DAILY Page Nine Tuesday, October 29, 1968 THE MICHIGAN Michigan rockets to ninth slot in national AP poll By The Associated Press After a two year drought, Mich- igan climbed back into the Asso- ciated Press national Top Ten yesterday, sliding into the ninth position. The Wolverines elevated them- selves from the twelth position held last week by virtue of their 33-20 victory over Minnesota. Meanwhile, idle Southern Cali- fornia widened its lead over.run- nerup Ohio State while both Kan- sas and Penn State closed ground on the leaders. The Trojans 5-0, who resume activity at Oregon this week drew 24 of the first-place votes from a national panel of sports writers and sportscasters.' Southern Cal had 21 firsts a week ago. Ohio State, 31-24 winners over Illinois for its fifth straight, at- tracted 12 firsts, compared to 15 last week. The Buckeyes will be ahome to Michigan State, No. 16, Saturday. Kansas mide Iowa State. its sixth straight victim, 46-25 and picked up six firsts to hold third place ahead of Penn State, which drew one first place ballot after bombing Boston College 29-0 for its fifth in a row. The point total, based on 20 for first and graduated scale down to one point for 15th place gave Southern California a 64-point lead over Ohio State, 786-722. A week ago they led by only 16 points. Kansas was a strong third with 686 and Penn State a solid fourth with 592. The major casualty of the week- end was Notre Dame,, upset by' Michigan State, 21-17, and drop- ped all the way ;from No. 5to No.;12. . Tennesse, Purdue and Georgia all moved up a peg to take over fifth, sixth and seventh places. Tennessee had an off day. Purdue downed Iowa 44-14 and Georgia beat Kentucky 35-14. Both Miami, Fla. and Syracuse, who had been No. 9 and. No. 10, were knocked off and dropped out of the top 20. Miami lost to Au- burn 31-6 and Syracuse was run over by California 43-0., California, Michigan and Mis- souri all moved into the first 10. A California thumped Syracuse, Michigan clobbered Minnesota 35-20 and Missouri ran over Kan- sas State 56-20. Newcomers to the top 20 were Southern Methodist, which ad- vanced to No. 13 by drubbing Tex- as Tech 39-18; Houston, which be- came No. 15 after beating Missis- sippi 29-7; Michigan State, No. 16 on its upset of Notre Dame; and Ohio University which became No. 19 after rolling over Dayton 42-12 for its sixth straight. 'A little Gopher please, gently Browned' -Daily-Andy Sacks WOLVERINE DEFENSIVE BACK BRIAN HEALY (24) intercepts an errant Gopher aerial Saturday afternoon at Michigan Stadium. Teammate Tom Curtis (25), who currently leads the Big Ten in interceptions, begins to lead the blocking for Healy. Michigan's alert defensive play is one of the contributing factors in the team's rise to ninth place in the country. PRO FOOTBALL: GreenBayea pCowboys live, 28-7 By ROBIN WRIGHT Most people thought of Satur- day's football game as part of homecoming, but to the Minne- sota Gophers, the game belonged to Dennis Brown. As Coach Murray Warmath la- mented after the game, "Brown killed us." Playing in just over half of the daily, sports, NIGHT EDITOR: FRED LaBOUR game, Brown recorded two touch- downs on passes, ran for 45 yards and completed 11 of 20 throws for 152 yards. The only bad thing Brown did during the game was to knock the Wolverine water canteen over. when he was pushed out of bounds. Warmath went on to explain, "Brown was the big player. His quick passes were tremendous. I've never seen anyone better than Brown on those quick passes. And this is what chopped us up. "Brown was more troublesome than Johnson this game. Every ball that went up in the air was caught. I've never seen ,a better1 game from a quarterback." Brown modestly disagreed. "I'm glad we won, but as far as my per- sonal performance, it was not a great day. "I could have done better. For- ty-five yards rushing is n6t thatj respectable, although 152 yards passing is not too bad. I consider it a good game when I make more1 than 200 yards in total offense. In fact, Brown was more com- plimentary of sophomore Don Moorehead, who was in action just1 0B Ilboard The fraternity championship in IM - touch football will be decided tonight at 7:20 at Wines Field followed by the resident hall championship at 8:55. half, the Gophere could only once get as far as the Michigan 45, while, during the same time, the Wolverines were able to get on the scoreboard six times. Against the Michigan second and third teams in the second half Minnesota was more success- ful. Inside the Michigan 50 five different times, Minnesota went on to score three of those times. After an exciting first half of two Brown touchdowns, two John- son touchdowns, two "where-did- he-learn-to-do-that" Killian field- goals, a pair of interceptions and a general tromping of the meaty rodents from Minnesota, Elliott decided to let up the second half. So, the only real excitement in the second half was Curtis' fifth interception of the year, a McCoy interception and a Big Ten record tying fieldgoal by Killian. But despite clearing the bench of 61 players to avoid "laying -it on" Warmath's Gophers, Bump's boys were able to out-play them 53-39. Adding that\ Michigan is not succumbing to the disease ofsover- confidence, Brown pointed out that during the halftime, when Michigan was 30-0 ahead in points and everything in performance, "we were happy, but a little wary of a comeback. "The team knew that if we could score 30 points in a half, that it was possible for Minnesota to do it too.We knew we couldn't let down or be over-confident, so we made like it was a 0-0 game. -Daily-Larry Robbint DENNIS BROWN (22) watches Ron Johnson dive into the end- zone in the second quarter of Saturday's game against Minnesota. The Wolverines topped the meaty rodents from Minneapolis 33-20. I DALLAS (1)-Master quarter- back Bart Starr unloaded four touchdown passes 6n Dallas' proud doomsday defense last night and the world champions rolled to a 28-17 victory qver the team they have beaten in the last two Na- tional Football League title games. The victory shot the Packers into a tie for the lead in the Cen- tral Division with a 3-3-1 record and left-the previously undefeated' Cowboys with but- a game lead over New York in the CapitoljDivi- sion at 6-1. Points awarded for first 15 picks on basis of 20-18-16-14-12-10-9-7-6-5-4- 3-2-1: 1. SouthernCalifornia 24 5-0 78 2. Ohio State 12 5--0 7k22 3. Kansas 6 6--0 686 4. Penn State 1 5-0 592 5. Tennessee 4-0--1 442 6. Purdue 5--1 420 7. Georgia 5-0--1 396 8. California 5-1-i 336 9. MICHIGAN 5-1 260 10. Missouri 5--1 197. 11. Texas' 4--i 153 12. Notre Dame 4--2 112 13. Southern Methodist 5-1 92 14. Louisianx State 5-1 74 15. Houston 3-1--1 67 16. Michigan state 4-2 66 17. Arkansas 5-1 63 18. Florida State 4-1 38 19. Ohio v.', 6-0 25 20. Florida 4--1-1 20 . Others receiving votes, listed alpha- betically: Alabama, Arizona, Arizona State, Army, Auburn, Colorado, Georgia Tech, Miami, Fla., Mississippi, Nebra- ska, North Carolina State, Oregan State, Syracuse, Virginia Tech, Wyoming, Yale. Starr, who missed last week'sI game with a pulled muscle, rallied the Packers from a 10-7 halftime deficit with perfectly timed passes as the Cotton Bowl crowd of 74,604 groaned. He connepted on passes of threeI and 32 yards to tight end Mary Fleming and found Boyd Dowler on a five-yard scoring throw in the second half surge before a na- tional television audience. In the second quarter, he nailed Carroll Dale with a perfect 26-yard touch- down throw. It was a bitter loss for Dallas, which has, never beaten Green Bay in a regular season or play- off game. Twice Dallas has failed in the final seconds,. in the NFL title games against the Packers. BULLETIN Northwestern's Mark Proskine is out for the season, and pos- sibly his career, it was reported late last night. The Wildcat defensive end, mentioned this season for possible; All Big Ten honors, suffered a hairline fracture of his lower leg. Going into last week's game with Wis- consin, he had been second on the Wildcat squad in tackles, assisting on 37 while taking on 18 alone. over a quarter, but managed to gain 33 yards rushing and 49 yards passing. "Moorehead is going to be All- American material in the next- two years. He's got everything it takes. He's 6'3", weight 203 and has a strong running and passing at- tack." But Coach Bump Elliott agreed with Warmath. "Brown had a fine day. The offense clicked real well -we felt we had to throw to win, and it certainly worked. The of- fensive team played as well as I've seen them play. And defensively, we again came up with thedstrong plays that put us in good posi- tion." Offensively, Michigan broke a Big Ten record by completing 107 plays. Illinois set the previous rec- Coeds: "Let us style a FLATTERING HAIR CUT to your individual needs." No Appointment Needed The Dascolan Barbers Near Michigan Theatre ord earlier this season with 100 plays. And Elliott wasn't kidding about the "strong plays" defensively either. Minnesota, managed to get inside Michigan territory only six times the entire gamey In the first I I NBASa ndings EASTERN DIVISION I II 11 NHL Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE East Division W L T Pts. GFGA 5 1 1 11 23 14 Boston Baltimore Cincinnati Pluliadelptkia New York Detroit Milwaukee W 4 5 3 3 3 2 0 L 0 3 2 3 3 4 Pet. 1.000 .625 .600 .600 .500 .400 .000 Montreal Chicago Boston Toronto New York Detroit St. Louis Oakland Minnesota Los Angeles Philadelphia Pittsburgh 5 5 4 4 2 2 3 1 3 3 0 0 1 0 0 West Division 3 4 0 2 5 2 2 4 1 1 3 2 10 10 9 8 4 6 6 5 4 4' 36 20 18 26 16 23 19 19 15 13 r13 23 14 13 19 15 20 32 24 29 17 21 WESTERN San Francisco Atlanta Los Angeles Chicago Phoenix San Diego Seattle DIVISION 3 1 .750 3 2 .600 3 3 .500 2 3 .400 2 3 .400 2 3 .400 2 5 .286 GB 1 2% 4 1 1Y 1 2'S ,. ' I i. Gitdde Pik ings I Hare pumpkin, hare pumpkin, pumpkin pumpkin, hare hare." "Hare carve carve, hare carve carve, carve carve carve carve, hare hare." 4 We can scarce believe it, but Allan Harris did indeed win Gridde Pickings last week and what a shock to us all. Al wins a Cottage Inn pizza which may or may not be the biggest thing that has ever happened to him, or us, or the man selling news- papers on the corner. But at any rate, we're off on another wonderful week of this gay, fanciful.madness and you better enter, because next week is the election, and you know what that means. Get your entry into 420 Maynard by miinight on Friday or we'll stick you with insults of a most perspicascious nature. 1. MICHIGAN .. at North- 12. Oregon State at Stanford western .. (pick score) 13. North Carolina at Air Force 2. Michigan State at Ohio State 14. Memphis State at Tulsa 3. Iowa at Minnesota 15. Auburn at Florida 4. Iinois at Purdue 16. Colorado at Kansas 5. Indiana at Wisconsin 17. Washington State at Arizona 6. Army at Penn State 18. Southern California at Oregon 7. Houston at Georgia 8. UCLA at Tennessee 19. The Citadel vs. Davidson at 9. SMU at Texas Charlotte, N.C. 10. Arkansas at Texas A & M 20. Emory & Henry at Hampden- 11. Pennsylvania at Harvard Sydney Saturday's Results New York 3, Minnesota 0 Toronto 2, Boston 0 Los Angeles 6, Philadelphia 2. Pittsburgh 4, St. Louis 2 Only games scheduled. Sunday's Results Toronto 5, New York 3 Boston 4, Montreal 2 Detroit 4, Chicago 3 Philadelphia 2, Oakland 2, tie Yesterday's Games No games scheduled. Today's Games No games scheduled. Saturday's Results New York 98, Cincinnati 92 Boston 102, Milwaukee 89 Philadelphia 122, Chicago 118 San Francisco 107, Baltimore 106 Only games scheduled. Sunday's Results Los Angeles 152, San Diego 116 Atlanta 123, Phoenix 100 Baltimore 126, Seattle 114 Only games scheduled. Yesterday's Games No games scheduled. Today's Games Baltimore at Milwaukee' Chicago vs. Boston at New York San Francisco at New York Atlanta at Los Angeles Only games scheduled. Nothing's happening in '8 Notin 'shiExcept you , ... as far as Libbey-Owens-Ford is concerned. Everything else is old hat. We've been there. In missiles and lasers: On space walks. Wherever and however glass could go. Next stop - the 21st century. With only once-a-year pauses on campus to look for creative engineers and scientists for technical center, manufacturing and sales functions. If this is your year to happen, look for our repre- sentative. NOV. 7 Libbey-Owens-Ford Company D 1 811 Madison Ave., Toledo, Ohio 43624 Chemical, Mechanical, Civil Engineers Challenge UOP to Challenge You UOP is what professional people have made it...a leader in: * petroleum process development * process plant construction * air and water management * specialty organic chemicals * plastic laminates * fragrances, flavors and food products # aircraft seating and galleys * truck and tractor seating . * control instrumentation * metals and alloys * fabricated metal products We have room for you to 'grow in all these areas. With UOP, you can apply professional talent in research, development, engineering, design, manufacturing, market- ing and technical service. Be sure to talk with a Universal Oil Products Company representative at your Placement Office on November 5. Challenge him to challenge you. better ideas from ~1 BETG HSCIENTISTS TALK STRAIGHT WITH ICI Thinking of returning to the U.K.? Get in touch with the team of ICI scientists visiting your campus shortly. They will tell you about jobs available now, where these are, how much they pay and what the housing situation is. If you've only just arrived, drop in just the same for a chat about your future prospects. ICI's recruiting team will visit your canpus on November 4 Contact them through Miss M. D. Webber, General Place- ment Division, Bureau of Appoint- ments and Occupational Information 3200 Student Activities Building - ! L- Needs You!Y Student Housing Association Is a Means to improve the Apartment-Rental situation; you're tired of PF youretiedofPoor Maintenance or FORMERLY CAMPUS DISCOUNT, NO GAMES3T NO GIMMICK BARNES & HIND VOTE VO 5 SHAMPOO Maybelline All Wetting Solution TOOTHPASTE SC c9C 0 cc -King 15 oRe7$10 77Size 15s . e. 89 $Re754.1 oz Limit 1 - Exp. 11/3/68 Limit 2 -- 11 /3/68 Limit 1 - Exp. 11 /3/68 LiitI-Exp. 11/3/'68 - - - -