Exu IHURSDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TRM WOW Kappa Sigs Beat Theta Chi, 16-0, in 1-11 P layoffs Olson Decisions TurpinSAE Downs Wins Middleweight Title Chi Psi; DU -T- 1*1 by Pap"' NOT LITTLE OR BROWN: FabledJug Reaches Fifty-Year Mark r NEW YORK - (M)- Carl Bobo Olson, a tireless ring mechanic with a persistent, slashing attack, twice floored Britain's Randy Tur- pin last night to win the vacant Dune Mentioned As 'Back of Week' NEW YORK - (AP) - Stanford's Bob Garrett, whose "unconscious" passing attack knocked UCLA out of the undefeated ranks Saturday, earned The Associated Press back of the week designation by his 21- point scoring feat. Garrett edged out Bernie Falon- ey of Maryland who, for the sec- and straight week, barely failed to make the No. 1 spot. Also singled out for special no- Lice were Charley Sumner, William and Mary quarterback, and Michi- gan's Duncan McDonald, who ac- counted for all 20 points against Northwestern. I world mviddipurpiaht title on alI DS NJ l5IT 'fll V.-........ -- - ,I unanimous decision in a 15-round battle at Madison Square Garden. The winning Hawaiian drove the sturdy Turpin to the ropes and pummeled him almost at will. Turpin went down for a five-count in the final seconds of the ninth and took a count of nine from Referee Al Berl in the tenth. RANDY STARTED with a rush, slowed down under Bobo's steady punishment, but still packed enough thunder to shake up Olson with a long overhand right in the eleventh. Referee Berl scored it 9-4-2 in favor of Olson, Judge Charley Shortell, 11-4 and Judge Arthur Susskind, 8-7, on the unanimous ballot. The Associated Press card had Olson on top, 10-4-1. The capacity crowd of 18,869, paying $167,651, roared as Olson, an 11 to 5 favorite, slashed Ran- dy's face and dumped him twice, Seen on every campus from MAINE to U. C . LA. - - By PHIL CHURCH Kappa Sigma shutout Theta Chi, 16-0, yesterday at Ferry Field to earn a spot in the quarter-fl- nal fraternity grid play-offs. Theta Chi's lone touchdown bid failed when a long pass was grounded in the end-zone early in the second half. Kappa Sigma cinched the victory when Don Mit- chell hit Red Fisher with a 35 yard pass midway in the first half. Mitchell flipped to Tom Case for the extra point to make the halftime margin, 7-0. THETA'S Bob McKenzie was' caught in his own end-zone just after half for a safety, while Case ran five yards around end to close the scoring minutes later. Chuck Heimerdinger passed to Mitchell for the extra point. A wide-open offensive show found Sigma Alpha Epsilon scor- ing on the last play of the game to overtake and nip Chi Psi, 25- 20. A see-saw battle, the winners came from behind twice-knot- ting the count 13-13 at half and finally winning as Jack Stevens' heave intended for Howie Toe was blocked into the handsof team-mate Tony Cornelinson, who scored the clincher. Chi Psi's Dale Ewart ran across both first half scores for the los- ers and passed to Pete Banzhaf m the second half to again give his mates a lead they failed to hold. * * * ALPHA EPSILON Pi and Phi Kappa Sigma struggled to a 13-13 regulation Jime deadlock, but Al- pha Epsilon Pi notched the tri- umph, 14-13, in overtime when a pass from Herb Zaroow to Jack Chayes picked up the winning yardage. Dale Bock of Theta Xi found mate Ted Betts with an extra point pass late in the game to edge Delta Chi, 13-12. Delta Upsilon moved in front of Sigma Phi, 12-0, early in the game and went on to record an 18-6 triumph. Bob Brown scored twice for the winners. Phi Kappa Tau hit paydirt In the first half and then traded sec- ond-half touchdowns to down Acacia, 14-7, as Ray Sanford pitched both Phi Kappa Tau mark- ers. Tau Kappa Epsilon whitewash- ed Delta Sigma Phi, 13-0, with Armin Tufer starring, while Tau Delta Phi edged Theta Delta Chi, 13-12, in a replay of a recently pro- tested contest. FROM PICTURES 'SOL .S . f A P/7"C/rZYG' SA-AZL /N / 0r2L , C77W0 I ~VIIESO 9 S =07-B-4Z2G 4,.4/NI SA yE ,Q,g-7'/Lc- AP Nswsfpufvr.$ N By PHIL DOUGLIS, Exactly fifty years ago this month a youthful football man- ager, an elderly groundskeeper, and a cheap chunk of crockery, unwittingly collaborated in the starting of Michigan's most treas- ured athletic tradition. This tradition is the Little Brown Jug, the trophy emblematic of Michigan - Minnesota football battles, the latest of which is to, be enacted in Minnesota's Memor- ial Stadium come this Saturday afternoon. THE ORIGINAL jug was not little, was not brown, and was not even brought by the Michigan team to Minneapolis. In fact, it was purchased when the team ar- rived, by manager Thomas Rob- erts '04, because Coach Fielding "Hurry-Up" Yost had fears that if his team used a Minnesota sup- plied jug, it might contain prop- erties not conducive to good foot- ball. So Roberts went to a down- town Minneapolis store, and pur- chased a large five gallon grey jug for all of 30 cents. He trun- dled it back to old Northrup Field, and on Oct. 31, 1903 he placed the big jug on the Mich- igan bench, unaware of the des- tiny which awaited it. The game itself, typical of the early 20th century games, was a bloody brawl, slow-moving and hard fought. Michigan scored the first touchdown early in the third quarter when burly tackle Joe Maddock plowed over from the one. ,. k i '" . on the jug, one half of the crock was painted Maroon and Gold, the other half Maize and Blue. * * * THUS A GREAT tradition was born, with the winner retaining possion of the 30 cent jug. The Wolverines were the most con- sistent holders of the trophy, as Minnesota did not get it again un- til 1919. After a series of ex- changes, the jug returned to Ann Arbor in 1943, and has been Mich- igan property ever since. Tomorrow the old jug will be Wolverines Drill Furiously As Minnesota Contest Nears dragged from its resting place in the athletic department's safe down at Ferry Field, (the jug in the Union trophy case-is a replica) and carried to Minneap- olis. On Saturday afternoon, the precious crock will be placed on the Michigan side of field at the 50 yard line. Thus the Little 1rown Jug re- turns to the same field where fifty years ago it stood unnoticed on the bench, only to later become probably the most famed and valued trophy in college football. L AI" sI, By DAVE BAAD Coach Ben Oosterbaan sent his Michigan football team through an extensive drill yesterday in preparation for its first away game of the season next Saturday against Minnesota. Quarterbacks Lou Baldacci, Duncan McDonald, Ray Kenaga and Bill McKinley led a trio of backfields through the long non- contact session against the block- ing dummies. * * * MC DONALD, outstanding in his last two appearances against Iowa and Northwestern, continued his pin-point passing during the work- out. He consistently fired com- pleted aerials to ends Bob Topp, John Veselenak, Jerry Williams and Tad Stanford. Earlier ,inrthe afternoon the Wolverine defensive combina- tions went through contact scrimmage againstuthe fourth and fifth stringers' imitations of the Gopher plays. The squad consistently smgar- ed the reserves' impersonator of Minnesota's great triple-threat tailback, Paul Giel. However, the stopping of Giel himself will prob- ably be a slightly different mat- ter. THE WOLVERINES managed to stifle him fairly successfully last year, but his 400 yards-plus rec- ord gained in his first four games this season point to a busy after- noon for Michigan defenders this Saturday. Oosterbaan utilized the same defensive units yesterday that have seen most of the action in Michigan's first four winning ef- forts. Art Walker and Dick O'Shaughnessy are still suffer- ing from leg injuries and will probably see only limited action Saturday. Walker was not present at prac- tice yesterday. Sophomore Bill Kolesar, nephew of the former Michigan tackle who performed in the late 1930's, moved into Walk- er's spot behind Dick Strozewski. Kolesar was impressive last Satur- day -in a short stint during the Northwestern contest. Fred Baer, who hasn't been much in evidence since he start- ed the first two games last year for the Wolverines, was given a lot of work. yesterday at the left defensive linebacker slot. SPORTS WARREN WERTHEIMER Night Editor The kick was good and the Wol- verines had a 6-0 lead. (Touch- downs counted five points in those days.) WITH ONLY two minutes left to play, the Golden Gophersmoved over the Michigan goal, and then added the extra point to tie up the game. Minnesota fans went wild. They mobbed the, team, flooding the field so that the game could not be resumed. In the wild confusion, thefateful jug was left standing on the Wolverine bench. When the Minnesota grounds- keeper, an elderly gent named Oscar Munson, found the jug the next day, he took it to the Gopher athletic director. The director put it in the trophy case, with the notation "Michigan Jug--Captured Oct. 31, 1903" af- fixed to it. The years passed, and it wasn't till 1909 that Minnesota sent Michigan a letter saying, "We have your jug, come up and win it." The Wolverines did just that, win- ning 15-6, and they triumphant-' ly carried their old jug back to Ann Arbor. The score was lettered GRILLED STEAK or PORK CHOPS daily $1.25 daily STATE DRUG State and Packard 0 HARRIS TWEED Certification Mark Reg. U.S. Pat. Off. MARC o$ NSRDE th TO PROGRAMS: HARRIS TWEED' certification mark is your protection! This mark is owned and administered by the Harris Tweed Association, Ltd., a non-profit organization. It is placed upon the goods by the Association's direction to indicate ONLY the origin and method of manufac- ture of tweed, spun, dyed and finished in the Outer Hebrides. Made, of course, only from pure new wool produced in Scotland, and hand-woven by the Islanders at their homes in the Islands of Lewis, HEarris, Uist, Barra and their several purtenances, and all known as the Outer Hebrides. You can always be sure that you are buying Harris Tweed when you find the certification mark stamped on each three yards of the tweed or on the label. Always look for this mark! -Inquiries may be addressed to-Suite 801, 110 E. 42nd Street, New York 17 Etter Keeps Sport Publicity Flowing styled by @1953,TI4E MANHATTAN SHIRT CO., 444 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK~, N.TY casual living comes of age- in Sportshirts b I Modern living is casual living. So the modern man dresses casually, but neatly -in a sportshirt like the GABSHIRE. A wonderful, washable gabardine sport- shirt ... pick-stitched at' pockets and collar long-sleeves ... in a forest- full of crisp Fall shades. Styled and tailored in the famous Manhattan tradi- tion, it's casual but it's smart. See it for yourself today. GABSHIRE By DAVE LIVINGSTON One of the busiest men on the Wolverine sports scene is probably the least known to the average fan, Les Etter, who works under the imposing title of Michigan Sport's Publicity Director, prepares reams of sport's copy which eventually finds its way into the hands of the public, yet his byline is never seen. FROM EDITING football pro- grams to running the Michigan Stadium pressbox on Saturday aft- ernoons to furnishing varsity ath- letes with pictures to put in their fraternity publications is all in a week's work for the tireless Etter. From his office, staffed only by his attractive wife, on the second floor of the Athletic Ad- ministration Building, the genial, grey-haired Etter sends out in- formation on Michigan athletics to colleges, newspapers, and radio sportscasters all over the country. His numerous duties include, in addition, such things as arranging press conferences and attending many of the banquets, meetings, and conferences that are so com- mon in the sports world, DURING THE football season Etter has no trouble finding work to do, but when the various winter and spring sports get into full Vo;;;oo;;;>o PLANNING A Call us for the fnest selec- tion of favors and programs in Ann Arbor. Favors - Programs swing things often get even tougher. It's a familiar sight to see him scurrying from the fieldhouse to the Intramural Pool and then to the hockey arena on a Saturday night in January when three and maybe four varsity athletic con- tests are going on at the same time. Etter's active interest in sports and sports writing dates back to his undergraduate days at Minne- sota. As a journalism major he, served as sports editor of the year- book and assistant sports editor of the school paper, while at the same time winning a varsity let- ter as a distance man in track. 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