WAGE EIGII T THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 9.1965'1 PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. NOVEMBER fl. 1~e~ + Vas h.raw aa.L, .1.lV t a. l aL/aI1V V1 1JVU ,w LLOYD GRAFF Reserves Scrub Freshmen By HOWARD KOHN A passing combo of Pete Hollis to Tom Parkhill sparked a 26-8 victory for Michigan's reserve Readers Respond i team in the annual battle with ,ds e othe freshman crew last night at To Trivia Challenge the Ann ArborhHigh Stadium. Parkhill, of the "isdopr tunity against Wisconsin" fame, Dear Lloyd, snagged five of Hollis' aerials to In your column of Nov. 4, 1965, you asked a number of questions. account for one touchdown and Here are the answers: to help set up another six-pointer 1) Gepetto was not married. as the experience of the Blue 2) The third baseman in the Cub infield with Tinker, Evers, overpowered the jittery frosh. and Chance was Harry M. Steinfeldt. The third and fourth-stringers 3) -JohnnyVander Meer's catcher was Ernie Lombardi. of varisty status, dressed in the 3) Jhn lesrukfrtrefrthalf 4) Clark Kent's parents were George and Martha Kent. Clark's blue,struck touhows ot take a r20-0 i lead off glasses have special lenses which do not melt under his X-ray and the field at intermission. Hollis, a heat vision. senior quarterback, directed the 5) The tribe that Chief Thunderthud belonged to was NBC. Tonto team to paydirt on the strength was Apache. of his sharp passing arm. 6) Rocky Marciano was once Soph Scores knocked down by Ezzard Charles. Sophomore fullback Mike Ye- 7) Mike Broder once sent in a dinak bulled over for the first TD, "reasonable facsimile" of a Kel- :<: :.>climaxing a 75-yard. drive. Hollis logg's Corn Flake box top. picked up the second counter on 8) Captain Midnight had to the keeper play from four yards out. And a Hollis pass to senior change his name because he was Tom Brigstock was good for 22 demoted and Lieutenant Midnight yards and the third Blue touch- sounds ridiculous. 9) Sky King's plane was The The reserves clicked -for a two- Songbird. point conversion after the Brig-. 10) What happened to Jerry stock TD on a pass from P.A.T. Lee Lewis? Nothing. holder Parkhill to Craig Kirby. 11) Red Auerbach smokes Phil The first two attempts were miss- lies cigars and Gene Guariglia ed on wide boots by Hollis. liesa Gr CmHollis to 1iParkhillworked to- flOW 6 St.,gether for the final score for the 1ridge Mass. (honest). Blue on a nine-yard ass earl 12) Alex Olmedo's doub1es " in the third quarter. partner was Ham Richardson in SON OF GEORGE AND ? Frosh Fright 1958. For the freshmen who were KEEP AHEAD OF YOUR HAIR!! * NO WAITING * 4 BARBERS COLLEGIATE STYLING DASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theatre Full Time & Evening Employrment If you are free four evenings each week and Saturdays, you can maintain your studies and still enjoy a part-time job doing special interview work that will bring cn average weekly income at $67. ... If you are neat appearing and a hard worker call Mr. Adams at 761 - 1488 Monday-Friday between 10 A M, and 1 P.M. No other 0 t imes. We are also interested in full-time employees. = .y PETE HOLLIS enough action to intercept two passes for the frosh. "On the line, guard Jim Duffy and tackles Warren Sipp and Dick Tackett were among the stal- warts." One of the highlights of the freshman performance was a 73- yard punt from the frosh 17 to the Blue 10 by halfback Bill Bol- duc-an unofficial freshman rec- ord. Another was a 66-yard pass to Jim Wilhite, which he subse- quently fumbled. Coach Fitzgerald's charges were plagued by constant bobbling of the pigskin against the hardhit- ting varsity men. Defensive backfield coach Don Dufek, who managed the Blue team, was admittedly pleased with the victory. "They worked hard," he said. "Sophomore Kent Leslie Pros Silent On Draft .Date TOM PARKHILL T , 5 f 1 2 , 13) Lou Berberet hit .262 for the Washington Senators in 1957. t 14) Crusader Rabbit's companion was Raggs the Tiger. (By the. *way, Raggs was smarter than Bullwinkle. The only famous char-c acter's companion dumber than Bullwinkle was Mighty Manfred theN Wonder Dog.)I 15) Ming lives, pass it on. 16) Sheb Woolley never composed another famous song, but he did make up some not-so-well known melodies in his shower. r 17) Paul Seymour has coached Syracuse, Cincinnati, St.. Louis, Chicago, and Baltimore. 18) Satchel Paige played for the St. Louis Browns and playedt baseball for Kansas City at the end of last season.I 19) Rin Tin Tin worked out of Fort Apache and his boy was t Rusty. f 20) The third stooge was Moe. 21) Edar Jobre is the bantamweight champion of the world. 22) The same thing happened to Bill Haley and the Comets as happened to Jerry Lee Lewis: obscurity. 23) Lou Thezz has been known to lose occasionally, but notr Antonino Rocca. 24) Haystacks Calhoun weighs 600 pounds. Skull Murphy, Killer Kowalski, Sweet Daddy Sikki, the Volkov Brothers, Seaman Thomas,c (Nature Boy) Buddy Rodgers, and Tiger Tiersky can all now bet found on Channel 9. 25) Soupy Sales' favorite pie is banana cream. 26) Bud Anderson is Billy Grey. 27) Captain Marvel's secret word was "Shazam." 28) Annis Jensen is on the Mexico City Cardinales and Bobby Matiere is on the San Francisco Bay Area Bombers. 29) Cliff Mapes came up with the Yankees in 1948 and sub- sequently traded to St. Louis and Detroit. Lou Skizas came up witht the Yankees but in 1956. He was traded to Kansas City, Detroit, Chicago. 30) Clarence (Bevo) Francis played for Rio Grande College in Ohio.. Sincerely, Roger L. Browdyl James Zommel E. S. Don Miguel Broder Matter of Research,. . When I received this letter I wondered whether these guys were the foremost trivia experts in the world or the most resourceful researchers ever to hear the crackle of a yellowed page so I called Roger Browdy and associates to get the story. Digger Browdy went to the General Library Saturday morning and began his work. His first monumental task was to find out where Gene Guariglia, the perennial eleventh man of the Boston Celtics in the early Sixties, now resides. He combed through tele- phone. directories, naturally, going through the Bronx, Manhattan, Brooklyn, Washington, Los Angeles, Phoenix, Chicago, Kansas City, and finally Boston. Voila. Of course, I didn't trust him so I called up Cambridge myself. Yes, that's where he lives. In order to discover whether Gepetto was married Roger went to the Ann Arbor Public Library, read the entire tale of Pinnochio. He reports he enjoyed the book,aincidentally. He read short biographies of Frank Chance, Johnny Evers, Joe1 Tinker to glean the fact that the third baseman was Harry M. Steinfeldt. But he ran into trouble when he researched the magnificent Bevo Francis. Somehow, Roger thought Bevo was a football player and searched vainly through old football coverage for his name. Discover- ing nothing he turned to basketball and luckily found his name in: a list of All-Americans in the 1954 Sports Encyclopedia. Roger's research did turn up a conflict. He bought a Superboy comic book and found that young Clark's parent's names wereI George and Martha Kent. However, in a marvelous new book edited - by Jules Feiffer called The Great Comic Book Heroes, we find the first Superman comic ever printed. It was written by Jerome Siegel and Joe Shuster, by the way, for future reference. In the second frame, Mary Kent, not Martha, is Clark's foster mother. If anybody can reconcile this conflict please write me im- mediately. Is it possible that the Kents got a divorce and George remarried? troubled by the cold weather and first-game tension, the game didn't begin until two minutes were left on the clock. Dennis Brown, a 170-pound quarterback from Lincoln Park, moved his team to the seven-yard line with six seconds left and then con-! nected on a scoring pass to end Jon Kramer. Halfback Ron Johnson took a toss from Brown to give the fresh- men the extra two points. "Despite the disappointing out- come of the game, the frosh per- formed well under the circum- stances," reflected freshman coach Dennis Fitzgerald after the game. yA couple of the boys did a note- worthy job. ... Brown looked fine at quarterback, as did his replace- ment, Denny Beemer. Another of our top backs, Bob Kieta, was suffering from a sore hand and didn't get too much of an oppor- tunity." Kieta did, however, see and Mike Yedinak were probably the most outstanding among the underclassmen." Leslie, who limped off the field in the first quarter and then came back to lead the ground game in the second half, was playing on the gridiron of his alma mater. The game was switched this year from the traditional after- noon fracas in Michigan Stadium to a night contest at the high school to give more of the Wolver- ine fans a chance to attend. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: CHUCK VETZNER DEPENDABLE IMPORT SERVICE We have the MECHANICS and the PARTS. NEW CAR DEALER Triumph-Volvo- Fiat-Checker WE LEASE CARS as low as $4.50 per 24-hr. day HERB ESTES AUTOMART 319 W. Huron 665-3688 SUBSCRIBE TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY 0 NEW YORK (P)-The National Football League and the American Football League are playing it cute about the date of their an- nual player drafts of college talent. Nobody wants to announce the date but it undoubtedly will be Saturday, Nov. 27, the day of the Army-Navy game. Once again the two leagues are expected to operate from New York headquarters with club field representatives in contact with their home office by direct wire. 0 I 'GRID SELECTIONS 1 ditto! Direct, hard-working, no-fooling fire. What a mouth- watering job it does on food. Direct fire does something very special for beer flavor, too. It works a little different in the brewery, but the result is the same . . . great taste. Fire-brewing is the traditional Old World way . . . it gets better flavor out of the ingredients and puts it-into the beer. Fire-brewing is costlier, but it delivers more flavor, pleases more custome: Try a*frosty Stroh's today. America's only fire-brewed beer. FIRE-BREWED FLAWOR * There's nothing trivial about grid picks or John Zline's triumph in last week's contest. John, who lives at 536 Forest, wins two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre, now showing "The Cincinnati Kid." Among his correct predictions was La Vern's 37-7 whipping of Claremont-Mudd. La Vern's last name and home address are not known, but should prove a challenge to trivia experts. So should this week's contest. Get your entries in to 420 Maynard St. no later than Friday at midnight. U.r 1. MICHIGAN at Northwestern. (pick score) 2. Minnesota at Purdue 3. Illinois at Wisconsin 4. Indiana at Michigan State 5. Iowa at Ohio State 6. Air Force at Arizona 7. Arkansas at SMU 8. Auburn at Georgia 9. North Carolina at Notre Dame 10. Navy at Penn State 11. Mississippi vs. Tennessee at Memphis 12. Oklahoma at Missouri 13. Baylor at Texas Tech 14. Maryland at Clemson 15. UCLA at Stanford 16. Oregon State at Washington 17. Texas A&M at Rice 18. Virginia at Georgia Tech 19. Kansas at Colorado 20. Juniata at Moravian Complete Formal Rental Service Formal Wear by "AFTER SIX" TICE'S MEN'S SHOP 1607 South University-across from the AA Bank 9:00-5:30 Mon. & Fri. till 8:30 Engineers and Scientists: Let's ta lk about a career at Boeing... 50-year leader in aerospace technology Campus Interviews Monday and Tuesday, November 15 and 16 The most effective way to evaluate a com- pany in terms of its potential for dynamic career growth is to examine its past rec- ord, its current status, and its prospects and planning for the future, together with the professional climate it offers for the development of your individual capabilities. Boeing, which in 1966 completes 50 years of unmatched aircraft innovation and pro- duction, offers you career opportunities as diverse as its extensive and varied back- log. Whether your interests lie in the field of commercial jet airliners of the future or in space-flight technology, you can find at Boeing an opening which combines profes- sional challenge and long-range stability. The men of Boeing are today pioneering evolutionary advances in both civilian and military aircraft, as well as in space pro- grams of such historic importance as America's first moon landing. Missiles, space vehicles, gas turbine engines, trans- port helicopters, marine vehicles and basic research are other areas of Boeingactivity. There's a- spot where your talents can mature and grow at Boeing, in research, design, test, manufacturing or administra- tion. The company's position as world lbader in jet transportation provides a measure of the calibre of people with whom you would work. In addition, Boeing people work in small groups, where initia- tive and ability get maximum exposure. Boeing encourages participation in the company-paid Graduate Study Program at leading colleges and universities near company installations. We're looking forward to meeting engi- neering, mathematics and science seniors and graduate students during our visit to your campus. Make an appointment now 6~ * the nicest things we do for your shirts are SPECIAL PACKAGING ;I- 'I- The Kwik 'n Kleen famous "sof-pac" method of folding your shirt around a special paper liner will minimize those hard creases left by sharp e d g e d cardboard liners. The special pliofilmn bag with a paper back helps to maintain that smooth look even in your dresser drawer. No need to remove the shirt from its protective package to find the one you want to wear- each package is 'clearly marked "Short Sleeve" - "French Cuff"-or "Regu. 0 1 ~ ~. I & I NIu I I I