EVEN J s TUESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SE ~USAY CTBRt, 96 H MCIG NDAL '__SI~E 'M' Faces 'Poise' Problem, Mason Says TEXAS RATED FIRST: Michigan Falls from Top Ten I By HOWARD KOHN Contrary to the old proverb that says, . "Action will remove the doubt that theory cannot solve," three weeks of football action at Michigan have raised more ques- tions, rather than answered the original ones. Is Michigan capable of produc- ing a championship team, or even a winning team? Yes, according to. grid critics before the 'season opened, but after three lackluster' performances the answer is not as decisive. Tony's Theory "They lack poise," explained Tony Mason, offensive line coach. "It's something that has to be acquired. It isn't coachable. "Poise 'is the diffierence between an adequate 'player and a good player. It gives him that extra surety in making a tackle or catching a pass." Mason also noted that, "No team has stopped us yet. Penalties, like the one that took away a first quarter touchdown against Geor- gia, plus fumbles and pass inter- ceptions have been our biggest problems." Costly Boo Boo In the Georgia game, Michigan was penalized only 51 yards and lost only one fumble. but the fumble stopped an offensive drive in Georgia territory as did two of the penalties. Michigan. outpassed and outrushed the Bulldogs in the first half, but managed only a one-point lead by intermission. "In the second half, Georgia was the better team," admitted Mason, "but I'd like to play them for a living instead of the Big Ten teams." The consensus seems to be that Georgia was not that ex- ceptional, but that Michigan was even less so. Instances where the Wolverine { t f f c l 1 j j j defense had the Bulldogs pinned this Saturday against the unbeat- on their own one-yard-line (once en Spartans of Michigan State in with first down and again with the first conference game for the fourth down) and allowed the of- Maize and Blue. "We're going to fense to escape without any dam- play like the devil to beat State," age did little to help Michigan's said a confident Elliott. "They chances. have a good team and we'll have The South Is Avenged to be at our best." The loss snapped an eight game Commenting on the showings of winning streak and became the MSU this season, Mason exclaim- first mark in the loser's column ed, "They play like pros-and if for Michigan against teams below they get any bigger, they ought the Mason-Dixon line in modern to be judged illegal." The Spar- football history. tans, ranked No. 5 in the country, Head coach Bump Elliott sum- have two of the biggest men in med up the contest by saying, "We the Big Ten in 256-pound Harold were expecting a tough game and Lucas and 258-pound Charley we got it." Smith. Michigan's crucial test will come Michigan will hold "closed prac- tices" this week in preparation for the annual battle with State. Detwiler Unsure 'm n tn ea Halfback Jim Detwiler, spark- plug of the Michigan backfield, FCa who reinjured his knee last week, Oaf. OR t is working out with the team. Det- wiler twisted the knee in the North Carolina opener, sat out the F ina §earn California tilt and then lost his balance in the third quarter against Georgia wrenching the ATHENS, Ga. (P) - As the knee once again. plane touched down right on "He has either a torn or loose schedule, a deafening roar went cartilage in his knee, but the in- up from thousands gathered at jury is not one that would hamper Ben Epps Airport Saturday night his running," explained Dr. Pen- to greet the victorious Univer- nis Burke, team doctor. sity of Georgia's football team. Backfield in Motion The plane taxied up to the Dave Fisher and Carl Ward, the main gate as the band struck up otlier two members of the starting Glory to Old Georgia and fans offensive backfield, are expected intoxicated by the Bulldogs' 15-7 to be at full strength this weekend game. Elliott indicated that "the next couple of days should tell his starting status." If he isn't able to compete, junior Ken Wright will remain in his position. Bye Bye Clayton Elliott plans only one major change for MSU. He will switch defensive end Clayt Wilhite to an offensive end slot. Dick Vidmer will stay as first- string signal-caller, according to Elliott, with Wally Gabler as back-up man. By The Associated Press For the first time since Novem- ber of last season, Michigan's Wolverines are no longer among straight victory, collected 25 first place votes and 368 points. Points are figured on a basis of 10 for first, nine for second, etc. the nation's top 10 collegiate foot- Nebraska, which bombed Iowa ball teams. State 44-0, received 10 first place Texas and Nebraska were the votes and 355 points. solid 1-2 choices yesterday as the Behind the first two came Ar- Wolverines, along with Louisiana kansas, 3-0; Georgia's upset State and Kentucky, dropped out kings, 3-0; Michigan State, 3-0; of the running in the Associated Purdue, 2-0-1; Notre Dame, 2-1; Press' weekly college football poll. Southern California, 2-0-1; Mis- Texas Gets Vote- 'sissippi State 3-0 and Florida, 2- Texas held its No. 1 rating on 1. a heavy first place vote while l Purdue, second a week ago fol- Nebraska moved up from third and replaced tied Purdue in sec- ond place. The Longhorns, 27-12 victors The offorts of th over Indiana for their third lowing its conquest of Notre Dame, dropped four notches as a result of a 14-14 tie with South- ern Methodist, a team that -had been trounced earlier 42-0 by Il- linois. NOT Number One Georgia, upsetters of Alabama earlier, advanced from 10th to fourth on its 15-7 upending of seventh ranked Michigan. Louisiana State, fifth-ranked a week ago, was beaten by Florida, 14-7. Sixth-ranked Kentucky was ambushed at Auburn, 23-18. I Pro Standings I Detroit GreenE San Fra Baltimo Los An Minneso Chicagoj Dallas Clevelan New Yo St. Lou Philade W ashin Pittsbur NATIONAL LEAGUE Western Division W L T Pct. 3 0 0 1.000 Bay 3 0 801.000 ancisco 2 1 0 .667 re 2 1 0 .667 ngeles 1 2 0 .333 ota 1 2 0 .333 0 3 0 .000 Eastern Division W L T Pet. 2 1 0 .667 nk 2 1 0 .667 rk 2 1 0 .667 is 2 1 0 .667 iphia 1 2 0 .333 gton 0 3 0 .000 rgh 0 3 01 .000 PF PA 65 39 84 40 103 68 79 60 65 86 83 101 66 105 PF PA 76 29 65 73 41 58 96 60 65 78 24 58 39 91 ie SGC The top ten with first place votes in parentheses: 1. Texas (25) 3-0 368 2. Nebraska (10) 3-0 355 3. Arkansas (1) 3-0 285 4. Georgia (3) 3-0 250 5. Michigan State 3-0, 219 6. Purdue (1) 2-0-1 182 7. Notre Dame 2-1 182 8. Southern Calif. 2-0-1 108 9. Miss. State 3-0 47 10. Florida 2-1 46 Others receiving votes in- cludes: Alabama, Auburn, Duke, Kentucky, Louisiana S t a t'e, Michigan, Missouri, Ohio State, Oregon, Stanford, Syracuse, West Virginia, Wyoming. Committee on the University Bookstore are endorsed by: IFC IQC PANHELLEN IC VOICE G. R.O. U. P. ASSEMBLY ASSOC. GRADUATE STUDENT COUNCIL U.M.S. E.U. YOUNG REPUBLICANS YOUNG DEMOCRATS upset of Michigan chanted "damn good team! damn good team!" Then the door opened and out stepped a middle-aged dowager returning from a .shopping trip to Atlanta. Silence flowed over the front rows, then a new chant was start- ed which carried the word to the rcar: "Wrong damn plane! , Wrong damn plane!" after sitting on the bench during the second half last Saturday. Both suffered hip bruises in first half action. Guard Barry Dehlin, who has not played since the first quarter of the season opener, is still a question mark for the upcoming. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 20, Dallas 13 SUNDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 14, Washington 10 Cleveland 35, Philadelphia 17 Baltimore 27, San Francisco 24 Green Bay 23, Chicago 14 Minnesota 38, Los Angeles 35 New York 23, Pittsburgh 13 AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division W L T Pct. PF Buffalo 4 0 0 1.000 104 Houston 2 2 0 .500 89 New York 0 4 0 .000 65 Boston 0 4 0 .000 44 Western Division W L T Pct. PF San Diego 3 0 1 1.000 92 Kansas City 2 1 1 .667 61 Oakland 2 2 0 .500 76 Denver 2 2 0 .500 89 SUNDAY'S RESULTS San Diego 31, Houston 14 Denver 16, New York 13 Kansas City 27, Boston 17 Buffalo 17, Oakland 12 r PA 55 83 90 109 PA 61 74 61 89 SCORES LATE GRID PICKS Eureka 12, St. Procopius 7 Sign the Bookstore Petition! i 1 I -Daiy-Jim Lines MICHIGAN HALFBACK CARL WARD ,is grabbed from behind by an unidentifiable Georgia tackler. Though unsuccessful in this particular situation, Ward is known for his ability to slip unscathed from similar predicaments. Recovered from a minor injury, the junior speedster faces another rough chore Saturday against 1MSU. GRID SELECTIONS It was a heartbreaking week. Michigan, Purdue, Iowa, and poor old St. Procopius failed to come through and if you got half right, you did better than most. There was a winner though. Charles Tyler of Michigan House, West Quad, won two tickets to "Marriage on the Rocks" now showing at the Michigan Theatre. He has the chance to compete for our Giant Grand Prize after the ,ast contest week. This week features the East Stroudsburg State and Kutztown State game at Kutztown. So get your entry blanks at the Daily and have them in before midnight Friday. No nore than one entry perperson,, - All in all it promises to be .a -week of rationality and skillfull ,selections. Indeed, the results couldn't possibly get more unpredictable. THIS WEEKS GAMES I University of Michigan Inter Fraternity Council preien b 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. And retention is excellent. This is NOT a skimming method; you.definitely read every word. You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks'ond 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.wil be increased. Consider what this new reading ability will enable you to accomplish-ir your required reading and in the additional reading you will want to do. 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 recertly 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. 18964 Coyle St. Detroit 35, Michigan IFC Mass Committee Tryout Meeting Open to all fraternity members-Actives and Pledges who are interested in-orking on the. Inter Fraternity Council. -0": 1 1 V f li 4. r f r ' 7:00 P.M., Thursday, Oct. 7 Room 3RS, Michigan Union 1. 2. -'3. 4. 5. 6. 7., *8. 9.i 10. 11. Michigan St. at MICHIGAN Purdue at Iowa Oregon St. at Northwestern Illinois at Ohio State Indiana at 1Minnesota Wisconsin at Nebraska Oklahoma vs. Texas at Dallas Clemson at Georgia Southern Cal at Washington Florida at Mississippi Syracuse at UCLA, 12. Army vs. Notre Dame at Chicago 13. California at Air Force 14. Penn State at Boston College 15. Oregon at Stanford 16. Pittsburgh at Duke 17. North Carolina at North Carolina State 18. Kansas State at Missouri 19. Pennsylvania at Dartmouth 20. East Stroudsburg St. at Kutztown St. d iscount records, EXTRA LOW PRICES I THIS WEEK Deutsche Grammophon i WAN TED! FIFTY MEN, Because you like our pizza so much, we need HELP! 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