26, 1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 26-1-3.--IC I AN DAL V N * SPAR TANS MUST PLUG HOLES: Navy, Pittsburgh, Penn State Tapped for Tough Opponents MSU Gets 'N fiddle-of-the-Pack' T LOOKING 'EM OVER-Navy's ace quarterback Roger Staubach seemingly looks right at the defense to complete his passes. Last week against a highly-rated West Virginia eleven he completed 17 of 22 for 209 yards-in just over three quarters of the 51-7 rout. ON COAST: Oklahoma, Oregon Challenge Leaders, By RICHARD EISENBERG The strength of the independ- ents has already become apparent with nine squads rated with the best in the land. Heading the impressive list is! Navy, fresh from a 51-7 shellack- ing of West Virginia. Led by its highly publicized quarterback, Roger Staubach, the midshipmen are one of the favorites in the ~quest for the Lambert Trophy,. symbolic of Eastern football su- premacy. John Sai heads a list of' fleet running backs. Up front, the ends and tackles are sound but the middle of the line was hurt by graduation losses. This week Navy is scheduled to go against a relatively weak Wil- liam and Mary team. Pitt Tough In a typically rugged schedule, Pittsburgh will be fielding one of its finest teams. The Panthers were successful in their first out- ing, with a 20-0 victory over UCLA. This weekend they can count on one of their toughest games against the Washington Huskies. Leading the offensive attack for Pittsburgh are Rick -Leeson and Paul Martha, two of the fine run- ning backs in the country. The Panthers' line is, as usual, tough. Quarterback Terry Isaacson, who led in the Air Force Acade- my's upset victory over Washing- ton, may be the finest at the school since the famed Rich Mayo. The Falcons, with unusual depth and the fine running of fullback Larry Tollstam, will face Colorado State this week. Not Getting Warmer Army is still searching for a quarterback. In the second year under Coach Paul Dietzel, the Ca- dets must solve this problem if they are to prevent Navy from taking an unprecedented fifth straight victory. Dietzel also finds himself in the awkward position of having his unique three platoon system of specialists somewhat interfered with by the rules com- mittee. Penn State, the defending cham- pion in the East, opened the sea- son with a 17-7 victory over Ore- gon. The Nittany Lions, who were hurt through graduation losses, are featuring a new offense - the "swing T," with five backsin the game at a time, one of them play- ing end. Syracuse, with a victory over Boston College under its belt, lacks very important team speed, but has powerful fullback Jim Nance and should be very strong again this season. The Orangemen meet the Kansas Jayhawks this Satur- day. Little-known Memphis State University held powerful Missis- sippi to a scoreless tie last Sat- urday. The Tigers, 8-1 in 1962, have 24 lettermen back and next take on Tulsa. By TOM ROWLAND special To The Daily EAST LANSING-Head football coach Duffy Daugherty paced vig- orously up and down the sidelines during the last Michigan State game-type scrimmage here Satur- day. He was trying to find a quarter- back. Sophomore Steve Juday and letterman Dick Proebstle, the two Spartan signal-calling candidates, took turns directing the Green first team, and after the first stringers won a 37-6 victory over the Whites, Duffy still hadn't made up his mind. Proebstle com- pleted four of nine passes and hit end Tom Krzemienski for an 18- yard touchdown, and Juday nailed receivers on six of 11 aerials, in- cluding two TD tosses to Krze- mienski. All of which made one thing definite: Krzemienski will start at of ensive left end this year. Picks Juday Finally, after reviewing the, scrimmage movies, Daugherty set- tied on Juday to direct the Spar- tans against North Carolina this Saturday. That answered one question. But what about all those other question marks that have kept Duffy pacing the sidelines this season? Where to replace six of his starting linemen from the Big Green Wall of a year ago? How to find a fullback of thelikes of the fabulous George Saimes, another graduation casualty? The soph crop was small in number and potential. Where to fill in the need for a power run- ner? And this year the Spartans have scheduled the top teams of 1962, Southern California and Wisconsin, along with Notre Dame, Illinois, Michigan and Northwest- ern. Although not ranked in the country's top 20 for the first time in a long while, and with the pres- sure seemingly off, Daugherty is on the spot to produce an adequate season after last year's disappoint- ing 5-4 mark. So the Spartan head mentor has shifted some of his players around to new spots, invented a couple of new positions, and come up with a 1963 football team that looks ready to put up a scrap for a fifth straight 'State winning season. On the Line First problem on hand was re- building the Spartan forward wall, where they're now 20 pounds per man lighter than last year. State will weigh about 209 pounds across the line this fall. With Krzemienski at one end on offense the other wingman po- sition could only go to 6'4" Matt Snorton, who is the last living remains of the gigantic forward wall Duffy had a year ago. It was pretty evident that the 245-pound senior was in top form Saturday as he hauled in a 45-yard pass to set up the third Green TD. Co-captain Dan Underwood and Hubert Benson give State fairly good depth at the end spot. Veteran two - time letterman Dave Herman will start at left tackle. He's big-6'1" and 236 pounds-and along with left guard Earl Lattimer could make that side of the line rough. Lattimer was switched during the spring from the fullback spot. Local Boy Center goes toanother conver- tee, former guard and sophomore Don Ross, an all-stater from East Lansing. Starting right guard Steve Mel- linger is out of the lineup right now with a badly mangled leg, and soph John Karpinski (5'11", 205) has taken over. Rahn Bentley, a former guard from Grand Rapids, holds the right tackle position down-he's 5'9 -at 214 pounds. So the line is bound to be weak- er than last year, but what about plugging up the lineup holes in the backfield? The quarterback spot is still fuzzy, but the names Sherman Lewis, Dewey Lincoln, Ron Rubick and Roger Lopes are already on the programs. Lincoln and Lewis ran from the halfback slots last year, but Duffy shifted Lincoln to full and inserted Rubick at half in the spring. Last Saturday Lincoln was back at halfback and Lopes had moved into the fullback spot. The reason is pretty obvious. Without Lopes the Spartans would have about the lightest running crew around. (Lincoln is 185, Ru- bick 178, and Lewis 150.) The placement of Lopes at full gives; State the power runner they need. Lopes is 5'10" weighing 215-a powerful runner who, given the hole, can really mov A bulldozer-type runner, he accomplished surfboard r majoring physical education Go! Go! Lewis is an amazingly fast back who led the team in sc last year. He's won two Bi broad Jump titles and 300C dash crown during the si times and will be State's big away threat this fall. His running partner. Linc much the same--give him daylight in the secondary an a tough man to grab. The lem this year will be gettini into the secondary. If all else fails to bring to Spartan Stadium this fal Michigan State kicking a will. The Spartans have g great booter in Lou Bobich, a bor with a highly unort style. He kicks using a socce -approaching from the sid hitting the ball with the side of his foot. He's one ( best kickers MSU's had in a while. While it's a make-shift, State won't be any soft touc fall, but the Spartans look a dive. Just how succes Daugherty can fill in the an to some of those line-up que will determine how far. RENT A TV THIS SEMESTEF R ncr r c Vni ire r Kl^%Ai' By MIKE MEYERS, After college football's first big Saturday, it appears as though the 1963 campaign in the West Coast's Big Six Conference will not be as one-sided an affair as was pre- viously predicted. Southern California, nearly everybody's choice to repeat last year's nationial championship, looked anything but the part as they defeated an aroused Colorado team, 14-0. Quarterback Pete Beathard, who threw a record four touchdown passes in last year's Rose Bowl against Wisconsin, couldn't get his aerial game start- ed on a rain-soaked field. He was more fortunate with his running game, scoring both of USC's touchdowns personally on sprints of five yards each. Bad Boys Hal Bedsole, 6'5" Trojan end, caught one of Beathard's good tosses for a 63-yard gain, but the play was called back on a penalty. USC was penalized a total of 107 yards. Washington's Huskies met dis- aster at the hands of Air Force as quarterback Terry Isaacson marched the Falcons 91 yards for a score with only one-and-a-half minutes to play. Washington, listed as number ten nationally in pre-season rat- ings, are playing without fullback Junior Coffey who has a broken foot. Stacked Deck? Coach Bill Barnes of UCLA has reshuffled the Bruins T-formation for more adaptability. The modi- fied offense did little good, how- ever, as Pittsburgh toppled them, 20-0, in a Friday night game. UCLA has a Junior College All- America in passer Steve Sindell and a fine runner in quarterback Larry Zeno. Also adding to Bruin punch are Mel Profit, 6'5" end, and Russ Banducci, 215-pound sophomore guard. California started their season with a 15-8 victory over Iowa State. Quarterback Craig Morton played a poor first half, complet- ing only two of nine passes for the Golden Bears. The second half was a complete reverse with Mor- ton leading Cal's running and passing game. Look Out? Coach Mary Levy has 24 letter- man returning to make California the dark. horse of the Big Six. New head coach John Ralston started his regime on the right foot as Stanford smashed San Jose State, 29-13. Halfback Dick Ragsdale scored all four Indian touchdowns with runs of 45 and 49 yards and pass receptions of 35 and 9 yards., The Indians should have strong quarterbacking with Clark Weaver and Steve Thurlow who divided the job last year. Joining the squad is sophomore signal-caller. Mike Connelly who was outstand- ing as a freshman. Take Anacin Washington State was upset in its first outing by Texas Tech, 16- 7, but the great passing of Dave Mathieson should promise better things to come. ThisSaturday's big game is the' nationally televised battle between Oklahoma and Southern Californ- ia. There are overtones of national championship in this one. Other games match California against Illinois, Washington, State at Iowa, Washington at Pitt, UCLA at highly-rated Penn State, and Stanford at Oregon. FRED PETERS -Class of 1965 (master barber) invites you to U-M Barbers N. University near Kresge's ---and DOMENIC DASCOLA, Lit '36 V invites you to try the Dascola Barbers opposite Jacobson's y a aa SHERMAN LEWIS DEWEY LINCOLN ... bolsters State speedster pair ... N EW 19" G.E. 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