fBER 27, 1960 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA NATIONAL FOOTBALL LEAGUE: Teams Prefer Spartans to Wolverines NFL Standings AFL Standings WESTERN DIVISION Chicago 1 0 0 Baltimore 1 0 0 Detroit 0 0 0 Dallas 0 1 0 San Francisco 0 0 0 Los Angeles 0 0 0 Green Say 0 0 A Pct. 1.000 1.060 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 By FRED STEINHARDT . As Michigan makes preparations for its annual showdown against, the cornfed huskies from East Lansing this week, a glance at National Football League rosters, shows that the Spartans are far ahead of the Wolverines in pro- ducing pro players. At latest count ,there are fifteen MSU praduates on NFL teams as opposed to only five Wolverines. Combined, the two schools are represented on every club except Pittsburgh, Los Angeles, and St. Louis. Five Liona As might be expected, the De- troit Lions top the list with five, four from State and one from Michigan. The Green Bay Packers follow up with four and the Dallas Cowboys and Cleveland Browns with two. Chicago, Baltimore, San Francisco, New York, Philadelphia, and Washington have one apiece. The lone Michigan man on the Lions is Terry Barr ('56), who has proven his versatility by playing both offensive and defensive back. Touted as the finest defensive back to come out of the Big 10 in years, he played a vital role in the Lions historic championship drive in 1957 and made several all-Pro teams. After a ragged start ion defense last season, he was converted to a pass receiver by Coach George Wilson and per- formed credibly. Converted to a running back this year, he has played well during the exhibition season and his great speed is ex- pected to shore up the Lion at- tack. MSU Alums kicked off, and had a punting average of over 40 yards. He is, credited with some of the most fantastic catches witnessed in Michigan Stadium. On defense he was a demon who neutralized three and four opposing blockers. He was a two year all-American. In pro ball Kramer has been handicapped by a troublesome7 knee and the great degree of specialization which hurts the all around college performer and helps the player especially gifted in one particular phase of the game. He is, however, considered' a most reliable and tough com- petitor. Kramer is joined on the Packers by MSU alumni end Bill Quinlan, tackle Norm Masters, and center Dan Currie. Currie was an all- American on the 1957 State power- house that pulverized Michigan 35-6. A teammate of Currie on the 1957 team, Walt Kowalczyk was recently drafted from the Lions in an inter-league maneuver to strengthen the new Dallas Cow- boys. He played with the Phila- delphia Eagles in 1968-9 and was traded to Detroit this summer. Another former Spartan, Leroy Bolden, went to the Cowboys from Cleveland. Kowalczyks old running mate Clarence Peaks is a back on the Eagles. fintst running backs in recent years ('58) is attempting a come- back for the San Francisco 49ers after sitting out last season while his knee was mending. Pace is big (210 lbs.) and very fast (:09.6 in the 100 yard dash) and could develope into a real pro standout. He has a very good sense of bal- ance and is hard to bring down. Michigan's other two players both perform for the Cleveland Browns and coach Paul Brown. John Morrow plays offensive center and Bob Ptacek ('58) is a reserve back, At Ann Arbor, the versatile Ptacek played every backfield, single the T. The league Colts; wing and quarterback in WESTERN DIVISION W L T Houston 2 1 0 New York 2 10 Boston 1 2 0 Buffalo 1 2 0 EASTERN DIVISION WL T Denver 2 1 0 Dallas 2 1,0 Los Angeles 1 2 0 Oakland 1 2 0 LAST WEEK'S SCORES Oakland 14, Houston 13 Dallas 17, Los Angeles 0 Pct. .667 .$67 .333 .333 Pct. .687 .667 .333 '333 Other Spartans other MSU alumni in the are linemen Palmer Pyle, Elison Kelly, Giants; and Fran O'Brien, Browns. Both Vic Zucco and Bert Zagers play de- ftnsive back, Zucco for the Bears and Zagers for the Washington Redskins. Future professional stars will get anopportunity to test their mettle before a selldut crowd of 76,000 Saturday at East Lansing. Precedent has proven that stars of the Michigan-Michigan State rivalry have pretty fair chances of distinguishing themselves in pro ranks. EASTERN DIVISION W L T Pet. Cleveland 1 0 0 1.000 Pittsburgh 1 0 0 1.000 St. Louis 1 0 0 1.000 New York 1 0 0 1.000 Washington 0 1 0 .000 LAST WEEK'S SCORES Chicago 17, Green Bay 14 Baltimore 20, Washington 0 Cleveland 41, Philadelphia 24 New York 21, San Francisco 19 Pittsburgh 35, Dallas 28 St. Louis 43, Los Angeles 21 Daily Classifieds Bring Results PAPER-BOUND BOOKS 50 Publishers Represented PROMPT SERVICE On Special Orders OVERBECK'S BOOKSTORE position in Bennie Oosterbaan's p THAT'S OUR* BOY -- One of Michigan's great halfbacks of recent years was Jim Pace, here shown eluding Northwestern tacklers in the 1957 meeting, by virtue of his tremendous speed (:09.6 in the 100-yard dash). Pace is one of five ex-Wolverines playing with the National Football League. Pace who is with the San Francisco 49ers hopes to regain his old form after sitting out last season with a knee injury. If he does then opposition tacklers will probably have as hard a time stopping him as Northwestern did. Yanks Beat Nats, 4-2; White Sox Whip Tigers w REMODELING SPECIAL This WeekOnly SKIRTS and PANTS By The Associated Press The American League cham- pion New York Yankees rolled to their 10th straight victory- longest in the majors this season -with a 4-2, 10-inning decision at Washington last night while Last Chance Students who have not yet picked up their season tickets have only three days left to do so. Ticket Manager Don Weir has set 4:30 p.m. Friday as the ticket deadline. the Chicago White Box, scram- bling for the leftovers, tied idle Baltimore for second place, The Box, trying to keep intact Manager Al Lopez' record of never having finished lower than second, defeated Detroit 6-3. Cleveland re- tained a 112-game edge over Washington for fourth place de- spite a 6-1 loss at Kansas City in the only other game scheduled in the AL. In the National League, where the Pittsburgh Pirates have wrap- ped up their first flag in 33 years, only one game was scheduled, Ban Francisco at Los Angeles. The Dodgers led 2-0 after five innings of play. The Yankees blew a 2-0 lead when Harmon Killebrew tied it with his 31st home run in the seventh inning, off rookie Bill Stafford. But the champs bounced back for their longest streak in two years with two runs in the 10th on Bob Crev's double, a walk and a tie-breaking single by pinch-hitter Hector Lopez. Dale Long, who homered in the second inning capped the rally with a single off loser Pedro Ra- mos (11-17). Duke Maas (3-1) was the winner, giving up one hit in his two relief innings. Minnie Minoso had three hits, one his 20th home run, and drove in two runs for the White Sox along with Luis Apariclo. Frank Baumann (13-6), who had only a 13-8 record for five years in the majors before this season, was the winner. Bill Fischer (8-8) lost it. Bud Daley won his 16th for the A's with a four-hitter as he beat the Indians for the first time in three decisions this year. The Athletics backed up his efforts with a 14-hit attack that featured a home run by Pete Daley and a 3-for-4 performance by Jerry Lumpe, who rapped a double and two singles. Dick Stigman (5-11) started for Cleveland and gave up three ol the Kansas City runs in five innings. He was followed by Dor Newcombe and Carl Mathias. r M I Y r 4 6Y r yC 4 Ypp 7 Y Y G S ' C 1 The battle for the quarterback post vacated by Tobin Rote was fought between former Michigan State teammates Jim Ninowski and Earl Morrall, both of whom made all-American in College. At this time, Ninowski, a native Detroiter, appears to have won the job. Gary Lowe, another Spartan, is a defensive back and giant end Sammy Williams can be used both ways and as a placekicker. Wil- liams was a near unanimous all- American in 1958 and played a major part in the hard fought 12- 12 tie in the Michigan game that year. Ron Kramer ('56), Michigan's representative on the Green Bay Packers, hardly needs an intro- duction ot Wolverine fans. The best athlete to come to Ann Arbor ,j for many years, Kramer is con- sidered by some observers to be! the finest Michigan has ever had. His supporters certainly have a lot of ground to stand on. He won nine varsity letters; three in track (shotputter), three in basketball (in which he was a fearsome re- bounder and a 20 point man), and three in football, Kramer placekicked very well, Name U.S. II Davis Cup Challengerps NEW YORK UP) - The United States yesterday named a trio of youngsters-Earl Buchholz, Chuck McKinley and Dennis Ralston - to team with veterans Bernard Bartzen and Barry MacKay in the campaign to recover the Davis Cup from Australia. The tennis squad, headed by Capt. David Freed, will leave for Australia around October 31 for appearances in various Australian state tournaments and two inter- zone matches leading to the chal- lenge round. The Americans, who clinched their zone title a week ago, will play the Philippines, the Eastern Zone Champions, and if victorious, will take on Italy's European win- ners for the right to meet Austra- lia Dates and sites haven't been set. The Challenge Round is sched- uled at Sydney December 26-28. I DRY CLEANED and PRESSED 1/3 OFF THlE .NEWEST MOST BEAUTIFUL PORTABLE EVER SEEN REMINGTON!1 Thee days a typewriter is a mtwt for every college stu- dent. Act now and you can rent or buy a new Remington Portable for lots less than you think! And you get free the new Remington COLOR rEY Touch Typing Course plus a handy carrying case for weekend trips. -Come in now MORRILuLS 314 South State H I CASH AND CARRY OFFICE 721 N. University (right down from Hill Auditorium) DRY CLEANERS AND LAUNDERERS I I I U 1I I Major League Standings li AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB New York 92 57 .617 - Baltimore 86 64 .573 61? Chicago 86 64 .573 6 Cleveland 74 75 .497 18 Washington 73 77 .487 1914 Detroit 68 82 .455 241 Boston 64 85 .430 28 Kansas City 55 94 .369 37 LAST NIGHT'S SCORE New York 4, Washington 2 (10 ins.) Chicago 6, Detroit 3 Kanlsas City 6, Cleveland 1 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at Boston Detroit at Chicago (N) New York at Washington (N) Cleveland at Kansas City (N) NATIONAL Pittsburgh Milwaukee St. Louis x-Los Angeles :-San Francisco Cincinnati Chicago Philadelphia x--Incomplete LEAGUE W L Pct. GB 92 58 .613 - U6 63 .577 52, 85 63 .574 6 78 69 .531 1214 75 73 .507 16 67 83 .447 25 57 92 .383 34a 55 94 .369 36 LAST NIGHT'S SCORE Los Angeles 2, San Francisco 0 (end of five innings) Only game scheduled TONIGHT'S GAMES Chicago at San Francisco (N) Cincinnati at Pittsburgh (N) Milwaukee at Philadelphia (N) St. Louis at Los Angeles (N) Come in and see the POPULAR SPECIAL BICYCLE (a Raleigh Industries Product) .$4j95 with HANDBRAKES and STURMEY-ARCHER 3-SPEED GEARS We Still Have Some Saddle Baskets in Stock BEAVER'S BIKE & HARDWARE u nmedicalI FORKS expense could cost you a K college education Register for Men's Rush' First Floor Michigan Union September 26-October 4 Weekdays 2-5 P.M. - I I 605 Church NO 5-6607 IM. U 0 0 0 HIGHLIGHTS OF YOUR STUDENT HEALTH PLAN: W Coverage in force 24 hours a day -on or off campus (including vacation periods). 0 Eligible dependents can be included. * Covered expenses inc- include Hospital room, board and miscellane- ous expenses, doctors', surgeons' and nurses fees., A BAD FALL - AN ACCIDENT - an emergency operation - a bottle excess of the income or savings alloted to your education. It doesn't with fever - each could result in hospital and medical expenses for in take long these days to spend hundreds of hard earned dollars for neces- sary medical treatment! * YOUR STUDENT HEALTH PLAN, written according to specifications of the Student Government Council. has been designed specifically to help defray these high hospital and medical expenses. This liberal Plan sup- plements the existing Health Service Benefits furnished you by the University. The Student Health Plan combined with the Health Service 6 benefits provides more complete protection against the high costs of hospi- tal and medical care. * DESCRIPTIVE BROCHURES and applications have been mailed. Addi- tional copies are conveniently located throughout the campus. Be SURE that unforseen medical Expenses don't cost you a college education - return your completed application and premium TODAY! Be prompt, the enrollment period is limited. UNIVERSITY INTER-ARTS MAGAZINE Announces its first organization meeting writers * poets. artists "photographers * musicians I I __ _. _ _ .. .. . t