THE MICHIGAN DAILY rRt sn Ax,. c '- 1Y 1 AT1 ViiGAN DA1/ILY HUSDA, Tests 'M' Speed Miller, Hollis Head Versatile Group In Big 10 Monopoly on Quarterbacks By DAVE ANDREWS Based on season records and performances, the Big Ten must have the strongest and most ver- sitle group of quarterbacks in Conference history. No less than four, Ron Miller of. Wisconsin, Wilburn Hollis of Iowa, Sandy Stephens of Min- nesota, and Dick Thorton of Northwestern have already been mentioned as prime candidates for All-American honors. Five more teams boast other field generals of "better than average" caliber. This list includes Michigan's own Dave Glinka, who has been called by Minnesota Coach Murry Warmath, "at least as good as Thornton was when he was a sophomore." Maury Gutman and Bernie Allen have led Purdue to a fine start, while Michigan State's Duffy Daugherty sings the praises of his own Tom Wilson. Ohio State has come up with their finest running quarterback in years in Tom Matte, while Illinois is happy with little Johnny Easterbrook. unbeaten Hawks to a number one national ranking, and threatens to do even more. In Conference competition against three , op- ponents he has gained 227 yards in 46 trips carrying the ball, and has thrown for 128 more, ranking second only to Miller in total of- fense. Miller is statistically the best Wisconsin passer since Jim Ha- luska was filling the air with pig- skins. Thus far he has engineered three victories, come within 52 seconds of piloting a tie with Iowa, and has baffled everyone with his aerial wizardry. ed by the inability of his receivers to hang onto the ball, 'Mr. Everything' Stephens, while not among the leaders in total offense, rushing or passing, has Minnesota's un- beaten' record speaking for him. He's "Mr. Everything" for the Gophers. The abundance of quarterbacks is something of a rarity, as usa Volleyball Starts tonight marks the beginning of the I-M Volleyball season with a full slate of social fra- ternity games on tap. This is just ,another in a long season of I-l leagues. "However, our main concern is FLYING TACKLE -- Minnesota tackle Frank Brixius, largest In moving the ball against them," man on the team at 250 pounds, flies through the air in a their size, .we'renot going out Gopher drill. During the week, he has been relegated to second there Saturday to lose." string by 215-pounder Dick Miller." p ZBT, PDT Unbeaten winner of the Theta Chi and ZBT1 contest. After a scoreless first half Sig- ma Alpha Epsilon tallied on a passl from Bil Kile to end Don Kelber to defeat Sigma Phi Epsilon 6-0. SAE's next encounter is with Sig- ma Nu. Unplayed Game Also remaining in first place "B" social fraternity contention are Sigma Chi and Phi Sigma Delta. The two teams did not play yesterday and will meet in a re- scheduled tilt. In second place "B" competi- tion, Delta Upsilon outpointed Theta Xi, 14-8. The outstanding play of the game was a three-way pass combination that went from Gayle King to John Scott to Bob Trepp for Delta Upsilon's first tally. Decisive in Chi Psi's 6-0 victory over Delta Chi was a first half touchdown scamper by Kent Strickland. Both this game, and the Phi Gamma Delta-Delta Sig- ma Phi contest which was won 20-12 by the "Fijis" were second place "B" elimination contests. TDC Romps Theta Delta Chi swamped Zeta Psi yesterday in a third place "B" league match by the score of 32-0. Dick Parr ran for two TD's and passed to Paul Osterbeck for an- other score and Gerry Andeen threw touchdown passes to Bill Kelly and Osterbeck. A long pass from Ron Keller to Bob Reeves was the only coring as Trigon eliminated Pi Lambda Phi in a fourth place "A" League playoff game. Instrumental in Sigma Phi's winning attack over Acacia was quarterback Chris Jenkins whose four TD passes were more than enough to offset an interception by Bob Riedel as Sigma Phi won easily'26-8, in a fourth place "A" league battle. GRID SELECTIONS The sixth-ranked Minnesota Gophers face Michigan before a Homecoming crowd for the traditional Brown Jug. Iowa, ranked first in the nation takes on powerful Purdue, also in the top ten, and Ohio State (no. 9) takes on surprising Wisconsin. Why don't you see if you can pick these games? We dare youl Pick the winners of the other games as well, include the score of the Michigan game and send your entries to Grid Picks, Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, main office on the second floor. Here are this week's games: or return them by hand to the I 1. 2.. 3.; 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Minnesota at MICHIGAN Penn State at Illinois Michigan State at Indiana Purdue at Iowa Northwestern at Notre Dame Ohio State at Wisconsin Mississippi at Arkansas Miami (Fla.) at Auburn Clemson at Duke Florida at LSU 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Georgia at Kentucky Tulane at Georgia Tech Texas at Rice SMU at Texas Tech w Oregon at California Washington at Oregon State Nebraska at Colorado Iowa State at Missouri Dartmouth at Harvard Maryland at Wake Forest Ii irginia, had 20 in his debut. PGO NHL Standings W L T Pts. GF GA BuyYour PEUGEOT from Montreal 4 2 2 10 30 23 Chicago N 4 1 16916 6 9 New York 3 4 0 6 19 24 Terot 2 3 22: 19 Stan ford Boston 02 4 4 12 16 Authorized Renault-Peugeot Dealers LAST NIGHT'S GAMES SERVICE Toronto 3, Montreal I New York 2, Chicago 0 25900 Outer Dr. DU 6-0699 TONIGHT'S GAME: Lincoln Park - Outer Dr. of Fort Boston at Detroit I I I i1 i flrk1 irliigan Bai1 Ifini v 0 1