PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY,- OCTOBER 2, 1965 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. OCTOBER 2. inns +v .w+st ark av 1r iVVV 0 Ilin-MSU Tops Big Ten Slate, TRASH AND CLASS: UAC Muggers Rip Daily, 7-6 By The Associated Press Four Big Ten teams will open up the conference grid schedule today with the Michigan State- Illinois grudge game highlight- ing the slate. MSU, unbeaten in its first two games, will host the Illini in a battle of the Big Ten front-run- ners. The Spartans have yet to yield a touchdown this year in rolling over UCLA and Penn State. Quar- terback Steve Juday has connect- ed on 22 of 35 passes for 221 yards to lead the Spartan aerial offense, while kicker Dick Ken- In the other league contest, Northwestern, currently first in ney of Hawaii has booted five Iowa travels to Wisconsin to face the conference after its victory consecutive field goals. the winless, once-tied, Badgers. over Indiana last Saturday, tan- Illinois. with Fred Custardo The Hawkeyes broke a seven-game gles with Notre Dame in the Irish calling the signals and Pete Gra- losing streak last week against home opener. Both elevens are 1-1 bowski providing the running Oregon State after losing their on the year. Notre Dame holds punch, bounced back from an opener against Washington State, a 23-7 edge in the series dating opening loss to Oregon State to Snook Leads Iowa back to 1889. smother Southern Methodist last Gary Snook, senior field general The Irish lost their No. 1 rat- week. touted as one of the nation's best. ing last week as they were upset Michigan State is seeking its spearheads the Iowa attack. Pon- by Purdue, after beginning the first win in four years against derous Wisconsin offers a tough season with a romp over Califor- the Illini. The Spartans have defensive line. nia. dropped 16-0, 13-0 and 7-6 deci- The remaining Big Ten squads Purdue Out West sions to Illinois in the last three are scattered across the country Purdue is; visiting out West in entertains Indiana tonight in the Longhorns first game in 15 years with a Big Ten opponent. Texas has rolled up 64 points in two games while surrendering only seven. The Hoosiers have split their two contests, losing to Northwest- ern after topping Kansas State. An effective rushing offense and a strong defensive unit are the main strong points in the Indiana attack. By CHUCK VETZNER It was pageantry at its richest, poetry at its finest, and pedantry at its sublimest. It was football on a Friday afternoon, fresh, alive, exciting. The UAC Muggers won anyway. Yes, the valiant forces of the Daialy Libels met with defeat by the slimmest and slimiest of mar- gins, 7-6. "It was just luck," said good, o~-l TIJIUYU '..uovauiej 1..riri "A lines, turned back the cuffs on his were unable to score before the muted gray-blue herringbone sport deadline. coat ("If you don't wear a sport A large crowd had been antici- coat for sport when do you wear pated for the Ferry Field battle, it?"), and began to move the but very few fans actually showed team. up. The reason became apparent The furious and frantic desper- when a Michigan football team ation comeback drive met with official noted an unusually high success. The Libels scored in the turn out for yesterday's drills. next half. The TD came on a spec- Due to the physical similarities tacular "flea-flicker" play as Jim between the Wolverines and the (Legs) Tindall caught a pass and Libels, many spectators mistaken- tossed the ball to Graff who scur- ib en setatwosgmaen- ried down the sideline like a Ku y vent to see the wrong game. Klux Klansman chasing his sheet. Even though the Libels did lose From that point on, however the the Little Brown Wastebasket defenses took over and the Libels they demonstrated their strong who missed their extra point try, moral fiber and human decency. 4 outings. " in non-league encounters. WOULD YOU LIKE TO READ 1000 to 2000 WORDS A MINUTE WITH FULL COMPREHENSION AND RETENTION EASE PRESSURE-SAVE TIME-IMPROVE CONCENTRATION You can read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCFLERATED READING method. You'll learn to comprehend at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute. An.d retention is excellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely read every word. You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual material as well as to literature and fiction. The author's style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased. Consider what this new reading ability will enable you to accomplish-in your required reading and in the additional reading you will want to do. m a tilt with Southern Methodist tonight. The SMU Mustangs were humiliated by Illinois last week. The game is being played where no Big Ten team has ever won. Bob Griese, the phenomenal Boilermaker signal-caller who has completed 28 passes in 36 at- tempts for five touchdowns this season, is the big reason for the two-touchdown margin given to Purdue. The Boilermakers are ranked No. 2 in the nation. Texas, the No. 1 ranked team, OS o oatsport Lloydf (Lovable) Uraff. At o SU on Coast o ileast we'll beat them in basket- Ohio State and Washington will ball." Graff, the Libel coach, both be trying to rebound from quarterback, end, roving lineback- setbacks suffered last week in er, and cheerleader, unselfishly their game today in Seattle. The played the entire game despite Buckeyes fell victim to a stun- the urgings of his fellow players. ,ing North Carolina defense "It was just my duty," he gushed which allowed them only a field humbly after the game. goal, while the Huskies were trip- The Muggers, using their grilled ped up by Baylor. Passing will cheese on white formation, struck Minnesota, yet to win this year, first. They were also the first to faces Missouri in a home game score. for the Gophers today. Washing- The Libels suddenly realized ton State upended the fumbling they were behind and went to Gophers last week and USC tied work. them in their initial tilt. Graff flung his beret to the side- G T i BOARD MEETS: Rules Block MSU Telecast No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READING method. In this way the reader avoids developing any dependence upon external equipment in reading. An afternoon class and an evening class in ACCELERATED READING will be taught each TUESDAY adjacent to the U. of M. Campus, beginning on October 12. Be our guest at a 30-minute public demonstration of the ACCELERATED READING method, and see it applied by U of M students who have recently completed the course. BRING A BOOK! Demonstrations will be held: WEDNESDAY, Oct. 6 at the Bell Tower Inn at 7:30 p.m. MONDAY, Oct. 11 at the Bell Tower Inn at 7:30 p.m. The Bell Tower Inn is located at 200 S. Thayer St. (Across from Hill Auditorium) NATIONAL SCHOOL OF ACCELERATED READING, Inc. By BOB McFARLAND The Board in Control of In- tercollegiate Athletics held its first meeting of the year last night in what was mainly an or- ganizational affair. Replying to an inquiry by state Sen. Roger E. Craig concerning the possible telecast of the Mich- igan-Michigan State game, the Board stated that the game could not be shown live because of NCAA rules. No Education NCAA authorities do allow for a sell-out game to be telecast, but only by the home college's educational station, provided that the station "operates entirely on lems such as labor shortages, the a non-profitnbasis." Because weather, and strikes." Michigan has no educational sta-' In other Board action, John tion, a telecast has been ruled out Dahey, John Yanz, Jerry Mader, by the NCAA. Brian Patchen, and Fred Lambert Much of the Board discussion were approved as coaching assist- centered around the University ants of the freshman football Events Building, concerning both team. the financing and final contract.' Electing new officers of the At the present time digging has Board for the; coming year, the begun on the foundation. members chose Prof. Stuart Chur- chill as vice-president and Prof. One of These.Years Marcus Plant, faculty representa- Chairman of the Board Fritz tive to the Board, as the secre- Crisler says it will be "most sur- tary. prising if construction on the Athletic Director Crisler also! Events Building is completed by announced that an appropriation the ta'get date of January 1, of $3500 had been voted for the 1967, because of unforseen prob- band. -Daily-Jim Lines HERE'S THAT MAN again folks. Yes, that contorted grimace of pain and anguish belongs to lovable, adorable, sweet old Lloyd Graff. We don't have the courage to tell what he 'is looking at. Let us simply say, better luck in grad school old buddy. LA' Clinches Tie' 18964 Coyle St. Detroit 35, Michigan II' *11 TODAY'S TOP GAMES Every Science, Engineering and Math student should know about CSSTP before h e makes up his mind about a career. Sign up now at your placement office to get the story on CSSTP- from the IBM interviewer October 27-28 MIDWEST Georgia at MICHIGAN Illinois at Michigan State Missouri at Minnesota Northwestern at Notre Dame Iowa at Wisconsin Navy at Oklahoma Miami (Ohio) at Western Michigan Iowa State, at Nebraska Colorado at Kansas State Bowling Green at Dayton (n) Tulsa at Oklahoma State Wichita at Cincinnati EAST Boston College at Army Princeton at Columbia UCLA at Penn State Buftalo at Massachusetts Dartmouth at Holy Cross Brown at Pennsylvania Boston University at Temple SOUTH Mississippi vs. Alabama at Birmi ham Kentucky at Auburn Baylor at Florida State (n) Louisiana State at Florida Clemson at Georgia Tech Miami (Fla) at Tulane Vanderbilt at Wake Forest Pittsburgh at West Virginia Syracuse at Maryland Tampa at Mississippi State Virginia at North Carolina William & Mary at Virginia Tech SOUTHWEST Texas Christian vs. Arkansas at Little Rock (n) Duke at Rice (n) Indiana at Texas (n) Purdue at Southern Methodist (n) WEST Kansas at California Stanford at Air Force Oregon State at Southern Calif. (n Idaho at Washington State Ohio State at Washington Arizona at Wyoming New Mexico at Colorado State (n) Brigham'Young at Oregon LOS ANGELES (TP)-Denny Le- master pitched a five-hitter as the Milwaukee Braves defeated Los Angeles 2-0. The Dodgers none- theless clinched a tie for the Na- tional League Pennant as Cincin- nati defeated San Francisco. The loss ended the Dodger 13- game winning streak, which began two weeks ago. ,A victory would. have given L.A. the flag outright. But the front-running Dodgers didn't have much of a chance against Lemaster after he abrupt- ly halted a first inning threat. He allowed only three hits after that inning, bringing his record to 7-13 while not permitting a runner past second base. Claude Osteen took the defeat for the Dodgers. Cincinnati erupted for four runs in the first inning, knocking out San Francisco's Joe Bolin. Frank Robinson's 33rd home run was the big blow for the Reds. The Giants now trail L.A. by SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: RICK STERN Ing- two games and each team has two left to play. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB YOUR 1065-66 STUDENT DIRECTORY OCT. 5 & 6 ONLY OCT. 4 &5 ONLY x-Minnesota 101 59 .631 - Baltimore 93 67 .581 8 Chicago 93 67 .581 8 Detroit 87 72 .547 132 Cleveland 86 74 .538 15 New York 75 85 .469 26 California 74 86 .463 27 Washington 69 90 .434 31% Boston 62 98 .388 39 Kansas City- 59 101v.31 42 x-Clinched pennant. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 6, Kansas City 1 Baltimore 2-2, Cleveland 0-3 Detroit at Washington (ppd., rain) Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES California at Minnesota New York at Boston Detroit at Washington Baltimore at Cleveland Kansas City at Chicago NATIONAL LEAGUE W_ L Pct. Gi$ Los Angeles 95 65 .594 - San Francisco 93 67 .582 2 Cincinnati 89 71t .556 6 Pitt:sburgh 88 72 .550..7 Milwaukee 86 74 .538 9 Philadelphia 82 76 .519 12 St. Louis 78 81 .491 16Y/2 Chicago 72 88 .450 23 Houston 65 95 .406 30 New York 50 109 .314 44i% YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cincinnati 11, San Francisco 2 Milwaukee 2, Los Angeles 0 Pittsburgh 2, Chicago 1 Houston 4, St. Louis 2 Philadelphia at New York (rain) TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at New York Chicago at Pittsburgh St. Louis at Houston Milwaukee at Los Angeles Cincinnati at San Francisco 4 1 i l l 7 from the land of the rising sun THEY'RE COMING ,man s alone for long in Paris. Not in a Paris Club Stripe belt, anyway. The colors catch the chicks' eyes. The masculine cowhide trim does the rest. They're bold belts-like the women who admire them. $3.50 takes one home.. Send the belt tag with just $2 to Paris for _ a regulation-size (22"x3 "x a")hard (ouch!) maple fraternity paddle with a leather thong. Beautifully grained and finished. 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