PAGE SIX 'E'" 7N TtgTTr_ ,k N 1M A n V _,,.w.. .. ... ..,...... _._...... .. 'AGE IX PUWUP ilWE1WVEsA PT WhA WW Y SUNDAY, OCTOIER 21,1956 M' Shows Powerful Offense in Beating 4s Collegve F'ootball lRounidup ___~: Big Ten *MICHIGAN 34, Northwestern 20 *Michigan State 47, Notre Dame 14 *Penn State 7, Ohio State 6 Iowa 34, Hawaii 0 *Purdue 6, Wisconsin 6 (tie) *Minnesota 16, Illinois 13 *Indiana 19, Nebraska 14 * * * East Virginia 24, Lehigh 12 Navy 13, Cincinnati 7 Yale 25, Cornell 7 *Columbia 26, Harvard 20 *Penn 14, Brown 7 *Syracuse 7, Army 0 *Pittsburgh 27, Duke 14 Boston College 32, Rutgers 0 Holy Cross 7, Dartmouth 7 (tie) Princeton 28, Colgate 20 South Florida 21, Vanderbilt 7. *Tennessee 24, Alabama 0 Mississippi St. 19, Arkansas St. 9 Wake Forest 14, Fla. St. 14 (tie) North Carolina 34, Maryland 6 *Georgia Tech 28, Auburn 7 West Va. 20, William & Mary *Kentucky 14, Louisiana State *Tulane 10, Mississippi 3 NU's Lightning Offense Harrasses olverines (Continued from Page 1) E r M ~: } 4 _ .: 2 'u ''7 : ::: \ vi ildcats th e . ..Mm"e M11 WITH DAVE GREY - .i .'. + { . : i 4 1 :s :Y"' . i'.. . ..: ti i : 13 0 * * * Southwest *Texas A&M 7, Texas Christian 8' *Southern Methodist 14, Rice 13 *Arkansas 32, Texas 14 Ariz. St. 26, Hardin Simmons 13 w * * Midwest Oklahoma 34, Kansas 12 Colorado 52, Iowa State 0 Houston 12, Oklahoma A&M 0 Tulsa 3, Detroit 0 Wayne 28, Case 7 * * * Far West *UCLA 34, California 20 *Stanford 21, Oregon 7 Oregon St. 21, Washington St. 0 Wyoming 30, Utah 20 Montana 21, Brigham Young 14 *Southern Cal. 35, Washington 7 Utah State 46, Colorado A&M 7 Montana State 26, Idaho State 6 AF Academy 49, Colorado Mines 6 -Daily-Dick Gaskill SHIFTY JIM PACE is shoved out of bounds by Northwestern's George Gondek after returning a punt to the Michigan 20 yard line in the third quarter. Coming up to assist is Bob McKiever (46). Northwestern 48. Then on a suc- cession of five short gains by Barr, Pacea nd Herrnstein, the Wolver- ines moved the ball to the 17. Herrnstein Finds Opening On the next play Herrnstein found a hole at left tackle and bulled his way over for the score, but Kramer's only conversion fail- ure of the day left his team behind by a point at 10:12 of the period. Exactly four minutes later the deficit was completely erased when Ptacek connected on a 15-yd. aerial to Maddock who slid into the end zone with a tackler at his heels. The touchdown drive had begun seven plays earlier on the Wild- cat 36 where Ed Shannon recover- ed fullback Charlie Jerasa's fum- ble. After a Northwestern drive stall- ed on the Michigan 30 midway through the second period, the Wolverines struck back quickly to stretch their lead to 20-7. A key play in the touchdown march came when Pace fell on a fumble for a seven-yard loss at the Wildcat 23, but end Stan Dwyer piled on Pace and drew a 15-yd. roughness penalty against Northwestern which brought the ball to the eight. Finally, on fourth down Ierrn- stein plunged in from the one for the touchdown. Squads Exchange Touchdowns The squads exchanged another pair of touchdowns before half- time to increase the score to 27-. .13. Barr and Kramer combined for the Wolverine six-pointer on a 16- Statistics HI-F ISTUDIO 1317 South University Complete Stock of Hi-Fi Complements AMPLIFIERS AM & FM Tuner Kits HEATH KITS DYNA KITS ARKAY KITS Electro-Voice Speaker Enclosure Kits AT AUDIO-FILE NET or CATALOGUE PRICES MENDYK RUNS WILD: Spartans Crush Notre Dame, 47-14 SOUTH BEND, Ind (W)-Dennis Mendyk, bursting 62 and 68-yards on touchdown runs, yesterday fea- tured unbeaten Michigan State's production line use of three sets of backs in overwhelming Notre Dame's worn-down football forces, 47-14. , In pumping more points against the Irish than at any time sincet the series was inaugurated in 1897, the No. 2 ranking Spartans blastedt six touchdowns in the second halft after the teams had battled to a 7-7 halftime standstill.1 The key play came in the firstx two and a half minutes of the1 third period when Mendyk, 183- lb. senior left half from St.Charles3 streaked 62 yards on a quickl opener. John Matsko booted the firstt of his three extra points and the Spartans were off to their greatest victory over the Irish since blank- ing them 35-0 in 1951. Four of Five The triumph before an over- flowing throng of 59,378 fans, was MSU's fourth over the Irish in their last five meetings and gave Coach Terry Brennan's young team its third loss in four starts this season. Jim Ninowski, junior quarter- back, herded MSU into a 21-7 bulge midway in the third period by hitting three straight passes for 55 yards. The drive carried 83 yards in 14 plays with Don Gil- bert ramming the last three. At the outset of the last quar- ter, Clarence Peaks drilled over from the two to complete a romp that included sophomore Mike Panitch's 49-yard punt return and then a catch of Mendyk's 16-yard pass. Three more sensational scoring jaunts soon followed. First Mendyk barreled 68 yards to paydirt, then end Larry Harding stole a Paul Horning pass and raced 28 yards into the end zone. Arend 'Ends Scoring Don Arend, sophomore fullback ended the Michigan State scoring with a 65 yard scamper. Both teams scored in the second quarter. The Irish scored first on a drive which carried 83 yards in 12 plays. Frank Reynolds scored from the Spartan five to give the Irish a brief 7-0 lead. yd. pass play. It was the first of three phenomenal leaping catches for Kramer who pulled the ball down deep in the end zone. Besides Michigan's one second half touchdown -- a Herrnstein one-yard plunge climaxing a 73- yd. march-the Wolverines threat- ened twice to pile up an even greater margin over the battling Wildcats. . A 79-yd. drive in the third quarter came to a halt on the one- foot line of Northwestern and a desparate 68-yd. thrust ended when time ran out in the- final period with Maddock on the three- yard line after catching a 20-yd. pass from Ptacek. In individual statistics, Barr led Michigan by accounting for 111 yards on 13 rushes and one com- pleted pass. Pace gained 65 yards and Herrnstein picked up 62 on 15 runs apiece. Ptacek led the passers with four completions in five tries, while Maddock and Kramer were credit- ed with two receptions to head that department. Texas A&M, Upsets TCU COLLEGE STATION, Tex ()- Little Don Watson, who beat Texas Christian last year with a 51-yard1 run, clattered down shadowy rain- swept sidelines to set up a touch- down yesterday, and it brought Texas A&M an upset 7-6 victory in the biggest game of Southwest Conference football. Texas Christian's mighty Frogs had virtually camped on the Aggie goal line for three periods and were leading 6-0 when Watson electrified the crowd of 42,000 thatx sat huddled under umbrellas and raincoats with a 26-yard dash1 that set the ball on the Frog 31.1 John Crow hammered right end down to the TCU seven, then Wat- son passed to Crow on the 1-yard line and the score was tied. Out came Lloyd (CQ) Taylor to kick the extra point and Texas A&M had felled the nation's No.c 4 team and surged into the favo-t rite's spot in the Southwest Con- ference race. Part of the game was played in a driving rain and winds that ap- proximated 90 miles per hour. . A Rough, hiteresti]g Day For a game that wasn't supposed to be a "real thriller", there cer- tainly was a lot of drama and excitement. It was one of the roughest, wettest, and offensive-laden games seen in the Michigan Stadium in a long time. There was little doubt in peoples' minds-including Coaches Bennie Oosterbaan and Ara Parseghian-that Michigan was definitely the master but that North- western put up an impressive fight. "I feel we did quite well against a very good team," said a tired Parseghian after the game in the dressing room. It was a frustrating afternoon for the coach in his first Big Ten year as one by one his players fell with injuries. At least 10 of the Wildcats were forced to the sidelines. Despe- rate lack of manpower forced some back into play only to have to leave again. Despite Michigan's winning effort, the show was obviously stolen by the Northwestern junior halfback Bob McKeiver, 23 yrs.-old, 5' 7", 162 lbs. Oosterbaan was among the standing applauding crowd that honored the shifty speedster, when he finally left the game via the injury route. McKeiver carried the ball eight times for 44 yards net, caught five passes for 100 yards, and punted three times for an average of 47 yards. But Michigan was equally im- :Y .. pressive. Parseghian commented, 4 _ "We were caught completely un- prepared for some of Michigan's plays; we hadn't seen them be- fore." The Blue has spent a great deal of time all fall, however with new patterns. They showed yester- day to advantage-the shift left, the greater use of the quarterback option play, the bullet pass into": the flat and its faking companion. The Wolverines were for the third time this season, a devastat- ing offensive threat, not only in running but also again in passing. "John Herrnstein, Jim Pace, and Terry Barr are the finest running backfield I have seen . ..Pae was very good, and Kramier-yours:,:; > can't cope with a guy who all you--Daily-Dick Gaskil have to do is throw the ball out BOB McKEIVERI in the air somewhere," summa- . Bub yoKe rb a rized the Northwestern coach. applauded by Oosterbaan Superlatives were the only way one could describe the three leaping catches the big end made (one was called back). "He's proved himself a true All-American," commented Oosterbaan with a smile afterwards. S * * * 3 * 4 NUT First downs ........ 12 Rushing yardage ... 200 Passing yardage .... 162 Passes ..............8-11 Passes intercepted by 1 Punts...............3-47 Fumbles lost ........ 3 Yards penalized ..... 60 M 25 283 156 7-10 0 2-29 0 40 1 "KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR" Try our COLLEGIAN STYLES * NO WAITING " 11 BARBERS The Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theater A Few Successful Repeats. .. Last week, the Wolverines repeated the touchdown reverse run and pass from Barr to Kramer that had scored against UCLA; yester- day there was the repeat of the pass from the left halfback to the quarterback--Ptacek to Jim Maddock for a touchdown again. Like Army, Northwestern seemed able to diagnose some of Michigan's plays but still were unable to stop them. The Wildcate, however, were able to stop Michigan to a degree in the second half by switching its defense from a six to a seven-man line. Sloppy tackling did hurt the losers, and it was also noticeable in the winner's defense. All afternoon minor blocking and tackling mis- takes were noticeable, that helped make the score closer than it might have been., So like the weather, yesterday's game will long be remembered as a colorful combination of darkness and sunshine with enough of the latter to reinforce the thought that 1956 is an explosive "new type" of Michigan football year. I s . ------- - - - . PICTURE FRAMES 1 1 r 1 1 ' N, Complete Stock of all Sizes & Styles, Finished & Unfinished $1.00 and Up Art Supplies of All Kinds One Group of Close Outs ... off WAHR'S University Bookstore 0 U 101 l MALAGA THE.DISTINGUISHED AUA~ CURED BRIAR PIPE GUARANTEED AGAINST TONGUE-BITING 6SOGGINESS OR WET-HEEL The Secret Is In The Curing $500 *750 $1000 LIGHT IN WEIGHT, GRACEFUL IN BAL- ANCE, EXQUISITE IN - GRAIN, EXCELLENT IN WORKMANSHIP, UNSUR- PASSED IN ITS SMOKING QUALITY. WE RECOMMEND THE "MA LA G A" AND INVITE YOUR INSPECTION. THE ,PIPE CENTER 118 E. 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