PALM THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. OM*t)HFn 90- 1-4fi? FAG! TWELYW THE MTCITT(V~T BAITI' i.'.riraa V r1~"ua~str~'w1 q~ 1 0t9 l aW.r/' ZVt. :CS., ta ' l~.. ,SN,*b.V, (I GRID SELECTIONS This week's guest selector is none other than that star of stage, screen, radio, and the diag, Opal Bailey. Miss Bailey comes to the University from Washington, D.C., home of Clark Norton, Bundy McGeorge, and Stephen I. (for Ira) Firsheim. Miss Bailey who weighs in between "100 and 200 pounds chose Michigan because of its fine reputation for sports, a love of the outdoors, and Lloyd Graff. Not quite adjusted to the Michigan way of doing things, Miss Bailey commented that she was shocked and amazed at The Daily sports staff choice of guest selector for Grid Picks. "Who me?" she gasped as Clark Norton told her the news. And yes ladies and gentlemen, it IS Opal Bailey. So sharpen up your pencils, call your favorite bookie for a scoop on the odds, and get your thing here by midnight tonight. Our mail has been running 3 to 1 against pizza pies, and the Butterfield Theaters (ever since they ran Snow White for three weeks in August), but alas, that's the only free stuff we can get. (Consensus in Captials) 1. INDIANA at Michigan 11. CLEMSON at Duke 2. MICHIGAN ST. at Minnesota 12. COLORADO at Nebraska 3. Ohio St. at NORTHWESTERN 13. Texas Tech at FLORIDA ST. 4. NOTRE DAME at Illinois 14. HARVARD at Cornell 5. IOWA at Wisconsin 15. HOUSTON at Mississippi St. 6. Oregon St. at PURDUE 16. Iowa St. at MISSOURI 7. TENNESSEE at Alabama 17. Washington at SO. CALIF. 8. Texas at ARKANSAS 18. UCLA at Stanford 9. AUBURN at Georgia Tech 19. MIAMI (FLA.) at Pitt 10. California at SYRACUSE 20. BATES at American Int. BOB McFARLAND (Executive Sports Editor, 51-29, .638)-Indiana, Minne- sota, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Iowa, Purdue, Tennessee, Texas, Auburn, Syra- cuse, Clemson, Cooradb, Florida St., Harvard, Houston, Missouri, Southern California, UCLA, Miami (Fla.), Bates. CLARK NORTON (Sports Editor, 45-35, .563) - Indiana, Michigan State, Northwestern, Notre Dame, Iowa, Purdue, Tennessee, Texas, Georgia Tech, Syracuse, Clemson, Nebraska, Florida St., Harvard, Houston, Missouri, Southern California, UCLA, Miami (Fla,), Bates. RICK STERN (Associate Sports Editor, 44-36, .550)-Indiana, Michigan St., Ohio St., Notre Dame, Iowa, Purdue, Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Syracuse, Clemson, Colorado, Florida St., Harvard, Houston, Missouri, Southern Cali- fornia, UCLA, Miami (Fla.), Bates. GRAYLE HOWLETT (Associate Sports Editor, 43-37, .538)-Indiana, Mich- igan St., Ohio St., Notre Dame, Iowa, Purdue, Alabama, Arkansas, Auburn, Syracuse, Clemson, Colorado, Texas Tech, Cornell, Houston, Missouri, Southern California, UCLA, Miami (Fla.), Bates. OPAL C. BAILEY (Guest Selector)-Michigan, Michigan St., Northwestern, Notre Dame, Wisconsin, Purdue, Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia Tech, Syracuse, Cfemson, Nebraska, Texas Tech, Cornell, Houston, Missouri, Southern Cali- fornia, UCLA, Miami (Fla.), Bates. MONTREAL WINS: Boston Trounces Red Wings COLLEGE LIFE presents BOB EHLE it DETROIT (P) -- The Boston, the third period was two minutes Bruins packed five goals into two blitz-like sequences last night and crushed the Detroit Red Wings with a 6-3 come-from-behind vic- tory to hang onto a share of first place with Montreal in the Na- tional Hockey League. The surprising, unbeaten Bruins scored their third straight one- sided victory after an season open- ing tie, and Fred Stanfield sparked them for the second time in 48 hours. Stanfield, who scored twice against his old Chicago mates in a 7-1 victory over the Black Hawks Wednesday, scored his third and fourth goals of the season on set- ups from John McKenzie 27 sec- onds apart in the second period. Derek Sanderson had tied the score 62 seconds earlier with a jab in of Ted Green's rebound. Boston dumped Detroit out of a three-way tie for first and put the game away with goals by Eddie Shack and Johnny Bucek before Professor Wins MEXICO CITY (,) - Joseph Puelo, 25, of Detroit, a history professor at the University of Michigan, took a second place in the light heavyweight lifting in the pre-Olympic games with a total of 1,039.5. He equaled the Olympic press record with a lift of 341 pounds and set a new American jerk record of 390.5 pounds. old. Boston, weakest scoring team in the league last season, now has 231 goals in just four games. MONTREAL (; )- Yvan Cour- noyer's fifth goal in five games and the flawless goal-tending of veteran Gump Worsley carried the Montreal Canadiens to a 1-0 Na- tional Hockey League victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs last night. Cournoyer, a shifty rightwinger with a blazing shot, beat Toronto goalie Johnny Bower at 5:36 of the opening period with the Leafs short-handed. Worsley, supported by a tight- checking defense, made the un- assisted goal stand up for his 30th career shutout. Worsley, 38.uneeded to make only 15 saves as the Canadiens bottled up Toronto's attack from the start. The 42-year-old Bower stopped 26 Montreal shots in losing. Toronto's Bob Pulford had 16 seconds to serve on a tripping pen- alty when Cournoyer, a 25-goal scorer last season, broke in alone on Bower and fired the game's only tally. 3 1 4: is Room 3A, Union 7:00 P.M. NEW COURSE FOR EXPECTANT PARENTS FAMILY LIFE EDUCATION: PREPARATION FOR THE CHILDBEARING YEAR Coll Instructor: Mrs. Ted. Seals, R.N., 663-3198 for registration information. First Class: Wed., Oct. 25 Series: 8 weeks, 1 night per week 7:30-9:30 P.M. Jones School, Room 209 401 N. Division Cost: $18.00 per couple Sponsored by the Ann Arbor Public Schools' Continuing Ed. Dept. Friday, October 20 Sponsored by Campus Crusade for Christ &. U I NHL Standings NBA Standings 1 Eastern Division W L Boston..................3 0 Montreal ................31 Detroit................ 2 2 Toronto ................22 New York...............1 1 Chicago......... 0 4 Western Division Califonrias...............29 Los Angeles........... 2 0 Philadelphia ............ 2 2 Pittsburgh.1 3 St. Louis ............... 1 2 Minnesota .. 0 2 Yesterday's Results Montreal 1, Toronto 0 Boston 6, Detroit 3 Philadelphia 1, Pittsburgh 0 TV 1 0 1 1. 4 Pts. 4 4 3 Eastern Division w L Pct, GB Boston ................ 1 0 1.000 Detroit................ 1 0 1.000 Baltimore............ 1 0 1.000 Philadelphia.......... 1 0 1.00 New York............1 1 .500 Cincinnati 1 1 .500 Western Division St. Louis ......... 4 0 1.000 San Francisco........2 3 .400 Los Angeles.........1 2 .333 Seattle............... 0 1 .000 San Diego........... 0 2 .000 Chicago............. 0 3 .000: Yesterday's Results San Francisco 116, Chicago 106 St. Louis 100, Los Angeles 95 -- 212 % 2Y 3% UNION-LEAGUE "It will not Rain on 4 Homecoming Weekend" go I UNION-LEAGUE 0 'Co G '67 V . T _ - ,I OZZIE SAYS: 1967-1968 "FAREWELL TO THE EMERALD CITY" Student Directory ON SA J4 D oC7 on SATURDAY NIGHT-10:0-UNION BALLROOM . Featuring THE UNION - DIAG - ENGIN. ARCH I FIVE BUCKS $1.25 A4 1A r/ I1 An Open Letter to the Men (?) of taylor house: Fhe hallowed halls of GOMBERG HOUSE rang with peals of hearty, deep-voiced laughter at your insolent challenge of yesterday. At first; we considered making the contest more to your speed-say, Blagdon House. even by suggesting a competitor closer /" In light of the outrageous insolence and laughableness of your ridiculous proposal, however, we -gleefully accept your challenge to a Tug O' War at 9:15 SATURDAY MORNING in the fragrant environs of Island Par k. You, O venomous scum of taylor, would do well to remember the words of Santayana: "Those who do remember, the past are condemned to relive it." Having not remembered your past humiliations at our han not lds, you are condemned to relive every hellish second of them. We wait with bated breath to. reacquaint your creaky, sutrescent carcasses with your equally foul and disgusting breeding ground - namely, the bed of the 4 mighty Huron River. Contemptuously yours, 4i I . m -M 0 U I Ew -U A