THE MICHIGAN DAILY NFL GAMES: Lions, Rams, Browns Favored in Pro Battles A Proper Ending TIE GAME almost always disperses the crowd at the end of a game with a feeling that the final curtain- was never really dropped. Yesterday's ferocious battle at East Lansing gave this reporter that sensation. And yet, it was, perhaps, the' ideal ending, because two gridiron powers had just waged sixty minutes of the roughest foot- ball I have ever witnessed on completely equal terms.' Michigan entered the game a 13-point underdog. In a Michigan- Michigan State contest, that means nothing. The play in the first half proved this fact. The Wolverines completely dominated the action and they held a 12-0 lead at the intermission mark. When I say dominate, I mean It in the fullest sense of the word. The Spartans rarely carried the ball into the Michigan zone. Quarterback Bob Ptacek and endGary Prahst were the offensive stars of the first half, but the real decisive factor which gave Michi- gan the upper hand was the forward wall. Men like Don Deskins, Alex Callahan, Walt -Johnson, George Genyk and Willie Smith paved the way for the offense to move. Defensively, the line was superb. Michigan State reversed play in the second half. The Spartans took over and with Dean Look and Art Johnson doing most of the ball- carrying, the Spartans meant business. A physically tired but spiritually fired-up Wolverine team held out as long as possible, but in the fourth quarter, the Spartans traveled 97 yards in 17 plays to tie the game. State captain, Sam Williams, who played a spectacular game for the Spartans, attempted what would have been the winning conversion but the kick went wide. Three minutes still remained, but Michigan decided to settle for a tie. After running out two minutes on the clock, the Wolverines punted. Michigan State, however, wasn't quite ready to settle for a tie and it launched a passing attack which clicked. But there just wasn't enough time remaining, and the contest was a stalemate. ' A case question asked after every game is: What was the turning point of the game? In my opinion, the turning point of yesterday's game came in the early minutes of the final quarter, when Michigan still held a 12-6 victory. Look, who returned a punt 92 yards in the third period, to make the score 12-6, dropped back on fourth down to kick. John Halstead blocked it and Jerry Marciniak recovered the ball on State's six-yard line. Michigan used Ptacek the entire game on offense and at the time of the blocked punt, he was out of the game. It cost Michigan five yards for delay of the game to bring him back in, and the Wolverines were unable- to push the ball across the goal line. Jim Chastain intercepted the third-down pass in the end zone and ran it out to the three. It was from that point that Michigan State took over and marched 97 yards for the tying tuchdown. Minor Injuries... IN THE SECOND HALF while State dominated everything, Michigan dominated one aspect of the game which it would have been happy not to claim. Almost every other second-half play saw a Michigan man injured. John Herrnstein, {vho was a stalwart on defense, sat out the entire second-half with a head injury. After the game, however, good news came from the Michigan dressing room, that none of the injuries were serious, and that everyone should -be ready for next week's game with Navy. For those of you who are wondering what yesterday's tie game will mean as far as a Big Ten title or a trip to the Rose Bowl for either team counts, the only conclusion that can be made is this-a tie game hurt State more than it did Michigan. The Wolverines play one more Conference game than do the Spartans and that game could mean a lot. Of course, that extra game is against Ohio State. Yesterday's Michigan-Michigan State game was the first one played in East Lansing in five years. From recent rumbling it appears that in the future the game will be played in East Lansing every other year. Michigan students may grumble at this decision, but after spending yesterday on the Spartan campus, it seems most justified. The color, the excitement, the mounting tension, all of which are connected with a fierce rivalry, are at a maximum when Michigan and Michigan State play each other. It seems most unfair to deprive the MSU students of this excitement by naming Ann Arbor the ma- jority of the time as the site for the game. Two. Gentemen.. . T IS NOW 4:15 p.m. The game ended approximately 45 minutes ago. I am still sitting in the press box, trying to finish this column. I just glanced up from my typewriter and scanned the empty stadium. Only. wads of paper remain to give any indication that a footbll ganle was played here this afternoon. As thelplayers walked off the field 45 .minutes ago, they were all shaking hands and slapping one another on the back. Two men, both smiling, met in the middle of the field and also shook hands. Each one had naturally wanted to win the game but if a win just wasn't in the book, perhaps a tie was the next-best thing. The two men presented a physical contrast to those fans who watched the personal meeting. One was taller than the other, but both were stocky. The shorter of the two had the game ball tucked under his arm. This man was the coach of a team that was desperately outplayed but came back valiantly to tie the game. The taller gentle- man accepted the game ball as graciously as it had been given. He was the coach of a team that almost pulled off what undoutedly ould have been called one of the greatest upsets of the year. This w ' the way Duffy Daugherty greeted Bennie Oosterbaan at the conclusion of a bitterly contested football game. Both men could justifiably be proud of ther teams. I By CHUCK KOZOLL The demoralized Detroit Lions, smarting from their 28-15 lose to Baltimore last week, are cast as slight favorites to subdue the Packers in Green Bay today. Reported to be in top physical condition, the Lions will have the services of Gene Cronin and Danny Lewis plus the possibility of being able to use recently acquired cen- ter Bob Griffin. Starr Top Quarterback Green Bay, victims of the Chi- cago Bear attack last week, boast top runners in Don Mcflhenny and. Paul Hornung who will prove dan- gerous if they can shake the Lion's secondary. If the Packer's ace quarterback, Bart Starr, can find the pass protection that was lack- ing in the previous contests,-Green Bay will also have a dangerous aerial threat. Los Angeles, who threw a scare into the defending champion Cleveland Browns last Sunday, enter San Francisco's Kezar sta- dium as definite favorites to over- come the 49ers. With Bill Wade, who tops the league as a passing and running quarterback at the Los Angeles helm, the Rams have a distinct edge in the air. Jon Ar- nett's and Joe Marconi's ground gaining prowess give Los Angeles a balanced attack. Rams Favored Quarterbacks John Brodie and Y. A. Tittle, who had bad days against Pittsburgh, will be relying heavily on Hugh McElhenny and R. C. Owens to collect high yard- age totals to dispel the leaks in their passing department. Lou Groza and his educated toe, which combined to give the Browns a narrow winning edge over Los Angeles last week, may see little emergency use in Pittsburgh to- day. Cast as heavy favorites, the Browns easily overshadow the Steelers who lost to San Francisco last week. Jim Brown, who came into his own last week, plans to team up with Jim Ninowski and Bob Mit- chell to drop the Steelers. New York; with Frank Giford and Alex Webster starring in the scoring department, are in the likeliest positions to hand Phila- delphia their second league defeat. Subject to weakness in fourth quarters, the Eagles fell down be- hind the Washington Redskin's scoring revival. BOBBY MITCHELL .. .ground gaining specialist Baltimore, Chicago Stage Surprise Pro Grid Victories By The Associated Press BALTIMORE -The Baltimore Colts knocked' the previously un- defeated Chicago Bears back on their heels with three touchdowns in the first six minutes and went on to win a hair-raising 51-38 decision last night before the big- gest professional sports crowd in rebuilt Memorial Stadium. The first sellout crowd of 52,- 622 since the stadium was done over in 1953 hardly had a min- ute to catch its breath in the National Football League con- test. .Gain Early Lead Their favorites ran up a 27-3 lead in the first quarter with halfback Lenny Moore going for three of the touchdowns and add- ing another in the last quarter for the second Colt triumph without defeat. Their No. 1 draft choice, Leon- ard Lyles from Louisville Vniver- sity, returned a, kickoff 103 yards for a touchdown and Willie Gali- moreof,,the Bears went 99 yards for another one. Bears Revive The Bears, taking their first licking after six exhibitions and the league opener, didn't roll ove,r and play dead,* despite the first- quarter outburst and a 34-10 de- ficit at halftime. They moved swiftly' to two touchdowns with only 14 plays at the start of the third quarter to trail by 34-24. A pass interception by"Ray Brown put the Colts back if business on the Chicago 10, however, and they scored on a 2- yard pass from quarterback John Unitas to end Jim Mutscheller to pull away 41-24.. Cause Upset CHICAGO - Halfback John Crow-startling early game touch- down baffled the Washington Redskins and enabled the Cardin- als to go on to a 37-10 victory over Washington last night. The Redskins, rated contenders. for the eastern division title in the National Football League, never could put together a strong threat and had their defenses shattered by the passing of Rey- nolds. Formerly of Louisiana 'State, Reynolds took over- from veteran Lamar Mchan late in the second quarter and completed 16 of 25 passes for 228 yards. Two of his shots went for touchdowns. Crow Stages Run Crow, former Texas A&M All America halfback, put the Card- inals ahead before most of the crowd of 21,824 was seated. On Chicagos first play from scrim- mage, Crow went 83 yards off left tackle for a touchdown. Later he punted two yards for another score which was set up by Rey- nolds' passing. Conrad, Crow's teammate at Texas A&M last year, booted an 18-yard fourth ,quarter. After one running play Rudy Bukich tossed a 20-yard touchdown pass to John Carson. The Cardinals wasted ,no time in retaliation when Ollie Matson took a Mchan pass for a touch- down with the play covering 51 yards. The victory gave the Cardinals a 1-1 record for the season. They lost last week's opener to New York while Washington started the season with 'a victory over Philadelphia. FOR RENT LARGE Single Room in clean quiet house. One block from Campus. Be- hind Administration Bldg. Linens furnished. $8.75 wk. Call Rock at NO 2-3179. )C67 APT. for rent for 2. 3, adults or a couple. Very reasonable. Call NO 3-4402. )C68 TO GRADUATE Student with trans- portation; a study, bedroom and bath. $50 a month. 2107 Hill St. NO 8-7240. )C70 EFFICIENCY apartment. Completely furnished, first floor, private en- trance, pleasant and cheerful. Cam- pus area ' $68 including utilities. NO 8-6787 or NO 2-4346. )071 AVAILABLE --Doubles for men. Suite and double room, near campus. Phone NO 8-8681 after 5 p.m., 1011 E. University. )C65 IDEAL 3 room.apartment for couple. Newly furnished. Ultra modern. Ex- cellent location. Immediate occu- pancy. Call 8-7876 or 3-1887. )C63 PLEASANT furnished, 2 bedroom home, oil heat, shower, insulated, reason- able rent to responsible party. NO 2- 7207. )C60 WANTED: Two-men to share apart- ment. 3rd floor-share kitchen and bath. Call NO 3-6919. )C23 CAMBRIDGE RD.-1430. Huge double for men, private bath, shower, 2 sinks, large closets, linens, beautiful location. )C55 NEAR CAMPUS FURNISHED HOME, 4 bedrooms, 2nd floor. Living, dining, kitchen, den on 1st floor. Tastefully furnished in- cluding automatic washing machine, ideal for family, group of boys or girls. 1023 Church St. Unfurnishedhapartment, 2 bedrooms, living room and kitchen - dining. Nicely. decorated. 1114 S. Forest. Phone NO 3-1447 or 3-5098 to see. )C59 SINGLE room near all sport areas. Clean and quiet. $10 per week. Stop by 402 Benjamin or call NO 2-8372. )C57 2 ROOM SUITE for men with attached clothes closet. "i block from cam- pus. $9 per person. Also double room. $7 per person. NO 3-7242. )C58 ROOM for male students, ?' block from campus. Cooking privileges. 417 E. Liberty. NO 5-7588. )C52 SINGLE ROOM for man. Near Campus. NO 8-8681 after 5:00 P.M. 1011 E. University. )C49 2 BEDROOM HOUSE. Available imme- diately, unfurnished. Ideal for stu- dent couple. Gas heat, utilities sepa- rate. HUnter 2-6014. )C21 LARGE Single Room for Man. Three Blocks from Campus. Across . from Wine's Field, near all sports areas. Linen furnished. Call NO 2-8372. )C25 TRAILER SPACE AVAILABLE -US-23 15 miles North of Ann Arbor. Large lots, reasonable rates, pleas- ant surroundings. STARLIGHT TRAILER COURT 10175 Bishop Rd. ACademy 7-7191 )C3 CAMPUS-1 BLOCK. Modern furnished apartments. 514 S. Forest. NO 2-1443. )C4 WANTED TO RENT WANTED TO RENT-Parking area or garage, vicinity of Lawyers Club. Call NO 3-7962. )L3 EMPLOYMENT FOR MALES OLDER GRAD Stud. to do part-time recreational work with boys.Call Mr. Clifton, NO 3-5001. )Y1 ALTERATIONS CONVERT your double-breasted suit to a new single-breasted model. $15. Old style wide lapel single-breasted coat into a new style narrow lapel model. $11. Write to Michaels Tailor- ing Co., 1425 Broadway, Detroit, Michigan, for free details or phone WO 3-5776. )P1 HELP WANTED NEEDED-Football officials. Afternoons and evenings. Intramural Sports De- partment. Call NO 3-4182. Ask for Ronald B. Thompson. )H13 REGISTERED Nurses and lab. tech- nician. Top starting salaries in ac- cordance with qualifications. 'M Medical Center (Osteopathic), Mio, Michigan. )H14 MICHIGAN DAILY needs carrier with car to deliver to Pittsfield Village. Contact Steve at HU 3-4215. )H MALE AND FEMALE dancing instruc- tors wanted over 21. Experience need- ed. Apply in person. Arthur Murray Studios, 1311 S. University. )H8 LINES 2 3 4 I DAY .80 .96 1.12 Classified Figure 5 average words to a line. deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 1 1 :00 A.M. Saturday Phone NO 2-3241 BUSINESS SERVICES Wrap Your Chubby Fists Around The Wheel r of one of these beauties and Really Live! You Pay Less Dough and Get More Go! 58 Volvo demo ......$2,095 57 Volvo ..........$1,695 .56 Volkswagen ..............$1,345 55 Volkswagen sedan ........ $1,095 55 volkswagen sunroof $ 995 58 Triumph stationwagon demo. ... ...........$1,895 58 Triumph sedan demo .....$1,695 WE SERVICE ALL FOREIGN CARS Mich. European Car Corp. Liberty at Ashley NO 5-5800 )J26 RITZ BEAUTY SALON Complete line of Beauty work 605 E. Williams Phone NO 8-7066 )J2 POTATOES- U.S. No. I $3.00 -- 100 lbs. Delivered .O.D. Also Cabbage To- matoes - Apples - Onions. DeMarco Produce. NO 2-7747. . )J24 PIANO instructor. Mrs. George Eustis. NO 5-7454. )J22 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Blue frame glasses. Call NO 3- 7297. )A20 ALAS! ALACK! We've lost'our plaque. Any information regarding a bronze plaque with C.S. will be welcomed at Collegiate Sorosis. Call NO 3-8251. )A19 LOST-Travelers checks. Please call: John Weimer, English Dept., Ext. 539, 2785, 3384, or 2-5250. Reward. )A17 LOST-Pearl ring valuable to owner. Reward. Call Norma Herman, NO 2- 1238. )A18 LOST: One silver spoon marked "M.W.," possibly in Auditorium B Friday, Sept. 19. Call John Weimer, English Dept. or NO 2-5250. )A15 FOR SALE 41 FT. Richardson Holse trailer, 2 bed- rooms. On lot. Ready to occupy. Make offer. Must sell. Call NO 5-8856. )B29 BIANCHI Bicycle, man's, new cond. ww, gen., S-A shift. Best offer. NO, 8-6312. )B21. ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords ?- $7.25; socks 39c; shorts 69c; military sup- plies. Sam's Store. 122 E. 'Washington. )B2 PERSONAL Young, ATTRACTIVE, Thrifty maga- tine agency wishes to attract readers. Object: subscriptions. Single and'mar- ried may apply by phoning Student Periodical Agency NO 2-3061. MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES MUSICAL MDSE;, RADIOS, REPAIRS 3 DAYS 2.00 2.40 2.$04 SMITHS CARPETS - RUGS LINOLEUM - TILE 6 DAYS 2.96 3.55 4.14 Hi F STUDIO An amazing inventory of HI-FI components available to you at catalogue price. KITS We stock amplifier, AM -FM tuner and speaker enclosure kits in several brands. 1217 and 1317 S. University NO 8-7942 )X$ SALE On Record Players SAVE up to $40. on STROMBERG-CARLSON ADMI RAL COLUMBIA PILOT MUSIC CENTER 300 S. Thayer NO 2-2500 )X4 RARE Violins & String Instrument repairs. Pianos {Baldwin, Ivers & Pond, Estey) and Organs (Baldwin, Estey, Thomas) New and Used. Terms. MADDY MUSIC 508 E. William NO 3-3223 )X1 ROOM AND BOARD GIRL WANTED to share attractive house on Liberty St., Private bed- room and laundry facilities. Call NO 2-2856 after 5 p.m. )E13 WANTED - Boarders. Excellent rates. Cali steward, NO 3-8581. )E10 BOARDERS WANTED at Tappan Inter., national House. 724 Tappan. NO 5- 5703. )E7% PETS AND SUPPLIES SCOTTIE ,PUPS. AKC registered. Home grown. Reasonable. Phone NO 8-7501. )T1 TRANSPORTATION WANTED RIDE-Mon. thru Fri.; must arrive Mich. Union 7:40 A.M. from North Campus. Call NO 3-3831, Eve. ) Q2 SAVE on Carpet Remnants- many sizes and colors. CARPET STORE - 207 E. Washington St. I GERMAN and FRENCH, Experienced European tutor. Special method for' Graduate Students. Call 3-2975. )F38 14 YEAR OLD boy needs tutor for 8th grade social studies and reading; 4 to 6 hours per .week until June. Write Box F32 in care of The Daily. )F32 WEEKLY knitting lessons for any girl at League. $3 for 12 hours by 'pro- fessional teacher. Org. meeting Octo- ber 9. Further information at League. )F33 I AM DISGUSTED. My name is Dick Richiger and I am a student here with you. Every day I hear of people having ltrouble finding ways and means of supplementing their living allowance but who are doing very little about it and I am fortunate to be associated with an International concern which at the present time is giving me 3 important factors which every college student should be concerned about. 1) The opportunity 'of meeting a large concern for post- graduation opportunities. 2) The wonderful experience so badly needed along with our education. 3) MONEY RIGHT NOW. Our working schedule is flexible enough to meet any school requirements. I am carrying,16 hours. If you have' the guts or fortitude to face reality and you have a burning desire to be successful, call for an interview at NO 2-5127 between 6 and 9 P.M. Friday or Sunday. )F36 FOR N.Y. TIMES Sunday Delivery and Weekday by mail Call NO 5-7944 after 6 P.M. )F29 FRENCH tutoring by native French woman. Phone NO 5-7516. )F18 BABY SITTER--Afternoons. Must have transportation. Call NO 3-3827 morn- ings or afternoons. )F13 I . . .._ USED CARS LINOLEUM STORE 205 N. Main St. )J14. ONE-DAY SERVICE for shoe repairing and hat cleaning at SANFORD'S also fine tailoring, suits pressed .andt shoe shining 119 East Ann Street Phone: Business NO 8-6966 30 years in same location (opposite court house) )J5 FOX MOTEL Room Phonesj Free TV 2805 E. Michigan RU 2-2204 I FOR SALE We specialize in good used cars fromi $100 up. GENE'S AUTO SALES at 544 Detroit Street. NO,3-8141. , )N1 '49 PONTIAC--two toned green. Motor in good condition. Cali NO 3-1841. )NA WE BUY USED FOREIGN CARS We servicealls make foreign cars. MICHIGAN EUROPEAN CAR CORP. 303 Ashley NO 5-5800 )N13 MG-TF for sale. Excellent condition' with radio, heater, electric defrosters. Call NO 2-7987 after 5:30 P.M. )Nil Welcome 'Students!! Try us for: " CREW-CUTS * PRINCETONS * FLAT-TOPS Today!! The Dascola Barbers near Michi an Theatre )JI J8 1 U We now have hot barbecued chickens, spare ribs, pork' "roasts, and beef roasts. Hot and ready to go. Call ustbo reserve your order. RALPH'S FOOD MARKET (formerly Freeman's) 709. Packard NO 2-31'75 "Just two doors from the Blue Front" )J28 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES WHITE'S AUTO PAINT SHOP Bumping and Painting 2007 South State NO 2-3350 )S4' C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and acces- sories. Waranteed & guaranteed. See us for the best price on new & used tires. Road service - mechanic on duty. "You expect more from Standard and you get it!" 1220 S. University at Forest NO 8-9168 )S1 SERVICES Ot. .. 7:30 P.M. INFORMAL DISCUSSION TOPIC "As a Jew, am I Duty bound to 90 to Israel . 1 -. 11 8:15 P.M. in the Lounge a. with r I ms..... _., .; shoes. Call LINDA RUSSEL or 2021 Stockwell HOWARD SAXER Hillel Foundation Fritz Reiner, Conductor Sty!, 21Z Brown Gfin Plain Toe Seamless Biudher., 995 Also in block. PROGRAM Overture, "The Corsair," Op. 21 ........... ...BERLIOZ... 11 I II