PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1966 PAGE SIX TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 3,1960 Fisher, Vidmer Lead Pack In Big Ten Statistics Fight By The Associated Press while Bob Griese of Purdue leads Jack Clancy's pass catching'! with 59 completions on an identi- leadership is in danger. National- cal 105 attempts for a .562 per- ly, the Michigan end is only seven centage and 794 yards gained. ahead of the number two man, Other Michigan offensive lead- Glenn Meltzer, a sophomore at ers are halfback Jin Detwilerwho Wichita State, who has played one is ahead in scoring with 42 points less game on a ten game slate. on seven touchdowns and punter Purdue's Jim Beirne is a respect-~on emtuhosand y urder able fourth with 48 grabs. Stan Kemp, whose 69 yarder on ise nourth thingraocoms rSaturday helped boost his aver- But this is nothing to compare age to 41 yards. with Big Ten statistics where Else Clancy isn't even leading, but is Elsewhere, the remaining Big trailing Beirne, 31 to 30. Ten leaders are Griese with 866 Elsewhere, Michigan leads in yards total offense, Tom Schinke four of the other seven individual of Wisconsin with a 28.9 yard Big Ten leaderships. In rushing. kickoff return average on eight I fullback Dave Fisher is way out runbacks, and Al Brenner of Freshman Stars Impress Despite Loss By ED GRUCA Like all freshman teams, Mich- igan's frosh football squad is "a good team." After seeing his team in compe-I tition for the first time last Sat- urday, Coach Bill Dodd said the freshmen are "as good as or bet- ter than any I've seen" in the few years he has been here. This is despite the fact that the team lost its only game 25-14 to Wis- consin last Saturday. The definition of a "good fresh- man football team," according to Dodd, is one that will provide needed players for the following year's varsity squad, and not nec- essarily containing the balance and depth required for a winning in front with 377 yards on 62 car- ries for a 6.1 average in only four league games, while the closest of his pursuers is 45 yards behind. The three nearest to him have played five league games. Vidmer Leads Passing has become a strong: point for the Wolverines as Dick Vidmer has taken over the lead with 55 completions on 105 at- tempts for a .524 percentage. Hisj passes have resulted in 669 yards; gained and six touchdowns. But the only statistic where Vidmer is ahead is touchdowns, SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: BOB LEES ivMichigan State with a 17. yard punt return average while at- tempting ten. Defensive Statistics Individual defensive statistics have leaders from six teams in five categories, and none of them are Michigan. Iowa's Dave Moreland leads the conference with 67 tackles, while the best Michigan player is Frank Nunley with 51 tackles, good for a tie for fifth. Additional leaders are Illinois' Phil Knell with five interceptions, and Phil Clark of Northwestern with 12 blocked passes, while Phil Hoag and Ron Kamzelski of Mich- igan State and Minnesota, respec- tively, have each recovered three fumbles. combination itself. Dodd says Going into the game without that the frosh appear to have any previous scouting of Toledo. those players that will be needed Dodd says his boys will just go out to fill graduation gaps, on the field and play their own Noting that the varsity squad game of football and will not be will lose most of its offensive and especially k e y e d to playing defensive backfields for next year, against Toledo's particular type Dodd mentioned several players of play. as good prospects for taking their Coach Dodd said that he was places. Among them are John satisfied with the team's play in Gabler, Garvie Craw, Tom Wein- the last three quarters of Satur- man, Pete Dreshmann, Ed Wool- day's game with Wisconsin. It was ley, Ken Wall, Tom Curtis, and only in the first quarter that the Brian Healy. young Wolverines, in their first He also mentioned some of the 15 minutes of college competition, better linemen who have good were outplayed. In fact they were chances to make the varsity next outplayed so badly that they came year. These include Jim Mandich, out of that first quarter losing Phil Seymour, Bill Mouch, Wer- 19-0. ner Hall, Fred Sample, and Pete Sarantos. By the time the game ended, Linebackers Cecil Pryor and things evened up to the point Dick Caldarazzo are also good where both sides had the same bets. number of first downs and Wis- The frosh will get their second consin led in offensive yardage and final taste of inter-university by a mere 8 yards, 192 to 184. competition tomorrow night at 8 Relating the first quarter diffi- o'clock when they engage Toledo culties mainly to tightness and University on the Ann Arbor High consequent carelessness, Dodd said School field. that this was overshadowed by Toledo beat Dayton 27-14 last the fact that, from a standpoint weekend for their third win of technical fundamentals, the against two losses. Playing in five team s play was sound. games, as compared with one for The young Wolverines are prob- Michigan, obviously gives Toledo ably not the best frosh team in a considerable edge in experience. the West, but nor are they meant Another advantage held by the to be. Their purpose is to provide Ohio school is its excellent gtiar-|tomorrow's varsity stars, and the terback and fullback duo. A small loss of one game does not alter defense and injuries, however, may their chances of fulfilling that cause them trouble. purpose. QUCKI(rK 'V I ; i this classic scrimmage jacket looks great on or off the field . .and it's pile-lined Lightweight yet warr,. -. nimble, straight- from-the-shoulder styling: that's Peters warm-up jacket of all-nylon in a rugged canvas weave. The 30" snap front model features a warm, pile lining, racing collar, slash pockets and drawstring waist. Navy -Associated Press BRIAN HEALY, Michigan freshman back, is badly harassed by a Badger defender in last Saturday's Michigan-Wisconsin fresh- man game. The little Wolverines lost to the baby Badgers 25-14. AMERICAN CULTURE STUDENTS' ASSOCIATION THURSDAY NOON LUNCHEON DISCUSSION PROF. SIDNEY FINE of the History Dept. will speak on "THE LIFE OF FRANK MURPHY" Nov.3 a 0 GUILD HOUSE, 802 Monroe $.25 Lunch or coffee; sizes 36-46. 19.95 -1 -.-. ------------ Triple Thick Shakes. 25c Delicious Habuyers 5c Attention Contact Lens Wearersu Save 35% On Wetting Solution The big news in sports this week is in the world of high school football. The mighty MAS- ILLON, Ohio, Tigers, the most powerful schoolboy team in the nation over the past three dec- ades, are in danger of losing their fifth game in a row for the first time in the school's long history. From 1932 to last year, a period described by Masillon boosters as the "modern era," Tiger teams have turned in 13 unbeaten, untied seasons in posting a fabulous 296- 34-12 record. This season, though, Masillon has a 3-4-1 record, and their game Friday night brings unbeaten STEUBENVILLE to town. The Ohio River team, top-ranked in the state, is expected to hand Tiger Coach BOB SEAMAN loss number five in his first year at Masillon. But Seaman is traveling in fast company. In 1932, the year Masil- Ion lost four in a row, the Tigers had another freshman coach. His name was PAUL BROWN. * * * Moving on to the college scene, the Big Ten noted yesterday that slippery BOB GRIESE of PURDUE set a conference record for total offense in a single game as he ral- lied the Boilermakers to a 25-21 victory over Illinois last Saturday. 2000 W. STADIUM BLVD. 'U IFA I From Our Men's Sportswear Departments JOIN THE DAILY STAFF WETTING SOLUTION-SOAKING SOLUTION-CONTACT LENS CLEANER SOLUTIONS DECONGESTANT DROPS CONTACTISOL ALLERGAN Send Coupon To With Check or Money Order Contact Lens Solutions P.O. Box 2282 Lansing, Mich. ONLY $100 Ea. - mm -iimnimm Name E Address Griese, although throwing five passes into the hands of Illini defenders, wound up with a 19 for 38 afternoon, tossing for 288 yards. He also slithered through the line eight times for 29 yards, making his total for the day 317 yards. * * * In the pro ranks, JIM BROWN'S retirement has left the field wide open for leaders in the ground- gaining department, and Los An- geles' DICK BASS has stepped right into the breach. After eight games, the Rams' top running threat has gained 631 yards on 140 carries, 43 yards ahead of the Cleveland Browns' LEROY KEL- LY. The Rams also have the NFL's top pass receiver in TOMMY Mc- DONALD. Though catching 38 passes, good for 415 yards, the cigar-smoking flanker has yet to score a touchdown. In addition, he is being foliowed closely in re- ceptions by PAT STUDSTILL of the Lions. The Detroit star has received only 37 passes, but has gained a whopping 828 yards. Under the NFL's complicated system of rating passers, Green Bay's BART STARR is now lead- ing the league. His closest pursu- ers are Cleveland's FRANK RY- AN, PhD, and Baltimore's peren- nial JOHN UNITAS. LARRY WILSON'S three spec- tacilar interceptions in the game against Chicago on national tele- vision earlier this week gave the St. Louis free safety eight inter- ceptions for 174 yards and two touchdowns, as well as the lead in this department. i' ,4 __ ._ I Barton § § -§ MADE IN ENGLAND v-4 § t Henley§ § f- Wimbledon § § A CLASSIC GROUP OF SWEATERS FROM ENGLAND Made in England by Alan Paine, these exceptional sweaters are fault- § § lessly designed, fully fashioned for perfect fit.., the ultimate in comfort. § Sizes 38 to 46. § § Barton-Magnificent four-ply pure camelhair cardigan with authentic § Alan Paine saddle shoulder. Natural camel only. $37.50 § Ashford (not shown)-V-neck pullover with saddle shoulder, in four-ply pure camelhair. Natural camel only. $29.50 § Wimbledon-Original club-trim tennis pullover. 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According to a Honolulu report- er, Wills was last seen playing his banjo in the Hawaiian city with a Dixieland combo. "* 4 I Pro Standings 1 Chicago Montreal Boston Toronto Detroit New York NHL W 4 3 I 1 L 1 1 1 4 T Pts. GF GA 0 8 24 14 1 7 14 10 1 5 16 21 3 5 12 12 0 4 22 24 1 3 11 18 LAST NIGHT'S RESULT Montreal 2, Toronto 2 (tie) NBA Eastern Division W L Pet. Philadelphia 5 0 1.000 B~oston 5 1 .833 New York 4 4 .500 Cincinnati 3 4 .429 Baltimore 1 8 .111 Western Division Detroit 5 3 .625 San Francisco 5 3 .625 Chicago 5 5 .500 St. Louis 3 3 .500 Los Angeles 2 7 .222 LAST NIGHT'S RESULTS Boston 133, Los Angeles 108 Cincinnati 131, New York 129 Chicago 102, Baltimore 94 GB 2, 3 1 1 3 r I 11 Ili 'r