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November 07, 1961 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1961-11-07

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY'

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, If.

THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7,1

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Injuries Hamper 'M'
Interior Line, Fulibacks Hurting for Tilt
With Illinois after Inter-conference Win

After Duke Game

For the BEST in

Shirt Laundering

By AL GRASS
Having done its part to continue
the Big Ten's domination over
outside threats, Michigan is now
making ready for the more difficult
matter of winning internal strug-
gles as it prepares to meet a de-
ceiving Illinois squad at Cham-
paign next Saturday.
The unpredictable Wolverines,
after walloping Duke's Blue Devils
28-14 for their third victory in as
many non - conference ventures
this season, gave the impression
of a reasonably healthy outfit as
they pushed the North Carolina
visitors around almost at will
throughout the entire first half
before settling down to a comfort-
able, two-touchdown triumph.
Team Sick
In reality, however, this year's
Michigan squad is as sick as a
Lenny Bruce punch line, and any

*try

KYER MODEL LAUNDRY

627 S. Main
814 S. State

and Cleaners
601 E. William
1023 E. Ann
NO 3-4185

I

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SIC FLICS

I

doubter need only pore over the
team's medical lists or visit the
locker room to have this fact
brought painfully home.
Accidents and injuries began to
hamper the Wolverines even be-
fore they took the field for the
opener against UCLA less than six
weeks ago, and when the steady
decrease in personnel, especially
among the ranks of the interior
linemen, persisted from one game
to the next, Head Coach Bump
Elliott was moved to note somberly
that "injuries will be a key factor
in determining our offensive and
defensive units."
Efficiency Down
But the stream of wounded play-
ers to the sidelines continued, and
last Saturday saw Michigan even
more crippled than Elliott must
have contemplated as tackle Jon
Schopf, end Scott Maentz, and
fullbacks Bill Tunnicliff and Ken
Tureaud joined the list of tlse
out of action or operating at much
less than full efficiency.
Schopf and Tureaud, in fact,
didn't event take the field, suffer-
ing respectvely from a shoulder
injury and a pinched leg muscle.
The latter is not expected to play
against Illinois.
While Michigan was able to
withstand these; losses without a
collapse, as well as the impaired
efficiency of Tunnicliff, Maentz,
who was utilized only on spot oc-
casions, and linemen Todd Grant,
John Minko, and Lee Hall, the
team would desperately like to
have some of its injured guns
back for the upcoming games.
After their initial scrimmage
for this weekend's Big Ten tilt
with Illinois, the Wolverines heard
Coach Don Dufek's report of last
Saturday's Illinois-Purdue game.
Pracice Notes
Illinois, also hampered by a rash
of minor and major injuries,
fought valiantly against the erratic
Boilermakers before succumbing
23-9. Intent on improving their
conference standing by notching
what would be their first victory
after six disheartening losses, the
Illini are expected to be "no push-
over."
Highlighting last week's game
for the losers was dangerous half-
back Cecil Young, who broke an
Illini record by returning a Boiler-
maker kickoff 96 yards for his
team's lone touchdown.
Chandler Shaken
Quarterback Bob Chandler,
whose talents, given the chance,
VOTE VOICE
JEFFREY,
MAG I DOFF,
McELDOWNEY,
ROSS
PAID ADVERTISEMENT
Read and Use
Daily Classifieds'

came to light against the Blue
Devils last Saturday, continued to
look fine, although shaken slightly
when running a practice play
Monday.
Chandler, whose football for-
tunes depend greatly on his sensi-
tive left leg, indicated pleasure at
his "chance to play a major portion
of the game for the first time since
last year's Oregon game, before
my injury," aided by quarterback
Dave Glinka in directing Michi-
gan's aerial attack throughout
much of the Duke game.
Chandler complete oneaof three
passes during his spot appearances,
a ten-yard pass to end Bob Brown
in the second quarter.
Two series of downs before he
had attempted a 40-yard strike to
halfback Jack Strobel near the
right sideline, but the pass was
slightly overthrown.
He also showed no reluctance
for running, trying several quar-
terback sneaks when his receivers
were covered.
Big Ten Shines
The trio of Wolverine victories
over UCLA, Army, and the Blue
Devils boosted the Big Ten's over-
all record against outside opposi-
tion to 16 wins, 5 losses, and a
single tie. In these 22 games, con-
ference teams have outscored their
less fortunate opponents by a 438-
221 margin.
When the two conference cellar-
dwellers, Indiana and Illinois, are
disregarded-which Michigan has
no intention of doing this weekend
-the league's record against non-
members jumps to 15-3-1. As a
result, all of the remaining con-
ference teams, Wisconsin excepted,
have achieved some degree of
prominence in -national ranking
polls.
Ohio State's win over Iowa and
Minnesota's upset of Michigan
State moved both teams ahead of
the Spartans in the rankings.

4

;..

.4

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-Daily-Fred Shippey
COME TO PAPA-It looks like Duke halfback Dean Wright (28) is about to make a somersaulting
catch of Walt Rappold's fourth-quarter pass against Michigan Saturday. But Wolverine defenders
Frank Maloney (56) and Paul Raeder (in background) have broken up the play. Wright had caught
two key passes in Duke's second touchdown drive three series of downs before.
Detroit, San Francisco Miss
Chance To Advance in NFL

By BILL BULLARD
The title race of the Western
Division of the National Football
League tightened up last Sunday
as the first and second place teams,
Green Bay and Chicago, were de-
feated.
By tying 20-20 at Kezar Sta-
dium, San Francisco and Detroit

"All I have to do is flyto
St.Louis and back and then
I'm initiated?"

l ~~ies" ING
t. GA C UN TER S 0C

,GFRID SELECTIONS
We told you so. For the first time this season the score of the
Michigan game has decided the Grid Picks winner. Well, not quite.
It's worse than that.
For the first time in memory we have an exact tie, a dead heat,
between two pickers, Eugene Gambis, 6350 Abington, Detroit, and
Joseph Kotler, 333 E. Ann, Ann Arbor.
They both had 16-4 records and missed 28-14 the Michigan score
by nine points each, Gembis guessing 26-7 and Kotler picking 36-13.
Henry Yee also got 16 right but missed the score by 15 points.
Gembis and Kotler can shoot crapps at The Daily Building to
determine the winner of the tickets.
To enter this week's contest for two free tickets to the Michigan
Theatre, now showing "Breakfast at Tiffany's," bring or send in your
choices by Friday midnight to Grid Picks, Michigan Daily, 420 May-
nard, Ann Arbor.
THIS WEEK'S GAMES

each missed the opportunity a
victory would have given them of
climbing within one game of first
place.
But the tie left both teams one
and one-half games behind the
Packers which is not an impossible
gap to close in the next six games.
Even fifth, place Baltimore, just
two games from first place, has a
chance at least to tie the leader
by the close of the season.
Tough Schedule
Green Bay has to face San Fran-
cisco, Detroit, and the tough New
York Giants in three of its last
six games. Any one of the four
teams below the Packers are cap-
able of moving into the first spot
if the Packers falter. In the case
of the Lions and the 49ers, they
can aid their cause by defeating
Green Bay themselves.
The 49ers or the Lions could
have really set themselves up for
a title bid by winning Sunday.,
Both teams received the results
of the other NFL games as their
late-starting west coast game pro-
gressed.
They knew that Green Bay had
been blasted 45-21 by the Balti-
more Colts and the second place
Chicago Bears had been nipped
16-14 by the Philadelphia Eagles.
Gunfight in Frisco..
A battle between the "scatter-!
gun" offense of ,the Lions and the
"shotgun" offense of the 49ers
went to Detroit in the first half
by the score of 17-0. It looked like
a far different game than the
49-0 beating the 49ers gave the
Lions in their first meeting.
San.- Francisco got back six
points when Abe Woodson ran
back a Yale Lary punt 80 yards for
a touchdown in the third period.
Their second touchdown came in

the last quarter after a Jim Ninow-
ski pass was intercepted on the
Lion 15-yard line. The extra point
rhade the score 17-14.
Tommy Davis tied the score at
17-17 with his 34-yard placement
with 1:05 remaining in the game.
Nino Moves Lions
It seemed that a tie was certain
unless Lion quarterback Ninowski
could engineer a quick scoring
drive. And that's just what he did.
In 39 seconds he moved his team
63 yards to the 17-yard line of the
49ers by completing four passes.
Then Jim Martin came off the
bench to put his toe into a 24-yard
boot that sailed through the up-
rights for a 20-17 Lion lead.
Twenty seconds remained on the
clock when the Lions kicked off.
But two passes from; John Brodie
to J. D. Smith for 22 yards put
San Francisco in position to tie
the game again. Davis kicked the
41 - yard three - pointer and the
game was tied 20-20 with four
seconds left. Before the Lions
could start another play, time had
run out.
Pro Grid
ae Standin gs
NFL
WESTERN DIVISION
Gree Ba L T' Pet. PF PA
reen Bay 0 .750 243 113
Chicago 5 3 0 .625 155 141
Detroit 4 3 1 .571 126 168
San Francisco 4 3 1 .571 197 128
Baltimore 4 4 0 .500 175 198
Los Angeles 2 6 0 .250 133 180
Minnesota 1 7 0 .125 135 226
EASTERN DIVISION
W L T Pct.PF PA
Philadelphia ' T 1 0 .875 195 125
New York 6 2 0 .750 199 16
Cleveland 5 3 0 .625177 162
St. Louis 4 4 0 .500 149 139
Dallas 4 4 0 .500 134 177
Pittsburgh 3 5' 0 .375 153 142
Washington 0 8 0 .000 62 228

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21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20OWONDERFUL SMOKES!
AGED MILD. BLENDED MILD-NOT FILTERED MILD -THEY SATISFY

*.I

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MICHIGAN at Illinois
Minnesota at Iowa
Michigan State at Purdue
Ohio State at Indiana
Wisconsin at Northwestern
Notre Dame at Pittsburgh
Dartmouth at Columbia
Duke at Navy
Arkansas at Rice
Stanford at Southern Cal.

11.
12.
13.
14.
15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.

Princeton at Harvard
Clemson at South Carolina
Georgia Tech at Tennessee
S. Methodist at Texas A&M
Nebraska at Iowa State,
N. Carolina St. at Maryland
Oklahoma at Missouri
Kentucky at Vanderbilt
Oregon State at Washington
Baylor at Texas
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