TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 16, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY lp&nw wrmw THE MICHIGAN DAILY YAL E NN "UGround By JOHN SUTKUS surprise formations that fooled What was it that upset Mich= the defense completely and led to g What watta? upt Mh- Michigan's demise. Nelson said, igan last Saturday? "It was not a question of any- Wa it the defense? Or was it thing they did differently. It the two key Northwestern plays wasn't a question of our not being in the first half? Or was it that able to cope with formations. They Bob McKelvey decided to have a ran what they do best and they good day and went Wolverine did it very well." hunting? Coach Bump Elliott summed it It's really hard to say. It was up when he said, "We were sim- that kind of a game. ply outhit on defense." You can't really blame the de- Turning Points fense too much. They held the And what about those two key Wildcats to less total yardage than Northwestern plays in the first the Michigan offense made. But, half? the fact remains that no single First was the quick kick that team has ever managed to run put Michigan in the hole and through the Michigan defense eventually led to the Wildcats' quite as well as Northwestern did first touchdown. Actually it was Saturday. a very good football, play (for Shifted to High Northwestern). Usually when the The Wildcat running game Wildcats quick kick, halfback ground into high gear the first Larry Gates lines up as the deep time they had the ball. And that back in the "I" formation and turned out to be the story of drops back to kick. their offense for the rest of the But on this particular play, Ron day. Rector lined up as the deep back This did not come totally un- in the "I." The Wolverine de- expectedly. Rather, Michigan was fenders expected a power sweep. waiting for the Wildcat, ground instead, Rector dropped back to game. But as End Coach Jocko kick. He got a good kick away, Nelson says, "They did a very good good enough .that the ball sailed Job of it. We didn't think they over the head of the Michigan would do that good a job of it." halfback who was running back Neither was it a question of to cover. Naturally the ball took Game a Northwestern bounce. Eventual- ly it went out of bounds on the 12, leaving the Wolverines in a hole. Three plays and minus seven yards later, Northwestern's stack- ed defense managed to block Stan Kemp's punt and recover it on the one-yard line. One play was all it took for the Wildcats to tie up the game. Another Specialist The other key play of the first half was the "Smith special." Smith is the fastest back on the Northwestern squad, and with 28 seconds left in the first half he entered the game in a perfect sit- uation for the long bomb. Perhaps the Michigan defenders misjudged the ball in the 22 mph wind or just made one wrong step. Any- way, Smith made a very good catch in the end zone for a 45- yard TD. These two plays certainly gave { the Wildcats life and momentum. a They enabled them to enter the y dressing room with the upper hand. And Michigan was forced to to1 play catch-up in the second half. goo Northwestern elected to receive in the second half. Michigan nat-B urally chose to have the wind at tha their backs, hoping to force NU the Upsets M' ARKANSAS SECOND: Spartans Retain No. 1 Rating By The Associated Press Michigan State, moving toward a showdown meeting with Notre Dame, continued to show the way yesterday as the No. I team of the nation in The Associated Press' weekly college football poll. Arkansas, with 21 straight vic- tories over a two-year span, was a close second, with unbeaten Ne- braska and once-defeated Notre Dame not far behind. Alabama, Southern California and UCLA followed in that order as the first seven teams main- tained the same ratings of last week Missouri edged into the No. 8 spot and Texas Tech and Florida moved into the Top Ten, displac- 'Vikings Coach Van Brocklin Quits Professional Football CARL WARD, Michigan's leading rusher, sprints for a gain against Northwestern. Preparing to make the tackle for the Wildcats is Robert Hubbs. N I ENGINEERNG OPPORTUNITIES scot had The sum tim thi off sho V get the 20-y the ope H sti kick into the wind aird give up od field position. Where Is Justice? But it didn't quite work out at way. Northwestern turned on ball-control offense. They )red the first three times they d the ball in the second half. eir first touchdown drive con- ned seven minutes of valuable e. Michigan did score in the rd quarter, but, all told, the ense had the ball only a very rt time. When the Wolverines finally did the ball, in the fourth quarter, y were stuck inside their own yard line with the wind in ir faces; and they could not n up the offense. [owever, the Michigan offense 1had a good day. They pro- duced over 300 yards again and outdistanced their Northwestern counterparts in first downs, rush- ing yardage, and total yardage. Injuries, Too As for Smith, he has a hip in- jury. Other players, such as Carl Ward and Dave Fisher, have had the same trouble this year. The injury is described as painful and difficult to play with, but not permanent. Wally Gabler suffered a knee bruise, resulting in his sitting out a series of downs on Saturday. Both Smith and Gabler are ex- pected to be ready for Saturday's clash with Ohio State. MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL (P)- Volatile Norm Van Brocklin, con- sidered by nearly everyone except himself as one of professional football's finest young coaches, stunned the Minnesota Vikings yesterday by quitting as head coach. The high-strung Dutchman, who can strike an erring player dumb with searing words and moments later charm the crushed athlete, said there would be no reconsidera- tion of his decision to resign after 412 years with the National Foot- ball League team. The Viking management, shocked by Van Brocklin's announcement was not accepting the resignation at face value, however. President Max Winter and Gen- eral Manager Jim Finks said they hoped to arrange a meeting with Van Brocklin to try to dissuade him. The 39-year-old coach quit less than 18 hours after the Vikings suffered a 41-21 loss to the Balti- more Colts which virtually elimin- ated them as contenders for the NFL's Western Conference cham- pionship. Finks said Winter and he did not discuss who would take over the team. Van Brocklin said his personal preference could be offensive line coach Walt Yowarsky. "I want to get out of football now and I have no intention of reconsidering," said the former great pro quarterback who guided i the Philadelphia Eagles to the NFL title in 1960 after playing nine seasons for the Los Angeles Rams. * * * Rickey Critical COLUMBIA, Mo. (a) - Branch Rickey, a dominant figure in base- ball for half a century, remained in a critical condition yesterday. Rickey, who made champions out of the St. Louis Cardinals and led the Brooklyn Dodgers to faine, was stricken last Saturday while accepting membership in the Mis- souri Sports Hall of Fame. Rickey, the man who brought the first Negro, Jackie Robinson, into major league baseball, col- lapsed into a chair beside the po- dium. Mrs. Rickey rushed to aid him as a doctor in the audience stepped quickly to the chair. Speeds To Record BONNEVILLE SALT F L A T S, Utah (P)-Craig Breedlove took advantage of a break in the wea- ther yesterday and became the first man in history to travel 600 miles per hour on land in re- capturing the world land speed record. Breedlove had held the record for jet cars four times before. He broke it only two weeks ago but lost it five days later to Art Ar- fons of Akron, Ohio. It was Arfons' mark of 576.353 m.p.h. that he ex- ceeded yesterday. for Seniors and Graduates in MECHANICAL, AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL, ELECTRICAL, and METALLURGICAL ENGINEERING ENGINEERING MECHANICS APPLIED MATHEMATICS PHYSICS and ENGINEERING PHYSICS ing beaten Tennessee and Ken- tucky. Duffy Daugherty's Spartans probably were looking ahead to the Irish and had to come from behind Saturday to beat Indiana 27-13 for the Big Ten champion- ship. Notre Dame also was paying more attention to Saturday's date at South Bend than the business at hand, but woke up in the last period to top North Carolina 17-0. Arkansas remained at Michigan State's shoulder by defeating Sou- thern Methodist 24-3, but Ne- braska had to sweat out a 21-17 edge over Oklahoma State to nail down a tie for the Big Eight crown and an Orange Bowl berth. Next: MSU vs. ND The Saturday pairings should provide a real test for the ratings as six of the 10 teams are in- volved. Michigan State, No. 1, takes on Notre Dame, No. 4. Ar- kansas, No. 2, plays Texas Tech, No. 9. Southern California, No. 6, faces UCLA, No. 7, with a Rose Bowl berth opposite Michigan State at stake. Alabama held the No. 5 position by disposing of South Carolina 35-14. Southern California rolled over Pitt 28-0 and UCLA downed Stanford 30-13, setting up their important meeting at the Coli- seum. Missouri's 30-0 romp over Okla- homa moved them into the eighth position. Texas Tech's success against Baylor moved them into the No. 9 spot and Florida moved into the rankings again by bomb- ing Tulane 51-13. Tennessee, which had been eighth, fell out of the top rank when it lost to Mississippi 14-13. Ken- tucky also dropped down when it was beaten by Houston 38-21. The Top Ten with first place votes in parentheses, season rec- ords and total points figured on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis: 1. Michigan State (31) 9-0 456 2. Arkansas (15) 9-0. 439 3. Nebraska (2) 9-0 378 4. Notre Dame 7-1 346 5. Alabama 7-1-1 268 6. Southern California 6-1-1 226 7. UCLA 7-1-1 180 8. Missouri 6-2-1 115 9. Texas Tech 8-1'86 10. Florida 6-2' '42 Others receiving votes, listed al- phabetically: Auburn, Dartmouth, Georgia Tech, Kentucky, Louisiana State, Mississippi, Ohio State, Princeton, Purdue, Syracuse, Ten- nessee, Tulsa, Washington State. NHL W L T Pts. GF GA Montreal 6 2 3 15 43 28 Chicago 6 2 1 13 41 20 New York 4 3'3.11.34 28 Toronto 3 6 2 8 19 38 Detroit 2 5 3 7 27 33 Boston 2 5 2 6 17 34 Today's Games No games scheduled HAIRSTYLING to Please -CONTINENTALS -COLLEGIATE -RAZOR CUTS 6 BARBERS The Dascola Barbers (Near Michigan Theatre) NBA Rugby Champs The. Michigan Rugby Club won the championship of the Southwest Ontario Rugby Un- ion and annexed the Lambatts' Trophy by defeating Sarnia 6-3 last Saturday. The winning score was made in sudden- death overtime. EASTERN DIVISION W L Pct. Philadelphia 8 3 .727 Cincinnati 9 4 .692 Boston 8 4 .667 NewYork 4 9 .308 WESTERN DIVISION W L Pct. Los Angeles 9 6 .600 San Francisco 8 6 .571 'St. Louis 5 6 .455 Baltimore 5 11 .313 Detroit 4 11 .267 GB 5 GB 2 42/2 5 CAMPUS INTERVIEWS FRIDAY, NOV. 19 Appointments should be made in advance through your College Placement Office Pratt,&.. U WA hitney UlrtNIT ED, ARR/'CRP1 Aircraft IA Equal Opportunty Employer SPECIALISTS IN POWER...POWER FOR PROPULSION-POWER FOR AUIILIARY SYSTEMS. CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE AIRCRAFT, MISSILES, SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS. * Today's Games Ste Louis vs. Philadelphia at N.Y.C. Detroit at New York Boston at San Francisco Professional Football I AMERICAN LEAGUE Eastern Division W L T Pct. PF PA Buffalo 8 2 0 .800 218 149 Houston 4 5 1 .444 205 228 New York 3 5 1 .375 186 188 Boston 1 8 1 .111 137 235 Western Division W L T Pct. PF PA San Diego 6 2 2 .750 221 160 Oakland 5 4 1 .556 208 168 Kansas City 5 4 1 .556 190 185 Denver 4 6 0 .400 215 267 Sunday's Results New York 30, Boston 20 Denver 31, Houston 21 Kansas City 31, San Diego 7 Buffalo 17, Oakland 14 NATIONAL LEAGUE Eastern Conference W L T Pct. PF PA Cleveland 7 2 0 .778 239 205 St. Louis 5 4 0 .556 217 172 New York 4 5 0 .444 146 230 Dallas 4 5 0 .444 191 170 Washington , 3 6 0 .333 131 202 Philadelphia 3 6 0 .333 217 232 Pittsburgh 2 7 0 .222 141 207 Western Conference W L T Pct. PF PA Baltimore 8 1 0 .888 284 164 Green Bay 7 2 0 .778 178 120 Minnesota 5 4 0 .556 274 272 Detroit 5 4 0 .556 167 180 Chicago 5 4 0 .556 266 207 San Francisco 4 5 0 .444 285 252 Los Angeles 1 8 0 .111 135 258 .. _ ooo- Ir -\ . .u...i....i SAVE THIS AD FOR r HOLI r TRAVEL E r r' FUTURE REFERENCE IARGAI *i~ y. " M " t t f t E E FOR U of M STUDENTS & FACULTY VIA NEW YORK CENTRAL RAILROAD 25% SAVINGS from regular round trip coach fares Ann Arbor to specified des- tinations as quoted below. Tickets at these fares will not be honored in stan- dard sleeping cars or sleeper coaches. DATES OF TRAVEL m - m mmm mm / / # / / Ns, #/ I NS/ # 1 / IAVE I / # # 25-% / . / / / # / / 1 / / / Business Side" of Newspapers Provides Challenging Careers Newspaper life isn't all typewriters, presses, dead- lines and news scoops. Someone has to handle the advertising that makes news gathering possible. Someone has to prepare payrolls, and handle credit, and purchase supplies, and look after circulation. An increasing number of these someones" are col- lege graduates. Fellows like George Pratt, above, who, after graduating from the University of Michi- gan in 1961, began his business career with the Booth Newspaper group. After a year in Booth's Training Program, George became a member of the classified advertising staff of the Kalamazoo Gazette. With Booth he will find ample opportunity for advancement. He has already found that salaries, pensions and other benefits are comparable with those of other businesses. Booth Newspapers are located in Bay City, Mus- kegon, Saginaw, Flint, Grand Rapids, Kalamazoo, Jackson, Ypsilanti, and Ann Arbor. Each presents excellent opportunities for happy, successful lifetime careers. Investigate Booth's possibilities before you decide. THANKSGIVING Lv. Ann Arbor Nov. 23, 24, 25 Return by Nov. 30, 1965 CHRISTMAS Lv. Ann Arbor Dec. 13 thru Dec. 24 Return by Jan. 5, 1966 * EASTBOUND SCHEDULE' R. T. No. 368. No. 354 No. 8 No. 356 Student * Fare I ' Lv. Ann Arbor X 6:45A 3:05P 6:55P 9:45P u * Ar. Detroit X.7:30A 4:00P 7:50P 10:40P ' * Lv. Detroit 8:30A %4:30 P 8:15P _ a Ar. Buffalo 12:55 P %9:10P 12:37A $21.10 . Ar. Rochester 2:30 P 1 1 :23P 2:OOA 25.90 ., ' Ar. Syracuse 3:52P 12:58A 3:24A 29.80 *Ar. Utica 4:37P- 1:53A 4:10A 32.35 I Ar. Albany 6:17P 3:45A 5:52A 37.80 " Ar. New York 9:20P 7:1OA 9:OOA 43.75 I Ar. Springfield 9:55A 45.10 Ar. Boston 12:40 P 52.25 " X-Daily except Sunday. 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