THE, MICHIGAN w,%AII .Y rTM a+I° ZSUNUA.Yw NOV AM TRIUMPH' FOR WOLVERINES: 'M' Upsets Third Big Ten Team I STANDPOINT 4 tinued from Page 1) lood gave indications that this get-together of neighborhood s was to be no less a donny- k than its predecessors. Four Players Injured the first four minutes alone, players, two from each team, stretched out. By the end of half four Wolverines had been ped off the field. But it was all esult of clean, spirited play ier than unnecessary rtactics.y he' first two casualties were tly responsible for setting up higan's first touchdown. On opening kickoff John Halstead Fields on the State 20-yard causing him to fumble. Tom son fell on the loose ball on the' was the only tackle Halstead' was to make. He was carried un- conscious from the field and taken to University Hospital where X- Rays later revealed no fractures. Jobson sustained a head injury two minutes later and also sat out the rest of the game. After Jobson's recovery, Michi- gan's attack and Noskin's passing was rapier-sharp. A 15-yard pass to Harper, a three-yard gain off right tackle by Harper and an eight-yard flip to Rio in the end zone were all the Wolverines needed to jar their guests. Harper's kick for the extra point was good. Only one minute and 10 seconds had elapsed. Midway through the quarter, State launched one of its two pay- off drives of the day behind sub- stitute fullback Roger Detrick, although it muffed a chance to 4 0 Several styles of Xmas stockings and quick11 nd easy sweater patterns YRNCRAFT SHOP 0 NIcKES ARCADE Phone NO 2-0303 ° onom <==> eomo o 0<=>0<=>0 o h tie when Dave Kilgore's kick was low and wide. (Detrick made the many Buck- eye followers forget all about in- jured All-American Bob White, the man he was replacing. Detrick carried 11 times in the 15-play touchdown march, crunching out 46 of the 57 yards. The 198-pounder turned out to be the Buckeyes only real ground threat for the entire contest and was called upon wisely if un- mercifully by quarterback Fields. Detrick's 33 carries fell just five short of the Big Ten record. His net yardage of 139 was 40 yards more than gained by the rest of his teammates. Finish with Touchdown The Wolverines closed out the first half just as it had begun it- with a touchdown. Getting the ball on its own 31 with less than three minutes remaining, Michigan needed 11 plays to goover. Noskin hit a solid wall of crim- son-and-white jerseys at the goal line, but still stood upright as the officials signalled the score with two seconds showing on the clock. Harper, who had been ifistru- mental in this drive with a couple of fine runs, added his second extra point of the day to give Michigan a 14-6 haif time lead. Divide Third Period Both teams divided the third period with one sustained series of plays apiece that had the net effect of leaving the one-touch- down margin stand. Ohio State stuck to the ground and Detrick once again in grind- ing out 72 yards in 15 plays. Det- rick carried on eight of the last nine attempts, climaxing the series Big Win with a one - yard leap over left guard. Fields' two-point conversion pass y to Jim Herbstreit tied the con- test although Michigan soon broke it up for good. Pace Winning Assault Noskin and Julian paced this game-winning assault. Beginning: on the Michigan 36, Noskin com- pleted two passes to end Scotty- Maentz (he connected on seven of 10 for the day). And Julian, who had committed the Wolverines' only only two fumbles, went from. villain to hero with four jaunts covering 28 yards. Rio got the touchdown going r . over center from the one. Harper's Daily-Fred Shippey kick was no good but he com- SWEEPS THE END-Fred Juian Michigan senior halfback goes pensated for this failure with a around end as he did so many times successfully yesterday in the 30-yard field goal midway through the final period that put the finish- Wolverines stirring 23-14 upset over Ohio State. Julian showed ing touches on the annhilation of speed that hadn't been in evidence previously this year as he the Buckeyes. capped his Michigan career with one of his greatest games. eHayePuts on Typical Performance As He Steals Showy in Los ing Cause 11A SPECIAL Thanksgiving Turkey Dinner $2.75 plus sales tax In addition, dinners from our regular menu at the usual prices. Reservations accepted for groups of 6 or more.' Plenty of space for smaller parties. Call NOrmandy 2-4431. MICHIGAN UNION Service from 12:30 to 3:00 M FIRST DOWNS 20 Rushing 13 Passing 6 RUSHING YARDAGE 198 PASSING YARDAGE 108 PASSES ATEMPTED 11 PASSES COMPLETED 8 INTERCEPTED BY 3 Yards Returned 43 PUNT 2-34 YARDS KICKS RETURNED 33 Punts 0 Kickoffs 33 FUMBLEIS 2 FUMBLES LOST 2 PENALTIES 2-10 OSU 20 13 228 134 16 11 1 20 1-30 108 10 96 2 2 2-10 By JIM BENAGH Daily Sports Editor Despite Michigan's season-best performance and, the splendid Michigan-Ohio band rivalry, a chubby man with rolled-up sleeves proved to be the attention grabber in yesterday's football finale. The man was Wayne Woodruff "Woody" Hayes, a very cortro-' versial figure since the second game of the season when he was accused of punching a reporter in the nose. Hayes reached a new high of show-stealing in his three-hour appearance against Michigan. Sheds Coat He opened his performance by shedding a brown sport coat and stomping up and down the side- lines to show his disgust for the officials' calls. Fans thought they were seeing a coach at his peak when he threw the coat into the mud and began to verbally be- rate the officials after, a second- quarter touchdown was, called back. But the frustrated actor was just warming up - and burning up from the fact that he was headed for his first losing season in nine years at Ohio State. He picked up a bench chair aft- er Michigan's second touchdown, held it over his head in Atlas l 1 c. i fashion, and then slammed it into the frozen ground. He added pol- ish to the presentation by kick- ing sideline markers en route to the Buckeye bench. Continues Antics He continued his antics throughout the second half, then gave an encore for the press after the game. To show his disappointment, Hayes kept reporters and guests out of, the locker room until very. late. Then when they were al- lowed in, the disgruntled coach paraded in circular movements around the center of the room as the reporters stood off to the side. He, spent a few minutes straight- ening his Ohio State baseball cap on his head. He looked as if he were preparing for a battle. At the chosen moment, Hayes voluateered his little bit of in- formation. "The job Bump Elliott has done at Michigan this year is a truly great one," he said. "Michigan was a good team to- day," he continued. "They weren't any good at the start of the sea- son." As he talked, he occasionally stopped to sneeze. The effects of a coatless day were beginning to catch up with him.. "The job Elliott has done ranks as one of the very best In the country this year," he concluded about Michigan's, performance. "I thought our kids played hard," he said. "We were up for this one but not far enough, and that's been the story all year. We got started well at times, but just weren't quite good enough to bring them home." With those words, the coach re- focused his icy stare from the floor to the gathering around him. Disgruntled, he said: "I think that's all I have to say." No Questions He turned away immediately. There were no questions. The glare in his eye scared reporters off. "That's a new low, record for him," one Ohio reporter whis- pered to another on their way out. "I've never seen such a short press conference." As they opened the door to leave, the air was filled with mu- sic of Columbus people, who are known to be football's most rabid fans. "Goodbye, Woody. Goodbye, Woody. Goodbye,, Woody, we're sorry to see you go," they sang. After all, they said, it was a losing season. And no one is sup- posed to do that with Ohio play- ers. Dave Lyon, Associate Sports Editor Class Memorial IT'S CUSTOMARY for each senior class at Michigan to use its ac- cumulated funds to purchase an objet d'art with which to decorate the campus. Such gifts by past graduating classes are very much in evidence on the University grounds. They include large rocks on pedestals, uncomfortable concrete park benches, the 'M' seal on the Diag, the Union fountain, and an abstract art work in the Undergrad Library, to name a few. Of course, the class of 1960 intends to follow, tradition by donat- ing some permanent memorial to the campus, so that its members can bring their kids to Ann Arbor at some future date and proudly point out the class memorial. Whatever the class officers decide to give this year, they'll have a hard time trying to match the quality of the "class gift" presented to Michigan yesterday by a hardy band of seniors while 90,093 looked on. For the 23-14 decision rendered against Ohio State on the Sta- dium gridiron was primarily the work of Wolverine seniors. This marked the final appearance in their college football careers, and the seniors made it a memorable one. They played football as they had never played it. The four seniors which compose the starting backfield all had good days concurrently for the first time this year. Stan Noskin, Tony Rio, Darrell Harper, and Fred Julian formed an illustrious quartet in their last act on the Michigan gridiron stage. These four scored all of Michigan's 23 points and accounted for all but 69 yards of the Wolverines' respectable 306-yard offensive total. It should be realized, of course, that the 10 seniors playing (two other seniors were kept out by injuries) could not have won the game by themselves. Once again the Raiders, composed of sophomores and juniors, turned in a sterling defensive effort., Four times Elliott sent them in to thwart Buckeye offensive maneuvers, and four times they succeeded. The non-seniors on the first and second offensive teams contributed their fair share to the Wolverine triumph. But the sophs and juniors have still more games in front of them in which to display their abilities and accumulate praise. The seniors do not have this opportunity, and yesterday's victory over the tradi- tional rivals from Columbus belongs- to them. STAN NOSKIN - You all know about the little girl in the nursery rhyme, who "when she was good she was very, very good, and when she was bad she was horrid." Noskin developed a pattern dur ing the season, hitting the extremes on alternate Saturdays: bad against MSU, good against Oregon State, bad against Northwestern, good against Minnesota, bad agains Wisconsin, good against Illinois bad against Indiana, and incomparable yesterday. As Noskin went, so went the team. Yesterday the quarterback from Evanston threw passes that landed in the. arms of teammates instead of opponents. He passed 10 times, completed seven for 88 yards and one touchdown. The one interception off of him developed into nothing.serious. And he intercepted one back to highlight his good defensive effort. His running netted plus instead of minus yard- age. It was a very, very good day indeed. TONY RIO - The man who wasn't supposed to play at all in his final collegiate game because of an injury played most of it. He gained only 18 yards in six carries, but that yardage was good for three first downs and a touchdown. He scored another TD on a pass from Noskin. DARRELL HARPER - Michigan's handyman kicked two extr points, added a field goal with six minutes to go to seal the Buckeyes' fate, and gained 58 yards in 11 tries to lead Michigan's formidable ground attadk. FRED JULIAN - In one of his better games, he picked up 54 yards in a dozen carries. He fumbled twice, but helped the defense make sure OSU didn't cash in on either one. GEORGE GENYK - The Michigan captain and leader of, Wol- verine interior lineman turned in his usual dependable performance. MIKE FILLICHIO - A lineman who has come on fast, he has held his own with any guards in the Big Ten. JARED BUSHONG - For his improvement this season, he won a starting tackle berth for yesterday's game. JIM McPHERSON, JERRY LEITH, TOM DeMASSA - These were the only seniors who did not see frequent action in this season's games. McPherson, Michigan's fifth-ranking quarterback, halfback Leith, and guard DeMassa got into yesterday's game in the last min- utes. ALEX CALLAHAN, BRAD MYERS - Injuries prevented these two from participating in yesterday's game. Myers, a starting half- back, was permanently sidelined early in the season. Julian filled his place capably. Elliott will eagerly await the return of all possible players for next season, since there are holes to fill. And though he hates to se the football-playing members of the class of 1960 depart, he will surely remember the day the "built" a class memorial on the Stadium turf. 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