THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1961 OS, Minnesota Gain Important Victories 4 punt and was kept alive by con- sistent gains by Gene Donaldson, a 218-pound sophomore fullback, who took over when regular ,Roy Walker limped off the field with a charley horse. Purdue dominated the statistics except that it gave up the ball twice on fumbles and once on a pass interception. The Spartans had one lost-ball fumble and no interceptions. The Boilermakers had a 156-145 yard 'margin by rushing and 85-50 by passing. Underwood MSU Standout Standouts in the rugged defenses included guard Stan Sczurek of Purdue and guard Dan Underwood of Michigan State. Michigan State almost pulled it Jp ''I ---- III illiiiiiiiii" A . ................. -- - ---- --- Ell O out shortly before time ran out. Gary Ballman sneaked through the Purdue pass defense and was wide open far downfield - but Smith overthrew him. "We'll be home for Christmas," Coach Duffy Daugherty of Michi- gan State commented wryly in the dressing room. * * * Ohio State 16, Indiana 7 BLOOMINGTON-Ohio -State's running game sputtered in low gear against Indiana's stout de- fense in payoff territory, but Joe Sparma's touchdown passes and Dick Van Raaphorst's kicks pulled the Buckeyes through 16-7 yester- day. The Hoosiesrs, lacking the depth to match Ohio State's manpower for 60 minutes, held the unbeaten Bucks to a 9-7 lead at the half. They struck sharply and quickly for their touchdown late in the second quarter and drove to the Ohio State 10 in the fourth quar- ter in a bid to make it a contest again. Breaks Deadlock Van Raaphorst broke the score- less deadlock by kicking a 40-yard field goal with 7:43 to play in the second quarter. An Indiana fumble on the second play after the next kickoff opened the door, and the Bucks went 23 yards in five plays. The payoff was a five-yard pass from Sparma to Paul Warfield. Sparma threw the clincher in the third quarter, a nine-yarder that Charles Bryant took on the run in the corner of the end zone. Van Raaphorst converted. Indiana's offense was a thing of beauty on its scoring sequence in the second quarter. Chuck Faw- cett returned a kickoff 34 yards to the Indiana 49, and a five-yard penalty and four plays put the Hoosiers on the scoreboard. Byron Broome passed 25 yards to Bill Olsavsky in the end zone for the touchdown, and Luke George verted. con- o- autfirutir trabittioual sfljHnga *w a Minnesota 16, Iowa 9 IOWA CITY-Bruising defensive play by Minnesota's mighty line set up two fourth-quarter touch- downs and gave the fifth-ranked Gophers a 16-9 victory over Iowa today. Center Dick Enga and tackle Bobby Bell led the slashing Minne- sota defense which kept alive the Gophers' hopes for national honors and left them tied for the Big Ten football lead with Ohio State with a 5-0 conference record. Led 3-2 Minnesota led 3-2 going into the fourth quarter on Tom Loechler's 26-yard field goal. Then an inter- cepted pass and a blocked punt provided Gopher scores which sent Iowa to its third straight loss, longest Hawkeye losing streak in nine years'. After an intercepted pass gave the Gophers the ball on Iowa's 39, quarterback Sandy Stephens on the next play threw a touchdown pass to Bill Munsey. Three minutes later Enga blocked an Iowa punt and end John Campbell covered the ball in the end zone to push the Gophers in front 16-2. Intercepted Pass The Hawkeyes, who got a safety in the first quarter when Minne- sota's Bob Frisbee intercepted a pass and then ran into the end zone as he was tackled, scored its only touchdown with 3 seconds left. End Cloyd Webb took a 33-yard pass from Matt Szykowny for the score. Wisconsin 29, Northwestern 10 EVANSTON- The kicking and running of quarterback Jim Bak- ken and the pass-catching of 6 foot 6 end Pat Richter carried Wisconsin yesterday to a 29-10 Big Ten football victory over Northwestern. Co-captain Bakken passed 18 yards off a fake punt situation to Richter in the first quarter to set up his eventual 47-yard field goal. In the fourth period, Bakken punted 89 yards with a tail wind, the ball stopping dead on the' Northwestern 3 after the Wildcats had driven 86 yards only to be stopped on the 4. Never Recovered Northwestern never did recover from the prodigious ~punt. Later Ron Miller sneaked over from the one and Bakken booted the extra point, pushing Wisconsin ahead 22-10. But Bakken wasn't done yet. He stole sophomore quarterback Tom O'Grady's pass in the final four minutes and ran it back 35 yards for a touchdown. His kick was good, making the final score 29-10 -but Wisconsin was on the North- western one-yard mark when the game ended. I I -AP Wirephoto BORIS OVER-Purdue halfback Tom Boris crosses the Michigan State goal line in yesterday's game. His touchdown was instrumental in Purdue's 7-6 win over Michigan State. On the ground is Spartan defensive guard Charley Brown. The conversion of Boris' touchdown was the victory margin. 'WE WERE OUTHIT': Daughergty own After LosS }l I I wOrsted Our finest imported worsted wool fab- ric. The most pop- ular fabric in men's wear, character- ized by its hard finish and close weave. In Burnt Olive, Charcoal Brown, Oxford and Cambridge Grey. 15.95 twist Fine worsted wool mid weight fabric by Raeford mills. Distinctive twist in the weave imparts outstanding dura- bility and shape re= tention. Dark Ol- ive, Black and Charcoal Brown. 13.95 Re0woo& g Ross 1208 South University Convenient Charge Accounts Available MUNICIPAL PARKING LOT AT REAR OF STORE In Effig EAST LANSING (P) - Duffy Daugherty, his once top-ranked Michigan State Spartans beaten twice in a row, came back to East Lansing from his second defeat yesterday to find himself hung in effigy. Students hung Duffy in effigy on the MSU*campus after the Spar- tans lost 7-6 to Purdue yesterday. There was a sign, "Duffy-13-0, 7-6." "We had a feeling something should be done," said one of the student leaders of the effigy hang- ing. "We think he has a bunch of good players and doesn't handle them right, otherwise he wouldn't lose those games.'' MSU lost its first game last week, 13-0sto Minnesota. Then the Spartans dropped one 7-6 yester- day. LAFAYETTE OP)-Duffy Daugh- erty, the once-smiling Irishman now saddened by two losses in a row, was still able to crack a joke after the 7-6 loss to Purdue. "We'll be home for Christmas," he commented wryly. The MSU Rose Bowl hopes-a Christmas trip to Pasadena-went down the drain with this loss. Purdue is still in position to chase league leaders Ohio State and Minnesota. Michigan State can only hope to salvage the rest of the season and end up 7-2 with victories over Northwestern and Illinois. Daugherty offered no alibis. '.We were just outhit," he said. "Purdue has a very strong line' and they were up for this game. I still thought toward, the end that Big Ten Standings W L Pet. Minnesota.........5 0 1.000 Ohio State.........5 0 1.000 Purdue ........... 3 1 .750 Michigan State .... 3 2 .600 MICHIGAN ......2 2 .500 Northwestern...... 2 3 .400 Wisconsin .........2 3 .400 Iowa ............. 2 3 .400 Indiana .......... 0 5 .400 Illinois............0 5 .000 we could pull the game out. But we couldn't get in far enough so Brandstatter could kick us a field goal. One, more first down and we could have made it. "If you lose once," he said re- ferring back to the 113-0 blanking to Minnesota, "it's easy to lose again." "We are a good team," Daugh- erty said in assessing the Spar- tans. "But not a great one. We don't have the knack of coming up with the winning play when we need it." Daugherty wouldn't make any predictions on the crucial Minne- sota-Purdue, game coming up next Saturday. "Both have wonderful quarterbacks," he said. "It should be a great game to watch and second guess." Purdue Coach Jack Mollenkopf - TOYS - PLAYTH ENGS - BOOKS admitted he was happily surprised at being in his present position in the Big Ten race. "I said all along," the Boiler- maker Coach declared, "that a lot depended on our two sophomore quarterbacks-and they both came through with flying colors." Mollenkopf said he was feeling fine despite a recent operation for a stomach disorder. "If you don't feel good after this win, you're in bad shape," he said. The Michigan State squad got out of town fast after the defeat, Three chartered planes, operated by Purdue University, took the team and followers back and landed them at Lansing at 7 p.m. i ZINDELL OLDSMOBILE Ann Arbor, NO 3-0507 rr 1 IP p. ViV T' Re nm a ' . PAID ADVERTISEMENT PAID ADVERTISEMENT I HAS OFFICE HERE: Diamond Importer Finds Gem-Bearing Mine Abroad A new business-Robert Haack Diamond Importers - quietly opened a branch office recently at 504 First National Building to wholesale and retail diamond goods. Behind the move are stories of two Milwaukee ex-marines' trips. into South American jungles. The trips led to discovery of an estimated $11,000,000 gold field, three rich diamond bear- ing fields the pair staked claim to, plus high adventure. Its "in- gredients" were silent, deadly river whirlpools, tangles with deadly piranha fishaattack by a tiger, plane crashes-and death. The adventurers are Robert Haack, 34, principal owner of the diamond importing firm, and his brother, Donald E., 29. Shows Diamonds r Haack, who was in Ann Ar- bor this past week with more than $120,000 worth of diamonds in his pockets, told the reason for successive trips into un- mapped jungle areas between 1954 and this year. He formed the importing busi- ness 13 years ago in Milwaukee and purchased diamonds from the internationally-known De Beers Diamond Syndicate of London, which controls 95 per cent of the world's output of gems. "I decided to circumvent this source by setting up my own diamond mine," Haack said, ex- plaining that De Beers yearly allots a designated number of diamond carats to each country. Haack now mines industrial dia- monds and gems, cuts and mar- kets them. completed last week that win be used in surface mining opera- tions amid a 7,000-acre diamond field the Haack firm discovered along the Ireng River and is operating under a 50-yearvlease from the Venezuelan govern- ment. Haack said leases he has on two other diamond fields in Bra- zil and British Guiana are to be dropped because the fields are inaccessible by land. Find 500 Diamonds Worth of the diamond hold- ings was proved in 1954 when Haack and his brother returned from their first South American trip with 500 diamonds. Since that time "thousands" of the gems have been uncovered, many of them up to three carats, which are being cut in New York and Antwerp. Output of the Venezuelan mine is expected to be hiked several hundred per cent with the $800,- 000 self-propelled dredge that will handle 1,000 tons of gravel per hour separating the diamonds from the gravel. Haack estimates that each ton contains an aver- age of one-third of a carat. Thus, it is possible that more than 300 carats per hour could be uncovered. This prospect-the outgrowth of Haack's demand for an inde- pendent business operation and the ability to follow through-is the result of seven years of plan- ning between 1946 and 1954. Haack studied Spanish in prep- aration for his initial South American junket and gathered' articles of diamond field finds, pinpointing them tp fix the gen- eral area for investigation. i* Cats are notoriously silent in their singularly feline way. But even the most stealthily treading tomcat could take lessons from the men at Ford Motor Company whose job it is'to track down and suppress unwanted noise in vehicles. At our Ford Research and Engineering Center in Dearborn, engineers have created a unique room without echoes, virtually duplicating the perfect stillness that exists miles above the earth's surface, The "Silent Room", as we call it, is a chamber utilizing fiber-glass wedges as sonic "blotters" to soak up noise emanating from subjects undergoing developmental tests. In this acoustically sterile environ- ment, electronic instruments seek out the source of vibrations, rattles, rumbles and squeaks so that they can be eliminated in production. This scientific approach to silence is but a tiny facet of'the many- sided program of pure and applied research which goes on daily at Ford Motor Company. It is another example of Ford's leadership through scientific researcb and engineering. MOTOR COMPANY The American Road, Dearborn, Michiganl PRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD " THE FARM s INDUSTRY " AND THE AGE OF SPACC - - WORTH $47,000: This diamond pendant owned by Robert Haack Diamond Importers, which has a local office, is a 5.07 41 Carat flawless Pink Diamond, world. Gold Field Found, Sold On land, they hacked through dense jungle, sometimes making only 50 feet an hour. In 10 days the party re'ached a gold-bear- ing river bed, staked a claim and sold it later to a Texas syndi- cate which is exploiting the field. Later the prospectors left for Georgetown, British Guiana, and to the interior of that country, discovering 5,000 acres of dia- mond bearing gravel beds along the Echilebar River. The stones ran up to 3 carats and were of the river or alluvial type of dia- monds of fine blue-white color. The party wasn't satisfied; the one of six such gems in the Ireng the 500 diamonds were picked from the ground. And it was here that a na- tionally-known author-explorer, Col. Leonard Clark, who auth= ored "The Rivers Ran Ease," died, along with two others in 1958, while jumping the deadly Ireng rapids in a powerboat and exploring its tributaries. Clark, who discovered the headwaters of the Amazon, and the other two were in Haack's employ at the time of the accident. A plane crash in Venezuela nearly claimed Haack's brother who was down in bush country not far from whei'e Slick him- self had crashed in a separate accident. Robert Haack sped to I 4 I II i I . I