PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TTTFsnAV- VnVVMRV.U. IV lGAM PAG~ SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'I'TTI~?bA~7 ~Jr~V1'flRD~'D 10 lOhO A.ur~JAAa.rv , i v A.nAA J.M, JJ, lyJQUs 5'_, F7 .. M- Il Blues Win Annual Frosh Grid Contest, 10-7 ANN ARBOR BANIK... I . . y .t . ... ,. -''' r ' _. Y_.. ".. is your campus banking headquarters. Both faculty and students find that banking is pleasant and fast at all three of Ann Arbor Bank's campus loca- tions. If you don't do your banking at Ann Arbor Bank, why not stop in today and 3m K get acquainted? You'll find Ann Arbor Bank wants to ,'L i I m r By TOM ROWLAND End Stan Kemp hauled in a ten-yard scoring pass in the clos- ing minutes of the annual fresh- man intrasquad scrimmage yes- terday to give the Blues a 10-7 win over the Whites in cold and dark Michigan Stadium. Kemp leaped to haul in quar- terback Dick Vidmer's pass on the one and drove in to cap off a 60- yard touchdown drive that was sparked by Vidmer's passing and the running of halfback Louis Lee - and one that was almost thwarted by a holding penalty just as the Blues neared pay dirt. With the Blues trailing 7-3 and the clock running out, Vidmer passed to Kemp and then to Lee NTowUU-atzke, Lopes Lead All Scorers CHICAGO 03)-Tom Nowatzke, Indiana's 220-pound junior full- back, has taken the Big Ten all- games football scoring lead. Clicking in every department, Nowatzke has a total of 48 points on five touchdowns, four field goals and six extra points and holds a six-point lead over full- back Roger Lopes of Michigan State, who has seven touchdowns for 42 points. Halfbacks Lou Holland of Wis- consin and Sherman Lewis of Michigan State are tied for third with 36 points each. The leaders with points scored follows: tds pat fg tp Nowatzke, Indiana 5 6 4 48 Lopes, Michigan State 7 0 0 42 Holland, Wisconsin 6 0 0 36 Lewis, Michigan State 6 0 0 36 VanRaaphorst, Ohio St. 0 8 8 32 Henderson, Michigan 5 0- 0 30 Krause, Iowa 5 0 0 30 Snell, Ohio State 5 0 0 30 Stamison, Northwestern 0 1 6 29 Fronek, Wisconsin 4 15 0 27 Grabowski, Illinois 4 0 0 24 Murphy, Northwestern 4 0 0 24 Stinson, Northwestern 4 0 0 24 Plankenhorn, Illinois 0 11 4 23 Timberlake, Michigan 2 10 0 22 kkeep trim ARCADE BARBERS NICKELS ARCADE 4 to set the ball at the White 35. The White defense held for three plays, bringing up a fourth-and- two situation at the 27. Vidmer, an ace in the hole with the op- tion, went right and pitched to Lee, who bulled his way for the key first down. On the next play Vidmer ran the option to the other side, this time lateralling out to halfback Mike Bass, who bobbled the ball, picked it off in midair, and then raced to the four, only to have the play nullified by a 15-yard walk-off for holding. Still not denied, Vidmer hit Lee at the 13, and then fullback Dave Fisher carried the ball to the 10 to set up the tally. Late Scores All of the scoring came in the final quarter, but the Whites made two almost-good scoring bids in the first half. Quarterback Rick Vogt passed to end Clayt Wilhite to put the Whites down on the Blue seven yard line in the second quarter, but the Blue nipped the drive by pouncing on a fumble on the next play. In the closing seconds of the first half the White threatened again. They ended up trying a field goal that went wide from the Blue 10 on the last play before the intermission. The Blue finally got some points on the scoreboard in the second half by marching 97 yards to give Jim Seiber a field "goal shot from the White 10. The key play in the drive was Lee's 50-yard dash after taking Vidmer's pitchout that set the Blue at the White 28. Vidmer kept on another option to the nine and then pitched out to speedster Carl Ward, who carried to the three. On fourth down at the two yard line Seiber's kick put the Blue into a 3-0 lead. White Tally The Whites bounced right back. Jim Detwiler returned the kick- off to the White 41, fullback Bob Mielketraced to the Blue 42, and five plays later the ball was on the Blue 19. Two penalties then gave the Whites the ball on the three, and Volk scored on a sneak from the one. Besides scoring the winning touchdown, Kemp showed top punting form for the Blues. Center Frank Nunly stood out as the bul- wark in the middle of the Blue line, and 240-pound tackle Henry Cartwright made a good showing for the White defense. Big Ten Standings W L TPFPA Sikorsky Michigan State 4 Ohio State 3 Illinois 3 Wisconsin 3 MICHIGAN 2 Purdue 2 Iowa 2 Northwestern 2 Minnesota 1 Indiana 1 0 0 1 2 2 3 3 4 4 4 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 o. 95 61 95 88 60 78 74 85 39 74 30 33 70 84 50 114 70 98 82 118 Piroraft ENGINEERING REPRESENTATIVES WILL BE ON CAMPUS TO GIVE SENIORS AND GRADUATES COMPLETE DETAILS ON ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES WITH THE PIONEER AND LEADING MANUFACTURER of VTOL AIRCRAFT See your College Placement Office now 11111 for an appointment. -Daily-Richard Cooper GETTING READY-White halfback Bob Mielke (32) prepares to meet the fate of the big Blue line in yesterday's annual freshman scrimmage which the Blues eked out a 10-7 win. Leading Mielke's in- terference is center Jack Craig (59), while Stanley Kemp (89) pursues from across the field. Kemp scored the winning touchdown for the Blues. Closing in from the near side is end Dick Uhlman (83). (Ties count % game won, 1/ game lost) BIG TEN ROUNDUP: MISU Takes Lead; OSU, Illinois Trail Friday, November 15 By BUD WILKINSON Michigan State moved into sole possession of first place in the Big Ten ahead of Ohio State and Il- linois, but the race for the roses won't be over until the last day of the season. Michigan State gained the con- ference lead by trouncing Purdue, 23-0. The key to State's victory was a tough and determined de- fense which yielded only 68 yards on the ground and 65 in the air. Fleet-footed halfback Sherman Lewis led the Spartans offense averaging more than eight yards a carry, and was aided by the clutch running of fullback Roger Lopes who scored two of State's three touchdowns on one-yard plunges. Dick . Proebstle, taking over the quarterback spot from in- jured Steve Juday directed the team well and passed to Tom Krzemienski for the third Spartan tally. Next week State goes against Notre Dame in a non-conference game and in the final game of the season faces Illinois in a tilt which could decide the championship. If State wins the final game they will wind up with a 5-0-1 record and will be assured of at least a share of the conference title. If the Spartans lose the last game they will still have a share of the title if Illinois loses to Wis- consin this Saturday and Ohio State loses one of its last two games. OSU in Running The Buckeyes of Ohio State, who were upset last Saturday by Penn State 10-7, are, also in the running for the roses. To gain a tie for the championship the Buckeyes will have to win their two remaining games with North- western and Michigan if Michigan State also wins their final game. At present they are in second place with a 3-0-1 record. If Ohio State and Michigan State tie for the championship, Michigan State will probiably go to the Rose Bowl. The usual Big Ten procedure is to eliminate the team that most recently went to the bowl game. That was 1958 for the Buckeyes and 1956 for the Spartans. Illinois, which fell victim to ex- cessive fumbling and an alert Michigan defense in the Wol- verines' 14-8 victory Saturday, is still not eliminated from the con- ference race. Because the Illini play seven conference games and the Buckeyes and Spartans play only six, Illinois cannot end up in a tie for first. Right now the Il- lini hold down the third spot in the Big Ten with a 3-1-1 record. -Their remaining games are with Northwestern, which has been de- feated three times in as many games and conference leading MSU. If Illinois should lose either of the remaining games they will be scratched from the title race. However, if Illinois wins both its games and Ohio State loses one, the Illini would have a lead in percentage points and would take a trip to Pasadena for the New Year's Day festivities. Season's Climax Regardless of who wins this Saturday the championship)will be decided in Michigan on Nov. 23 when Illinois meets MSU in East Lansing and OSU comes to Ann Arbor to tangle with the Wol- verines. In a game Saturday between the pre-season favorites for the Big Ten title, Wisconsin scored a 17-14 come-from-behind victory over Northwestern. The Badgers lost the ball eight times on six fumbles and two pass interceptions, but came to life in the fourth quar- ter, scoring ten points on the pass- ing of Harold Brandt and a 27- yard field goal by Dave Fronek. In other games featuring Big Ten teams Saturday, Iowa defeat- ed Minnesota 27-13, sending the Gophers into a last place tie with Indiana. Starring for the Hawk- eyes was sophomore quarterback Garry Snook who threw three touchdown passes in his second week as quarterback. Indiana won its third in a row defeating Oregon State, 20-15, on the power running of fullback Tom Nowatzke. The Hoosiers downed Minnesota in somewhat surprising effort two weeks ago, 24-6. The win, their first Big Ten victory, followed a trouncing over Cincinnati, a team whic his looking ahead to basket- ball for exictement, 20-6. 4 LIBERAL ARTS NBA SCORES Detroit 116, Los Angeles 109 Boston 116, St. Louis 110 ALL DEGREE LEVELS * Analytic Research * Language Program 9 Computer Programming * Mathematics * Statistics ALL ACADEMIC MAJORS NEEDED Training in Specialized Techniques Are Provided by NSA Liberal Arts Majors (except mathema- ticians) are required to take-the PRO- FESSIONAL QUALIFICATION TEST given on 7 DECEMBER, 1963 Applications for test MUST BE IN NOT LATER THAN 22 NOVEMBER. See your COLLEGE PLACEMENT OFFICER now for a Test Bulletin containing further details. 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