.SUNDAY, OCTOBER I4, I959 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEM SUNDAY, OCTOBER 14, 1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVE?( 1I NU Tes Minnesota; Purdue Surprises Irish 1 the 9eiae... WITH DAVE GREY Sideline Impressions t seems like a different game when one watches from the sidelines. You see and hear details missed from higher up in the Stadium or in the press box. But, as many football players on the bench will say, you also don't get to see some of the key blocks, tackles, or holes open up in the line. Running around as a photographer's assistant yesterday gave me the opportunity to gather some scattered impressions of "color" in one of Michigan's most brutal routs in recent years. From the field, Michigan showed its bigger size. The crisp line play time and again pushed Army back to set up the potent single wing attack. Michigan looked faster and the timing was sharper than the Cadets, who usually excel in this department. 1 But not all the energy is on the playing field. Under Ann Arbor's warm sun, the team, band, and cheerleaders all had a good workout. As one of the referees commented with a smile during a time-out in the third quarter, "Too hot for this; this is baseball weather" There is little of the "spectac- ular atmosphere" for players that one might expect. You can see the pre-occupied intensity of expres- ,.,. sion. Not until the final quarter did smiles and signs of relaxing begin to show on the bench. Even then the eyes of the individual players : and coaches kept turning toward s the scoreboard and the "all pow- erful" clock. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan was his usual self, unsmiling, outwardly calm, and always in motion. Often CONCENTRATION with his arms tucked behind his ,.Robinson back underneath his suitcoat, Oos- ..Oosterbaan terbaan shows little emotion. He is often in conference with his other coaches, especially line Coach Jack Blott, while the Michigan quarterbacks are constantly in touch via phone to another of Michigan's coaches up in the press box. Army Shows Troubles.. . From the sidelines, it looked obvious on a couple of Michigan's pass patterns exactly where the pass was going. Despite the obviousness, the Army defense was not able to use their knowledge of Michigan's plays to advantage. The coordination of the Cadet center and quarter- back on both first and second team offense also was not clicking. Army fumbles were frequent, but Michigan's good tackling was still not rocking enough to cause most of this 'damage. Coach Earl Blaik admitted that his team hurt themselves more than they helped. There were also other minor details that often we never see. One of the Wolverine team managers let out a cheer during the explosive first half and was reprimanded by one of the referees, "No cheering allowed on the field." Block 'M' looked good, especially since I, like many other students, have never seen it before in action. And quite often the Michigan rooting section solidly outcheered the organized Cadets on the other side. The thought of the day uppermost in the minds of many people, however, came from Captain Tom Maentz, kneeling on the sidelines, Just before the end of the first half, "Too bad we couldn't have done this last week." Rain, Wildcats Halt Late Gopher Rally; Dillard Sparks Boilermaker Victory MINNEAPOLIS (g) - Underdog Northwestern hurled back a last- ditch Minnesota offensive against the backdrop of a nightmarish rain storm yesterday to gain a scoreless tie with the unbeaten Gophers. A crowd that started out at 62,- 468 sat in utter misery as the Gophers stumbled and fumbled against the highly-tuned Wildcats in a soaking second-half downpour. Wildcats Brace But with four minutes remain- ing, second string quarterback Bobby Cox fired a Minnesota rally that penetrated to the North- western 18 before the Wildcats braced splendidly. Northwestern, a two-touchdown underdog, shook the Minnesotans with a third period foray which carried to the Minnesota 25. On fourth down fullback Charley Jer- asa tried a field goal from the 32 but hoisted a high pop-up which fell far short. 54 Yard March Minnesota, gunning for its sec- ond Big Ten triumph, shot out of its offensive doldrums with spo- radic marches, the most promising of which rolled 54 yards to the Wildcat one before Ken Bombar- dier fumbled and Northwestern's George Gondek recovered on the one. Minutes later another fumble, by sophomore Bob Blakley, stymied another Minnesota thrust, and the Cat's Frank Bennett recovered on the 17. A third Minnesota fumble, by Dave Lindblom, handed the Cats a glittering chance in the fourth period but Lindblom himself cut it short with a key fourth down tackle of Bob McKeiver on the Minnesota 25. Purdue 28, Notre Dame 14 SOUTH BEND, Ind. {})-Full- back Mel Dillard scored twice and generally terrorized Notre Dame's sophomoric defense with slashing runs yesterday to combine with Len Dawson's excellent quarter- backing in leading Purdue to a 28- 14 upset football victory. The Boilermakers, 7-point un- derdogs, surprised the Irish for the third time in the last five years with a devastating ground attack mixed with enough Dawson aerials to keep Notre Dame guess- ing and the capacity crowd of 58,- 000 yelling. Score in Each Quarter The Big Ten team scoring in every quarter-rolled up a 14-0 margin before the Irish tallied late in the second to trail 14-7 at half- time. Lightweight BICYCLES from$41 up Complete line of. ACCES- SORI ES and complete SERV- ICE department, for all makes. Introducing our R A 1 N - PROOF BOOK BAG. 49c KIDDIE KORNER Corner Main & Madison 4 Blocks from Campus Phone NO 8-7187 -Daily-haries Curti! PUNT RETURN-Michigan quarterback Jim Maddock is probably one of the few football players in history ever to catch a punt deep in his opponent's territory. Maddock caught the weak Army kick late in the third quarter on the Cadet 18-yd. line and returned it to the 3. Buckeyes, Hawkeyes Win; !1 i Spartans Trot By The Associated Press CHAMPAIGN, Ill. - Unbeaten Ohio State, the team which spurn- ed the forward pass, scored one touchdown on a pass and another on a fake pass, to launch its Big Ten title defense with a 26-6 vic- tory over error-smitted Illinois yesterday. In grinding to their 14th consec- utive conference triumph-one shy of Michigan's league mark-the Buckeyes chewed up their usual ground yardage, but needed an Illini fumble and a pass intercep- tion, to turn the tide. Quarterback Frank Ellwood, who completed two of the passes Ohio State tried, and halfback Jim Roseboro each scored two touch- downs as Ohio State hammered to its third victory of the season. The Buckeyes rolled to 282 yards rushing, 101 yards coming from hard-hitting Roseboro in 19 car- ries for a 5.3 average. Ohia State's 2 for 3 passing record was. good for only 29 yards, but included was a 14-yard touchdown toss. Iowa 13, Wisconsin 7 IOWA CITY, Iowa-Hard-hit- ting Iowa, aided by clever decep- tion, smashed down Wisconsin, 13- 7, yesterday in a wild, bruising Big Ten football game that had a near record crowd of 53,273 limp at the finish. Iowa beat back a late challenge by the aggressive Badgers who had gone into the fourth period trailing 13-0 after Iowa's stout de- fense had turned back three Wis- consin threats. Wisconsin, marking its confer- ence debut, finally scored mid- wa$ in the final period on a 23- yard flat pass play, Don Carlson to Eugene Melvin, and got the successful conversion from Glenn Bestor.I ance Hoosiers A five-minute electrical storm had doused the stadium with rain just before Iowa took off from its 16 yard line. There had been no damage from the storm, but Iowa's lightning-like t h r u s t s through the air cut through Wic- consin for a touchdown on eight plays. MSU 53, Indiana 6 EAST LANSING, Mich.-Michi- igan State added a brilliantly suc- cessful passing game to its brutal running attack and swamped In- diana 53-6 in a one-sided Big Ten football game yesterday. The Spartans used alternating backfields to jump to a 27-6 half- time lead and won running away before 58,858 homecoming fans, the largest crowd in Macklin Sta- dium history. MSU, No. 2 team in the country, had relied on sheer running strength to win its first two games against Indiana the Spartans opened up-passing on the first play and throughout the game. State outscored Indiana, which now has lost three in a row, three touchdowns to one in the first quarter ,added one in the second period and two more in the third and fourth quarters. Clarence Peaks, the versatile plunging and passing lefthalf, pro- vided the day's crowd-rouser with a 63-yard punt return touchdown, jolting off several would-be tack- lers on his way. Paid Political Advertisement HEAR MAYOR ALBERT E. Candidate For Governor MONDAY 8 P.M. IAnn Arbor is where Having a mature point of view is largely a matter of self confidence, and here Disney makes a definite contribution. You'll feel and look your confident best in aDisney Hat. The right hat always imparts confidence and Disney is always the right hat! Illustrated above: LUZERNE ... 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