I ~THE MICHIGAN DAILY Shutout Heads I-M Card Wildcats Play without Star r, today as it whipped through a major passing review. The latest report says that first string tackle Brian Moore won't be ready to play Saturday against Marquette. He's sidelined by a sprained ankle that kept him out of the season opener at Stanford. Starting left guard Dale Mat- hews is a doubtful starter be- cause of a knee injury. MINNEAPOLIS - An injury to starting end Bob Deegan, one of the hardest hitting linemen on the team, brought fresh worries to Minnesota's Gophers today. Deegan missed the day's work- out because of a charleyhorse-a muscle injury in his leg-and is doubtful for Saturday's home opener against Indaina. LAFAYETTE - Purdue's Boiler- makers will leave here tomorrow by bus for South Bend and Satur- day's road opener with Notre Dame, but the squad's promising sophomore Dave Miller will be left behind. Miller, who suffered a strained leg 'muscle in last Saturday's game with UCLA was left off the Purdue traveling roster. * * * BLOOMINGTON-Indiana Uni- versity's football squad will leave two key players behind when it flies to Minneapolis tomorrow for Saturday's gamewith Minnesota. Tailback Joe Maroon and block- ing back Wil Scott were left off the traveling squad list posted to- day. Both were injured in Indi- ana's 17-6 defeat at Illinois last week. By DAVE KIMBALL and JAMES BERGER Quarterback Roy Netzer passed for three touchdowns to spark Nu Sigma Nu to a 22-0 victory over Alpha Chi Sigma in Ferry Field I-M action yesterday in the pro- fessional fraternity division. ASC proved an early game threat as they took the opening kickoff and marched to the "NSN five. However, the tough Nu Sig line, headed by former Wolverine football captan Jim Orwig, held ACS there and took over on downs. Nu Sigma Nu then marched to the Alpha Sig one yard line, only to be stopped by an outclassed but determined defense. A pass from the Alpha Sig one yard line was then intercepted by NSN, and on the next play Cliff Colwel caught a Netzer pass in the end zone for the first touch- down of the game. Alpha Chi Sigma was never in the game after that, as their de- fense couldn't match the passing of the talented Netzer. In other Ferry Field action Zeta Beta Tau, 21 point favorites at the start of the game, had a tough time with Zeta Psi, but finally defeated the Zets on a' touchdown pass to Bob Rosman late in the game, 8-0. Phi Sigma Delta whipped Kappa Sigma 12-6 on scoring runs by Harvey Kulber and Lyle Felsen- thal. Bill Boyd scored the lone Kappa Sig TD. Tom Hill scored twos, touch- downs to lead Theta Xi to a 28-0 rout over Delta Tau Delta. - In another game, Alpha Tau Omega edged Delta Upsilon 8-6. Phi' Delta Phi shutout Tau Epsilon Beta 12-0, and Delta Theta Phi defeated Phi Delta Epsilon 8-6. Phi Kappa Tau and Tau Delta Chi beat Alpha Sigma Phi and Psi Upsilon, respectivelly, by for- feit. Pro Frats Phi Delta Phi shutout Tau Epsilon Beta 12-0 and Delta Theta Phi defeated Phi Delta Epsilon 8-6. 517 East Williams OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY Late for class? Never a wait at RED'S STAND UP BAR SUB'S & HOAGIE SANDWICHES . . 75c A meal on a loaf of bread I DICK THORNTON, Northwestern's star quarterback, will be on the bench with a thigh injury as the title-minded Wildcats open their Big Ten season against a strong Iowa squad Saturday at Evanston. i' PAPER-BOUND BOOKS 50 Publishers Represented PROMPT SERVICE On Special Orders OVERBECK'S BOOKSTORE American Golfers Lead 32 Team Field; Nicklaus Fires 133 For First 36 Holes 1 Ii By The Associated Press ARDMORE, Pa.-Jack Nicklaus and Deane Beman, a couple of young college students, provided the insurance today for an ex- pected American victory in the second World Amateur Golf Team Championship. lajor League' Standings Drive Out To WHITMORE LAKE Each shot a three-under-par 67 through the rain at the Merion Golf Club-Nicklaus putting his on top of a 66 in yesterday's opening round. Bob Gardner, a 39-year- old Public relations man, came along with his second straight 71 to give the U.S. a three-man team score of 205 for the day and a two-day, three-man total of 413. Under the World Team scoring system, only hte best three scores for each day are counted in the team scoring. The U.S. had a total of 208 yesterday with 66-71-71. Individually the U.S. stood 1-2-3 in the standings with Nicklaus at 66-67-133, a truly remarkable amateur performance and a score the prose would envy at the tough, tricky Merion course. Beman had 71-67-138 and Gardner 71-71- 142. Next best was Mexico's Juan Antonio Estrada, a 24-year-old North Texas State College gradu- ate, with 71-72-143. No individual title is officially recognized in the World Team Championship. Estrada was the only Mexican player who could come close to matching yesterday's fine per- formance, and as a result the Great Britain and Ireland team moved into second place while Mexico and New Zealand dropped back to a fourth place tie behind Australia. The British were just 20 strokes behind the Americans, despite a fine par 70 by Ireland's Joe Carr,j who won his third British Ama- teur Championship last spring. Australia's Bruce Devlin, who tied for individual honors in the first world tournament at St. Andrews, Scotland, in 1958, also .had a 70 to help his team into third place with a 433 aggregate. Then came Mexico and New Zealand at 442, South Africa at 445 and Canada and Rhodesia- Nyasaland at 450. In other Wines Field competi- tion under the arcs last night, Phi Alpha Kappa trounced Gamma Alpha 24-0. PAK was brilliantly led by Quarterback Jack Faber, who passed for two touchdowns, ran for another, and scored a total of 10 points.*Faber's two TD tosses were to Dick Lenters and Ed Meyering. In another Wines Field tussle sparked by individual perfor- mance, the Law Club whipped Alpha Omega 12-2 behind the runnnig and passng of Ron Reosti. The Law Club quarterback ran 50 yards on an end sweep for the first TD and passed to Tim Scan- lon for the other. He was also brilliant on defense. Good Defense In a game marked by rugged blocking and tight defense Delta Sigma Delta defeated the Falcons 1-0 in a sudden death overtime game. The Delts were awarded the victory when they gained the most yardage in four plays from scrim- mage. Nel Sherbert passed for two touchdowns in the first half as he and his Psi Omega teammates coasted to a 14-0 victory over Phi Chi in the remaining Wines Field ,game. Sherbert passed to lanky Harv Johnson for 60-yards and the first Psi Omega TD, then connected with fleet Bob Grunde- man for the other touchdown. A good goal line stand by the Phi Omega late in the second half preserved the shutout. In a social fraternity 'A' game played Tuesday Alpha Sigma Phi defeated Phi Epsilon Pi 20-0. Frosh Cage There wilt be a meeting for all freshmen interested in trying out for basketball next Monday, Oct. 4, at 4:15 in the basement of the Athletic Administration Building. The building is located at 1000 South State. You Can't Beat Gold Bond 515 E.William Your Campus Cleaner for SERVICE QUALITY PRICE '4 I A I -1 ' , I AMERICAN and New York Baltimore Chicago Cleveland Washington Detroit Boston Kansas City LEAGUE W L Pct. 94 57 .623 87 65 .572 86 65 .570 74 77 .490 73 79 .480, 69 82 .457 65 86 .430 51 94 .377 GB 8 20 21 z 25 29 37 A GO-KART 8 laps for 50c 4-11 weekdays 12-11 Saturday and YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Kansas City (N) Boston at New York (N) Cleveland at Chicago (N) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. Pittsburgh 93 58 .616 Milwaukee 87 64 .576 St. Louis 85 65 .567 Los Angeles 80 ;0 .533 1 San Francisco 76 75 .503 1 Cincinnati 67 84 .444 2 Chicago 59 92 .3913 Philadelphia 56 95 ,3713 YESTERDAY'S GAMES St. Louis at Los Angeles (N) Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Cincinnati at Philadelphia (N) Milwaukee at Pittsburgh (N) Chicago at Los Angeles (N) St. Louis at San Francisco (N) GB 6 11 17 34 37 Try FOLLETT'S First USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES New Books If You Prefer- STATE STREET at NORTH UNIVERSITY Sunday of Ij I' E e pense ia you go education * A BAD FALL - AN ACCIDENT - an emergency operation - a battle excess of the income or savings alloted to your education. It doesn't with fever - each could result in hospital and medical expenses far 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. Wes Roberts can tell you: "THERE'S NO CEILING FOR A SELF-STARTER IN THE TELEPHONE BUSINESS" include Hospital room, * DESCRIPTIVE BROCHURES and applications have been mailed. Addi- board and miscellane- tional copies are conveniently located throughout the campus. Be SURE ous expenses, doctors', that unforseen medical Expenses don't cost you a college education - surgeons' and nurses fees. return your completed application and premium TODAY! Be prompt, the enrollment period is limited. A I. -e . D = m .l 1 When Wes Roberts was nearing the end of his senior year at San Jose State College, he was looking for a job with a wide open future. He found it when he joined Pacific Telephone in San Francisco. Here's how Wes tells it: "I remember one of my first jobs. The boss said, 'Wes, I want you to work out a plan showing where we'll need new field operating centers to keep up with Northern California's growth over the next 10 years.' I didn't know whether I was more happy or scared." Wes didn't tell us (but his boss did) that he division supervisor, he's holding down a key telephone job. Wes Roberts' story is not unique in the Bell Telephone Companies. The telephone business s growing fast-and men are needed who can grow just as fast. Wes can tell you: "We get good training. But no one nurses you along. We hire managers -not errand boys. So far as I can see, there's no ceiling for a self-starter in this business." If you're a guy like Wes Roberts--if you like to bite off more than you can chew and then chew it - you'll want to visit your Placement Office for i