THE MICHIGAN DAILY
SATURDAY. &V
THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~AT1TRnAV EbCT
KIL"i'1 i , "V X %J"JVA
olverines Hope to. Revenge 37- Drubbing
MURRAY SECOND:
'M' Harrier Surprises Rivals
.
By JIM BERGER
Associate Sports Editorf
urdue, the team that gave
hlgan its biggest drubbing last
invades Ann Arbor today
plete with a 300-piece band,
largest drum in the world and
famed Golden Girl.
ver 50,000 fans are expected at
higan Stadium this afternoon
ting at 1:30 for the game
ch is expected to be one of the
est of the season. 'the weather
cast calls for partly cloudy
s with a chance of showers.
Big Band
the game is disappointing,
chances are that won't be
case, the fans will be treated
t super-duper band show. The
ermaker band is one of the
:est in the nation, complete
1 flags, drums, props and
The Wolverine band, with not
quite so many flags and girls, has
a little more than half the num-
ber of players, is also rated as one
of the top collegiate bands in the
nation.
Both the Boilermakers and Wol-
verines will be seeking their first
Big Ten win of the season. Purdue
currently sports a 1-2 record while
Michigan has an even 1-1-1 mark.
Beat 'M'
Last season at Lafayette, the
Boilermakers made up for a 16-14
loss the year before by pasting the
Wolverines, 37-0.
Thus far this season the Boiler-
makers have shown little offense
and except for last week a good
defense. Opening against Miami
(Fla.), the Boilermakers were shut
out, 3-0. The next week they re-
bounded upsetting rival Notre
Dame, 7-6. Last week, in their
first conference game, the Boiler-
makers were buried by Wisconsin,
38-20.
THE LINEUPS
PURDUE
Hadrick
Brooks
Florence
Dudgeon
Lake
Hopp
Ellison
DiGravio
Morel
Kuzniewski
Donaldson
Pos. MICHIGAN
LE
LT
LIO
C
RG
RT
RE
QB
LH
RH
FB
Conley
Keating
O'Donnell
Cecchini
Hahn
Yearby
Laskey
Chandler
Clancy
Rindfuss
Anthony
eroit Loses Olympics;
Mexico City Receives Bid
(Continued from Page 1)
from yesterday's election of Mexi-
co City. To a man, the Detroit
group seemed unable to say any-
thing more than, "very disappoint-
ed." For'Gov. George Romney and
Mayor Jerome Cavanagh, the deci-
sion of the International Olympic
Committee to pick Mexico City
meant the fruitless end to seven
months of hard work.
Perhaps most bitterly disap-
pointed was Detroit industrialist
and University Regent Fred Mat-
thaei. Matthaei has been the most
enduring backer of Detroit's ef-
fort to get the games. This was
the seventh time he had taken De-
troit's bid all the way to the IOC
only to be turned down.
What makes yesterday's failure
all the more hard to take for Mat-
thaei is the fact that for the first
time he had the full support of the,
entire community behind him. It's
very doubtful that he will be work-
ing for Detroit in 1967, when next
the Olympic site question comes
due.
As for the other members of
the committee of nearly 300 who
worked on Detroit's Olympic pres-
entation, there almost certainly
will be experienced individuals
willing to give it another try in
1967. Gov. Romney has already ex-
pressed a willingness to go after
the 1972 games.
Canham Comments
Michigan varsity track Coach
DondCanham feels that Detroit.
would be foolish if it didn't go
after the 1972 games, although he3
doesn't feel Detroit will have an-
other goad shot at the games un-
til 1976, after the games have
been on the European continent
again.
"Detroit would be foolish if they
don't put out another bid. They'll
have a good chance of getting it
in 1976. Getting the right to be
bidder for the United States won't
be any problem. They can get that
part of it anytime they want it.
"There'll be a lot of new people
around for the 1976 bil and a lot
of people who got experience in
'this try."
Surprised at Choice
Canham, who felt that Lyon,
France, would be the site chosen
by, the' committee, expressedhsur-
prise at the election of Mexico
City. Earlier he had warned that
Detroit had lost a lot of votes be-
cause of the racial problem in the
United States; especially in light
of the bombing of a Birmingham,
Ala., church which killed four
young Negro girls.
Although he was surprised, Can-
ham did have an explanation of
Mexico City's successful bid. "I
think the boost camne from the
Iron Curtain countries. Russia
wants it in 1972 but if it were in
Europe in 1968 there would be the
continent problem to lick."
"The continent problem" can
best be expressed in what is be-
coming a rule of thumb for the
IOC. You can't have the Olympic
Games on the same continent
twice in a row. It is this principle
Detroit will have to overcome in
any 1972 bid.
Russia Seeking. Support
As toswhy the Soviets would
want Mexico City instead of De-
troit in 1968, when both would
seem to serve the purpose equally
well, Canham feels that by voting
to have the games in Latin Amer-
ica, Russia assured herself of
more votes for the 1972 effort.
Canham was also surprised that
the IOC delegates overlooked the
mile and a half height of MexicQ
City in their voting. "The heigh
will effect the performance of the
athletes, although I have no doubt
about Mexico City's ability to put
on the games. We held a national
meet in Colorado last year at a
height of about a mile and even
then we had problems, especially
in the distance events.
As to what effect the loss of the
Olympic Games will have on Mich-
igan's economy, Prof. Albert Swin-
gle, director of the University's
Bureau of Business Research;
pooh-poohed any real effect. "The
loss of the Olympics is nothing
compared to other' possibilities
Michigan has going for it in the
future,," he said.
Financial Survey
Swingle's group had made a sur-
vey early in Detroit's campaign
for the Olympic site and arrived
at a figure of $140 million of tan-
gible benefits, but the survey was
based on an earlier form of De-
troit's bid aid the figure could be
a great deal less than that if the
bid presented in Baden-Baden had
been accepted.
"The biggest benefit of getting
the Olympics would be intangible,
however," Swingle said. "Showing
the country and the world that
Detroit and Michigan could have
handled something like that would
have had immense value."
The big man to watch for Pur-
due will be number 17, Ron Di-
Gravio. The senior quarterback
from Weymouth, Mass., has start-
ed since his sophomore year. He
looked brilliant in defeat two
years ago. He looked more brilliant
in victory last year.
The 6', 172-p6und signalcaller
is a good ..500 passer and can
run. He also does the punting and
plays defensive back.
Other scoring threats are sopho-
more halfback John Kuzniewski,
and senior fullback Gene Donald-
son. Donaldson, who alternated
with Roy Walker last season, is a
pile-driving fullback who has good
speed in addition to his 215-
pounds.
Heavier Line
Michigan will have a seven-
pound per man weight advantage
on the line. Purdue averages 208,
while Michigan averages 215.
In the backfield, Michigan has
a slightly greater weight advan-
tage, averaging 199 to the Boiler-
makers' 190. This weight is spread
more nearly even throughout the
Wolverine's backfield, whereas in
Purdue's case, two men weigh
about 170 and two weigh 203 and
215.
Michigan coach Bump Elliott
will again start senior Bob Chan-
dler at quarterback. Chandler who
started last week in Michigan's 7-7
tie with Michigan State is ex-
pected to continue his passing. He
has thrown three touchdown
passes in the past two games to
end John Henderson. They were
Michigan's only scores.
Same Starters
Elliott has not made any
changes in his starting line-up.
Jim Conley and Bill Laskey will
I-M Scores
FACULTY FOOTBALL
Willow Run 9,Math Dept. 8
Psychology 12, Biochem. 0
Radiology Lab. 12, Eng. Mech. 6
Chem. Eng. 6, Philosophy 0
VOLLEYBALL
Alpha Delta P1 s, Kappa Sigma 1
Phi Sigma Delta 6, Delta Chi 0
Sigma Alpha Mu 6, Trigon 0
Zeta Beta Tau def. Phi Kappa Tau,
forfeit
COLLEGE FOOTBALL
RESULTS
Georgia!31, Miami (Fla) 14
S.E. Louisiana 36, Corpus Christi 0
Westchester St. 20, So. Connecticut 0
start at the ends; Tom Keating
and Bill Yearby will start at the.
tackles; Joe O'Donnell and Rich
Hahn at the guards, an Tom
Cecchini at center.
In the backfield it will be Chan-
dler at quarterback, Jack Clancy
and Dick Rindfuss at the half-
backs and Mel Anthony at full-
back.
Leading pass receiver Hender-
son and end Craig Kirby will also
be ready to come in at end. Quar-
terback Bob Timberlake will prob-
ably do the place kicking, with
Captain Joe O'Donnell punting.
Purdue Disappointed
The Boilermakers were one of
the big disappointments in the
Big Ten last season. Picked to be
among the contenders, Purdue
ended -up with a mediocre 4-4-1
mark including losses to Indiana,
Illinois and Minnesota in the con-
ference. In non-conference action
the Boilermakers were beaten by
Miami (Ohio) and tied Washing-
ton. Their victories were over
Michigan, Iowa, Notre Dame and
MichiganState.
Last year when Michigan and
Purdue met, the Wolverines had
just taken a 28-0 beating from
MSU.
This year the situation is dif-
ferent. Michigan opened with a
27-16 win over Southern Metho-
dist, were beaten by Navy, 26-13,
but rebounded to tie Michigan
State.
No Injuries
Michigan's team is in top shape.
The Wolverines received no in-
juries after last week's tie and
even halfback Dick Wells, out with
a bruised hip last week, may be
ready to see some action.
Likewise, the Boilermakers are
in top shape. If DiGravio is in-
effective, alternate Gary Hogan
may be able to do the trick. Hogan
also contributed in last season's
slaughter.
The point spread is nothing. The
game is a real toss-up, and al-
though it's difficult to predict,
today's game might be the most
exciting of the season (even re-
membering last week's tie.)
Iowa and Wisconsin Clash
For First Place in Big Ten
By The Associated Press
The Big Ten football weekend
pits its two leaders, unbeaten Iowa'
and Wisconsin-in a big clash for
the top spot in the conference
while the rest of the league battles
it out for the first division.
Coach Jerry Burns of the under-
dog Hawkeyes expects another
scoring donnybrook like the last
two meetings.
Left-handed Hal Brandt is the
trigger for . the Badgers' versatile
offense, and passing star Fred
Riddle is the major weapon in
Iowa's arsenal. But Wisconsin
should have a big edge on the
ground with a powerful running
attack.
The Illini, ranked seventh na-
tionally and unbeaten, face Min-
nesota.
Igniting the Illini have been a
rugged defense, hubbed by line-
backers Dick Butkus and Don
sHansen, and a backfield of veter-
ans and rookies.
Quarterback Mike Taliaferro
longhorn-Razorback Contest
Highlights National Action
Special To The Daily
SOUTH BEND, Ind.-After run-
ning in obscurity for two full
years, Michigan's Chris Murray is
finally starting to worry people.
Yesterday he worried Illinois' Al
Carius, defending Big Ten cross-
country and two-mile champion,
by outsprinting him for second
place in the Notre Dame Invita-
tional.
It was the first time the 135-
pound senior from Toronto had
ever beaten Carius. who last year
ran 12th in the NCAA four-mile
cross-country run at East Lansing.
The race gave Carius something
to worry about in the three weeks
before the Big Ten championships,
to be held in Champaign next
month with Illinois as the host
school.
Faster Than O'Hara
Murray, who has placed 11th in
the Big Ten cross-country meet'
and third in the two-mile, was onej
of three men to break the course
record of 19:22, set last year by
NCAA champion Tom O'Hara, of
Loyola (Chicago).
Yesterday's winner, in 19:13,
was Notre Dame's Frank Carver,
ninth in last year's NCAA cross-
country run. Murray's time was
19:15 and Carius' was.19:16.
Michigan's only other entrant,
sophomore Ted Benedict, finished
12th in 19:56.
Murray said he thought he
might have won except for a slip
with a quarter-mile to go.
and fullback Al Wheatland are
seniors, but a real threat is posed
by sophomores Jim Gragowski,
Sam Price and Fred Custardo.
Minnesota has another tough
defense bulwarked by huge tackle
Carl"Eller and linebacker Frank
Marchlewski.
In other games. Indiana travels
to meet Michigan State, Southern
Cal tests Ohio State, and North-
western meets Miami of Ohio.
Daily Libels
Whip Densians
In the days of lackluster foot-
ball at -Michigan there is one
team-one great squad, a Magnifi-
cent Seven, a Sparkling Samurai
-that stands head-and-shoulders
above all poor souls who deign to
think that they can defeat that
superlative squad in a game of
football.
That great team, the Michigan
Daily Libels, yesterday met and
slaughtered, demolished and
crushed a sorry aggregation of
Michigan-Densians.
The score is even too sickening
and one-sided to .mention. It was
12-6.
Scoring the first two times they
had the ball and never having to
punt, the Libels put on such a
dazzling show that even the sun
hid behind the clouds in shame.
Tom (The Trotter) Rowland
blinded the Densians with a dis-
play of ball-handling never be-
fore seen in the Ann Arbor area.
Bill (No Bull) Bullard caught one
of Trotter's missiles for one score
while Bob (The Zephyr) Zwinck
hooked up with the Trotter on a
pass-run combination.
No Bull's touchdown was set up
by a long pass-run gain from Trot-
ter to Stan (Ollie Fran) Kukla.
The Zephyr set up his own touch-
down with a pass interception.
The Cheetahs are the Libels' un-
surpassed two-way team while the
Red Dogs are the veritable wall-
of-stone defensive specialists. The
Densians got out of their own end
just once.
He had been carrying the pace
along the four-mile perimeter of
the Notre Dame Golf Course, but
lost his balance on a curve. Carver
and Carius both pulled past him,
and Murray was just able to over-
haul Carius at the wire.
"Chris looked as relaxed and
confident as I've ever seen him
run," said Assistant Coach Dave
Martin. "He said he felt real good
all the way and was very strong
at the finish."
Martin said Benedict looked
good, too, and would have been
fifth or sixth any other year.
Notre Dame won the team title
with 27 points, beating out West-
ern Michigan, second with 58. Il-
linois was fourth with 128.
Michigan also sent Brian Kelly
and Doug Purrington to run in the
three-mile freshman race. Kelly
finished second in 14:54, three sec-
onds off the winning time, and
Purrington was 33rd.
Michigan's next meet comes next
Saturday with Spring Arbor Jun-
ior College on the Varsity Golf
Course.
,..y
TOMORROW
THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL:
CORNED BEEF ON RYE
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1429 H ill St.
Hillel members
Non-members
75c
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By TOM WEINBERG
Top-ranked Texas, featuring the
offensive spark of quarterback
Duke Carlisle and the defensive
play of tackle Scott Appleton, runs
into Arkansas in one of the top
games of the week and could de-
cide the Southwest Conference ti-
tle.
In the South, top action is prom-
ised when undefeated and arch
rivals North Carolina and North
Carolina State clash before a par-
tisan crowd at Chapel Hill.
The East hosts two non-Ivy
League games which upstage the
league schedule. Dartmouth puts
the longest winning streak of any
major team-15-on the line
against Holy Cross and Princeton
will host Colgate in a battle of
unbeatens.
Fight for Survival
Stanford invades Washington in
a battle for survival in the Pacific
version of the race for the roses.
UCLA can look for lots of trou-
ble with Notre Dame.
Oklahoma will open defense of
the Big Eight crown without the
services of dismissed Joe Don
Looney against Kansas.
Down in the Southwest Confer-
ence, in addition to the Texas-
Arkansas battle, Baylor meets
Texas Tech, and Southern Meth-
odist will test Rice. Although SMU
upended Roger Staubach's Navy
last week, they must be at a peak
to dump the Owls.
Independents Clash
A battle of two of the country's
leading independents is on hand
at Syracuse where Penn State's
Nittany Lions will be pushed by
the Syracuse attack.
Air Force will meet thus-far,
unsuccessful Maryland, and Ala-
bama will try to re-enter the vic-
tory column when they meet Ten-
nessee.
AU
rr.wr r ri rrr
-7
(By the Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys!" and,
"Barefoot Boy With Cheek.";
I mmmmmmm
BOOM!
Peo4otaiqe4
STATIONERY
PENCILS
MATCHES
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NO)
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Ann Arbor Addrress__________________________
Today, foregoing levity, let us turn our keen young minds to
the principal problem facing American colleges today: the
population explosion. Only last week four people exploded in
Cleveland, Ohio-one of them while carrying a plate of soup.
In case you're thinking such a thing couldn't happen anywhere
but in Cleveland, let me tell you about two other cases last
week-a 45-year-old man in Provo, Utah, and a 19-year-old
girl in Northfield, Minnesota. And, in addition, there was a
near miss in High Point, North Carolina-an eight-year-old
boy who was saved only by the quick thinking of his cat, Fred,who
pushed the phone off the hook with his muzzle and dialed the
department of weights and measures. (It would, perhaps, have
been more logical for Fred to dial the fire department, but one
can hardly expect a cat to summon a fire engine which is fol-
lowed by a Dalmatian, can one?)
But I digress. The population explosion, t say, is upon us.
It is, of course, cause for concern but not for alarm, because I
feel sure that science will ultimately find an answer. After all,
/
(a1r people expldceJ 11z6 /dr
has not science in recent years brought us such marvels as the
maser, the bevatron, and the Marlboro filter? Oh, what a saga
of science was the discovery of the Marlboro filter ! Oh, what a
heart-rending epic of trial and error, of dedication and perse-
verance ! And, in the end, what a triumph it was when the
Marlboro research team, after years of testing and discarding
one filter material after another-iron, nickel, tin, antimony,
obsidian, poundeake-finally emerged, tired but happy, from
their laboratory, carrying in their hands the perfect filter
cigarette! Indeed, what rejoicing there still is whenever we
light up a Marlboro which comes to us in soft pack and Flip-
Top Box in all fifty states and Cleveland!
Yes, science will ultimately solve the problems arising from
the population explosion, but meanwhile America's colleges
are in dire straits. Where can we find classrooms and teachers
for today's gigantic influx of students?
Well sir, some say the solution is to adopt the trimester sys-
tem. This system, already in use at many colleges, eliminates
summer vacations, has three semesters per annum instead of
two, and compresses a four-year-course into three years.
This is, of course, good, but is it good enough? Even under
the trimester system the student has occasional days off. More-
over, his nights are utterly wasted in sleeping. Is this the'kind
of all-out attack that is indicated?
I say no. I say desperate situations call for desperate reme-
dies. I say that partial measures will not solve this crisis. I
say we must do no less than go to school every single day of
the year. But that is not all. I say we must go to school 24
hours of every day!
The benefits of such a program are, as you can see, obvious.
First of all, the classroom shortage will disappear because all
the dormitories can be converted into classrooms. Second, the
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