SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY F ,'ITIAY', [1C.' 't'tt tTi'.14. y ! rtt fi SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY r* u= **Ai*A.~ sA 'J.JAyZ L1yb I ORDER NOW Personalized ifts for Christmas STATIONERY , MATCHES * NAPKINS * PLAYING CARDS ' PENCILS (for the children) insure adequate time for delivery by ordering now. RAMSAY PRINTERS, Inc. 119 E. Liberty Street (across from the P. Bell) Mollenkopf May Junk Three-Team System .h (EDITOR'S NOTE: The following acticle was written especially for The Michigan Daily by Steve Egger, sports editor of the Purdue Ex- ponent.) By STEVE EGGER Sports Editor, Purdue Exponent LAFAYETTE-It is extremely difficult to preview a game fol- lowing a contest such as Purdue played with Miami (0.) last week- end. With chances extremely high that Boilermaker coach Jack Mol- lenkopf will junk his three-team system and revert back to the al- ternate unit system making num- erous personnel changes in the .., S AUTOMATIC PHOTOGRAPHY Completely automatic exposure control with filter compensation does away with ail exposure worries and makes photo technical knowledge unnecessary. Black and white or color with the fully automatic ROLLEI-MAGIC requires simply: a glance, a click for a perfect ROLLEl picture. Nothing could be easier or quicker. Every problem is solved for you. No guessing about 'sharpness or composition. The future picture ris seen on the super clear focusing screen with bright Corners, clear and full of 'color. it is sharp and in full size lust as it will appear finally as it is automatically photographed by the ROLLEI-MAGIC. " - WHAT YOU SEE process, this preview may seem a little sketchy to the Michigan fans for whom this column is being written. The three-team system installed by Mollenkopf this year was very similar to that started by Paul Dietzel when he coached at Loui- siana State. This system achieved limited success in the first two games ({Washington and Notre Dame) with the three units being known as the "Gold" (two-way team), the "Raiders" (offensive specialists), and the "Rippers" (defensive specialists). Numerous Misplays However, a rash of injuries and a lack of continuity in the offen- sive attack resulting in numerous misplays against Miami's Red- skins is almost certain to see two teams capable of playing both ways readied for Saturday's en- counter with the Wolverines. The end position has been hit the hardest by injuries. Co- captain Forest Farmer suffered a fractured thumb against Miami and will be out for three weeks. Farmer had previously started every game in his varsity career. Knee injuries have also made part- time players out of Don Brooks and Clarence Foster. Greiner To Start Senior John Greiner will un- doubtedly move into the spot va- cated by Farmer with Brooks scheduled for the other starting spot. Foster and converted full- back Dave Ellison may hold down the end slots on the alternate unit. Other possible candidates for these positions are senior John Wilson and sophomores Sam Longmire Brumm is the leading tackle on the Rivet team. Light by Big Ten standards at 218-pounds Brumm is one of few Hoosiers seeing action wit hthe top two teams. 249- pound Ron Richnafsky has been the other starting tackle for Pur- due in the first three games; how- AT LEFT HALF: StrobelI Earns Post In First Backfield ever, sophomore Jim Garcia may take Richnafsky's place on the number one unit. Gap at Guard The graduation of Stan Sczurek and Tom Krysinski left a big gap in the guard corps. Juniors Wally Florence and Bob Lake have done an admirable job with the first unit while sophomores George Pappas, Lou DeFillipo, Bill Ho- ward, and Jim Valesano and junior letter man Tom Kotoske will pro- vide support at this position. Co-captain Don Paltani, a steady performer who came into hi own in the Michigan game last year, is the starting center. Junior Pete Dudgeon will in all proba- bility be the center on the second unit although sophomore Ed Flan- agan may see a lot of action. Juniors Ron DiGravio and Gary Hogan have split the quarter- backing duties this fall with Di- Gravio perhaps having the edge. They had a very frustrating day Saturday in their passing efforts as receivers dropped nine passes that should have been caught. Senior Ron Meyer will play de- fense for both Hogan and Di-' Gravio. Many Halfbacks There are numerous lettermen and topflight sophomores avail- able for halfback duty. Mollen- kopf has tried many combinations and had apparently come up with a top-flight pair in sophomore Charley King and junior Terry Marcoline. Three Fullbacks The Boilermakers have three top-flight fullbacks in Roy Walk- er, Tom Yakubowski, and Gene Donaldson. Walker has been the leading ground-gainer this year but his action has been limited en- tirely to offense. For this reason Yakubowski or Donaldson may be switched to the first unit unless Mollenkopf chooses to replace Walker on defense with letterman Bob Plaskon, This is a brief picture of a rather embarrassed Purdue Uni- versity football team which will take the field against Michigan Saturday afternoon at West La- fayette. Whether Mollenkopf can succeed in rebuilding the morale and confidence of the Boiler- makers may be determined in the early minutes of the game as Pur- due opens its Big Ten football season for 1962. By MIKE BLOCK It's been three years in the making ,but Jack Strobel has fin- ally come into his own in the Michigan backfield. For Strobel, in his sophomore and junior years, played under- study to Bennie McRae, one of the more spectacular Wolverine backs in recent memory. But with the departure of McRae, head coach Bump Elliott has elevated him to the starting left halfback slot. Tomorrow against Purdue, Stro- bel will accompany Bob Timber- lake, Dave Raimey, and Wayne Sparkman in the backfield sector of the first team. In for Bennie Last year, Wolverine followers became accustomed to seeing Stro- bel replace McRae every time the team went on the defense. Not that it disturbed them very much -as a safety, Strobel was the top man in the defensive backfield, J It - YOU GET The new ROLLEI PROJECTOR has two magazine s 'ftracks for all sizes of slides, from miniature to 6x6 cm imagesize. Slidetransportimage changing forward and reverse or optional image repetition are auto- matically controlled by push buttons on the unit or by remote operation. Lenses of different focal lengths permit home and large auditorium pro. 1eytion. Further ROLLEI programs: ROLLEIFLEX T . 3.5 F " 2.8 F " TELE-ROLLEIFLEX ROLLEl PENTA PRISM." ROLLEI MICRO ATTACHMENT --i. flAnn Arbor's Only Exclusive Camera Shop "PURCHASE FROM PURCHASE" and John Spires. All-American candidate Don -- NEWMAN CENTER 331 THOMPSON FRIDAY-OCTOBER 19 8:30 P.M. Dance- "ORIENTAL HOLIDAY" breaking up pass plays and bring- ing down runners with reckless abandon. Besides operating in McRae's shadow, Strobel has also had to overcome the obstacle of his small sibe. The 21-year old senior from Chicago is just 5'9", 175 lb., but he acts as though he weren't aware of the fact. When asked what he does as a ballcarrier when the line doesn't open up a hole for him, he shrugged, "I just put my head down and dive in." And it's rather difficult for the defensive linemen to believe he isn't a 200- pounder. That Knee Again Knee injuries have plagued Strobel ever since last year's Iowa game. Although he missed the re- mainder of the 1961 season and' all of spring practice this year, he had recovered enough to play full capacity this fall. As luck would have it, he twisted the knee again this past Saturday against Michigan State, but fortunately, he's rested it enough this week to be able to start tomorrow. So far, Strobel's main offensive function has been to serve as a blocker for Raimey, which, again, is quite an assignment consider- ing his size. In plays where he's the ball-carrier, he's generally sent on a trap inside tackle, or else on a slant between tackle and end. Strobel, incidentally, termed Raimey one of the best runners he's seen. "He combines speed with great power, making him very hard to bring down," said Strobel, 'and he's terrific at making a hole when there isn't any already there for him." Three-Sport Man Strobel lettered in football, baseball, and basketball at Fen- wick High School in Maywood, Ill., and was selected all-city and all-state in football, and all-city in baseball. When he came to Ann Arbor, he concentrated on foot- ball, and in the meantime won the John Maulbetsch Scholarship for- his scholastic and leadership abil- ities. While in Ann Arbor the temper- ature generally jumps up to 70 or 80 degrees for a football game,2 Strobel considers himself .a cool weather man. "In warm weather, you can loosen up and reach your' peak faster," he noted, "but you're also tired out a lot earlier in the game. When it's cool, though, you last a lot longer, and you have to play that much harder in order to keep warm." Where Michigan gridiron glory is concerned, it's this year or not at all for Strobel. Evidently, El- liott, at least, thinks this is the year, and is showing this confi- dence by assigning him that long- coveted opening berth. GRID SE LECTIO It's flip a coin week in the Michigan Daily grid picks contest. There isn't anyone on the Daily sports staff that agrees even re- motely on who's going to win in this week's 20 tough ones. If you're lucky at coi nflipping, or have got some secret system, bring or mail your entry to The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, by midnight tonight. No fair cheating-one entry per person, please. The winner will receive two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre, now showing the "Lady and the Tramp" and a free subscription to The Football News, a weekly gridiron paper. This week's guest selector is Russell Berg, who leads the Football News staff of grid exterts, and woud lead the Daily staff by one game if he had been a season long entrant. CONSENSUS PICKS IN CAPS (Consensus-58-22-.725) 1. Michigan at PURDUE 2. Northwestern at OHIO STATE 3. It'ICHIGAN STATE at Notre Darne 4. Illinois at MINNESOTA 5. Iowa at WISCONSIN 6. INDIANA at Washington State. 7. Navy at BOSTON COLLEGE 8. Harvard at COLUMBIA 9. HOLY CROSS at Dartmouth 10. Syracuse at PENN STATE 11. UCLA at Pittsburgh 12. GEORGIA TECH at Auburn 13. DUKE at Clemson 14. FLORIDA STATE at Georgia 15. Mississippi State at HOUSTON 16. SOUTH CAROLINA at North Carolina 17. OKLAHOMA at Kansas 18. Arkansas at TEXAS 19. NEW MEXICO at Utah 20. WASHINGTON at Stanford a 1116 South University NO 5-6101 jI --.-- --m---- w m STILL GOING ! LEAGUE PETITION ING AND INTERVIEWING UNIVERSITY SERVICES COMMITTEE FALL FILL-INS: EDUCATIONAL AND CULTURAL COMMITTEE SOCIAL COMMITTEE INTERNATIONAL COMMITTEE SENIOR NIGHT CENTRAL COMMITTEE PICK UP PETITIONS IN THE LEAGUE UNDERGRADUATE OFFICE AND SIGN UP FOR AN INTERVIEW. INTERVIEWING ENDS OCTOBER 24 I I STAFF SELECTIONS STAN KULKLA (57-23-.713)-Pur, OSU, MSU, MINN, Wis, Ind, BC, Col, SC Penn St, UCLA, Ga Tech, Duke, Ga, Hou, SC, Okla, Tex, Utah, Wash. DAVE ANDREWS (Associate Sports Editor-56-24-.700)-Pur, OSU, Minn, Wis, Ind, Navy, Har, Dart, Penn St, UCLA, Ga Tech, Duke, Fla St, Miss St, SC, Kan, Ark, Utah Wash. PETE DiLORENZI (56-24-.700)-Pur OSU, MSU, Minn, Wis, Ind, BC, Col, Dart, Penn St, Pitts, Ga Tech, Duke, Ga, Hou, NC, Okla, Ark, New Mex, Wash. MIKE BLOCK (55-25-.688)-Mich, OSU, MSU, Minn, Wis, Ind, BC, Col, Dart, Penn St UCLA, Ga Tech, Duke, Fla St, Hou, SC, Ken, Tex, New Mex, Wash. JIM BERGER (54-26-675)-Pur; OSU, MSU, Minn, Wis, Ind, BC, Har, Dart, Penn St, Pitt, Ga Tech, Duke, Fla St, Hou, NC, Okla, Tex, New Mex, Wash. BOB ZWINCK (54.26-.675)-Pur, OSU, MSU, Minn, Wis, Wash St, Navy, 001, HC, Penn St, UCLA, Ga Tech, Duke, Ga, Miss St, SC, Kan, Tex, New Mex, Wash, DAVE GOOD (53-27-.663)-Pur, OSU, MSU, Minn, Wis, Ind, BC, Cal, HC, Penn St, UCLA, Ge Tech Duke, Fla St, Miss St, SC, Okla, Ark, Utah, Wash. JERRY KALISH (53-27-.663)-Mich, OSU, MSU, Minn, Wis, Wash St, BC, Cal, HC, Penn St, UCLA, Ga Tech, Duke, Fla St, Hou, NC, Kan, Ark, Utah, Wash. TOM WEBBER (Sports Editor-51-29-.638)-Pur, OSU, MSU, Minn, Wis, Ind, Navy, Har, Dart, Penn St, Pitt, Ga Tech, Duke, Fla St, Miss St, SC, Kan, Ark,' New Mex, Wash. JOHN SCOCHIN (51-29-.638)-Mich, NU, MSU, Minn, Wis, Ind, BC, Har, HC, Penn St, UCLA, Ga Tech, Duke, Fla St, Miss St, SC, Okla, Tex, New°Mex, Wash. JAN WINKELMAN (Associate Sports Editor-50-30-.625)-Pur, OSU, MSU, Minn, Iowa, Ind, Navy, Har, HC, Penn St, UCLA, Ga Tech, Duke, Fla St, NC, Okla, Tex, New Mex, Wash. RUSSELL BERG (Guest Selector--48-32.-600)-Pur, NU, MSU, Minn, Wis, Ind, BC, Har, Dart, Penn St, UCLA, Ga Tech, Duke, Fla St, Miss St, SC, Okla, Tex, New Mex, Wash. B'NAI B'RITH HfILLEL FOUNDATION i SUPPER CLUB RESUMES Sunday, October 21 -6 P.M. (Kosher Delicatessen) $.75 for members $1 for non-members 1429 Hill Street get Lots More from lM mrore body F -in the blend ~~~more flavor n::::m i 1DM 'I:-., 111. (.LJ1. .711.L -?w- m:r~ tc VAV nRn$ 1. i