THE MICHIGAN DAILY Iverines Point for 'No Count' Battle 4, U Tough, ays Fouts By FRED STEINHARDT "Indiana is a much better foot- ball team than their recor'd shows. We anticipate a tough football game." End Coach Jocko Nelson who scouted Indiana cautioned against overconfidence against a Hoosier team that has won only one game 'in seven starts. "We're playing our games one at a time," said Nelson. Michigan has reason to be wary. Indiana has ambushed the Wol- verines the last two years while they were looking ahead to the traditional closing game against Ohio State. Back In 1954 with a Rose Bowl bid pending on an up- set of top-ranked Ohio State, Michigan was unceremoniously, dumped by Indiana 13-9. Supposedly Better "Before the season, Indiana was actually supposed to be better than A they have been in recent years. But everything just went the wrong way. First came the one year suspension by the Big Ten for recruiting violations. Then a lot of their key players got hurt. Star back, Joe Maroon will probably be In his best shape of the year against us Saturday." Indiana started the season with a single wing offense but has shifted to the wing-T employed by Michigan. "They have run 100 per cent wing-T plays the last two games but we won't be surprised If they run some single wing plays against us,"a said Nelson. Best Back The Hoosiers' best back is prob- vably the diminutive Maroon (5'6", 160) who has a 5.1 rushing aver- age. He saw only limited action in the team's 36-7 loss to Ohio State. Don Cromer is a solid full- back who can double at left half. Up front Indiana boasts one of the outstanding ends in, the na- tion in Earl Faison. A pre-season All - America selection, Faison stands an awesome 6'5" and weighs 235. He is considered a top professloal prospect. Other top linemen are Moses Gray. 230, and Jim Haas, 235. "As usual we'll be outweighed in the line," remarked Nelson. "But it's nothing new for us." "Indiana is tough defensively, continued Nelson. "They play hard nosed football. Their game against Northwestern could have gone either way. It was tied 3-3 at halftime." These are the silver wings of a U. S. Air Force Navigator. As a flying officer on the Aerospace team, he has chosen a career of leadership, a career that has meaning, rewards and executive opportunity. The IAviation Cadet Program is the gateway to this career. To qualify for this rigorous and pro- fessional training, a high school diploma is required ;however, two or more years of college are highly desirable. Upon completion of the program the Air Force encourages the new officer to earn his degree so he can better handle the respon- sibilities of his position. This in- cludes full pay and allowances while taking off-duty courses un- der the Bootstrap education pro. gram. The Air Force will pay a substantial part of all tuition costs. 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Please send nee detailed. information oft the Raimey and Hood Hurt; To Miss Indiana Game By DAVE ANDREWS offense this week" behind starter Michigan's football team, seri- Denny Fitzgerald. ously involved in preparation for McNitt has seen only limited Saturday's "no count" battle with action of offense thus far this Indiana learned yesterday that year. He has carried the ball a halfbacks Dave Raimey and Ed mere 10 times for 34 yards and fHood will not play, but were a 3.4 average. However, in what cheered by the return of speed- may be a good sign, he has yet to ster Bennie McRae to uniform. be trapped for a loss. Following yesterday's long, wet The rest of the squad is in good session, Coach Bump Elliott stat-_health outside of the usual bumps ed that Raimey and Hood were and bruises, and all are expected considered, "definitely out" of the to play against Indiana. Indiana game. Both suffered ankle injuries in last week's 8-7 con- quest of Illinois. McRae, who also hurt an ankle, ran without a limp. The Injuries to Raimey and ' Hood have "pretty well depleted our right-halfback position," said 607 E. Liberty Street Elliott. Last week sophomore Jim (Next to Michigan Theatre) Ward was lost for the season with a knee injury. Hood had just gotten back into the lineup two weeks ago, as early in fall drills he suffered a broken jaw. With three of the top offensive men at the position gone, Elliott said that he would use defensive halfback Gary McNitt "more on -Qerald Ahronhein COME BACK BOY-Michigan's Captain Jerry Smith (51) hauls down Illinois' Mel Myers (17) after a short gain. Jon Schopf (76) comes up from behind to help out, Both are members of Line Coach Bob Hollway's "formidable five."' WOLVERINE DEFENSE: Linemen Small, But Capable By DAVE ANDREWS Although facing another weight disadvantage this week against Indiana, Michigan's defensive line will lose no sleep, for they have proved, against the best football I Minnesota In Big Bowl? Who Knows? MINNEAPOLIS )--Minnesota is not ready to make a decision on the Rose Bowl, but it has done nothing to discourage admiring glances by west coast football people. Gopher Athletic Director Ike Armstrong and Coach Murray Warmath have been swarmed by queries about Minnesota's bowl in- tentions in the wake of last week's victory over Iowa that made the Gophers number one in the na- tion. Neither in is an official posi- tion to act. Armstrong says the matter will have to come before appropriate faculty groups, and Warmath is doing no speculating. But he makes it clear he and the team want to play if they're in- vited. Faculty' spokesmen have de- clared there are logical grounds for reversal of Minnesota's tra- ditional opposition to the Big Ten getting involved in Rose Bowl pacts. When Minnesota voted against the Bowl in the past, they say, it was on the basis of Conference- wide involvement in the post-sea- son game. With the Big Ten no longer of- ficially connected with the bowl, any invitation would be extended specifically to the school. This, said Prof. Max Schultze, head of the school's Senate Committee on Intercollegiate Athletics, would represent an entirely different situation. In the past, recommendations by Schultze's committee have been upheld by the school's full senate group. But any action by the sen- ate, presumably, could be review- ed by the school's Board of Re- gents-which would not be likely to freeze Minnesota out of a game it has been trying to play for 14 years. teams in the country, that they can hold their own. Bearing the brunt of the at- tack are Line Coach Bob Holl- way's pride and joy, his own "Formidable Five," namely Paul Paulos, Captain Jerry Smith, Dick Syring, Tom Jobison, and Jon Schopf. "These guys come to play football," beamed Hollway. However, behind "the five," Hollway and Assistant Line Coach Jack Fouts have developed an- other top notch group in Bill Stine, Lee Hall, Tod Grant, Joe O'Donnell, and Guy Curtis. Repeatedly Responded This second line has repeatedly responded to the situation throughout the year. Much like last year's "Raiders," they have halted numerous enemy drives, besides being used as individual spot replacements for the first group. To offset the tremendous weight disadvantage, "We've tried to give the offense a different prob- lem every play," said Hollway. "By this I mean that we've cross charged, changed our spacings, and in general tried to do some- thing different every time to con- fuse the other guys." "Gerry Smith is our defensive quarterback, and he deserves a, lot of credit," said Hollway, "but it would be impossible, to single out any one guy as the key to our success." However, he did mention that Schopf had done a "tremendous job." Got Size "Jon's got the size," he said, "Look at Syring, all 183 or so pounds of him, he hides his weight from us," quipped Hollway. But in spite of the pounding the Michigan forward wall has taken in its games against bigger Michigan State, Minnesota, and Illinois, to name a few, the in- jury toll has been virtually non- existent. This Hollway attributes to the conditioning program during the first three weeks of practice. "We worked the boys harder this year than in any other fall I've been here," he said, "the whole bunch is in real good shape." Another part of the condition- ing program involved the installa- tion of a "defensive attitude." "We tried to get the squad to believe that they could be a good football team if they were a good defensive team," said Hollway. Anyway, whatever the reason has been, Michigan's defense has been the toughest in recent his- tory, allowing a mere 70 points in seven contests, which amounts to about a touchdown and a field goal per game. Ii 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. 111 I . % NEW STYLES FIRST AT WILD'S x OQualijfied to pass ever *. Sexamination This muted glen plaid suit calls for a toast with a stout tankard of ale... for it has such a jolly feeling ... while the English tab collar shirt, in fine fabrics leaves no room for debate The John Jay Hopkins Laboratory for Pure and Applied Science at General Dynamics' General Atomic Division in San Diego, California, is a modern center of research and development, where new ideas and techniques are vigorously pursued. 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