TUESDAY, OCTOBER 31,1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I TUSAOTOE 1 96 H IHIAMAL Schopf To N Shoulder Bruise Hits Tacide ToWeen Line Fur lther liss Duke Game; Hall Set bI V, S+ O d S b verines. Minnesota's Judge Dick- son recovered on the five and went over from the one on fourth down. Minnesota's two other touch- downs came when quarterback Sandy Stephens was hit twice just beyond the line of scrimmage but bulled through and went 63 yards. He was also successful running' the option around right end. On his 43-yd. pass to end John Campbell, Elliott explained, "He (Campbell) was covered, but he was just a step behind the defen- sive man. The pass had to be thrown perfectly. He (Campbell) wouldn't even have been able to break stride." Elliott was happy with the two- way work of Raimey and McRae, although he is reluctant to keep them in on defense so long because it takes too much out of them. 'Gridiron Problems Rose Poly's Loaded Q* .. r cz + r+nnn By DAVE GOOD" About the only thing that Coach. Bump Elliott can be thankful for , after Saturday's 23-20 loss to Minnesota is that tackle Jon Schopf and guard Lee Hall were , not hurt as seriously as first an- ticipated. Schopf, whose shoulder was first feared to. be fractured and then dislocated, came out of it with a deep bruise and slight separation and will probably miss the Duke game. A pre-season All-America can- didate, Schopf has been playing outstanding ball despite a linger- ing cold which has sapped his' energy. Which First After this, when Hall was car- ried off the field on a stretcher in the fourth quarter, Elliott was be- ginning to wonder if he was going to run out of interior linemen before he ran out. of games to play them in. As it turned out, Hall only had the wind knocked out of him and, as team physician A. W. Coxon, M.D., noted, "'Heould have walked off if they'd waited a few more minutes." Ken Tureaud's absence as de- fensive cornerman was unexpected. Stepped on in Tuesday's practice, Tureaud seemed to be all right until Saturday morning, when he could hardly walk. "He must have had some bleed- ing in the hamstring muscle (on his left calf) that we didn't know , about," explained Dr. Coxon. As if these setbacks weren't enough, Minnesota added insult. to injury by scoring the winner with 2:57 left in the game after recovering Bennie McRae's fumble on the Michigan five-yard line.' Elliott called the play, a slant over right tackle, because McRae had been so successful with it through the game. Elliott figured that the Wolverines would have to make one first down to run out the clock, and didn't think of running quarterback Dave Glinka or full- back Bill Tunnicliff up the middle. 50-Minute Man For McRae, who played over 50 minutes both ways, it was a frus- trating turn of events. "I thought I was gone," sighed McRae, who saw daylight after he cut up to the 15-yd. line. But he was hit from the blind side by halfback Tom Teigen, who came into the game with express orders from Coach Murray Warmath to watch for a play to his side. "He must have hit the ball," said McRae, "because I didn't feel it (the tackle) at all. I was so shook. after the tackle I didn't even see the b ll.": Which Way Did It Go? The ball shot out of McRae's grasp so hard that it squirted past, Dave Raimey and some other Wol- TERRE HAUTE Ind. W) - Rose Poly's football team is well along its eighth winless season' (not, happily, in succession). But it's a matter of slight con- cern to the management of this highly respected engineering col- lege, whose graduates have been hired to the last man in years when a high proportion of other new engineers were begging for work. No Recruiting Rose Polytechnic Institute, to give its full name, provides excel- lent athletic facilities for any- body who wants to use them. It does no recruiting, has no athletic scholarships and makes no allow- ance in its scholastic program for sports practice time. In short, it's death in the af- ternoon for coach Max Kidd, who took the head football Job three years ago after coaching four un- defeated high school teams in a long career at Brazil and Bick- nell, Ind. End of World "Every Saturday is like the end of the world," he says. "I have a squad of 20 men, only one weighing 200 pounds. The last two games, 15 of them have been able bodied. We lost our last quarterback a couple of games back and had to shift from the wing-T to the single wing. "There are seven or eight fine football players on the campus who were regulars one or two years ago and then had to give up football because their grades be- gan to slip. There are other good ones who never even have come out for football. "I could pick a team off the campus, give it three days prac- tice, and lick our varsity as bad as other colleges have been doing," Kidd asserts. The lickings have been 70-0, 58-0, 61-0, 52-6, 48-0 and last Saturday, by Earlham, 80-0. The one touchdown, against Concor- dia of River Forest Ill., was a pass from Don McNally to Ed Zaeg- lein. Duke Coach Gives Credit Fat Weaver, National College Queen What makes Artearved Diamonds the DURHAM ('--Duke Coach Bill favorite of America's College Queensi Murray hopes the solid defense his Blue Devils showed against North Carolina State will hold for the Actually there are many reasons. Artcarved diamond rings Michigan game at Ann Arbor, Sat- must meet traditionally high standards for color, cut, clarity urday. and carat weight. Their award-winning styles are a delight "It has been a long time since to the eye. And, they take all of the guesswork out of buying we have credited our defense with a diamond. Every Artcarved ring carries a written guarantee stopping the opposition nine times for quality and permanent value that's recognized and re- during a game,'' Murray told his spected by fine jewelers from coast to coast. We think you'll weekly press luncheon yesterday. agree with America's lovely College Queens. He noted that the Blue Devil line Stop in at your jeweler and be sure to see all the exquisite a 17-6 victory over the Wolf pack. Artcarved diamond rings-the rings you buy with confidence "We were especially pleased that and wear with pride. we had no disabling injuries in NATIONALLY ADVERTISED IN this game as we did a week ago AMERICA'S LEADING MAGAZINES against Clemson," he said. Murray also noted that it wastcar7Ye Duker best running game of the season. The Blue Devils piled up 254 yards, despite the fact that DIt A M O N D A N D WEDDING RINGS State played one of its best de- fensive games. Duke end coach Marty Pierson7 218 E. 45th St., New York 17, N.Y. termed Michigan the biggest t~an Please send me more facts about diamond rings and Duke will play all season, averag- "wedding Guide for Bride and Groom." Also name ing 224-lbs. per man in the line. of nearest (or hometown) Artcarved Jeweler. I am He said the Wolverines have the enclosing 100 to cover handling and postage. two best halfbacks and fullback Name that the Blue Devils will meet. Address_________________ Pierson had a word of hope, however: EVENING STAF2 City Cpunty or Zone "Basically, they are not real First choice of State_ complicated in what they do. They America's College Queens do a few things and make them work to perfection. They do not pass as much as they did last year, but they do not need to throw as much because of their size Read and Use Michigan Daily Classifieds and their strong running game."' GRiD ISELECTIONS Sigh! For the 22nd consecutive football weekend a rank amateur has somehow managed to pick more games right in the grid picks than a member of the expert seers of the Daily sports staff. Imagine that! Not since the first weekend of the 1959 season when the now departed Tom Witecki (last year's sports editor) managed a 16-4 record has a member of the staff won the whole campus show. It's not the silly tickets that matter, it's the glory. Dave Good, a rookie picker this year, managed a 15-5 week to tie on the first week, but this is small compensation. Thsi week's meanie is Harry Smith, '64LSA, of 715 Hill St. And yes, the dirty rat picked Minnesota to help him to a 17-3 score. His only misses came on the Kentucky, Maryland and Wash- ington upsets. He's human anyway. Anybody who wants to take his turn at beating the experts, bring or send your choices to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard. The prize Is still the same-two free tickets to the Michigan Theater, now showing "Backstreet." One thing for sure, don't copy any of the staff picks, if you want to win. THIS WEEK'S GAMES -AP Wirephoto THE ONE THAT GOT AWAY-Wolverine halfbacks Bennie McRae and Dave Raimey try in vain to recover the loose pig- skin which had been Jarred loose from McRae's grasp by Min- nesota's Tom Teigen in the waning minutes of Saturday's game. Judge Dickson, Gopher fullback, finally recovered the fumble and four plays later scored the game's winning touchdown. 'M' DROPS OUT: Michigan gState Tops AP Poll By The Associated Press Michigan's 23-20 defeat at the hands of Minnesota Saturday dropped the Wolverines from this week's .Associated Press poll of the nation's top grid powers. For the third straight week Michigan State was placed into the top slot, piling up a wide margin over second-place Missis- sippi in first place votes. This Saturday the Spartans, who have scored 131 points while giving up only ten, place their 5-0 record on the line in a Big Ten Conference clash with re- surgent Minnesota, last year's Na- tional Champions who Just missed climbing into the top ten in the latest rankings. The Gophers are now ranked 11th with hopes for better things. Texas and Alabama followed in third and fourth positions, the same as last week, but Ohio State moved into fifth place when Iowa's 9-0 defeat by Purdue dropped them to ninth. There was a shuffling among the last five teams, but the only realy change saw Notre Dame, beaten by Northwestern, 12-10, drop out of the top ten to be re- placed by Missouri. The top teams, with season rec- ords and first-place votes in paren- theses, points figured on *a 10, 9, 8, 7, etc. basis: 1. Michigan State (31) (5-0) 437 2. Mississippi (8) (6-0) 407 3. Texas (6) (6-0) 383 4. Alabama (2) (6-0) 325 5. Ohio State (4-0-1) 267 6., 7. 8. 9. 10. Lousiana State (5-1) Georgia Tech (5-1) Colorado (6-0) Iowa (4-1) Missouri (5-0-1) 199 153 142 83 65 Min- Others receiving votes: nesota, Notre Dame, Purdue, Utah State Northwestern, Kansas, Penn State, Auburn, Syracuse, Rutgers, Wyoming and Arkansas. 1. Duke .at MICHIGAN (score) 2. California at UCLA 3. Columbia at Cornell 4. Florida at Georgia Tech 5. Indiana at Northwestern 6. Iowa at Ohio Satte 7. Michigan State at Minnesota 8. Mississippi at Louisiana State 9. Missouri at Colorado 10. Navy at Notre Dame 11. Oklahoma at Kansas State 12. Oregon at Stanford 13. Penn State at Maryland 14. Pittsburgh at Syracuse 15. Purdue at Illinois 16. Rice at Texas Tech 17. Southern California at Wash- ington' 18. Tennessee at North Carolina 19. Texas A & M at Arkansas 20. Texas Christian at Baylor - ----------- - ---------- .......... CONTRO ORDERS FR NOW GIANT OIL L SYSTEMS: tOM A COMPUTER V CONTROL REFINERY UNIT. ~k i . 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