SUNDAY, OCTOBER 16, 19 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FADE TIMM wolverine Defense Sigman Defensive Leader; Barr Paces Ground Attack F tm Curbs ildc is I Illini Victory Over Gophers Features Spectacular Plays 331 . I (Continued trom page 1) had been turned back, and from that point on, they were a beaten ball club. - Only once more did they ever challenge-and that too can be classified as a break of the game. As the fourth quarter opened, Michigan, still in the hole after StatisticsI N. M. First Downs ........ 10 6 Rushing Yardage ... .128 150 Passing Yardage ..... 45 18 Passes Attempted .... 15 7 Passes Completed .. 5 2 Passes Intercepted By 0 1 Punts ................10 7 Punting Average .... 33 46 Fumbles Lost ....,... 2 3 Yards Penalized . .... 45 35 taking the ball from the Cats on that brilliant stand, went into punt formation. Branoff fumbled the pass from center-and the ball rolled crazily about the end zone. If a Wildcat were to ,fall on it, it would have } meant defeat. But the quick- thinking Branoff picked it up, raced out of the end zone, and on the run, kicked the ball 62 yards to the Wildcat 28. This too was a turning point . .. for never again did Northwestern control the ball in Michigan territory. Barr Sews It Up Michigan's great scatback Terry Barr was just rubbing salt in the Wildcats' wound when he burst around right end, cut to his left, and sped 45 yards to paydirt with a little less than three minutes to play. Jim Pace, Barr's sensational understudy, had another shot at glory yesterday-but as usual his dynamic performance was nulli- field by a penalty. Midway in the fourth period, Pace swept the right end brilliantly for 19 yards to the Wildcat 13 yard line. On the next play he swept around the other end of the line - dodging, twisting, floating through the air like a man on a tight rope. He left a 13 yard trail of fallen Wildcats behind him as he pranced into the end zone unmolested. But it was all for naught-as a holding penalty obliterated the score and the yardage from the record books.' As Lou Saban said to reporters after the game, "The turning point was when we didn't score-we conild have beaten them if we did." It was a creditable game for Saban's rookie squad-which has yet to win a single game . . . Michigan meanwhile picked up its fourth win of the year-and is now the only team in the Big Ten that is unbeaten in overall compe- tition. Once again a crew of Wolverine diehwrds in the stands chanted enthusiastically for a certam post- season activity . . . but to all real- ists. present at yesterday's battle it looked a long, long way off. I --- - - - - -- --- - , - --- - - -, CHAMPAIGN. Ill., ('- Illinois' blend of passing and running to- day brought a 21-13 Big Ten foot- ball victory over the Minnesota Gophers, who bunched both of their touchdowns in the third per- iod on spectacular plays good for a combined 129 yards. The Illini, gaining their first conference triumph after losing their opener to Ohio State, clust- ered two touchdowns in the sec- ond quarter, once on a break, and again on a 90-yard drive in 13 plays. After Dick Borstad stole Hiles Stout's aerial to blunt an Illini thrust to the Gopher 13, the soph- omore Minnesota fullback fumbled on the next play and Rudy Sieg- ert recovered for Illinois on the 11. Harry Jefferson barreled over from there and Dick Miller boot- ed the point. Last Minute Score With only 30 seconds left before the half, quarterback Ed Lind- beck scored on a 6-yard naked re- verse to end the long march. Dean Renn converted. Illinois captured its insurance touchdown before 45,995 cheering fans midway in the final period. Abe Woodson stole a Ken Bomb- ardier pass and eventually Stout rifled a pass to Woodson good for 27 yards. Miller again converted. Gopher Surge Fails Minnesota, absorbing its sec- ond conference loss against one victory, tallied twice within three I 1 1 i minutes in an explosive third quarter. Quarterback Dick Larson passed 25 yards to Frank Koeneke who lumbered another 35 across the goal. Mike Falls added theRe d D l Ci sf d point. Minutes later. Larson looped the _ ball over his shoulder as he was being tackled. Sophomore half- back Bob Schultz snared it and. sprinted towards the sidelines anda down them for 69 yards. Falls' at- Person lze tempted conversion was wide. P ro b ie 1 CHRISTMAS CARDS New yarns and patterns for stolls, m sweaters WOnderfuiselection and soCks 20 Books to Choose From aU Many styles of sweater 10% OFF 'til Nov. 1 and sock packs. Blazer M scarf packs in University; colors. verbeck Bookstore w 1216 South University 10 Nickels Arcade U -Daily-Dick GasX411 TONY BRANOFF (17), Michigan's wingback, fumbles in his own end zone early in the fourth period. But quick thinking Branoff picked the ball up, side-stepped two defenders and on the run kicked a booming 62-yard punt. After this spectacular play, the Wildcats' backs were broken as they were unable to penetrate past the Wolverines' 40-yd. line in the final 12 minutes of play. DEADLOCKED AT 20-20: Purdue Ties Iowa With Dawson Pass! IOWA CITY, Iowa (MP-Purdue shocked 52,137 Homecoming fans yesterday by deadlocking Iowa 20- 20 in a wild and spectacular Big Ten football game, with Len Daw- son's 14-yard touchdown pass and his conversion the final plays of the contest. The excited homecomers, get- ting ready for an uproarious cele- bration after Iowa had taken a 20-. 13 lead with slightly less than six .r..i - ...- + r vv e r v r . a/v r v v a. a v . - yr V 6./ f l minutes left, were stunned by and Jim Whitmer retrieved the Dawson's sharpshooting that car- ball for the Boilermakers on their II S T l R E 1-I) C7 U R$ Campbell Sparks Hoosiers' 14.7 Conquest of Villanova BLOOMINGTON, Ind. ()-Na- tional high hurdle champion Milt Campbell was Indiana's football sparker yesterday in a 14-7 vic- tory over Villanova, which scored the only time it had the ball in Indiana territory. That was a 77-yard pass play, quarterback Ron Gorton to half- back John Bauer, with the ball in the air 45 yards. Hoosiers Outrush Rivals Villanova netted only 5 .yards by rushing to Indiana's 232, but picked up 122 yards in the air to the Hoosier's 62. Campbell, 209-pound right half- back, scored standing up on an 8- yard run after setting up the touchdown with a 10-yard burst. He got off another 38-yard run, intercepted one Villanova pass and caught a 20-yard pass on the ried the Boilermakers from their 22 to the tying points. Last Minute TD The touchdown play started with only four seconds showing on the clock. Lanky Len, who also had used his whiplash arm to ac- count for Purdue's first two touch- downs, faded back and let fly to end Steve Chernicky who grabbed the ball on the 2 to the far right side and rammed over. Then again it was up to Dawson. He didn't fail. His kick was right between the uprights. The message on the scoreboard for the home- comers was Iowa 20, Visitors 20. And a sickening feeling must have surged through the hearts of the homecoming crowd when victory had seemed so near. Hawks Recover Fumble The dramatic late developments followed another punishing jolt to Iowa. The kickoff after the Hawk- eyes' third touchdown was fumb- ,led by Bill Jennings and tackle Frank Bloomquist recovered for the Hawks on the Purdue 13. However, a holding penalty dropped Iowa back to the 24. Earl Smith fumbled on the next play 22. From then on it was one Daw- son pass after another with a 17- yarder to Melvin Dillard carrying to the Iowa 14 from which Len launched his final stab. Dillard, injured on a play, was carried from the field with 17 seconds left. BIG TEN ST W Michigan ,.2 Wisconsin.....2 Ohio State. . ...1 Michigan State 1 Illinois.........I Purdue.........1 Iowa ..........1 Minnesota......1 Indiana ........0 Northwestern . .0 L 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 T 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 Iowa ........ 0 Purdue ...... 7 13 0 7-20 0 6 7-20 TANDINGS Villanova 7 just as the first half ended. Vugene "Chick" C i c h o w s k i scored the other Hoosier touch- down on a 2-yard sneak. Both Indiana toubhdowns were made within 4 minutes in the third quarter. Villanova's Gorton- Bauer heroics came in the fourth. First Hoosier Win Indiana, winning for the first time in four starts, was too big in the line for Villanova, a f our- time loser playing its first game against Big Ten opposition. Hoosier drives sputtered six times inside the Villanova 16. In- diana lost the ball twice on fum- bles and once on a pass inter- ception, each time deep in Villa- nova territory. Villanova had four passes intercepted and lost the ball four times on fumbles, also all in its end of the field. Kaline, Snider Named Best In Annual Poll ST. LOUIS (A)- Duke Snider of the world champion Brooklyn Dodgers and Al Kaline, youthful outfielder of the Detroit Tigers, yesterday were named the out- standing players in the National and American Leagues in an an- nual poll by the Sporting News. The national baseball weekly reported Robin Roberts of the Philadelphia Phillies and Whitey Ford of the New York Yankees were selected as the outstanding pitchers in the two leagues. Pct. 1.000 1.000 1.000 .500 .500 .500 .500 .333 .000 .000 Kodak PONY 135 33Z x Inc. Fed. Tax CAMEPA Model C The Quarry I? tI S T A T E 1__-..-_-_-___. I I I I LJUIIVI1 LVllaj IWV Illul , ll"q PVGKcno