THE MICHIGAN DAILY du gan quadMakes Few 'Mistakes' Unbeaten Missouri Pushes Leaders By CLIFF MARKS z Michigan Captain Gerry intercepted a Michigan ass deep in Wolverine ter- with only a few minutes the game and the score looked like the "break" an needed to tie, or win te. could this actually be a "break?" Didn't Smith a fine, alert defensive making the "break" for an? Coach Bump Elliott red that this was the case, but added, Daugherty (Duffy Daugherty, MSU's coach) probab- ly considered it a "mistake" by his passer. Generally, recovered fumbles and pass interceptions are con- sidered "breaks" for the team that took over the ball, when in reality they are "mistakes" by the op- ponents. As Elliott said, the situation dic- tates whether the recovery or in- terception is actually a 'break.' "If a pass is batted up in the air, among a host of players, and in- GRID SELECTIONS This is the last day to get your Grid Picks in, so decide the ner of the Tougaloo-Philander Smith game, with score, the same Michigan-Northwestern, and get them in by midnight tonight. winners get a pair of free tickets to the Michigan Theater, now wing "I'm All Right, Jack." Entries may be picked up at the main office and returned by id or mailed to Grid Picks, Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann or. THIS WEEK'S GAMES Consensus Picks in Caps (CONSENSUS--38-22-.633) Northwestern at MICHIGAN Wisconsin at IOWA Marquette at INDIANA Illinois at MINNESOTA MICHIGAN ST. at N. Dame OHIO STATE at Purdue ARMY at Nebrtska Oklahoma at KANSAS Penn State at SYRACUSE Air Force at NAVY 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20: Arkansas at TEXAS ALABAMA at Tennessee North Carolina St. at DUKE UCLA at WASHINGTON CLEMSON at Maryland' Wake Forest at N. CAROLINA Colorado at IOWA STATE TCU at Texas A & M Holy Cross at DARTMOUTH Tougaloo at PH. SMITH SPORTS STAFF SELECTIONS DAVE ANDREWS (41-19--.683)-Michigan, Iowa, Indiana, Min- ota, Michigan State, Ohio State, Nebraska, Kansas, Syracuse, 7y, Texas, Alabama, Duke, Washington, Clemson, North Carolina,1 a State, TCU, Holy Cross, Philander Smith. TOM WITECKI (Sports Editor, 40-20--.667)--Michigan, Iowa, lana, Minnesota, Michigan State, Ohio State, Army, Kansas, Syra- e, Navy, Texas, Tennessee, Duke, Washington, Clemson, North olina, Iowa State, TCU, Holy Cross, Philander Smith. * * * * MIKE GIJLMAN (Associate Sports Editor, 40-20-.667)-Michi- , Iowa, Indiana, Minnesota, Michigan State, Ohio State,. Army, nsas, Syracuse, Navy, Texas, Alabama, Duke, Washington, Clem- North Carolina, Iowa State, Texas A & M, Holy Cross, Philander Ith. - * 0 * 0 FRED STEINHARDT (38-22-.633)-Michigan, Iowa, Indiana, inesota, Michigan State, Ohio State, Army, Kansas, Syracuse, Navy, :a, Alabama, Duke, Washington, Clemson, North Carolina, Iowa te, TCU, Dartmouth, Philander Smith. DON WEIR (Guest Selector 38-22-.633)--Michigan, Iowa, In- na, Minnesota, Michigan State, Ohio State, Army, Oklahoma, in State, Navy, Texas, Tennessee, North Carolina State, Washing- , Clemson, North Carolina, Colorado, TCU, Dartmouth, Philander 1th. - BOB ROMANOFF (36-24--.600) -Michigan, Iowa, Marquette, anesota, Michigan State, Ohio State, Army, Kansas, Syracuse, vy, Texas, Tennessee, Duke, Washington, Clemson, North Caro- , Iowa State, TCU, Dartmouth, Philander Smith. " 0 HAL APPLEBAUM (Associate Sports Editor, 35-25--.583) -- bhigan, Iowa, Indiana, Illinois, Michigan State, Ohio State, Army, nsas, Syracuse, Air Force, Texas, Alabama, North Carolina State, LA, Clemson, North Carolina, Iowa State, TCU, Dartmouth, lander Smith. GARY GUSSIN (35-25--.583)-Michigan, Iowa, Indiana, Minne- a, Michigan State, Ohio State, Army, Kansas, Syracuse, Navy, as, Alabama, Duke, UCLA, Clemson, North Carolina, Iowa State, U, Dartmouth, Philander Smith. BRIAN MacCLOWRY (35-25-.583)-Michigan, Iowa, Indiana, l- is, Michigan State, Purdue, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Syracuse, Air ce, Texas, Tennessee, Duke, Washington, Clemson, Wake Forest, orado, Texas A & M, Dartmouth, Philander Smith. CLIFF MARKS (34-26-.567)-Michigan, Iowa, Indiana, Min- ota, Michigan State, Ohio State, Army, Kansas, Penn State, Navy, :as, Alabama, Duke, Washington, Clemson, North Carolina, Iowa te, TCU, Holy Cross, Philander Smith. tercepted, then I would call that a real 'break," said Elliott, "but if the end broke to the right, and the passer threw to the left into the arms of a defender, then that's a 'mistake' on someone's part." "The same goes for a recover- ed fumble," he went on. "If a run- ner is hit hard in a pileup and the ball squirts loose on the ground, anyone could get it. That's a 'break.' However, if a runner shakes loose into an open field, and is hit from behind hard enough to cause him to drop the ball, that is a mistake." "Why? Chances are he wasn't carrying the ball right to protect it." Whether these instances be termed "breaks" or "mistakes," Michigan has made very few of them this year, having given up the ball only three tihes, on two fumbles and an interception. 'M' Opportunists On the other hand, the Wol- verines have stolen five, enemy passes, and dropped on three fum- bles, thus showing a decided edge in the matter of "change of hands." An area which the Wolverines have not shown a lack in is pen- alties, which Elliott calls "a bad mistake." The Maize and Blue have incurred 20 of those 'mis- takes' for a total of 185 yards. Those type mistakes have al- ready proved costly to Michigan as witness two offside penalties in the last minute of the State game which could have prevented a tying Wolverine TD. 'Not Those Mistakes' "It wasn't those kind of mis- takes that lost it for us at East Lansing," said Elliott, "it was mental mistakes". He cited examples of his line backers over-shifting on defense and not being in position to stop MSU's fullback Carl Charon, who ran wild up the middle. Elliott also mentioned Reid Bushong's punt that barely rolled into the end zone as a "break of the game." "Instead of them having the ball on their one-yard line, they took it on the 20," he said. "Saturday's game with North- western will be decided by a com- bination of "breaks" and "mis- takes," said Elliott, "with the team that can capitalize on the other's miscues coming out on top. If we give up the ball, es- pecially deep in our territory, Northwestern is the type of explo- sive team that can beat our ears off."' Sig Chi Wins Cross Country Social Iraternities Sigma Ci 33 (Al Pierrot 6th, Tom Bredt 13th, Dick Froncak 14th), Alpha sigma Phi 35, Trgon 40. Individual winner: Al Stenger of Phi Gamma Delta in 10:23.6. 120 men from 31 houses competed. Residence Halls Hinsdale 22 (Ralph Plott 2nd, An- dy Andres 3rd, Phil Townsend 17th), Anderson 27, Reeves 32. All-cam- pus champ: Ulrich Klopper of An- derson in 10:17.4. 80 men from 17 residence halls competed. TYPEWRITERS R ENT E D i .--SOLD BOUGHT REPAIRED r By JIM BERGER In professional fraternity action yesterday afternoon Nu Sigma Nu set the pace with a 30-0 romp over Delta Theta Phi, sparked by their quarterback Roger Netzer. Netzer passed to Pete Colwell for the first tally, in the first half, and to Tom Hudak and again to Colwell in the second half. The other two touchdowns were scored by Netzer and Tom Southwell on intercepted passes, In other pro fraternity action Psi Omega upset Phi Alpha Kappa 14-8 in a real thriller. Phi Delta Phi defeated the Law Club 14-0, Gamma Alpha edged by Phi Chi 6-0, Phi Rho Sigma stopped Alpha Kappa Psi 14-8, PEK easily won over Delta Sigma Delta 22-0, the Falcons routed Delta Sigma Pi 50-0, and Alpha Chi Sigma de- feated Phi Delta Epsilon by forfeit. In social fraternity "B" action Zeta Beta Tau squeaked by The- ta Xi 2-0 by virtue of a safety on the- opening kickoff. Both teams went into the game unde- feated and unscoredhupon.mIn oth- er "B" contests Phi Sigma Delta ran over Phi Kappa Tau, 28-12, Delta Upsilon beat Theta Delta Chi, 14-6, Delta Tau Delta was stopped by Zeta Psi, 20-14, Sigma Chi slaughtered Tau Delta Phi, 38-0, and Kappa Sigma won over Alpha Sigma Phi by forfeit. In independent action yester- day the Foresters beat the Zips, homecomingy - 14-8 and 526 Club stopped the Good Defense Muskrats, 12-0. Before the Air Force game De- In 'A' action Wednesday Psi vine called Cadet quarterback Upsilon topped ,Delta Chi, 20-0, Rich Mayo the best passer in the Phi Delta Theta edged Delta, Up- nation, and didn't give his club silon, 9-8, and Sigma Chi won much of a chance. What Devine over Phi Kappa by forfeit. didn't talk about was the three Music by the RUEL KENYON ORCHESTRA Fri., Oct. 14 9-12 P.M. VFW CLIUB .. . 314 E. Liberty Admission $1 Per Person Presented by Grad Student Council -Daily-James Warneka RETURNING-Fullback Ken Tureaud, here being tackled by Don Stewart of Michigan State, returns to the starting back- field against Northwestern. Nu Sigma Nu Romps 30-0 In Pro FraternityAction 11' I Headquarters for Michigan MICHIGAN: the NEW FUTURA MICII Strobonar electronic flash Most convenient flash unit ever made? Only 9 , inches high--weighs only 28 ounces with batteries. Fits all popular cameras and operates on 3 C-size bat- tolks or AC. See itnow. . . . $.85 only 10% down on our time payment plan P URCHASE Stickers Gla Pennants Jew Banners TS Playing Cards Sw Beer Mugs ssware weiry Shirts reatshirts I H If always Pays To Shop at MICHIGAN BOOK STORE State Street at North University Student Supplies MORRI LL'S 314 S. State St. Ph. 3-2481 fountain pens repaired 11 PREPARED FOR EMPLOYMENT INTERVIEWS? The College Student Qualification Inventory, used widely by college students in preparing for employ- ment interviews, features a 14-page booklet of questions most often asked by professional recruiting rep- resentatives. Careful preparation makes it easier to discuss your qual- ifications with a stranger. Excellent self-appraisal guide. One dollar, post- paid. Douglas Research Associates, P. O. Box 522, Greenville, Pa. I. CAMERA SHOP 1116 South University Phone NO 5-6101 11 i .* *.e. I I aily Classifieds Bring Results New Styles First c at WI LD'S " " 11 " R " S 1 ,wNmmwwmwxw - __._, STUDENTS for CUTLER MEET TOMORROW Student admirers, friends, and supporters of Democratic candidate for State Senate, Dick Cutler, will bold a mass meeting tomorrow, Oct. 15 at 10:00 A.M. in the 3rd Floor Conference Room at th. Union. Dr. Cutler is making an all-out effort to unseat the status quo government of this county and to bring greater liberal repre- sentation to the State Senate. Be sure to come to this meeting if you believe that the State of Michigan and Washtenaw County need new blood and more liberal representation of the kind Dick Cutler is able to give. The present members of the Students For Cutler aroup feel that Dick Cutler, who has been helping students 11 Uppermost in a college man's mind... OUR SPORT SHIRTS Wings, Blocks, Rugby $3.65 values . . s 2 for $6.50 $4.65 values . . . . 2 for $8.50 All Colors, styles sand sizes RABID EAUC1 IiI-ARRI S 119 South Main Street Ann Arbor Store Hours Monday 9 to 8:30 P.M. Tues. thru Sat., 9 to 5:30 P.M. 11 This muted glen plaid suit calls for a toast with a stout tankard of ale...for it has such a jolly feeling II i1 I I Ii