'rAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, OCTOBER 13 1966 PA_ EGTTE.IHGNDIL HRDY OTBR116 Grid Selections: Daily-UAC Game Tops List Start the weekend right ~4~YSCREAMER *The BUSHMEN Union Ballroom Oct.14.4-6 Free Nicholson M/C Sales 224 S. First St. Hours: 9 to 9 Monday thru Friday and 9 to 6 Saturday By BILL LEVIS gers before last weekend's humil- iating defeat, have somehow man- After suffering a $2,000 loss at aged to win the Daily-UAC game the hands of overpowering Hill1 two years in a row. If they win Auditorium last Saturday, the Friday, UAC will retire the little UAC Shortcircuits face an even brown wastebasket, symbolic of stiffer challenge Friday afternoon campus touch football superiority. at Ferry Field when they meet the Pep Talk devastating Daily Libels. Led by the dynamic duo of cap- tain Ed (Fair Weather) Herstein and Jim (Legs) Tindall, the Libels have been made six touchdown favorites on the basis of their 7-6 loss to UAC last year. The Short- circuits, formerly called the Mug- Daily coach Mark Killingsworth said yesterday that Daily "is going to play only if they (UAC) don't subpoena the rosters." He noted that "if UAC hadn't subpoenaed membership lists of campus po- litical organizations, we wnould all be better off. That the UAC forces Clancy Snares Pass Lead; Purdue Soph. Tops Scoring are powerful is evident (why else 1 would the administration have caved in so completely?) but thel Daily, aware of its great respon- sibility, courageous to the point of folly and evermindful of the need for "knowledge, wisdom and the courage to serve" will meet the UAC forces on the gridiron and utterly destroy them." More articulate coach and play- er Harvey (The Rabbit) Wasser- man said that the Daily "will smash their heads in." As one Daily cohort, who will remain nameless to protect his (or her) innocence, said, "We can't loss. Fritz (Crisler) is on our side." I Starters Libel coach ,Herstein plans to start at least six of the seven starting positions himself leaving the other spot thoughtfully open for end Tindall, the man who scored the only Daily touchdown last year after catching a pass from graduated quarterback (Lov- able) Lloyd Graff. Asked if Graff's loss would hurt, Herstein said that "we will cer- tainly miss Lloyd but I think we are stronger than last year, es- pecially since I have been lifting weights all summer." Herstein, 5'14", now weighs in at a mon- strous 130 pounds. UAC team members Frightful" Fred Smith and captain Jay-Jayl Zulauf visited the Daily yesterday1 exhibiting their game uniforms, consisting of corduroy jackets,1 Zulauf. the mastermind behind the Hill Aud. defeat last weekend, has a new brainstorm up his sleeve. He revealed that he is thinking of telecasting the Daily- UAC game on closed circuit TV. It would probably draw more than the Green Giants did last weekend. Entrants for this week's Grid Picks are advised to note ;he ac- companying photo. Pictured is the Libels' ace linebacker busily prac- ticing his unique blitz. With such I a defense. the outcome of the game is obvious-so obvious, in fact, that anyone picking UAC will automatically be disqualified from the contest.The winner will re- ceive two tickets to the Michigai a Theater, now featuring "Fantastic Voyage." Purdue at MICHIGAN (score) Illinois at-Indiana Iowa at Minnesota Michigan State at Ohio State Northwestern at Wisconsin Oregon at Air Force Arkaisas at Texas Alabama at Tennessee Rice at MSU Navy at Pitt LSU at Kentucky Oregon State at Idaho Colorado at Iowa State Army at Rutgers Cornell at Harvard North Texas State at Tulsa Washington at Cal West Virginia at Maryland New Mexico atxWyoming DAILY vs. UAC (Friday) The nation's leading pass re- ceiver and the nation's leading scorer will face each other this Saturday when Michigan hosts Purdue. Wolverine end Jack Clancy has a total of 35 receptions good for 479 yards as the 1966 season nears its midpoint. His closest competitor is Doug Flansburg of Washington State with 33 catches for 351 yards. Oddly enough Jack has yet to cross a goal line. Although he leads the country in pass receiving, Clancy has not played in enough Big Ten games to head the conference. Big Ten leaders are Roger Murphy of Northwestern with 11 catches for 178 yards and John Wright of Il- linois, with 8 for 194. Soph Leads Scoring Sophomore Perry Williams of Purdue, meanwhile is the country's top major college scorer with 54 points on nine touchdowns. Wil- liams was used exclusively as a defensive back last year on the Purdue freshman team. Though not listed among the leading Big Ten rushers (his longest run has been only 16 yards), Williams' onl3 real talent appears to be scoring touchdowns. Big Ten statistics show Bob Apisa as the conference rushing leader with 163 yards on 30 at- tempts for a 5.4 average. His team- mate Jimmy Raye is third behind Mike Krivosia of Indiana. Michi gan fullback Dave Fisher rank sixth with 90 yards on 9 carries but his 10.0 average tops the con- ference. H Use Daily Classified Ads CONTACT WEARERS! In individual passing, Indiana's Frank Stavroff is the Big Ten leader with 25 completions of 35 tosses for 301 yards. Bob Griese of Purdue is second with 16 to 24 completions for 215 yards. The Wolverines' Dick Vidmer, comple- ting 18 of 47, ranks fourth. Stan Kemp of Michigan holds a commanding lead in the punting deparement. His 44.0 yard average for 11 boots places him far ahead of Iowa's Larry McDowell. i ~ Al Libels' 'Toothpick' Tindall paisley shirts and red turtleneck sweater. Zulauf said that Smith will start at quarterback with himself at flanker and Murder McAllister on the line. To counter this massive UAC' line, Herstein plans to run his players backwards. UAC's Smith threatened that "everyone better come to the game early as it will be a shutout and only take half as long as expect- ed." Smith did not note which team was going to shutout which. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: BOB LEES Hathaway has a bizarre Triple Thick Shakes . 25c Delicious Hamburgers 15cl 2000 W. STADIUM BLVD. interview ody Allen p with Wo 4 z ~;'3#; { ? * '$ . *f .; ':~':~i>,': } . / . { . .{: ;.;: y:2 # ';'k< ' _ >:} ': A Hathaway: Mr. Allen, when did you start wearing Hathaway Club shirts? Allen: In college. I found they attracted more girls than any other kind. Hathaway: Really? What accounted for that? Allen: I don't know. Maybe it was the way the tapered body showed off my manly chest. Or the way the casual flare of the collar set off my rugged face. Hathaway: Are you serious? Allen: Of course. Once, one of your Club shirts saw me through three remarkably involved affairs. 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