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September 21, 1962 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1962-09-21

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21,1962

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

PAG

Purdue, orthwestern,

Indiana

Open

Cards.

REMEMBER
BIG CLUB

Yc

By TOM ROLAND

College grid fans will get a peak
at what the Big Ten has to offer
this fall as three conference squads
-- Purdue, Indiana and North,

western - get into action against
intersectional rivals Saturday.
The Boilermakers, slated for big
things this season, head into a
stiff first-game test against Wash-

To Matt Mann

Matt Mann's death last Aug-
ust 6 at the age of 77 ended a
fabulous 56-year coaching ca-
reer which saw Michigan's
swimming teams rise from
nothing to national prominence.
In 26 years at Michigan,
Mann coached 16 Big Ten and
13 NCAA championship teams.
He coached the United States
Olympic Team in 1952. After
compulsory retirement in 1953,
Mann went to the University of

Oklahoma where he coached
eight straight Big Eight title
winners.
"His coaching record was un-
surpassed in college circles,"
said Fritz Crisler, Michigan
athletic director.
The author of this tribute to
Mann is J. Fred Lawton, '11,
who also authored a biography
of "Hurry Up" Yost and wrote
"Roses that Bloomed in the
Snow" besides co-authoring the
immortal song, "Varsity".

ington, and Indiana takes on Kan-
sas State on the home Hoosier
territory. Northwestern tangles
with South Carolina at Evanston.
Close Call
A Purdue squad that is sup-
posedly set to crash into the ring
of rose-smelling conference-power-
houses this fall almost received
a premature upset yesterday. Their
chartered DC6, carrying team,
coaches, and Big Ten commission-
er Bill Reed, skidded to a halt
three-fourths down the runway
on takeoff for Seattle with a
crack in the air pipe intake of
the right inboard engine. No one
was injured.
The Boilermakers were on their
way to break into 1962 grid con-
tention-the first year that a
Purdue squad has been rated any-
thing besides a strong underdog
since the dawn of recorded sports
writing. They've never played in
the Rose Bowl, and pre-season
win-guessers give the Boilermakers
a good chance for a crack at the
Pasadena trip. Of course, there
are small matters-such as Michi-
gan State (at East Lansing, Nov.
10).

Ron DiGravio and Gary Hogan
give Purdue plenty of spark at
the quarterback post, and the rest
of the backfield is triple-stacked.
Strong Backs
Tom Yakubowski, who was num-
ber one at fullback until side-
lined with an injury last fall, and
Roy Walker are powerful in }he
line-smashing department. Tom
Bloom (six yards a carry last
year) and Dave Miller hold down
the halfback slots.
Coach Jack Mollenkopf lost
some key personnel from the line
but has an eager crowd of beefy
tackles to fill in open spots. Vet-
eran returnees Don Brumm, Forest
Farmer, and Don Paltani bolster
the rest of the forward wall.
With a rebuilding year behind
them Washington will be ready
to give the Midwesterners a stiff
opener. Especially tough on de-
fense, the Huskies are looking for
a strong signal caller to direct a
squad that includes 23 returning
lettermen. Pete Ohler has the
first-string QB spot now; he's
directing a strong backfield with
seven potential starters.
The line is big, anchored by

Ray Mansfield, 235-pound All-
American candidate at center.
Comeback-Ready
Indiana was 0-6 in the Big Ten
last fall, is hoping for better things
this fall. The most pressing Hoo-
sier problem is at quarterback, a
slot vacated by Byron Broome last

fall. The halfback outlook is
brighter. Last year's leading
ground-gainer Marv Woodson re-
turns along with wingback Nate
Ramsey.
The Indiana first game may be
a morale booster. Kansas State
hasn't won a conference game in
two years and this fall threatens
to be more of the same. The Wild-
cats are two-lettermen deep at
every line position, though, and 18
of last year's top 22 are back.
Wildcat Veterans
Northwestern is expected to
field nine lettermen when they
meet South Carolina. The Wild-
cats, a "doubtful but potential"
in the Big Ten this fall, will be
headed by All-American candi-
dates Bill Swingle and Jack
Cvercko.
Northwestern, too, is troubled
with quarterback questions this
year. Either sophomore Tom Myers
or senior Fred Quinn will get the
call tomorrow. Myers, said to have
the qualities of a first-rate helms-
man, hit to the air for 75 touch-
down passes in high school.
South Carolina, ranked about
in the middle of the Atlantic

Coast conference this fall, will
throw a veteran team against the
Wildcats. Two sophomores, Dea-
con Reeves and Blackjack Mc-
Cathern will share quarterback
chores.
The meeting is the first between
the° two schools.
BULLETIN
Do you feel that there is any-
thing wrong with The Daily's
coverage of Michigan and na-
tional sports? Do you think that
our sports writing is exception-
ally poor?
If you do, or if you would just
like to come around and help us
write sports, meet coaches, learn
how a newspaper really func-
tions, get the inside look at all
sports on campus, then come
around to The Daily
There will be a meeting of all
students interested in becoming
Daily sports writers at 5:00 p.m.
Sunday on the second floor of
The Daily, 420 Maynard St. No
experience required.

I

SAT.

Michigan Union

you'll

So long, great Coach, they say your soul has
left this earthly strand
No more we'll see your kindly smile, nor feel
your friendly hand,
But Matt, we bring no doleful dirge-or sound
of tolling bell
We know you'd want the "Victors" as your
Michigan farewell.
You coached her Youth-year after year they
triumphed in the pool
You loved them as a father loves his boys
-you loved their School!l
You loved Ann Arbor town-the Huron's song
-the Stadium's roar
You loved their teams, no matter what the game,
or what the score.
Our Michigan is greater, stronger, Matt, because
of you
Who lived each day the Spirit of "The Yellow
and the Blue."
God bless you as we say goodbye-with thanks,
and thanks again.
Your monument is in the hearts and minds of
Michigan men!
-J. Fred Lawton, '11

FOREST FARMER
. . . Purdue co-captain

like the

I

II

'

Major League Standings

J

AMERICANl

New York
Minnesota,
Los Angeles
Chicago
Detroit
Baltimore
Cleveland
Boston
Kansas City
Washington

LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
91 63 .591 -
87 68 .561 4%
83 70 .542 71
81 73 .526 10
79 74 .516 111W
74 79 .484 1612
74 80 .481 17
73 81 .474 18
69 84 .451 211-
58 97 .374 33Wf

NATIONAL

Los Angeles
San Francisco
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
Milwaukee
Sts Louis
Philadelphia
Houston
Chicago
New York

LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
99 54 .647 -
95 58 .625 4
94 61 .610 6
90 63 .586 9
80 74 .519 19Y/2
78 75 .507 21
77 77 .500 212
60 91 .397 38
56 98 .359 43%/
37 115 .243 612

Rec

MCI
mo=M.,

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fit

.wood & Ross introduces
a very special all-season coat .

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. .

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Chicago 6, Boston 4
Cleveland 5, Kansas City 2
Detroit 5, Minnesota 1
(Only games scheduled)
TODAY'S GAMES
Cleveland at Los Angeles (n)
Detroit at Kansas City (n)
Minnesota at Baltimore (n)
Boston at Washington (n)
New York at Chicago (n)

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Houston 7-5, New York 2-4 (second
game, 12 inn.)
Philadelphia 3-1, Chicago 1-4
Pittsburgh 4, Cincinnati 3
St. Louis 5, San Francisco 4
(Only games scheduled)
TODAY'S GAMES
Chicago at New York (n)
Cincinnati at Philadelphia (n)
Milwaukee at Pittsburgh (n)
Los Angeles at St. Louis (n)
San Francisco at Houston (n)

1
' ++
1
1
-
+
1
r'
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