PAGE EIGITT THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1967 PAGE EJORT TUE MICUIGAX DAILY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 9,1967 DEC. GRADS Purchase Announcements in Fishbowl NOW until Nov. 10 If paid dues, bring receipt. Senior Board Pistons DETROIT (A' - Hot shooting by Dave Bing and Terry Dischin- ger sparked the Detroit Pistons in a fourth period comeback last' night as they halted the New York winning streak with a 110- 108 National Basketball Associa- tion victory. Trailing 84-79 after three quar- ters, the Pistons surged in front to build up an 11-point lead with 1:34 left, but had to hang on to fight off the Knicks and post their third straight victory. Dischinger and Bing each flip- ped in nine points in the closing drive. Willis Reed hit 28 points to leadI Trip Knicks, the Knicks while Bing led the Pistons with 24. The victory enabled Detroit to take a two-game lead over the Cincinnati Royals, who lost to Bal- timore 122-100. * * * Hawks Prey ST. LOUIS - The St. Louisj Hawks broke from a 16-16 tie midway in the first period and went on to trounce Seattle 111- 96 in a rough and tumble Na- tional B a s k e t b a 1 Association game last night. Seattle lost Dorrie Murrey and Tom Meschery on personal fouls while Bob Rule was ejected from the game near the end of the first half for fighting. The Hawks' Gene Tormohlen also was thrown out for fighting with Rule. The victory gave St. Louis a 13-1 record in the Western Divis- ion while Seattle is 2-10. Dick Snyder led the Hawks with 110-108 20. Walt Hazard topped the Son- ics with 20. Bullets Blast BALTIMORE - Little Johnny Egan-smallest player in the Na- tional Basketball Association -- sparked the Baltimore Bullets to 21 points while Zelmo Beaty added a 122-100 victory last night over __ s _____.., a. .. .. ...w ..V ...-..... 7 i r N Bl4 Standings Eastern ivis 'ion Wion Lost Pd. Behindr xPhiladelphia 8 1 .889 Boston '7 1 .875 Detroit 6 4 .60 Cincinnati 5 7 .417 New York 5 7 .417 Baltimore 4 7 .364 Western Division St. Louis 13 1 .929 San Francisco 9 5 .643 Los Angeles 6 4 .600 xSan Diego 2 10 .1671 Seattle 2 11 .154Chcg1 10 .9 1 Chicago 1 0 .9 x-Late game not included. Yesterday's Results Baltimore 122. Cincinnati 100 Detroit 110, New York 108 St. Louis 111. Seattle 96 Philadelphia at San Diego, night 21, 4 4. 101 101'. Best Rookies ST. Louis (A)-Rod Carew of the Minnesota Twins and Lee May of the Cincinnati Reds have been named rookies of the year in the American and National Leagues respectively, the Sporting News announced yesterday. Best rookie pitchers selected in the weekly sports newspaper's 22nd annual poll of major league players were Dick Hughes of the St. Louis Cardinals in the National League and Tom Phoebus of the Baltimore Orioles in the American League. Hughes, 29, compiled a 16-6 record in helping pitch the Car- dinals to the National League pen- nant while Phoebus, 25, was 14-9 for Baltimore. The 22-year-old Carew played second base and batted .292 for the Twins. May took over first base duties for the Reds and hit at a .265 clip. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 7) For further information please callt 764-7460, Gen. Division, Bureau of Ap- pts., 3200 SAB. Sumer Placement Service, 212, Lower Level. Chicago Transit Authority, Chicago, Ili.--Sumer Bus Operators, 21 or over. NASA, Kennedy Space Ctr, Fla.-Soph., Jrs., Srs., and Grad Students in en-! gineering. Phys., Math. Union Carbide Corporation, Oak Ridge. Tenn. Apply for' summer employ, Jan. 1 Brookings Institution, Wash. D.C.- Interview Nov. 11 programmer trainee positions, some exper. req. State of Mich., Highway Construction and Roadmen, applic. avail at S.P.S. Further info. at SPS, 212 SAB, Lowerj Level. ENGINEERING PLACEMENT SERVICE Make Interview Appointments at Room 128-H1, West Engrg. Bldg. November 16, 1967 Aerospace Corporation University of Chicago *-- Graduate School of Business IIT Research Institute Illinois Tool Works Inc. The Mitre Corporation Power Controls-Div. Midland Rossj Corp. Monsanto Company Alden E Stilson & Associates, Ltd. United Aircraft-Pratt & Whitney Air- craft U.S. Army and Air Force Exchange3 Service U.S. Navy-Norfolk Naval Shipyard Peace Corps the Cincinnati Royals. Egan scored 26 points - 17 of them in the final period, leading the Bullets to a 15-0 burst in the final three minutes of the third quarter. Cincinnati was playing withoiit Oscar Robertson. High scorer for Cincinnati was Happy Hairston with 28 points. B ruinshNet 6-3 Victory By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Rookie Derek Sanderson fired two goals, one while killing a penalty, helping the Boston Bruins to a 6-3 vic- tory over the New York Rangers in a National Hockey League game last night. Vic Hadfield scored New York's first two goals as the Rangers suf- fered their second straight loss after going eight games without a setback. Sanderson's second goal came with only six seconds gone in the third period. He had lost a face- off, but pursued the puck into the Ranger end, took it away fromI defenseman Arnie Brown and whipped it past goalie Ed Gia- comin. Sanderson, Bobby Orr and Tom- my Wlliams scored third period goals for the Bruins rapping it up. Phil Goyette scored the Rangers last goal. MIKITA CLICKS CHICAGO-Two goals by Stan Mikita and one by Pit Martin gave the Chicago Black Hawks a 3-2 victory over the Montreal Canadiens last night. The Canadiens opened the scor- ing in the first minute of the secoid period when Bobby Rous- seau took the puck away from Mikita during a face-off to the left of the Chicago cage and dribbled{ it past goalie Denis DeJordy from 20 feet away. Mikita got the goal back a few minutes later. He was in front of Montreal goalie Gump Worsley to take Doug Mohn's pass from the left corner and rammed the puck into the cage. TIlE VANDALS AND THE BRU0K E EADS Dave Weir The Eternal Cycle Cubs Ara, Ivy and Michigan Unless the plethora of modern phenonema such as computerized citizens, push-button factories, massaging media and professionalized amateurs perverts the tradition of athletic determinism, Michigan's football fortunes will soon be on the rise again. For that persistent nemesis which haunts all gridiron prognostic- ators - the Low of Averages - still reigns supreme in the World of Sports. Never has the Law been more in evidence than during recent sports history. Witness, for example, the once impenetrable New York Yankee baseball dynasty which crumbled several years ago. Notice also the Cubs of Chicago who awoke from a prolonged .hybernation last summer to whip their Wrigley Field onlookers into unprecedented heights of hysteria. Consider too the Indiana Hoosiers who are currently making pigskin history by winning games. The Hoosiers boast a unique heritage: the only all-time losing record in the Big Ten grid anals. Perhaps a more intellectually gratifying example in the college football sphere is the classic case of Notre Dame. Decades of gridiron domination gave way to a dim period of losing dold- rums (characterized by offensive impotence and defensive phil- anthropy) which in turn was shattered by the Irish Resurrection engineered by a man called Ara. These various examples clearly indicate that we can depend on the Law. There is also an abundance of philosophical evidence which supports the "rise and fall" theory. We need look no farther than the aged, but time-proven adage of all good boxing devotees: 'He who is down will rise again.' Recently popularized by Dr. Timothy Leary, this ancient proverbial truism has provided inspiration for many an underdog. There is perhaps only one portion of the sports world to which the Law cannot be said to apply. That of course is the completely unpredictable Ivy League. Inconsistently, and interchangeably: Harvard beats Yale, Yale tops Princeton, Princeton nips Dartmouth, Dartmouth creams Columbia, Columbia squashes Brown, and Brown obliter- ates Penn. All of this occurs without any apparent relevance to reality, ability, percentages, or statistical tolerance. As a matter of fact, the activity itself bears little resemblance to football as we Midwesterners know it. Nevertheless, the Law of Averages still governs the fate of teams everywhere outside the Ivy League. And Michigan's downtrodden Wolverines definitely fall within the reach of its tentacalistic in- fluence. Wolverine teams of the past have compiled an all-time won-lost record of 500-183-30. In its first 80 years of gridiron action, Michigan had but six losing seasons. Then the Law entered the picture. In the last ten years alone, the Blue have had five under .500 marks and 1967 appears destined to be the sixth. But provided that the current threats of smog, McLuanacy, paper dresses, electric music, and potted GI's don't render the venerable Law of Averages obsolete, Michigan's football fortunes will soon be on the rise again. At least within the next 70 years. 0' 0 Don't knock it. 1, GRID SELECTIONS NHIL Standings East Division W L T Pts. GF GA xToronto 7 4 1 15 46 27 New York 6 3 3 15 40 31 Boston 6 2 2 14 40 26 Detroit 6 5 1 13 41 42 Montreal 5 4 3 13 26 28 Chicago 3 7 2 8 28 46 West Division Los Angeles , 4 3 15 41 41 Pittsburgh 5 6 2 12 32 31 Minnesota 4 4 3 11 27 31 Philadelphia 4 4 3 11 21 23 St. Louis 3 6 2 8 23 28 xOaklancl 2 8 3 7 29 40 x-Late game not included... Yesterday's Results ,,Chicago 3, Montreal 2 Boston 6, New York 3 Philadelphia 1, Pittsburgh 1, tie Minnesota 5, St. Louis 1 Toronto at Oakland, night i Even the ageless 'Pappa Bear,' George Halas, perseuctor, or prosecutor, of George Allen and remesis of the Detroit Lions is sending in his grid picks this week. Pappa took out a little time the other day at a Bears' practice session to jot down his favorites for this weekend's games. Pappa knows that there's only two things in the world better than pigskin - the Cubs and the Daily's Grid Picks. Besides, Pappa loves Michigan Theater tickets and Cottage Inn Pizza, especially if the newsreel devotes some of its prime time to his inconsistent Bears and the pizza is sprinkled with Lion meat that he beat out of the Packers industry of Green Bay. Wonder what Pappa likes about the Fighting Illini? 0 Sure. Business is business. The rules are tough And the rewards often questionable. It breeds materialism, Strangles the little guy, Kills the soul... If you let it. But did you ever think, American Business feeds you Three squares a day in a world Where starvation is a too-common diet. Provides you with warm clothes And a lot more than shelter Enriches your leisure hours with Art, music, theater, literature On a scale that is the despair Of the 5-Year Planners Of Cultural Revolutions. - Business puts London in your living room And you within 10 hours of Istanbul. It can make a good living for you And a better life for everyone ... If you make it. We hope you do. FIGURE SKATES HOCKEY SKATES HOCKEY GLOVES Shin Pads - Shoulder Pads Sticks HAROLD S. TRICK 711 N. Univ. 914S. State - --- - - - PAPPA'S PICKIN' THIS WEEK'S GAMES 41 t I 1 J and now... JADE EASf 1. MICHIGAN... at Illinois... (score) 2. Wisconsin at Ohio State 3. Indiana at Michigan State 4. Iowa at Northwestern 5. Minnesota at Purdue 6. Mississippi State at Auburn 7. Baylor at Texas 8. Maryland at Clemson 9. Kansas at Colorado 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Duke at Navy Georgia at Florida Oklahoma at Iowa State Oklahoma State at Nebraska Wyoming at New Mexico North Carolina St. at Penn St. Notre Dame at Pittsburgh Southern Cal at Oregon St. Washington at UCLA Texas Tech at TCU Bowdoin at Tufts,' A NEW AFTER SHAVE & COLOGNE !r A Your shirt ; LaundereJ You are our life insurance. Phoenix I t Ilil ';I .v cr f l11111 i