i PAGE SIX TU1F 1III('UCtA N XDAXU7.4IUJEEFU~Et 1 Ll. A 1VA 11, Ii l V H M .1)!# 1 li Y SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1963 a Timberlake's 'M' Line Contains Myers; Elliott Lauds Team Effort Passing Crushes Northwestern, 27-6 Homecoming Crowd Views 'M's First Big Ten Victory; Henderson Scores Twice; Clancy, Conley Score Others (Continued from Page 1) frustration that inspired them, the Wolverines played their best game of the year. A quietly satisfied head Coach Bump Elliott summed it up by saying, "They just hit and blocked the way they should. It was the best team effort of the season." Although Michigan did score four touchdowns, the big story was the Blue defense. The combina- tion of hard rushing and a tena- cious secondary held the Wildcats to just one touchdown, duplicat- ing Michigan State's effort of a week ago for the best confinement of Northwestern this year. OTHER SPORTS-See Page 5 The Wolverines didn't exactly stop the vaunted Tommy Myers cold, but they did a good enough job of defensing him that Wildcat Coach Ara Parseghian had to go to the ground most of the time. Myers threw for 127 yards via the airwaves, but it took soph quarter- back Dave Milam to pilot the team to their consolation TD. Although the whole Michigan line starred defensively, Captain Joe O'Donnell was especially imll- pressive, gathering in two NU fumbles. Tackle Tom Keating and ends Jim Conley and Bill Laskey spent most of the afternoon in the Wildcats' backfield, often con- verging on Myers for sizable losses. Laskey was consistently adept In keying on Northwestern's re- ceivers, and just as often blanket- ed one of them 'as he harrassed therfrustrated Wildcat signal- caller. Elliott also praised the second line: "This was the best support they've given the first string all year. With their constant hard rush, we could keep the pressure on all game. We had to keep them off balance, and we did." Pro Scores NHL Chicago 2, Toronto 0 Montreal 5, Detroit 1 NBA Boston 117, Detroit 109 New York 123, Baltimore 105 San Diego 53, New York 7 New Yor Guards Dick Ries and John Marcum were the spearheads of the success of the second unit, and enabled the Wolverines to preserve the shutout until only six seconds were left in the contest. But whereas the line has been ood all year, the secondary de- fense shone for the first time yes- terday. Halfbacks Dick Rindfuss and John Rowser twice broke up important pass plays just when it looked as though the Wildcats would go into score. In the interception department, all the glory wen to Michigan's ends. Conley picked off a Myers aerial early in the second half, but all the Wolverines could do was wiss a field goal try by Bob Tim- berlake. However, three plays later, John Henderson plucked another pass and danced 23 yards into the end zone. Naturally Happy Henderson was naturally happy but asserted, "It was all an ac- cident. I wasn't supposed to be in on defense, but somehow the substitution rule kept me in there." Henderson followed that feat up by taking a 24-yard TD pass from quarterback Bob Tim- berlake later in the quarter. Conley also caught a scoring pass from Timberlake, which prompted Elliott to say, "I wish he'd done that last week." The junior end had his hands on a pass in Minnesota's end zone a week ago, but at that time he just couldn't hold on to it. Steady Wind There was a steady 15 to 25 mile per hour wind throughout the game, and Michigan had it at their backs for three out of four of their scores. Elliott thought that it played a great part in his team's third quarter success es- pecially, but Parseghian said, "The wind was the same for Myers as for Timberlake. We don't have any excuses there." Instead, the Wildcat mentor as- serted that Myers just had a bad day. "Even Sandy Koufax gets knocked out of the box some- times," he remarked in a some- what hopeful analogy. Played Little Jack Cvercko, the Wildcats' ail- ing All-American candidate play- ed a little in the first half, but reinjured his knee and left the game. Parseghian doesn't look for too much action from him for the rest of the season. Michigan escaped with virtually nothing in the casualty depart- ment. Rindfuss suffered a bruised; elbow, and fullback Barry Dehlin was shaken up a bit, but neither injury is considered serious. (Continued from Page 1) now boast a 1-2-1 Big Ten record and a 2-3-1 overall mark. Pick Wind Northwestern won the opening toss but elected to kick taking ad- vantage of a 15-25 mile-an-hour tailwind. Myers drove the Wild- cats 41 yards in 11 plays the sec- ond time the Wildcats got hold of the ball, but the drive was halted on the Michigan 26. The Wildcats put together an- other drive at the end of the first quarter but again failed to score after penetrating to the Michigan 18. But this was to be Northwest- ern's high water mark until the final seconds of the game. Midway in the second quarter Timberlake drove the Wolverines 74 yards in eight plays for Mich- igan's first score in two weeks. The big play was a 33-yard toss to halfback Jack Clancy who weaved his way past three North- western tacklers into the end zone. Timberlake kicked his first of three conversions, making the score 7-0. Pussy Cats MICHIGAN N'WEST. First Downs 16 15 Rushing 6 7 Passing 10 8 Penalty 0 0 Total No. of Rushes 41 w,45 Net Yards-Rushing 29 47 Passing 196 170 Forward Passes Att. 20 25 Completed - 12 15 Intercepted by 2 1 Yds. interceptions ret. 61 0 Total Plays (Rushes and Passesm61 70 Punts, Number 7 7 Average distance 38 35 Kickoffs, returned by 1 3 Yards Kicks Returned 61 84 Punts 28 14 Kickoffs 33 70 Fumbles, Number 2 2 Ball lost by 0 2 Penalties, Number 8 4 Yards penalized 70 20 MICHIGAN 0 7 14 6-27 NORTHWESTERN 0 0 0 6- 6 At the start of the second half,: end Jim Conley intercepted a My- ers pass and returned 38 yards to the Northwestern 20. The break failed to materialize for the Wolverines as three of Timberlake's passes went out of the hands of Michigan's receivers. A field goal from the 30 yard line attempted by Timberlake was wide to the right. Michigan didn't have to wait long for its next break. On North- western's third play from scrim- mage, Henderson picked off a My- ers pass and ran it back all the way. It was sort of poetic justice for the Michigan end who earlier dropped two Timberlake passes. Recover Fumble Northwestern halfback Willie Stinson's fumble on the 50 yard line was recovered by Michigan, Captain Joe O'Donnell. It was another Northwestern fumble and O'Donnell recovery that set up Michigan's final tally. Tackle Tom Keating stopped My- ers for a six yard loss and with a jarring tackle forced the quarter- back to fumble on his own 201 yard line.' However, the Wolverines could not get started in this drive. In three plays Michigan lost 13 yards to the Northwestern 33. The big blow was a 15-yard personal foul penalty against the Blue. Key to Success Coach Bump Elliott then put in his two starting ends, Jim Con- ley and Bill Laskey, and it proved to be the key to success. With third down and 23 yards to go, Timberlake hit Conley at the Northwestern 12, and the Michigan end went all the way. The conversion attempt failed: when a bad pass from center forc- ed Timberlake to throw and it was incomplete. Northwestern finally scored on a 73-yard drive taking 11 plays. An attempt for a two-point con- version ended in an incompleted pass and the game ended 27-6. Naturally the disappointment of which continually caught Myers the game for the Wildcats was behind the line of scrimmage. El- the failure of Myers. Coach Ara liott also praised his defensive Parseghian had no excuses for backs John Rowser and Dick his quarterback's inability to get Rindfuss. started. Henderson by virtue of his two Michigan Coach Bump Elliott. touchdowns yesterday is far in who was carried off the field was front in Michigan's scoring race. quite pleased with the win. He The junior end has now scored praised the hard rushing line five touchdowns for 30 points. N W I DIAL SOMETHING NEW .i A A New Comedy in Color, with Stars You Like. We sincerely think you will enjoy it. SNEAK PREVIEW TONIGHT Come either at 5:20, see "Mary Mary" and stay for preview-or come at 7:15, see pre- view and stay for "Mary Mary" which fol- lows preview. 1 -Daily-James Keson MYERS GETS CRUNCHED-Northwestern quarterback Tom Myers (18) gets thrown for a loss by Michigan tackle Tom Keating (79) and guard Joe O'Donnell (69). Myers was con- tinually harassed by Michigan's line and lost a net 44 yards for the game. COLLEGE FOOTBALL: Texas, Ole Miss Win; Staubach Sets Mark The wonderful, wonderful story of Mary, Mary, who said..."Let's not start something in a cab we can't finish oan 44th Street." .aa " " ."aa"" """ a By The Associated Press DALLAS -The toe of shoeless Tony Crosby won foryTexasthe third week in a row yesterday as his extra points and 34-yard field goal proved the difference in a 17-12 victory over Southern Meth- odist that kept the nation's No. 1 team undefeated a n d untied through seven games. Tommy Ford, t h e blasting Texas runner, got the Longhorns off to a touchdown the first time they had the ball-the sixth time this season they have done that. Ford gained 75 yards of a 78- yard drive, a 50-yard dash get- ting it moving and an 18-yard run setting up the score on the one. * * * Tigers Bombed BATON ROUGE, La. - Missis- sippi unleashed a devasting run- ning game spearheaded by full- back Fred Roberts and ex-full- back Perry Lee Dunn to over- whelm Louisiana State, 37-3. yes- SOUTH BEND, Ind.-Quarter- back Roger Staubach set a Navy season total offense record and, with an Irishman named Pat Don- nelly, led the Middies to their biggest football tally over Notre Dame yesterday; 35-14. When the superb Staubach hit fullback Donnelly with a 30-yard pass in the third period, he broke the Navy total offense mark of 1,348 yards set by George Welsh in 1955. Four plays later, Staubach shot an eight-yard scoring pass to Don- nelly, breaking a 7-7 deadlock and igniting a 21-point third per- iod rally. The biggest previous Navy score in 37 meetings with the Irish was a 33-7 victory in 1956. I. 'I l ~f BReynoLDS BARRY NELSON "DIANE McBAN" MICHAEL REN"E A MERYYN LEROY ff w r 1 SCORES WORLD'S FAIR FRI. AND SAT. terday. It was Ole Miss' most victory over the Bayou since 1917 'when they LSU 52-7. lopsided Bangals whipped The third-ranked Rebels also showed why they are the nation's top defensive team. A blocked punt and a fumble recovery set up the first two Ole Miss touch- downs. ____ ORDER BY WAIST SIZE AND COLOR. NO C.Q.D.s. Jods 1209 S. University STEAK ANDSHAKE CHAR-BROILED HAMBURGER STEAK salad, potatoes, bread and butter 1.00 SPAGHETTI WITH MEAT SAUCE 1.00 1313 SOUTH UNIVERSITY GRID PICKS MICHIGAN 27, Northwestern 6 ! Ohio State 7, Iowa 3j Michigan State 30, Wisconsin 13 Illinois 41, Purdue 21 Indiana 24, Minnesota 6 Navy 35, Notre Dame 14 Penn State 17, Maryland 15 Pittsburgh 35, Syracuse 27I Army 14, Air Force 103 Georgia Tech 30, Duke 6 Alabama 20, Mississippi State 19 Mississippi 37, Louisiana State 3 Miami (Fla) 20, Kentucky 14 Nebraska 13, Missouri 12 Baylor 32, Texas Christian 13 Texas 17, Southern Methodist 12 Rice 17, Texas Tech 3 Oregon State 10, Stanford 7 Auburn 19, Florida 0 Rutgers 21, Boston University 6 OTHER SCORES Yale 10, Dartmouth 6 Cornell 18, Columbia 17 Princeton 34, Brown 13 Boston College 19, Vanderbilt 6 Villanova 22, Holy Cross 14 Pennsylvania 7, Harvard 2 North Carolina 28, Georgia 7 Cincinnati 35, Dayton 8 Kansas 34, Kansas State 0 Iowa State 33, Oklahoma State 28 Oklahoma 35, Colorado 0 Virginia Military 26, Wm. & Mary 6 Memphis State 25, Louisville 0 Tulane 20, South Carolina 7 West Virginia 20, Geo. Washington 16 Florida State 49, Furman 6 Virginia Tech 14, Richmond 13 Clemson 36, Wake Forest 0 Arkansas 21, Texas A & M 7 Arizona 15, Wyoming 7 Washington State 14, Idaho 10 Washington 22, Southern California 7 San Jose State 13, Oregon 7 Anthony Clancy Rindfuss Timberlake Dehlin Rowser Sparkman Schick Reid Evashevski Totals Myers Stinson Swingle Wahl Murphy Hampton Abraham Milam Prof fitt Totals Timberlake Myers Milamn Totals PA Rindfuss Henderson Kirby Clancy Sparkman Conley Totals Stinson Logan Murphy Burman Swingle Buckner Rector Clark Cyraneski Proffitt Totals O'Donnell Prichard Totals Norenberg RUSHING Michigan Tries 3 2 4 17 2 1 4 J 1 2 41 Northwestern Tries 9 10 9 2 3 1 2 6 3 45 Net 8 6 19 -26 -1 3 15 17 10 -3 39 Net -44 9 33 -2 21 2 1 12 14 47 PASSING Michigan Att. Comp. Yds. 20 12 196 Northwestern Att. Comp. Yds. 20 11 127 5 4 43 25 15 170 SS RECEIVING Michigan No. Yds. Avg. 2 13 6.5 4 63 15.7 3 44 14.7 1 33 33.0 1 10 10.0 1 33 33.0 12 196 16.3 Avg. 2.7 3.9 2.5 -1.5 -.5 3.0 3.7 3.4 10.0 -1.5 .9 Avg. -4.9 .9 3.7 -1.0 7.0 2.0 1.0 2.0 4.7 1A0 r Dial 2-6264 41l a I1 ilg1 lum An Entertainment Event Of Unsurpassed Beauty! WAT : DISNEY'S -t F~~nWasi +STOKOWSKI and the Philadelphia Orchestra 41 TECH wIOLOR "+ * - sy i How would- you like to win a free dinner for you and your date AT ______________ The Michigan Union is looking for a new name for its dining room and it needs your help. All you need to do is to send your suggestion to: DINING ROOM STUDENT OFFICES MICHIGAN UNION ICHRISTMAS FLIGHT to EUROPE $339 ROUND TRIP NEW YORK to PARIS Dec. 22 PARIS to NEW YORK Jan. 12 22 DAYS IN EUROPE Call: Mr. K. Hans Mr. J. Shurman NO 5-8394 NO 8-7720 Absolute Deadline - November 21 Northwestern No. 2 3 2 1 1 1 1 15 PUNTING Michigan No. 6 I 7 Northwestern No. 7 S 1 Yds. Avg. 25 12.5 51 17.0 17 6.2 22 11.0 1 1.0 11 11.0 15 15.0 7 7.9 17 17.0 4 4.0 107 7.1 Yds. 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