PAGE SIX " THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1966 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 2,1966 Rose Bowl: Not Just for the Champs $ 41.... 7'1:... TT1... 4.. 4....., 4... .. 41....... .. 1 1! -L.- .J 11_ ... t 4L - i .. _.__1_ 1 -1- 1_. - - . By DIANE DREYFUSS tne sig 'T en to turn to otner ai- lisnea tat the team which hasI . ternatives. most recently basked in the west- Although the Rose Bowl is play- One alternative, and the usual ern sun is eliminated from con- ed each year in glorious California path taken, is to send the second- sideration. sunshine, many fans are in the place team in the league. If two Compromise dark concerning the rules which darkmine the repesenta- or more teams are tied for the The non-repetition rule has determine the Big Ten representa- runner-up spot, however, it mat- often been questioned, but, ac- tive at Pasadena. ters not which team has defeated cording to Fritz Crisler, the regu- Originally evolved as a part of which. The coaches have estab- lation was a "compromise" be- the Tournament of Roses effort to replace a chariot race, the New Year's Day football competition has grown somewhat in dimension. No longer relegated to a high school football field, the right to partake in the battle now plays a major role in the minds of every coach in the Western Conference. Who Needs Roses?Y But until a contract was ar- ranged in 1946, the Rose Bowl meant no more to the Big Ten than did any of the other post- season struggles. Only two of the conference's teams had partici- pated, the Wolverines having smashed Stanford in 1902, and Ohio State having fallen to Cali- fornia 28-0 in 1921. Then the normally calm seren- ity of the Big Ten coaches' Christ- mas vacations was destroyed by the agreement of 1946. Instead of sugarplums dancing through their heads, ulcers tore at their stom- SWEET WORDS of assurance? Bump Elliott may have been achs as they envisioned the brutes reminding Oregon State Coach Tommy Prothro that the Wolver- of the AAUWU they were now ines couldn't possibly be back the next year to take on the west scheduled to face. coast representative in the Rose Bowl since Big Ten rules forbid The first annual vote of Big Ten it. The Wolverines had just thoroughly trounced Oregon State mentors sent the conference chain- in the 1964 Rose Bowl. pion, Illinois, to Pasadena, and the Fighting Illini upheld the glory of the conference by trouncing UCLA 45-14. - Democracy ltaTan1 lta14 However, winning the confer-' ence championship is not neces- the Big Ten. Every year, the grid- M iron masterminds go through the laborious process of selecting a By BOB LEES Granat, who outraced the defend- representative by. ballot. In the business world, a clock- er to carry the ball across the The election is complicated by watcher is someone who never goal line. But the Delts, with de- the non-repeating rule. As in the does any work, but just sits at his feat suddenly staring them in the case of Michigan State this year, desk and waits for the day to end. face, dug in to halt the extra no champ is allowed to immed- In yesterday's IM Fraternity Class point attempt and sent the game iately repeat at Pasadena, forcing A semifinal game, the officials into extra play. -- 1 were the clock watchers, but they Neither team was able to move had their hands full as Delta Tau the ball from the midfield stripe Delta edged Tau Delta Phi 14-6 in the first two plays of overtime, in a hard-fought overtime game. but on the third the Delts hit on Penalties were a key factor in a short flare pass to enter Tau E J TO L E NTthe match, as both teams were Delt territory. On the next play, unable to muster scoring drives 'Tad' Welch broke through to more than once in the reg- score a safety, and the Delts led creme bleach ular time. Jack Parisian, split 8-6. end for the Delts, opened the scor- Ouch ing by catching a touchdown pass The next play found the Delts from quarterback Phil Bayster in hitting the scoreboard once again, the opening minutes to culminate as Bayster found Parisian alone a long drive. The extra point try in the end zone. His pass was per- fell barely incomplete, but the fect, and the score climbed to its Delts were left wth a 6-0 lead. final 14-6 level. Tau Delt then began a long drive The Delts, who whipped Lambda of its own but was held on downs, Chi Alpha 22-6 in a quarterfinal -- and the first half ended with the match last week, stand undefeat- score unchanged. ed in Fraternity A competition. With about a minute to play, (This was Tau Delta Phi's first and the ball resting deep in his loss.) They will meet Sigma Chi, own territbry, quarterback Bob also undefeated, next week to de- Lederer lofted a long bomb to Ken cide the division championship. tween the Big Ten and the West willingly adopted the no-repeat coast schools. In the original con- rule. tract, each conference was to se- Gophers Go Twice lect its representative. The Big Only once since the creation of Ten did not want to necessarily these regulations has a Big Ten send their champ, however, while team returned to the Rose Bowl the far western group wanted to two years in succession. Minnesota greet only the "best in the West." did not break the contract when The resulting agreement allowed it played in both 1961 and 1962, no Big Ten team to repeat, modi- for no contract existed. During fying the Big Ten's desire that that period, the AAUWU split into the same team attend at the most two separate divisions, nullifying only once in three years. The its agreement with the Big Ten. AAUWU decided that they would At present, the run for the Rose send their champion each year, Bowl may be decided by that but this rigid regulation was soon coaches' vote. As Michigan State changed, too. When their entry, cannot return, Purdue and Mii- California, was beaten three years nesota are battling it out for the in a row, the conference quite bid. As the Boilermakers have the ATTENTION ALIENATED! If you feel lost in the vast complex of a multiversity, with no friends, or even enemies, try Joining The Daily Sports Staff. At least you'll have lots of enemies. Drop in at 420 May- nard St. and ask for Chuck. better record and an apparently stronger team, the odds are great they will get their first oppor- tunity to head out west. Should Griese and company lose this week to Wisconsin, however, with the Gophers winning, the trip to Pas- adena will depend upon the out- come of their showdown the fol- lowing week. GRID SEI The world is coming to an end.{ Hezachiah Scigby, famed Zoroas-! trian monk of the high Himala- yans, has predicted that the world will come to an end midnight of Nov. 1, 1966. Ooops, either Heza- chiah missed the boat or some- body else did when they told me what heaven is like. Or even hell for that matter. After all, filling out Daily Grid Picks is all right, but it doesn't exactly turn one on. There are other things in life (and after- life) than winning two tickets to AECTIONS the Michigan Theatre for guess- ing better than the two other guys who turn in entries. But at least Ursula Andress, starring in the "Blue Max," is better than contemplating why Hezechiah happened to pick Nov. 1. It could be because that's the day his 2-S deferment ended. If you do want to enter this week's contest, bring your selec- tions to 420 Maynard St. by mid- night Friday. Er, better make it sooner. I just remembered the Himalayas are on the other side of the International Date Line. ,0 THIS WEEK'S GAMES It's trade-in time for tired old myths. Like the one about business. Especially big business. That it is beyond the rugged individualist's wildest daydream to enter this holy of holies because he'll lose some- thing that's very sacred -like his inde- pendence. Sure, it can happen. If a guy or gal wants to hide, or just get by, or not accept responsibility, or challenges. We're not omniscient enough or stupid enough to speak for all business, but at a company like Western Electric, bright ideas are not only welcome, they are en- couraged. And no door is shut. Create a little stir, go ahead, upset an old apple- cart (we replace shibboleths at a terrific pace - we have to as manufacturing and supply unit of the Bell System - in order to provide your Bell telephone company with equipment it needs to serve you.) There's an excitement in business. True, we're in it to make a profit, but working to find new and better ways to make things that help people communicate is very re- warding and satisfying. Did you ever hear these wry words of Oliver Wendell Holmes? "Never trust a generality - not even this one." That's how we feel about the generality that claims you'll just become a little cog in a company like Western Electric. You might, of course, but if you consider your- self an individual now, odds are 10 to 1, that you'll keep your individuality. And cherish it. And watch it grow. Even at big, big Western Electric. You know, that's the only way we'd want you to feel. If you feel like coming in with us. W'iffr# Electric MANUFACTURING & SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM Illinois at MICHIGAN (score) Purdue at Wisconsin Minnesota at Northwestern Iowa at Michigan State Indiana at Ohio State Colorado at Missouri California at USC Rice at Arkansas Air Force at Stanford Baylor at Texas I-M Scores FRATERNITY CLASS A ist Place Playoffs (Semifinal) Delta Tau Delta 14, Tau Delta Phi 6 (ovt) 3rd Place Playoffs (Semifinal) Chi Psi 12, Alpha Delta Phi 0 4th Place Playoffs (Cemifinal) Theta Chi 22, Alpha Epsilon Pi 22 FRATERNITY CLASS B Ist Place Playoffs (Semifinal) Delta Tau Delta 14, Sigma Chi 0 The Associated Top Ten, with first place votes in parentheses, season records and total points on a 10-9- 8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis: 1. Notre Dame (39) 6-0-0 475 2. Michigan State (6) 7-0-0 437 3. UCLA (3) 7-0 - 366 4. Alabama (1) 6-0-0 347 5. Georgia Tech 7-0-0 261 6. Nebraska 7-0-0 246 7. Florida 7-0-0 209 8. Arkansas 6-1-0 151 9. Southern California 6-1-0 66 10. Tennessee 4-2-0 48 Others receiving votes, listed al- phabetically: Georgia, Harvard, Houston, Miami, Fla., Mississippi, Purdue, Southern Methodist, Syra- cuse, Wyoming. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: CLARK NORTON Join The Daily Sports Staff Alabama at LSU YPI at Wake Forest Miami (Fla.) at Tulane Florida at Georgia Utah at Arizona State Harvard at Princeton George Washington at Army Idaho at San Jose State UCLA at Washington Wyoming at Wichita State Morningside at St. Cloud State B'sIlboa rd The Fellowship of Christian Athletes Association will meet tonight at 8:30 in the IM Build- ing. Featured will be a taped speech of Bob Timberlake fol- lowed by a discussion. Still needed is one -more freshman basketball manager. Experience not a prerequisite. If interested, call either coach Dick Honig at 663-2441 or Rick Stern at 662-7663. The Michigan freshman foot- ball team will meet the Toledo University frosh at 8 p.m. this Friday at the Ann Arbor High School field. Students with var- sity football tickets, and Uni- versity staff and family with athletic coupons will be admit- ted free. Admission for all others is $1. For anyone interested in be- coming an IM basketball ref- eree, there will be a meeting tonight at 7 o'clock in the IM Building. Pay is at least $1.50 a game. so Problems fade with JCB, the fabulous new cosmetic that bleaches superfluous hair on face, arms and legs. In minutes, medically approved JCB turns hair blond. to blend with skin tones. Safe for sen- sitive skin . . . try it now! Giant JCB $5* Reg. JCB $2* Quarry 320 S. STATE ST. 663-4121 Why knock yourself out making those little-bitty drawings when you can get big art 'reproductions from FOLLETT'S? FOLLETT'S are better, too. U + Use Daily Classifieds + ALL PSYCH MAJORS and interested persons MASS MEETING Thurs., Nov. 3-7:30, Aud. A To found the Undergraduate Psych Association Dr. James McConnell will be the featured speaker livelier lather for really smooth shaves! 1.00 e / lasting freshness glides on fast, never sticky! 1.00 SrC k D E 0' brisk, bracing the original spice-fresh lotion! 1.25 Gallery-sized, MIND-BENDING We specialize in the bigger and better-like bargains, for instance. k fu li-color art prints from 1 to $200 Magnificent, museum-quality reproductions of famous paintings, each larger than a full-size newspaper page - ready for framing. Choose from landscapes, seascapes, abstracts, portaits, and still lifes by such artists as Degas, Renoir, Van Gogh, Picasso, Utrillo, and others. Here is an opportunity to add as many pictures to your walls as the decor of your rooms permit ... and what can so dramatically change the atmosphere of a room like a beautiful painting. Liven up your quarters for only quarters. The Salitman-Segal. Psychedel icatessen WCBN-650 9-10:30 A.M. _ 'It Chartered Jet Flights To Europe, Summer, 1967 Pin-ups are passe. Prints are posh! * I