THE MICHIG~AN D AILY I' Gridders Depend on Unknown Senior PRO FRATERNITY SEMIFINALS: PDP Nips Nu Sigma Nu, 2-0 By TOM WEBBEt Ever hear of Bill Dougall? You probably haven't, unless you're on the football team or in the same fraternity. Nobody else has. His picture isn't sent out with the other football publicity shots. His name never reaches the pa- pers. His picture isn't in the Mich- igan Gridiron Guide. Nobody sec- ond guesses his play calling. No- body worries much if he's in- jured. He's never traveled with the team. Red-shirt The reason is that Dougall is what is commonly known as a red-shirt. He's a'fifth string quar- terback and a senior at that. What's more he's been a fifth string quarterback or worse for three years now. He's only gotten into' two games in his entire Michigan football ca- reer. You probably missed those performances, while heading for the exit. They occurred in the Ar- my and UCLA routs: . Last Chancej Tomorrow will probably be his last chance to play for Michigan, and then only if it turns out like last year's Duke game. It's not likely that Bump Elliott will be able to empty the bench against either Iowa or Ohio State. All this and yet Dougall is a very valuable asset to the team. For three years, you see, he's been the man who runs the opposition's offense against the varsity to pre- pare them for the Saturday con- flict. Captain George Mans expressed how important it was to have the reserves present a good simile of the other offense. "Bill and the other guys do a good job of get- ting us ready for Saturday," he added. Naturally the reserves have to do more than just go through the motions of the offense. They've got to have spirit, and this is where Dougall, or Dougs as his team- mates call him, fits in. Good Leadership ,,we think it's important to have good leadership on the re- serves, and Dougall and (Jim)7 Zubkus (another senior red-shirt)a provide that," said backfield coach Hank Fonde. Dougall's thinking seems to1 support this. "We try like hell to beat the varsity whenever we can," he said. And indeed casual ob- servers at the practice field have asked if "that fellow" was the first string quarterback. It was only Bill Dougall completing pass after pass against the varsity de- fense. The red-shirts have so much spirit that they have even formed their own club-the Red-shirt Club. "We have our own cards and hold our own banquet at the end of the year. Paul Schmidt (a giant senior tackle) and I are unoffi- cial co-captains." Split Personality Actually "Dougs" has been something of a multiple person- ality in his role as a reserve. For three years now he has been such stars as Tom Matte, Ron Miller, Dick Thornton, Sandy Stephens, Ron DiGravio, Dean Look, Dick Eckert, and, this week, Walt Rap- pold. "I- watch the game films close and try to look as much like them as possible," he said. To make it even more convincing, he wears the same number of the quarter- back in practice. Of all the offenses he has run, Dougall said he liked last year's Ohio State offense the best. "The quarterback gets to run a lot, and I like to run.", He does a pretty good job of passing too, with Zubkus, known as "Zub," being his favorite re- ceiver. Offense Expert Dougall has been at his spe- cialty so long hat he has become something more than an expert on the various offenses. He admits to knowing more about the other offenses than Michigan's own wing-T, which he runs so little. He also admits to drawing plays on scrap paper in his spare time. "I've seen that guy just sit down and start drawing plays for fun," Dick Asel, senior football manager, said. The big question is why should a quarterback who could probably be playing first or second string at a smaller school, come to Mich- igan-and worse yet, stay out for the team for three years knowing he wasn't going anywhere. Big Time The former Redford High quar- terback from Detroit answered that it was "mostly because of my father," who was an 'M' man. "I figured if I wanted to play, I might as well try for the big time. If I had it to do over again, I'd probably do the same thing." Tis hope of being a high school coach answers why he stayed out all these years. "I figure that I learn something every day, and, if I'm going to cocah, the more I know the better." An education major, he hopes to start his coaching career at Uni- versity of Michigan High School as an assistant coach. Wing-T Best Out of all the offenses he has run and knows best, he picks the wing-T as the best. "It's easy to teach and has good deception and power," he said. If that doesn't work he can probably switch to any one of the many other of- fenses he knows. So if you happen to see a tall, thin, boyish looking student sit- ting next to you in class and he is drawing plays instead of taking lecture notes, say hello. It's Bill Dougall. And if Michigan manages to get three touchdowns ahead of Duke tomorrow, watch for old number 22. It will probably be his third and last appearance on a Michigan gridiron. MSU Play Ole Miss? EAST LANSING (P)-The Uni- versity of Mississippi should play Michigan State to decide which is the top football team in the na- tion, but cannot because of "ar- chaic thinking" says an Ole Miss student leader. "We can't play any team which has Negro players," said the edi- tor of the Mississippi student newspaper, "which practically re- duces us to our own conference. I feel that this is ridiculous, as do the majority of the students." The letter was written by Jim- mie Robertson, editor of the Mis- sissippean, student newspaper at the southern college. It was giv- en front page publication yester- day by the state news, MSU Stu- dent Daily. Robertson said all the students at Ole Miss believe they should be classed the top football team in the country. But there are three major prob- lems, he said. 1) Location "1,000 miles from nowhere." 2) The reluctance of other schools to play Mississippi. 3) The race issue. Mississippi cannot play any schools where whites compete against Negroes. "I would give anything," Rob- ertson wrote, "if there were some chance of Ole Miss and Michigan State playing each other in a Bowl Game. However, the archaic think- ing which prevails in our capital city makes this impossible." Because of these conditions, Robertson wrote: "We realize that a great deal of the criticism that has been heaped upon us in recent years because of our 'creampuff' schedule has been richly deserved." MSU Athletic Director Biggie Munn said the Spartans would love to meet Ole Miss in football com- petition. "If you can't meet them, you can't beat them," he said. "Michigan State has always re- fused to meet any school that would not accept our Negro ath- letes - this means housing and everything else." -Daily-Ed Langs RAPPOLD THIS WEEK-Bill Dougall, wearing the number of- Duke's quarterback Walt Rappold, spots a receiver downfield and sets to complete another pass against the varsity. Backfield coach Hank Fonde holds the portfolio of Duke plays, while George Mans (left) and Guy Curtis put the rush on Dougall (Rappold)? TWO WEEKS FOR HORNUNG: I DefermentCauses N1V1,ew rCon troversy By TOM ROWLAND Phi Delta Phi did what profes- sional fraternities have been try-I ing to do for the last five years,. namely defeat Nu Sigma Nu. It was a wayward snap from1 the Nu Sigs center that furnished Phi Delta Phi with the necessary 1 points it needed to win, 2-0. The winners broke a defensivee see-saw battle when Pete Tillott- son made a spectacular grab of Dick Rinella's aerial and rompedt for a 32-yard touchdown, only to have the play recalled on a blocking violation. Intercepted Pass With timerrunning out late in the second half, Jim Roberts in- tercepted a Phi Delta Phi pass and returned it to the enemy 26,to put Nu Sigma Nu in its lone scor- ing opportunity. The hope was short - lived, however, as PDP John Niehuss grabbed a Nu Sig pass on the goal line, and lateral- led to teammate Henry Cashen, who sprinted the eighty yards to score. The touchdown was nulli- fied by a second blocking penalty. Overtime Tally In the lower half of the brack- et, Phil Keubeller's last-ditch toss on the sixth play of overtime went for a tally and a victory for Phi Chi as it qualified for next week's finals with a 7-0 conquest of the Falcons. Finding himself deep in his own territory at the 19, Keubeller faded to pass and found Dick Dickerson, who hauled in the pig- skin and raced the remaining dis- tance to score. In second place semi-final ac- tion, Psi Omega's versatile helms- man Nel Sherbourne directed his gridders to a 22-0 victory over Phi Alpha Kappa. Plucked Aerial Harvey Johnson neatly plucked a Sherbourne aerial out of the grasp of a would-be interceptor and raced for the forst score. Sherbourne tossed to Keith Mor- rill for another, climaxing a drive from the Psi Omega 12. And on the final play of the game, adding in- sult to injury, Steve Heald chalk- Free Delivery Free Delivery Free Delivery The Cottage* Inn Pizzeria and The Brown Jug Restaurant PIZZA Free Delivery PIZZA Pizza delivered free in hot portable ovens. Real Italian food is our specialty. Cottage Inn 3-5902 Brown Jug 8-9819 12 E. Williams 1204 S. University Free Delivery Free Delivery Free Delivery 5 ed up a final six-pointer after Kadec scored for the winners. pulling in a Sherbourne aerial. Bruse Kropschott picked up Al- Eta Kappa Nu's safety nipped pha Kappa Psi's touchdown. Law Club, 8-6, in afternoon fourth Ed Marin and Roland Stuebner place semi-finals. Dave Beste ac- tallied for Delta Sigma Pi as the counted for the winner's touch- team by-passed Gamma Alpha in down, while Barry Broughton tal- fifth place playoffs, 14-0. lied the lone Law Club six-point- Tau Epsilon Rho's offensive ma- er. chine rolled over Phi Delta Chi, Identical Score 32-0. Joe McDade heaved an aer- By identical score and identical ial to Buz Steinberg for the first means Alpha Chi Sigma won its six-pointer, pitched-out to Ray fourth place semi-final contest Bishop for another, and then ran over Alpha Kappa Psi, 8-6. Bob himself for a third. * x r i , " 1 MEMBERSHIP on STEERING COMMITTEE for' G RID SE LECT iCN S If you don't turn in your choices of winners for this week's Grid Picks by midnight tonight, don't worry, you won't turn into a pump- kin, but you will be too late to enter the contest. Bring or send in your selections, including the Michigan score, to Grid Picks, Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Ambor. You may win two free tickets to the Michigan Theater. This week's guest selector is Prof. Hazel M. (Doc) Losh, Michi- gan's best football fan and everybody's All-American astronomy pro- fessor. THIS WEEK'S GAMES Consensus Picks in Caps (Consensus-61-39-.610) 1. Duke at MICHIGAN 2. California at UCLA 3. COLUMBIA at Cornell 4. Florida at GEORGIA TECH 5. Iowa at OHIO STATE 6. Indiana at N'WESTERN 7. MICHIGAN ST. at Minnesota 8. MISSISSIPPI at La. State 9. Missouri at COLORADO 10. Navy at NOTRE DAME 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. OKLAHOMA at Kansas State OREGON at Stanford PENN STATE at Maryland Pittsburgh at SYRACUSE PURDUE at Ilinois RICE at Texas Tech, SO. CALIFORNIA at Wash. TENNESSEE at No. Carolina Texas A&XI at ARKANSAS Texas Christian at BAYLOR By PETE DiLORENZI The two-week draft deferment granted to Green Bay Packer half- back and .National Football League-leading scorer, Paul Hor- nung, was criticized yesterday by Sen. Jack Miller (R-Iowa). The Associated Press quoted Miller as saying, "Regardless of the merits of Hornung's case, it has been handled in such a way as to cause widespread suspicion." "The availability of Hornung to play in. two key games for the current NFL leaders was the real reason underlying his deferment," he added.. Faces Colts Sunday The two key- games are this Sunday's encounter with the Bal- timore Colts at Baltimoi'e and next Sunday's game with the Chi- cago Bears at Chicago. Hornung had been scheduled to go on active duty with the 86th Army Engineering Corps at Fort Riley, Kansas, on October 30; however, the 5th Army head- quarters ordered him to report to the Great Lakes, Ill., Naval Hospital for further examination and evaluation of his condition. Hornung had been suffering from a neck ailment resulting from a pinched nerve. Thus far in the 1961 NFL sea- son, Hornung has carried 65 times and gained 369 yards for a very healthy 5.7 yards-per-carry aver- age. In his own special field, scor- ing points, he has run for six touchdowns, caught one touch- down pass, kicked 27 extra points and made good on 11 of 14 field- goal attempts for a grand total of 102 points scored-very nearly half of the Packers' team total of 222 points. Distant Second Hornung's nearest rival in the scoring race, Lenny Moore of the Colts, is a distant second with only 66 points. Averaging slightly less than 15 points a game-the same average with which he finished last sea- son when he broke the NFL single- season scoring record with 176 points in 12 games--Hornung seemed almost certain to break Pro Hockey Boston 5, Montreal 2 Detroit 1, New York 0 his own record because of the two additional games which each NFL team must play this season. Shoulder Hurt The Packers currently lead the NFL's western division with a 6-1 record and stand a very good chance of holding on to that lead with Hornung in the lineup for at least two more weeks. Conference on the University Petitions available at SGC offices in the SAB Due by 6:00 P.M. Sunday, Nov. Return petitions to Jean Spencer, administrative secretary and sign up for interview at same time Five Wolverines Rank In Conference Grid Stats , _____ -_ SPORTS STAFF SELECTIONS DAVE GOOD (67-33-.670)-Mich., UCLA, Columbia, Ga. Tech, Iowa, NU, MSU, Miss., Co., ND, Okla., Ore., Penn St., Syracuse, Purdue, Rice, USC, N. Car., Texas A&M, TCU. MIKE BURNS (Sports Editor, 64-36-.640)-Mich., UCLA, Columbia, Ga. Tech, NU, OSU, MSU, LSU, Colo., ND, Okla., Ore., Penn St., Syracuse, Purdue, Texas Tech, Wash., Tenn.,'Ark., Baylor. FRED STEINHARDT (Contributing Sports Editor; 64-36-.640)-Mich., UCLA, Columbia, Ga. Tech, OSU, NU, MSU, LSU, Colo.,,ND, Okla., Ore., Penn St., Syra- cuse, Purdue, Texas Tech, Wash., Tenn., Ark., Baylor. GEORGE WANSTALL (64-36-.640)-Mich. UCLA, Columbia, Ga. Tech, Iowa, NU, MSU, Miss., Colo., ND, Okla., Ore., Penn St., Syracuse, Purdue, Rice, USC, Tenn., Ark., Baylor. PROF. HAZEL M. (DOC) LOSH (Guest Selector, 63-37-.630)-Mich., UCLA, Cornell, Ga. Tech, NU, OSU, MSU, Miss., Mo., ND, Okla., Ore., Penn St., Pitt., Purdue, Rice, USC, Tenn., Texas A&M, TCU. BRIAN MacCLOWRY (Contributing Sports Editor, 63-37-.630)-Mich., UCLA, Cornell, Florida, OSU, NU, MSU, Miss., Colo., ND, Okla., Ore., Md., Syracuse, Purdue, Rice, Wash., Tenn., Ark., TCU. DAVE ANDREWS (Associate Sports Editor, 60-40--.600)-Mich., UCLA, Co- lumbia, Ga. Tech, Iowa, NU, MSU, LSU, Mo., ND, Okla., Stanford, Penn St., Syra- cuse, Purdue, Rice, USC, Tenn., Texas A&M, TCU. CLIFF MARKS (Associate Sports Editor, 59-51-.590)-Mich., UCLA, Cornell, Ga. Tech, NU, Iowa, MSU, Miss., Mo., ND, Okla., Stanford, Penn St., Pitt., Pur- due, Rice, Wash., Tenn., Texas A&M, Baylor.. PETE DiLORENZI (59-41-.590)-Mich., Cal., Columbia, Ga. Tech, OSU, NU, MSU, Miss., Colo., ND, Okla., Stanford, Penn St., Syracuse, Purdue, Rice, USC, N. Car., Ark.. Baylor. TOM WEBBER (58-52-.5$0)-Mich., UCLA, Columbia, Ga. Tech, OSU, NU, MSU, Miss., Colo., ND, Kans. St., Stanford, Md., Syracuse, Ill., Texas Tech, Wash., Tenn., Ark., Baylor. JIM BRGER (58-42-.580)-Mich., UCLA, Cornell, Ga. Tech, Iowa, NU, Minn., Miss., Mo., ND, Okla., Stanford, Penn St., Syracuse, Purdue, Rice, USC, Tenn., Ark.. Baylor. JOHN SCOCHIN (58-42-.580)-Mich., UCLA, Cornell, Ga. Tech, Iowa, NU, MSU, Miss., Colo., ND, Okla., Ore., Penn St., Syracuse, Purdue, Rice, USC, N. Car., Ark., TCU. JAN WINKELMAN (57-43-.570)-Mich., UCLA, Columbia, Ga. Tech, OSUl, NU,M SU, LSU, Mo., Md., ND, Okla., Ore., Penn St., Pitt., Purdue, Rice, Wash., Tenn., Ark.. TCU. By The Associated Press Five Michigan players are among the Big Ten statistical leaders. Wolverine quarterback Dave Glinka ranks third in passing with 21 completions in 38 attempts for 299 yards. Glinka also ranks fifth in total offense with 262 yards in conference play. Michigan fullback Bill Tunnicliff places fifth in rushing with a total of 167 yards in 43 carries while halfback Bennie McRae rates sec- ond in kickoff returns, and fourth in pass receiving. ' Maentz Leads Punters Scott Maentz, Wolverine end, continues to lead the Western Conference punters with 'a 39.1- yard average for 15 punts, and halfback Dave Raimey ranks sec- ond in pass interceptions. Sandy Stephens, Minnesota quarterback, leads the Big Ten in total offense with 567 yards. Wis- consin's Ron Miller is second with 506 yards. In rushing Ohio State's Bob Ferguson leads with 326 yards and a 5.6 average. Stephens ranks second and Michigan State's George Saimes holds the third spot. Szykowny Top Passer In passing, Iowa's Matt Szy- kowny holds down the top spot. He is followed by Wisconsin's Miller. Pat Richter of Wisconsin is the PARTY FAVORS by BUD-MOR 1 1103 S. Univ. NO 2-6362 leading pass receiver. Richter has pulled in 14 passes for 188 yards. Marvin Woodson of Indiana leads in punt returns with six for a 3.8 average, and his teammate, Woody Moore, leads in pass inter- ceptions with three. Bill Smith of Wisconsin is the leading kickoff returner with eight for a 21.6-yd. average. the Town Stripe is enjoying a renaissance. We just haven't seen many stripes in the last two years. Cricketeer brings it'back ... in The Vested Suit. 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