PAGE SIX TAE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1961 PAGE SIX TINE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1961 I Wolverines Clash with Highly-Rated Boilerm akers M 4 Expect 62,000 for Homecoming Game: Raimey Fully Recovered from Hip Injury REVENGE AT FERRY FIELD: Michigan Reserves Top MSU> r (Continued from Page 1) Michigan has already lost two right guards for the season in Lou Pavloff and Del Nolan witth regu- lar Joe O'Donnell out indefinitely. .The other Wolverines should be in top physical shape with half- back Dave Raimey ready to run at full speed after being slowed PURDUE MICHIGAN Elwell ....LE......Maentz Brumm ..... LT.. Houtman Sezurek ..... LG ........ Hall Pehanna ..... C....... Grant -Krysinski ..RG ...... Kurtz Russ ..... .RT...,... Schopf Farmer ..... RE ..,..... Mans DiGravio ... QB ...... Giinka Boris .......LH.... , McRae Miller ...... RH..... Raimey Walker ..... FB... Tunniliff ,down last week by a hip injury. Dave Glinka will be at his usual quarterback spot for the thir- teenth straight game, directing Bennie McRae, Bill Tunnicliff and Raimey. 4f he decides to go to the air against, Purdue's heretofore weak: pass defense,." ends Scott Maentz and George Mans will be Titans Sunk As Middies4 Win, t3-7-19 DETROIT MA')- Navy, seizing and losing a quick 13-point lead, overcame Detroit's Jerry Gross to Larry Vargo passing tandem last night with three fourth quarter touchdowns that produced a 37- 19 comeback victory. It was Navy's own passing game, led by Ron Klemick, plus Greg Mather's field goal kicking that put the boot to the stubborn, air- minded Titans. Mather booted three field goals that kept Navy in the game until its winning strike five minutes aft- ~er Detroit had gone ahead late in the third period. The placekicking specialist also booted four extra points. Detroit, tense at the start in its bid to gain national prestige, went ahead after trailing 13-0 in 20 minutes. Gross, number two among the nation's total offense leaders, cap- tivated the 31,279 fans in Tiger Stadium with his passing. He hit Vargo with three scoring passes of 6, 10 anid 26 yards. The touchdown that won it for the Middies was a 27-yarder from Klemick to halfback Carl Fink. Navy quickly added two more scores, one on Klemick's 25-yard pass to--Gary Kellner. his receivers. Strong armed Bob Chandler may also get a chance to test the Purdue secondary with his passes. All over Field Other players showing up ex- ceptionally well last week were linebacker John Walker who was all over the field, tackle Robert Lovell, ends Jeff Smith and Dave Mongeau, and reserve quarterback Tom Pritchard who looked good on both offense and defense. With the Wolverines realizing the comeback assignment before them, the morale has been sur- prisingly good after last week's disappointment. "The boys are looking to come back," Elliott said and he probably could have added that it's like starting a new sea- son. Purdue Has Incentive Purdue is not without its incen- tives, Homecoming notwithstand- ing. Not only are they behind, 12-2, in the all-time series with Michigan dating back to 1890, but head coach Jack Mollenkopf is recovering from an operation. The Boilermakers will want to win it for their coach, while assistant Bob DeMoss runs the team in his absence. The last time Purdue beat Mich- igan was way back in 1929, 30-16. The Wolverines won the last con- test in 1951, 21-10, and would like to start again right from where they left off. Want Redemption The fans could be treated to an explosive Michigan attack, finally achieving the potential forecast for them as early as last year. The players want nothing more than to, redeem 'themselves, especially in front of the old grads. Michi- gan is also ranked as a seven- point favorite and a defeat today could elicit quite a few howls from the alumni wolves. There will thus be more than the forecasted 62,000 fans paying attention to what goes on at the Stadium this after- noon. -Fred Shippey IN TOP SHAPE - Right halfback Dave Raimey drives alone through Michigan State tacklers in last week's game. Raimey is fully recovered from a bruised hip and will be in top condition for today's game. By TOM WEBBER Revenge-sweet revenge. Or at least a very small part of it as the Michigan reserves scored two touchdowns in the final quar-1 ter to edge its Michigan State counterparts, 14-12. Although for a while (hike the7 first three quarters) it looked like" that horrible Saturday all over again. Yep, you guessed it- Michigan fumbled on its first play from scrimmage and the Spartans recovered on the Wolverine 36- yard line. This 'time, however,, someone forgot to follow the script as Michigan State returned the compliment by fumbling after driving down to the Michigan eight. Controlled Game This apparently failed to daunt these Spartan reserves, who for three quarters played like the num- ber six team in the nation, as they completely controlled the game and had a 12-0 lead until Michi- gan's Bill Dodd came onto the scene shortly before the end of the third quarter. All he did was recover a Spartan fumble on the Michigan State 25, catch a pass to the four, bulled over in two plays and kicked the extra point. Then, half way through the fourth period, he gathered in a fiat pass from quarterback Bill Dougall and sprinted down the right side- lines for 30 yards and the winning score. He added the extra point for the final margin and later intercepted a pass on the Michigan goal line in the waning minutes to protect the margin. Takes Luck Even with all that though, it took a dubious Spartan call and some good old Irish luck (please note. Notre Dame) to pull off the victory at the old Ferry Field- Stadium, where Michigan used to beat that other team once in a while. The Spartans took the kickoff after Dodd's second touchdown and proceeded to move briskly down to the Michigan 23-yard line, partly with the help of a pass in- terference penalty. Faced with a third and one on the Wolverine 14, Spartan quarter- back Doug Miller, who had thrown for both Spartan TDs, mysterious- ly called for a pass play and was trapped for a 15-yard loss. Ron Spacht intercepted Miller's next pass attempt on his own 11 and ended that threat. Dodd Intercepts Then after Michigan was forced to punt, two Miller completions and a first down run by work- horse John Sharp had brought the Spartans back to the Michigan 39. Here Miller stepped back and launched a long aerial to Begany, who was open in the end zone. Begany politely dropped the pass and Dodd's interception saved' the win.f And the sweet strains of "The Victors" floated faintly over the stadium from its source on the band practice field. V Big Ten Games To Settle MSU Status BILL DODD ... scores everything i BY TOM WEBBER Imagine, a four-way tie for first place in a ten-team league. Don't laugh, it can happen this week if Iowa, Ohio State and Minnesota come through with vic- tories to remain undefeated with identical 2-0 Big Ten records. They would join Michigan State who plays Notre Dame at the top of the heap. (Purdue can make it a five team tie if it, beats Michigan, but we won't consider that possibility.) Hosts Washington State In another game, Indiana (yes, they're still in the Big Ten) hosts Washington State in a non-con- ference tilt. Iowa will possibly have the toughest fight on its hands as Wisconsin's pass-happy Badgers provide the opposition. The Hawk- eyes have shown weaknesses on defense and are still missing Larry Ferguson and Wilburn Hol- lis. The Badgers don't have. much of a running attack, but they have Ron Miller and Pat. Richter for an aerial game and than~ may prove to be enough. An upset would seriously hamper Iowa's title bid. Nothing Is Certain In Evanston, Northwestern's Wildcats must face up to the rumor that in the Big Ten no- thing is certain but 'death and Woody Hayes. The Buckeyes' Bob Ferguson is not injured, but Northwestern will probably wish he was. Bill Swingle is the Wildcat counter-attack at fullback, but it V usually takes more than a single Swingle to buck the Bucks. But then, the Wildcats have Bob Eich- koff (I-coff), and he's nothing to sneeze at. Some people thought that may- be Ohio State wasn't really very good when it was tied by TCU and barely beat UCLA. Sceptics discovered last week that Woody doesn't fool around in the Big Ten. Gophers At Illinois Minnesota, a throwback to pre- historic football days, sends its denfense against lowly Illinois. Illinois is the team that started the season with all sophomores, had them injured, and is starting all over again with more sopho- mores. They were the victims of last week's 44-0 licking by Ohio State. Illini coach Pete Elliott can take consolation in the fact that the Gophers haven't scored 44 points since Michigan last beat Michi- gan State (and boy if you don't think that's a long time, just ask his brother). At any rate this may be Min- nesota's last chance to be in first place, and they usually manage a touchdown or two a game. The team already in first place, Michigan State, can rest easy on that score, since it plays a non- conference contests. And this week it's supposed to be a con- test. The battle boils down to one of Spartan power vs. Irish luck, with Michigan State defending its number one ranking. And since Duffy Daugherty is Irish too, Notre Dame may not have a mo- nopoly in that department. The word from the Golden Dome is that Notre Dame is re- surging back into national promin- ence. Only trouble is that Michi- gan State has always been there. Hoosiers Can't Tie And last but not least, Indiana; can't tie for the Big Ten lead since it plays a non-conference affair. And besides it hasn't won a Big Ten game yet. The Hoosiers can Just never seem to win. Washington State has been billed as a good passing attack all Year and Indiana ac- tully came up with a good pas defense, holding Miller to five completions in last week's game. So what happens? Washington State sudenly comes up with a pulverizing running attack. It's the kind of thing which makes coaches turn to farming. DYNAKIT Full Line at Hi Fi and T.V. Center i. ~.......... Y.. . I SPORTS SHORTS: Wilt Breaks Own Mark; Mollenkopf Recovering ANNUAL OCTOBER PIPE SALE -EVERYTHING FOR THE PIPE SMOKER- P i C N E 1217 So. University *1 HI Fl and T.V. CENTER Across from H i ll Aud. MAKE NO MISTAKES THIS IS THE SPOT FOR HI-Fl I By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA-Wilt Cham- berlain last night broke his own convention hall scoring record by pouring in 57 points to lead the Philadelphia Warriors to a 122-115 home opening National Basketball Association victory over the Los ,Angeles Lakers. Southwest Conference Clashes In National Gridiron. Spotlight By GEORGE WANSTALL The powerful Southwestern Con- ference is in the spotlight this week with the powerful Texas Longhorns in the forefront. Texas, one of the stalwarts in conference play, owning a 4-0 record this season and the third ranking in national polls, has three of its victories against Cali- fornia, Washmington State and Oklahoma. One associates the Longhorns with these games against the name teams in the country and with their perform- ance in the Cotton Bowl of past years. Defends Record This week Texas defends its 1-0 conference record against the tough Razorbacks of Arkansas, a stiff conference competitor. Ar- Caches Pick 'Iwo 'M' Stars Michigan captain George Mans and fullback Bill Tunnicliff were among 76 players nominated for the All - America team of the American Football Coaches Associ- ation on the basis of a three-game ballot. Voting by the more than 2,000 coaches was based on individual performances in the first three games of the season. After the next three games another vote will be taken. Final selections for the u kansas after dropping its opener to Ole Miss, recovered to whip Tulsa, Texas Christian, and Bay- lor. The latter two are conference members also, giving the Razor- backs an unblemished record to carry into today's league tilt. Opened Strong Speaking of TCU, they opened the season with a stunning upset of Kansas, one of the pre-season picks for national champion. The next week they hung on to tie powerful Ohio State, another of the country's top powers. This week they take a 1-1 league record into a tilt with Texas A&M, also cherishing a 1-0 record. Host Winless Tech Baylor, one of the conference stalwarts and another national power, hosts winless Texas Tech. The Bears are still looking for their first conference win also, having been tripped by powerful Arkansas last week. Rounding out today's full slate of conference action, highly- touted Rice takes on Southern Methodist. The Owls, rated up in nearly all pre-season polls, were dumped by a ,surprisingly powerful Georgia Tech team in their open- er, but since then have managed to live up to expectations. Conference Has Power No one can dispute the power in this conference. Texas, TCU, Rice and Baylor, all proudly possessing national respect. Other top games in the South today ,feature Alabama at Ten- ranked rating to defend against the unpredictable Volunteers. The surprising Engineers of Georgia Tech take an eighth-rated team to Auburn to encounter their Southeast Conference rival. Traditional Rivalry In the East the top game will be the traditional Syracuse - Penn State game. In another game, Dartmouth, one of the top teams in the country defensively, takes on spoiler Holy Cross. No matter how good the Big Green seem to be each year, they find more than a match with Holy Cross-a tough one to pick. Rounding out the games to watch today will be Duke at Clem- son, UCLA at Pitt, Kansas at Oklahoma, and LSU at Kentucky. Despite Wilt's work, it was an 11-point splurge in the first two minutes of the final period that actually won the game for the Warriors. After leading most of the first three periods, Philadel- phia saw a 12-point margin sliced to two in the last 61/2 minutes of the third period. The Warriors opened the final period with seven quick-handed steals and driving layup shots, scoreing 11 points before the Lak- ers broke the streak. It ROCHESTER, Minn.-The con- dition of Purdue Coach Jack Mol- lenkopf remains good and he like- ly will be able to return to the helm of the Boilermaker football team in two to three weeks, a hospital spokesman reported yes- terday.- The coach was scheduled to have his first post-operative exer- cise later today, but will remain in the hospital for about a week. Suspension Lifted PHILADELPHIA-The Pennsyl- vania State Athletic Commission yesterday lifted the suspension of heavyweight contender Sonny Lis- ton. He had been bar~red indefinitely from fighting last July for two run-ins with police. Liston later was cleared in court. L UCKY STRIKE/ presents: "There seems to be some dissension on the squad QACY ---- --------- "0001- IQ "THE. FOOTBALL TEAM"f I 6 Used Bikes' "Do you think "Sothat'swhy the . . tecoach would g'et alhmCayLg" mad if weputed... on first down?" ...:.. :. :. ..:.:.::.. . . A .l I I