PAGE SIB TH -a- NaaA N I SLAasa aAGE IX T 1 aayfaRaall'1V BLaIT SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1956 I. Soph Backs Impressive as 1/ichigan Tops f > College Football Scores BIG TEN 'MICHIGAN 42, UCLA 13 *llinois 32, California 20 *Ohio State 34, Nebraska 7 'Iowa.27, Indiana 0 ' 'Purdue 16, Missouri 7 *Northwestern 14, Iowa State 13 *Michigan State 21, Stanford 7 *Minnesota 34, Washington 14; *Wisconsin 41, Marquett 0 EAST Army 32, VMI 12 Colgate 34, Cornell 6 Brown 20, Columbia 0 Dartmouth 13, New Hamp- shire 0 'Navy 39, William and Mary 0 Penn. St. 34, Penn. 0 *Pittsburgh 14, Syracuse 7 Princeton 28, Rutgers 6 *Yale 19, Conn. 14 Lafayette20, Temple 0 Edinboro 13, Slippery Rock 0 Maine 40, Rhode Island 0 Tufts 23, Bowdoin 0 Brandeis 26, Colbe 20 Deleware 33, Lehigh 7 Carnegie Tech 13, Buffalo 6 Hamilton 26, Swarthmore 0 Springfield 28, Amherst 7 South and Southwest *Baylor 27, Texas Tech 0 Florida 20, Clemson 20 *Tennessee 35, Auburn 7 *Duke 40, Virginia 0 *Maryland 6, Wake Forrest 0 *Mississippi 37, Kentucky 7 *Oklahoma 36, North Caro- lina 0 Virginia Tech 35, North Caro- lina State 6 Texas 7, Tulane 6 Georgia 3, Florida State 0 *Georgia Tech 9, SMU 7 Cincinnati 7, Tulane 6 Arkansas 19, Okla. A&M 7 Texas A&M 9, La. State 6 Far West Colorado 34, Kansas State 0 Wyoming 27, Denver 0 * denotes grid picks choices U 1 Ii -U A THE VERY BEST IN TRAVEL, EXPLORATION, ADVENTURE 1 your passport to see the world GREAT ADVENTURE FILM PRODUCERS IN PERSON NARRATING THEIR EXCLUSIVE COLOR MOTION PICTURES SUN., OCT. 28, ADUDOALD "BEYOND THE :00 P.M. ADMI'. DVNAILD B. M8CMuILL~AI1 NORTHERN LIGHTS" The Famous Admiral Takes Us To The Arctic Aboard His Schooner "Bowdoin" SUN., NOV. 11, CUR-ISNAGEL "THE BEAUTIFUL 3:00 rM uUII er IaI.s3ec s BL UE DANUBE" An Enchanting Cruise From Germany's Lovely Black Forest To Austria's Ga Vien MSU Gains 21.7 Victory Over Indians PALO ALTO, Calif. (P) - The sheer strength of the Michigan State running game, brutal and bone-jolting, took its toll on Stan- ford in the key third quarter yes- terday to give the Spartans a 21-7 victory over the West Coast Rose Bowl hopeful. State set the pattern by scoring in the first period, using steam- roller tactics to go 65 yards in 14 plays. Clarence Peaks, the versatile plunging and punting left half from Flint, was the pace-setter in that drive and throughout the en- tire gamefor the rugged Spartans. Peaks went over from the two to score. Stanford Strikes Bac k Stanford struck back to even the game with a pass-engineered second period tally. MSU held the ball for the first nine minutes and 32 seconds of the second half, advancing slowly -- but as inevitably as a glacier crunching forward. It took 19 plays for the Spartans to roll the length of the field for the second touchdown. MSU chopped out its gains the hard way - a few feet at a time. Four times in a row just a few more feet or inches were needed on the fourth down to keep the drive going. Four times in a row, the hard- hitting Spartan backs made it. Pat Wilson picked up the larg- est chunk of yardage - 10 on a quarterback sneak. Denis Mendyk, teaming with Peaks, had a nine yard gain during the drive. Gilbert Bucks Over Fullback Don Gilbert bucked over from the one for the touch- down. The second Spartan touch- down of the third period was made on breaks. Ellison Kelly recovered a fumble by Gordy Young on the Stanford 18 and MSU's second backfield penetrated into touchdown terri- tory in six running plays with Jim Wulff going over -from the two. Dave Kaiser, remembered well here for his game-winning Rose Bowl field goalmagainst UCLA, neatly booted all three extra points for the Spartans. Peaks was getting outstanding distances when he did the punt- ing - sending many of his boots into the end zone. UCLA 'Herrustein, Ptacek Run Well in Debut (Continued from Page 1 Play was less sharp as second half started. Michigan finally made "the costly error." A deep punt by Bradley put Michigan on its six, where on the first play Herrnstein let the ball slip out of his hands. Uclan quarterback Bob Bergh- dahl fell on the ball on the one. It was an easy matter for hard- hitting sophomore fullback Barry Billington then to push over cen- ter for the score. The most explosive play of the game was to. come soon after. Guard Dick Hill wrested a fumbled ball away from 'another UCLA sophomore, tailback Don Long. A personal foul penalty moved the ball to Michigan's 30. Wingback Barr then took the ball on a run to the, left side. A. long, leading pass that Kramer could take in stride over his shoul- der gave Michigan a brillianit 70- yard score. The final period picked up gain. The pass-happy visitors clicked for a score on a toss from :Brad- ley to end Dick Wallen. The extra point was missed as linebacker Barr nearly managed to block it. The last tally at 13:48 was just Icing, as third string fullback Jim Dickey scored off right tackle from the three. Second string fullback Jim Byers did not see any action yesterday, since he was bothered by an extracted tooth. Statistics ANN ARBOR P)'- - Statistics. of the UCLA-Michigan game UCLA Mich. First Down 12 1s Rushing Yardage 97 234 Passing Yardage 132 103 Passes 9-22 4-9 Passes intercepted 0 0 Punts 6-35 3-39 Fumbles Lost 4 4 Yards Penalized 20 25 4 -Daily-Larry Carbonellt UCLA'S FIRST SCORE-Sophomore fullback Barry Billington scores the Bruins first TD after the play had been set up by a recovered Michigan fumble on the one yard line. Attempting to make the stop are Jim Van Pelt (24), John Herrnstein (36), Tom Maentz (85), and Dick Hill (69). Illini Overcomes California, 32-20; Score Four TD's In Third Period I 4 SUN., DEC. 9, 3:00 P.M. RUSSELL WRIGHT "SMILING DENMARK" The Best of Denmark's Scenic Grandeur and True-Life Stories Of Its People SUN., JAN. 27, 3:00 P.M. JOHN GODDARD "KAYAKS DOWN THE NILE" Marvelous Films Of The Only Expedition Down The Entire 4,200-Mile Nile River SUN., FEB. 17, 3:00 P.M. HAL LINKER "EXOTIC JAPAN" Acclaimed the Finest Film of Japan, One Of The Most Beautiful Places In The World SUN., MAR. 10, 3:00'P.M. AUBERT LAVASTIDA "SOUTH AMERICA COAST TO COAST" Documents The Daring First Complete Surface Crossing of The Forbidding Continent 1956-57 SEASON TICKETS: Adults $5.00, Students and Children $3.00 ALL SEATS RESERVED * SEND FOR DESCRIPTIVE FOLDER Mail Orders: Enclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope with remittance TICKETS and INFORMATION: Boersma Travel Service, 14 Nickels Arcade, Ann Arbor THE WORLD TRAVEL AND ADVENTURE SERIES OF ANN ARBOR ANN ARBOR HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM * 601 WEST STADIUM BLVD CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (P)-Califor-c nia rolled up a 20-0 halftime bulge yesterday and then rolled over and died as Illinois lashed across four touchdowns within six and one half minutes of the third period en route to a 32-20 season opening football victory. The Golden Bears, 13-point un- derdogs, displayed such passing and running finesse in the first OSU Shows In First Win COLUMBUS, Ohio (')-Display- ing the same crushing ground at- tack which carried themto their second straight Big Ten title last year, Ohio State's Bucks yester- day ground out a 34-7 victory over Nebraska. A throng of 82,153 watched the' powerful Bucks go 77 yards in 12 plays, 66 yards in 9, 84 yards in 5 and 92 yards in 7 for touchdowns. Two of the scores came after pass interceptions, and the fifth one on a blocked punt. Ohio scored two touchdowns in each of the first two periods and then coasted in as Coach Woody ,Hayes used 42 players. Nebraska's lone score came in the third period when Jerry Pe- tersen, s e c o n d string tackle, blocked an Ohio punt and fell on it in the end zone. Ohio ground out 416 yards on running plays, and added 62 through the air for a 478 total, to Nebraska's 253. Don Clark, second string Ohio halfback, was the game's No. 1 scorer. The Akron sophomore, running from the left halfback spot vacated by All-America Hop- along Cassady, scored touchdowns on runs of 35 and 38 yards. half it looked as if the Illini would be disgraced before 54,833 fans, a record home opening crowd. Then the Illini's ineptness turned into alertness and Califor-' nia - beaten 7-6 by Baylor a week ago - collapsed into futility. The third quarter was only a little more than five minutes old when Don Gilkey's poor 19-yard punt for the Bears was taken by Illinois on the California 38. In four plays the Illini scored when fullback Ray Nitschke romped 26 yards, fumbled on the five, and Abe Woodson recovered the bounding ball in the end zone. Then in trip-harnmer fashion three more touchdowns made this way: Bob Allen recovered Gus Gianulias' bobble on the Califor- nia 19. On the fourth play from there, Hiles Stout scored on a quarterback sneak from the one. Dave Walker captured Herb Jackson's fumble on the Bears' 23. On the second down, Stout assed 15 yards to Woodson, who sped the final five. Joe Contestavile's attempted pass was stolen by KentSutter, sec- ond string Illini center, on the Bears 20, and he galloped into the end zone. The Illini tallied again in the first four minutes of the last quar- ter, which gave them five touch- downs in less than 11 minutes of action. Stout to Jefferson This time, Stout hit Woodson for a 51-yard aerial play that car- ried to the California 25. Stout eventually shot an 11-yard scor- ing pass to Harry Jefferson. California ripped through Illi- nois for 54 yards in eight plays to score in the first period. Herb Jackson's 21 yard run was the key, and John Stewart finally drove over on a pitchout from the two. Twice more the Bears crossed the Illinois goal in the second quarter. They thrust 78 yards in four plays as Jackson ripped off 32 yards, and Stewart eventually scored on a 38 yard around end maneuver. With one and one half minutes left before theuhalf, Bill Cooper recovered a fumble by Chuck Schrader, Illini junior quarterback, on the Illinois 31. Contestatile polished it off with a 12-yard touchdown toss to Norm. Becker who sidestepped Schrader for the catch. "We had to be helped," said Il- lini coach Ray Eliot after the game. "I guess you can call it luck or the breaks, but, boy! that was a terrific six minutes for us in the third period. NU WINS OPENER: McKiever Scores 14 Points As Wildcats Edge Iowa St. T he Finest Imprte LightweightRica Van Boven's imported light- weight raincoat gives you handsome perfections in protection. 0 FLY FRONT " RAGLAN SLEEVE * SLASH THROUGH POCKETS " PLAID LINING ! JIGGER STRAP * ADJUSTABLE TABS ON SLEEVE AND COAT BOTTOM ! BUTTONED VENT Even sizes only:$300 36-46 Regular; 36-42 Short; 38-46 Long 111)- r 1 1 1 1 R 1 A EVANSTON, Ill. (P) - Bob Mc- Kiever, a home town product who starred at Evanston High School, scored two touchdowns and added both extra points yesterday in leading Northwestern to a 14-13 victory over Iowa State in the Wildcats' football opener. McKiever gained 120 yards in 22 carries and made Coach Ara Par- seghian's debut in Big Ten circles a successful one although Iowa State battled down to the end and fumbled on Northwestern's 7 as the final gun sounded. Iowa Crushes Indiana, 27-0 oGi al i e.La To Gain Early Big Ten Lead Jim Kudlinski, a fourth string quarterback, sparked Iowa State's fourth quarter rally with a 42-yard pass which set up a 15-yard touch- down run by Chuck Latting. Latting also scored Iowa State's first touchdown with a 38-yard run up the middle that brought the Cyclones back into the game with only nine seconds remaining in the third quarter. Until then, Northwestern had completely dominated the game with McKiever doing yeoman work. Northwestern took the op- ening kickoff and marched 65 yards in 15 plays with McKiever going over from the 2. Iowa State came to life late -in the third quarter. Trailing 14-0, the Cyclones punted to Northwest- ern's 32, but Geroge Godektum- bled and Chuck Muelhaupt recov- ered for Iowa State on the Wild- cat 32. A 5-yard penalty and a 1- yard loss put the ball on the 38 from where Latting raced to his first touchdown. Late in the fourth quarter, Mc- Kiever punted 59 yards to lowa State's 14. Fullback Mary Walter smashed 23 yards and two more- running plays netted Iowa State a first down on its own 48. Kud- linski then whpiped his 42-yarf pass to halfback Paul Shupe on Northwestern's 15. Latting pow- ered his way into the end zone. Rent a TYPEWRITER (portables). Ask about our Rental Purchase Plan OVER BECK BOOKSTORE 1216 South University BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (A')--Iowa capitalized on Indiana errors for two early touchdowns yesterday and then mauled the Hoosiers with the one-two punch of half- back Don Dobrino and quarter- back Kenny Ploen, 27-0. The result, unexpectedly lopsid- ed, made the Hawkeyes at least temporary leaders of the Big Ten football race. The first conference game of the season, televised on a regional NBC hookup and also broadcast, attracted about 25,000 fans in 80 degree sunshine. Four different players scored the Iowa touchdowns, all on short runs. Bill Happel, junior right' halfback, ran from the Indiana 7 in the first quarter after end Frank Gliliam grabbed a fumble by Hoosier sophomore Jim Powell on the Indiana 16. Fullback John Nocera racked up another Hawk touchdown from the Indiana 1. Center Charley Pierce set it up by intercepting Chick Cichkowski's pass on the Hoosier 24. Ad Hoosier 24. ered his way into the end zone. 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