DAY, OCTOBER 28, 1947 THE MICHIGAN D A IL Y !Me= i A WHOLLY NEW IDEA IN PENS PARKER "51" "Writes dry with wet ink" 0 Lee ms show you the magic in the new Parker "51". Uses amazing new Parker "5J" Ink that dries as ,You wric! You need no blotter! 'The "51" pen starts on the split seroud ... gives you satin-smooth writing. MIany istrous colors. See them today. $12.50 and $15.00. CALKI NS-FLETCH ER DRUG CO. 324 South State Street 818 South State Street Irish on Top As Wolverines Second in Poll Michigan Relegated After Gopher Clash (Continued from Page 1) to seventh by outlasting previous- ly-unbeaten West Virginia, 21-14. The Southern Methodist Mus- tangs climbed to eighth place on a 7-0 win over U.C.L.A. Duke's stock soared on the Blue Devils' 13-6 conquest of Wake Forest and they came all the way from 15th to 9th position. Despite Army's upset loss tol Columbia, 21-20, ending their non-losing string after 32 games, the Cadets managed to hold 10th place in the rankings, only twol points ahead of Illinois which played an 0-0 tie with them ear- lier. Team standings with points figured on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis (first place votes in paren- theses): 1. Notre Dame (78) .......1734; 2. Michigan (69) ..........1689 3. Texas (25) ............15161 4. Pennsylvania (11) ......1165 5. Southern California (6) . .11331 6. Georgia Tech (2) ........ 957 7. Penn State (2) .......... 632 8. Southern Methodist...... 558 9. Duke (2) ................252 10. Army....................2081 Read and Use DailyClassifed Ads - ,,ail III k4-HlOUR SERVICE ON QUALITY PRINTING TICKETS - PROGRAMS - CARDS - FLYERS SMALL AND LARGE WORK DOwNTOwN-North of Main Post Office 308 NORTH MAIN STREET Phone 2-1013 CATERING TO STUDENTS SINCE 1900 THuREE GENERATIONS OF KNOWING HOW JUST KIBITZING EDITOR'S NOTE: This column is By DICK KRAUS written by a former associate sports (ALL ME A HERETIC, I think editBrofThe D PARSONSMichigan looked better By ARCII . P SNSrdy against Minnesota than against Ever since 4 p.m. Saturday Northwestern. Ever since Satur- sportswriters have been' feverish- day night the bulk of the nation's ly asking, "How good IS Michi- sportswriters have been applaud- gan?" or exclaiming, with the ing "the explosion of the Michigan proper amount of authority, "The myth." Michigan myth is exploded!" That is a lot of baloney, mostly Lyall Smith of the Detroit Free because there was no such myth, Press attributed the Wolverines' except in their own columns. A victory over Minnesota "techni- good ball club met the first good cally . . . to the fact that the ball club it faced all year, defeated cross-bar of a football field is 10 it, but had its collective pants feet high instead of nine feet, 10 scared off in the process. inches" (referring to the Gopher For four consecutive Satur- try for a field goal). If one were days Crisler's men could caii to "reason" further along this their own tune. They never line, it might be added that Min- knew how good they were be- nesota never would have scored if cause they never had to prove the field were two yards longer or it. Greatness does not come that Michigan would have scored from outclassing inferior opposi- again if a football game lasted 62 tion. minutes-all of which goes to Michigan, in the first half, was prove that a miss is still as good as not a great football team, but it a mile. was certainly not a poor one. Michigan Myth (?) Exploded Bierman sent an inspired ball Mr. Ruch of the New York club out after the "Brown Jug." Times needed a dramatic story His huge two-deep line charged Saturday. Here is the result: "The Michigan's lighter offensive unit myth of Michigan was exploded into its own backfield. Bob Chap- today by the Golden Gophers .. -. puis couldn't get his passes away. They outplayed the Wolverines and but for a series of bad breaks Throughout the entire first could have... . The Michigan line half Minnesota was the boss., was about as effective as a sieve. But with the second half gun, ws aSuhtasef asbChappisv there was a different Michigan ...Such stars as Bob Chappuis ta u ntefed h and Jack Weisenburger were bot- team out on the field. The ' tled up by the Gopher defense Gophers weren't chopping out while the sparkling "running of irty ws ith the same half. Faunce, Harry Elliott and Malosky Sometime in that ball game the made a mockery of the vaunted defensive forward wall became a Michigan line."deesvfowrwalbcma unit. The Gophers stopped mov- What about this Michigan ing along the ground. Then fi- Myth? It would seem to me that nally they stopped moving al- any myth which has formed was together. built by the very people who now say it has now exploded. I have The attitude of the nation as a not heard Coach Crisler or any whole to the seven point victory of the Wolverines extolling the of a team that was supposed to virtues of this team in the glow- win by 20 points is neither un- ing phrases that have kicked usual nor surprising. When per- around the sports pages recently. sonal sentiments are not involved Writers Seem To Forget everyone roots for an underdog. Specifically, the writers seem to And when a favorite is the recip- forget (1) That every team points ient of the reams of newspaper for one on the top and (2) that a adjectives the like of which this Michigan-Minnesota football Michigan team has received, the is not just another contest. public sentiment is doubly aroused game iInthstfoer cotst -look at most of this campus Regarding the former, I cannot reaction to Notre Dame's annual remember that a great Army team build-up. lost much prestige when they were A sut h pushd aoun byNav lat yar. Against Northwestern the de- pushed around by Navy last year. fensive ineptness was not costly Concerning the matter of the because the offensive team got less "Little Brown Jug," anyone who n t e B-teamus- saw the Gophers lose to Illinois 40 ually offers. The Gophers were a 2"wte G er los o l i different matter. 13 will admit that the boys fromdifrnmatr Minneapolis played with a great They were big and deter- deal more "enthusiasm" against mined. A lot of them felt they Michigan. Crisler called the Goph- had sacrificed the Illinois game er forward wall "the best I have Wolverines. They gave it all ever seen"-and he's seen 10 of they had and it wasn't enough, them. Psychology is a powerful because Michigan refused to Weisenburger Plays Well forpr the ftenthissell behind As to individual performances,f To the bulk of the nation's Weisenburger still picked up five sportswriters there doesn't seem yards per try and Chap completed to be any such thing as a peak eight out of 12 passes. Minnesota performance by an underdog team, scored only six points through the but only ineffectual play on the line that was "effective as a part of favorites. In this Big Nine sieve." A mockery? league any keyed up outfit can How good IS Michigan? They knock off any other eleven. are undefeated, untied, and lead Minnesota, despite the fact that the Conference. If they are not it is almost an all-sophomore team the number one team in the na- is far from green. Every key mem- tion this week, don't worry be- ber of the squad has a full year's cause they don't pay off on that experience behind him. Bierman either. started from scratch last season. Some of the boys ought to start He's better this year. If he comes writing and stop playing games up with a few more and bigger with words. backs he'll be murder next year. mASTERBILT Slacks So Trim, So Flawlessly Draped! iN The handsome fabrics an. colors that you're looking for. Styled the Masterbilt "Minute-Modern" way... smart lines built in to stay! Nationally known for care- A/ ful craftsmanship ... for fifty years. Choose for ingly, reasonably priced! $985~~~ f ....:i .9--f $ 85 3I t .Y "r _ _ I t , , ,/ . ! p s; , , ' ' : 'f -;;- f , ' ' __ 1; 1 -;, 7 SEE HOW AMERICA'S FINEST FLANNELS ARE MADE! We've been fortunate in securing a special window display, showing how GLOBE Wor- sted Flannels are made . . . step by step. These finest Worsted Flannels . . . in which only the choicest Australian wool is used . . . are made EXCLUSIVELY for us by te American Woolen Co. Be sure to see this interesting display . . which includes a showing of a wide selec- tion of new patterns and colors. The price? Truly modest .. . 8500 Other Flannels from $58.50 THE FLYING HOOSIER-Back George Taliaferro (right) of Indiana clings to the ball as he goes up in the air and is hit by back Ralph Everist of Northwestern in the sec- ond quarter of game in Evanston, Ill. Attempting to bring Taliaferro down with his left hand on his shoulder is Northwestern center Alex Sarkisian, whose fractured right arm is in a special cast. xv .s :R Fi" : 'r:? 4": f' ' : "iif 'i:F+%'"5 r"r: : Yl'.: ..u,.,: r. ^ _ .:: .. ... ^:: }i .J. '.: -0; ... pY s i }t::; ..y!f.,..;Y...: ir'' : .};:iijf i:: :;:;ii:: ii}}::'::: , 6y. ,}};;