100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

November 10, 1964 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1964-11-10

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


THE MICHIGAN DAILY

TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1964

THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1964

_ ., .... , .....sr _.. ,. .,,.z

Chances Improve

Despite

0 0e
Inj uries

NOTRE DAME FIRST:
AP Ranks Michigan

By MICHAEL RUTKOWSKI sideline the 6-0, 192-pounder for been more severe and have been
the rest of the season. Rindfuss to a number of key players. It is
Michigan State's victory over saw more action than any other only because of the great depth
Purdue enhnces our opportunity player last year as he played both of the Wolverines that these in
but if we're not successful on offense and on defense. This juries have not been as crippling
against Iowa .. season he has been used extens- as they might have been.F
These words of Wolverine men- ively on defense in order to bol- In looking ahead to this Satur-
for Bump Elliott sum up the feel- ster the pass defense. He has day's battle with Iowa in Iowa
ing around Ferry Field about been characterized by his aggres- City, Elliott commented that=
Michigan's chances for its first sive tackles and his able pass "This week's game will be as:
Big Ten Championship since 1950. coverage. tough a game as any we will play
The Spartan's 2-7 upset of the Wells Takes Over this year. We will definitely have
Boilermakers coupled wiEoethitheoto be at our best to beat them." ,
Wolverines' 21-6 conquest of in Et desve banrckelore- "Thir record is deceiving. They*
last year's Big Ten Champion,I in the defensive backfield to re- hv otte- attregms
lastyea's ig Tn Camponplace Rindfuss Saturday and vill have lost their last three games
Illinois, leaves the way open fordd by a total of eight points-five
a trip to Pasadena-provided that probably continue to do so f to Purdue, two to Ohio State, and
Purdue ties or loses in one of its ths Y hn a Rone this past weekend to Minne-
two remaining games with Indi- Both Yanz and Rindfuss were sota."
playing their fal home game '
anahand Minnesota, AND that _Elliott rates the Hawkeyes as!
Michigan wins its season finale having "one of the finest pass-
against Ohio State. Illinois Films ing teams in the country." Led
The previously unbeaten Buck- Films of last Saturday's by sharpshooter Gary Snook who
eyes were toppled from their num- j Michigan-Illinois game will be clicked on an 87-yard pass play,
ber two national ranking as a shown tomorrow night in Rm. in the final two minutes, Iowa JOHN YANZ
consequence of their 27-0 loss to 130 of the Business Adminis- just fell short of beating the went through a light work-
Penn State. tration Bldg. at 7 p.m. Wally Gophers when their try for the out in sweatsuits yesterday as the
But BEFORE Ohio State. there Weber will narrate the pro- two point conversion failed. remainder of the squad scrim-
are the always tough Iowa Hawk- gram. The films are free and * * maged against the freshmen in
eyes. open to the public. Michigan's first three units the Stadium.
.C firl yeiY^nvr ~r. 41-n'i

By The Associated Press

the unbeaten class and almost out

Michigan, unranked in last of the top ten. The Yellow Jackets
week's n Assocaed Press st 1polled 50 points to Syracuse's 49.
week s Associated Press P o 11, The Orange defeated Army 27-15.
moved into sixth place this week -
after trouncing Illinois, 21-6, Florida, ninth a week ago, lost
Saturday. to Georgia 14-7 while Purdue, 10th
The Wolverines now stand 6-1 last week, dropped a 21-7 decision
for the season, losing only to Pur- to Michigan State.
due, 21-20. , Alabama advanced one notch on
Notre Dame s Fighting Irish the strength of a 17-9 conquest of
survived a wave of upsets to hold LSU. The Tide picked up 11 first
the top ranking and Alabama place votes and 367 points in the
bucked the tide, too, to gain second balloting by 41 writers and broad-
place. casters. Points were awarded on a
Notre Dame's first place margin basis of 10 for a first place vote, 9
was reduced considerably, from 36
points to 13. The Irish collected for second, etc.
26 votes for the top spot and 380 Arkansas and Nebraska, each
points this week after edging with an 8-0 record, also advanced
Pittsburgh 17-15 for their seventh one place. The Razorbacks climbed
straight triumph, to third with 334 points, including
tright trumpgnh sxthree first-place votes. They turn-
In zooming into the sixth spot, ed back Rice 21-0 while Nebraska,
Michigan passed Ohio State, Geor= now No. 4, defeated Kansas 14-7
gia Tech, Louisiana State, Florida and moved to fourth.
and Purdue, all of which lost lastnr
weekend. Texas tripped Baylor 20-14 and
Ohio State dropped from second went from sixth to fifth.
to seventh. Georgia Tech fellT
from seventh to 10th and LSU place voTi en tee sw on-frs
from eighth to ninth. Florida and lstcevords andpoienthsnwao1--
Purdue dropped out of the first 10 8-lst records and points on a 1-9-
and were replaced by the Wolver- -
ines and Oregon State. 1. Notre Dame (26) 7-0 380

t
t
t
t
r
a
C

aturday's victory over the I-
lini marked the sixth time in as for Michigan and it looks as if
many years that the Wolverines: it was also their final game in
have come out on top and the Wolverine uniforms.
fifth straight time that Elliott These two latest injuries bring
has bested his brother Pete. the total to five key players who
Costly Victory have been felled this year. Earli-
The win was a costly one for er this season halfbacks Jack
Michigan, however, as two more Clancy and John Rowser were
players--seniors John Yanz and sidelined with back and knee in-]
Dick Rindfuss - were sidelined juries respectively, and in the
with injuries. Purdue game guard Rick Hahn
and linebacker Ba.rrn Dphlinwarp r

i

-7

I

GRID SELECTIONS

Jeffrey Shopoff won the Grid Picks last week with a 15-5 record,
picking Michigan by a 21-14 score. For this remarkable feat he re-
ceived two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre, now showing "Send
Me No Flowers."
Shopoff is the first of the weekly winners to reveal his system for
picking the games. "It's really very simple," explains Shopoff. "The
team whose coach is older always wins unless he was born during the
months of February, April, July, August, or October. As everyone

Yanz, who plays left tackle on
V ars~ eserves defense, was helped off the field
with a knee injury. He was oper-
ated on Sunday and will be lost for t
the remainider of the season.
Jerry Mader and Bill Keating
will alternate as Yanz' replace-
ment. Elliott claims that he has !
By BOB LEDERER only natural that the boys were "confidence in their ability to
tight and nervous." take over and do the job."
The varsity reserves dominated Line Strength Rindfuss, who has been a stal-'
the entire game and dealt the He went on to say that the wrt ndfns thi hs seenao su-f-
freshmen a 19-6 defeat yesterday freshman team's strength is inthe wart on defense this season suf
before approximately 300 fans in line. "While last year's squad had fered a severely sprained ankle
Michigan Stadium. speed, this one has strength in which Elliott feels may also
Leading the victors were Pete both lines," he said, "and next!
Hollis at quarterback, Tom Park- year's varsity will need strength Big Ten S
hill at end, and Tim Radigan at right there." Cited by Fitzgerald
fullback. On the first play from as this year's outstanding linemen
scrimmage, Hollis showed the were Dave Byers (6-2, 235), Dave W L Pct. PF
freshmen what was to come as he Porter (6-3, 207), and Paul John- Ohio State 4 0 1.000 92
hurled a 40-yard pass to Park- son (6-0, 230). Yesterday, while MICHIGAN 4 1 .800 112
hill, which was barely deflected Byers concentrated on defense and Purdue 4 1 .800 101
by Ernie Sharpe (5-11, 188), the Porter sat out part of the game Michigan State 3 2 .600 99
frosh safety. with an injury, Johnson worked Minnesota 3 2 .600 68
On its second drive the varsity, both ways and proved most effec- Illinois 2 3 .400 51
aided by a 30-yard scamper by tive. Northwestern 2 4 .333 61
Dorie Reid, moved to midfield be- Dick Nowak (5-11, 200), Don Indiana 1 4 .200 69
fore Hollis hit Parkhill on the 23. Armstrong (6-2, 215), Ron Hilde I
Radigan then took over and car- brand, Tom McCracken, and Tom Iowa 1 4 .200 88
ried the ball four times including Goss contributed strong tackling Wisconsin 1 4 .200 59
a three-yard dive for the score. on defense while Dennis Morgan
Frank Stagg's conversion attempt (5-11, 210) and Rockey Rosema r o Sn
was blocked. (6-2, 205) played well both ways.1 P7ro Stalf~dmgls i
The second varsity score came Paul D'Eramo (5-9-220) did most NFL
after Byron Tennant latched on of the centering, while highly-re- N
te Bayrn Tenan latcfrshe ogarded tackle Ken Kanicki (6-3, Western Conference
to a wayward aerial from fresh- 26)ddntse cin L T Pet. PF PA
man Terry Salmi (5-11, 190) and 260) did not see action..t
Thomas Injured Baltimore 8 1 0 .889 314 153
returned it to the frosh 44. The Detroit 5 3 1 .625 157 152
Hollis-Parkhill combination click- John Thomas (6-0, 180), the Los Angeles 5 3 1 .625 208 195
ed on a long bomb and after Stagg first-string quarterback for the Minnesota 5 4 0 .565 213 208
a the conersion good frosh, sat out most of the game Green Bay 4 4' 0 .500 214 152
madethe onvrsio god, te iSan Francisco 2 7 0 .222 153 248
varsity had a half-time lead of with an injury but showed how he Chicago 2 7 0 .222 159 252
13-0. had gained his stature by his fine Eastern Conference
play in the first quarter. He con- w L T Pet. PF PA
Stagg Intercepts tinually eluded onrushing linemen Cleveland 7 1 1 .875 248 '172
The sore remained 13-0 until to pick up valuable yardage and. St. Louis 5 3 1 .625 224 235
midway into the fourth quarter led the freshmen to the varsity Dallas 4 4 1 .500 168 161
when taggpickd offa Sami 1Philadelphia 4 5 0 .444 2 00 173
when Stagg picked off a Salmi one-foot line before a fumble re- Washington 3 6 0 .333 189 209
pass and rumbled 15 yards into versed the course of action. Be- Pittsburgh 3 6 0 .333 161 223
the end zone. The kick failed. sides this fumble, the freshmen New York 2 6 1 .250 132 227
Phil Bayster (5-11, 183), who had four passes intercepted, three Sunday's Results
guided the freshmen most of the in enemy territory. Baltimore 40, Chetago 24
way, finally put them on the Halfbacks Effective Cleveland 34, Washington 24
scoreboard with a 14-yard touch- Halfbacks Rosema and Sharpe St. Louis 34, Pittsburgh 30
down on the keeper play. Tom gained considerable yardage in Los Aeles 20,Phildelphia 10
Minnesota 24, San Francisco 7
Kollin's extra-point failed. their losing cause. Rosema, a big Dallas 31, New York 21
Also instrumental in the varsity strong runner similar to Jim Det- NHL
-victory were Jim Seiber at quar- wiler; and Sharpe; a smaller but W L T Pts GF GA
terback and Mike Willie, who in- shiftier runner, will surely help Detroit 7 2 1 15 25 16
tercepted two passes, at defensive the varsity in the future. Half- Montreal 4 3 4 12 30 23
halfback. back Dick Smith (5-8, 175) and Chicago 5 5 1 31 2360
More important, however, than fullback Al Doty (5-10, 188) were New York 4 5 3 11 23 24
the play-by-play is the account not as effective yesterday. Boston 2 8 1 5 18 40
the freshmen made for them- -----------

both lostfr the season. e
both lost for the season.'

Ohio State, which collected 11
first place votes last week, had
none this time and managed only
138 points. The Buckeyes were up-
ended by Penn State 27-0 in Sat-
urday's biggest reversal of form.
Oregon State, which climbed to
eighth, polled one first place vote
and 114 points after getting past
Indiana 24-14. Georgia Tech, 22-14
loser to Tennessee, stepped out of

2. Alabama (11) 8-0
3. Arkansas (3) 8-0
4. Nebraska 8-0
5. Texas 7-1
6. MICHIGAN 6-1
7. Ohio State 6-1
8. Oregon State (1) 7-1
9. Louisiana State 5-1-1
10 Georgia Tech 7-1

367
334
283
220.
184
138
114
69
50

Added to the preseason injury 'knows, these are bad months for coaches." '
of sophomore quarterback Dick "If both coaches happen to be born in one of these evil months,
Vidmer, it appears that the
Wolverines have run into a rash the better dressed coach always wins."
WonjuriesthsyearnintEven if you don't have a foolproof system, you too can win fame
and fortune by picking up a Grid Picks entry blank at The Daily, 420
Injuries Severe Maynard St. The entries must be returned to The Daily by midnight
Actually, Michigan has had Friday, and the limit is one to a contestant. Weekly winners become
fewer injuries this year than in eligible for the grand prize to be awarded at the end of the season.
the past two seasons. The differ-" THIS WEEK'S GAMES

Other teams receiving votes, in alpha-
betical order: Auburn, Bowling Green,
Florida, Florida State, Georgia, Mich-
igan State, Oregon, Penn State, Prince-
ton, Purdue, Southern California, Sy
racuse, ;Tennessee, Tulsa.

ence this season according to
Elliott is that the injuries have
standings

PA

1. MICHIGAN at Iowa
2. Purdue at Minnesota
3. Northwestern at Ohio State
4. Wisconsin at Illinois
5. Michigan State at Notre Dame
6. Oregon at Indiana
7. Air Force at Wyoming
8. Alabama at Georgia Tech
9. So. Methodist at Arkansas
10. Colorado at Kansas

11. Brown at Harvard
12. Baylor at Kentucky
13. Mississippi at Tennessee
14. Missouri at Oklahoma
15. Oregon State at Stanford
16. Pittsburgh at Army
17. Texas A&M at Rice
18. UCLA at Washington
19. Texas at TCU
20. Georgia at Auburn

W LPF PA

31
49
76
63
64
79
123
93
105
116

6
6
5
4
4
4
3
2
3
3

1
1
2
3
3
3
5
5
4
4

136
157
133
129
115
97
95
111
150
84

66
56
110
91
110
100
154
131
147
156

\ v

L7

9

1

I

i-
FAIRi
FRIDAY and SATURDAY
We're Here!
Are, You?
Gertrude Stein -Virgil Thomson
FOUR SAINTS IN THREE ACTS
Includes famous Ariad
"Pidgeons On The Grass, Alas"

-finest quality
Pants
Skirts
(plain)
Sweaters
(plain)

laundry-
5C

Suies

*

Co ats &
Dresses.
- (plain)

$115
$140

A

I

RAINCOATS, Cleand &
waterproofed . $2.00

A & P CLEANERS
312 E. Huron
across from City r all
668-9500

selves, since many of them will
fill varsity positions as sopho-
mores next year.
Freshman coach Dennis Fitz-
gerald was a bit disappointed by
the over-all play. "tWe weren't as
effective as I had hoped, but it's
Welcome
Students!
* DISTINCTIVE
COLLEGIATE
HAIRSTYLING
For MEN-
And Women-
7 Hairstylists
THE DASCOLA BARBERS I
Near Michigan Theatre

DEPENDABLE
IMPORT SERVICE
and the PARTS.
We have the MECHANICS
NEW CAR DEALER
Triumph-Volvo-
Fiat-Checker
HERB ESTES
AUTOMART
319 W. Huron
665-3688

Complete Formal Rentali
Service
formal wear
byi
"AFTER SIX" k
TICE'S MEN'S SHOP ,
1109 S. University Campus Village
9:00-5:30 Mon. & Fri. till 8:30

"SHABBes Goy!
Igor Conducts
STRAVINSKY

RCA VICTOR

i

I

- ....... .
MONO
or
STEREO
Favorite Short Pieces-
Greeting Prelude, Circus
Polka, Dumbarton Oaks,
Etudes for Orchestra,
Suites for Orchestra,
CBC Symphony &

Just
Released
Jeu de Cartes,
Cleveland Orchestra,
Pas de deux from Bluebird,
Columbia Symphony
Scenes de Ballet,
CBC Symphony

J
0
A
N

B
A

r

~ ;
;. ;r.,-
. 4 4f~'' f : .:. ?:ti: r

E
Z

A
N
G
u
A
R

i

I

1i

I

-I1

I

I I X I mill

11

I

i

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan