THE MICHIGAN DAILY P * I ' d V* t t e k nois Hopes To Extend Victory Streak Pete, 'Bump' Prepare for Initial Clash 'RED STEINHARDT man coach Don Dufek, who wit- Standing only 5'8" and weighing beat Ohio State and extended Iowa an and Bump Elliott will nessed their 14-12 upset of Purdue 156 pounds, Easterbrook is a mas- to its limit. Their only common alt their two-game skid last week. "They are finally begin- ter at rollout and option plays. opponent with Michigan so far is k against pre-season Big ning to look like the team that "The amazing thing is that he is Minnesota which beat them by 11 rite Illinois and Pete El- was supposed to be the class of also a very fine blocker who has points and the Wolverines by 10. the Big Ten." helped spring their halfbacks loose ni, always a rugged test The game was the first Purdue for several long runs," said Dufek. Practice Notes igan, are riding the crest loss in its last 13 home games. "Besides being a fine player, he The team ran through offensive eo-game winning streak, Competitor is also the inspiration of the team. plays and practiced defensing Illi- efeated Penn State and os eioe He is a real competitor." nois plays. n their last two outings. Illinois is led on the field by Easterbrook's alternate, junior Coach Elliott reported that only ropped out of title con- daredevil quarterback Johnny Eas- Mel Meyers, has been used pri- one player will miss this week's by losing to Ohio_ State terbrook, who threw two touch-mry ndfsehyera- game.enrcntrJh Wakr riesota. down passes in leading his team to marily on defense this year al- gm. Senior center John Walker though he completed 32 out of 63 aggravated an old knee injury s has come on strong the a 21-8 victory over Michigan in passes as a sophomore last year, against Wisconsin. The injured weeks," commented fresh- 1958. Surrounding Easterbrook in the knee is the same one which was -. ' "m backfield will be fullback Bill operated on last year and caused' Brown and halfbacks Marshall Walker to miss the entire season. Starks and Joe Krakowski. Brown, Fullback Ken Tureaud is re- a pre-season All-America selec covering from bruises on his left tion is, according to Dufek, "steady hand and elbow. End Bob Johnson and powerful and a good blocker. is running at full speed despite a Krakowski and Starks are the pulled muscle in his right calf. 1%t, Both will play against the Illini. GAINS SECOND PLACE FINALS AGAINST BETAS: Sigma Chi Outfights Delta Upsilon A____________________ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ By HENRY GOLDSTEIN A conversion made the differ- ence, as Sigma Chi edged Delta Upsilon 16-14 in a second place semi final game at cold, wet Ferry Field. In the opening few minutes DU quarterback John Kerr threw a pass into the flats to Mike Joyce and he was able to go all the way for their first six points. The conversion failed. Before the first half ended Tony Williams of Sigma Chi hit his target, John McGuire in the end zone for their opening tally. They picked up the extra two points on another pass from Williams to Tim Heinle. In the second half Joyce dis- played excellent broken field run- ning as DU scored again. This time a pass from Joyce to Kerr completed the conversion. Sigma Chi, not to be outdone pushed across the winner. McGuire snatched a 30 yard pass from Williams between two defenders and then Williams promptly threw a conversion pass to Paul Cooper for the winning two points. A last minute attempt by DU failed and they lost. In another second place semi final Beta Theta Pi beat Chi Psi 16-2 on two TD's and a safety. The Beta's first score came on a pass from Wayne Peacock to Mike Danek. On the. following- kickoff the ball fell dead on the Chi Psi 8 yard line and Bruce Beda of BTP scored a safety on the next play. In the second half Chi Psi scored their only two points on a bad BTP center which led to a safety. The Beta's last tally came on another pass from Peacock to Danek. Their conversion, a reverse went from Peacock to Don Corriere and then back to Pea- cock for the two points. Good crisp blocking made the differ- ence. In the third place semi finals Tau Delta Phi shut out Alpha Sigma Phi 12-0 and Theta Xi pulled off a win from Kappa Sig- ma by scoring in the last 30 seconds, 14-12. In the fourth place semi finals Phi Epsilon Pi defeated Sigma Phi 20-8 and Trigon rolled over Tau Epsilon Phi 26-0. Canadians Roll In the Independent league last night at Wines Field the Cana- dians easily downed the Sports- man 18-0. The Canadians, all re- gulars on the Michigan hockey team were lead by their star quarterback Butch Nielsen. Niel- sen passed for two touchdowns, one to Jim Brown and the other to Larry Babcock. The third was, scored by Gary Butler on an inter- ception. The Canadian's assets of speed and hard blocking made it easy for them to grind out the small yardage on end runs and draw plays. In another first place semi final the Foresters squeezed out a vic- tory over the Nakamura squad. The first and only score came late in the second half of the game as Ted Hetzel ran over the goal line after a well performed reverse and two key blocks. The final score was 6-0. In the two second place semi finals last night Evans slaughtered 526 Club 22-0 and GOE whipped CMS 22-0. And finally, in the third place semi finals the Muskrats downed the Hawaiins 12-6 in overtime, and Trust romped over AFIT 26- 6. Announcing .. " TH E BROTH ERS FOUR Tickets available at Union Desk JOHN EASTERBROOK ... leads uini IM Scores RESIDENCE HALLS VOLLEYBALL 'A' Wenley 4, VanTyne 2 Winchell 4, Hayden 3 Hubher 6, Lloyd 0 Michigan 6, Anderson 0 Allen-Rumsey5,Greene 1 Williams 6, Reeves 0 Adams 5, Kelsey 1 Taylor 5, Chicago i Scott 4, Strauss 3 VOLLEYBALL 'B' Cooley 4, Anderson 2 Reeves 6, Wenley 0 Williams 6, Chicago 0 Allen-Rumsey 4, Michigan 3. Lloyd 6, Scott 0 Huber 4, Winchell 3 Gomberg 6, Adams 0 Strauss 5, Greene 1 TYPEWRITERS RENTED 4..... SOLD BOUGHT REPAIRED Student Supplies MORRILL'S 314 S. State St. Ph. 3-2481 fountain pens repaired GRID SELECTIONS I The brothers Elliott meet head on this week as the Illini invade Ann Arbor in a game that would give the winner some much-needed prestige. With Johnny Easterbrook, the hot-cold little man at quar- terback, anything could happen. What do you think will happen? Send in the score of this Big Ten game with the winners of other games on this week's list to break any possible ties. Entries may be returned by hand to the main office on the second floor or mailed to Grid Picks,. The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor. Entries may be picked up at The Daily and must be in by Friday midnight to be eligible. The person with the most correct games will win two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre, now showing "Midnight Lace." Here are this week's Grid Picks: 1. Illinois at MICHIGAN (score) 11. Rice at Arkansas 2. Iowa at Minnesota 12. Texas at Baylor 3. Northwestern at Wisconsin 13. North Carolina at Clemson 4. Michigan State at Purdue 14. Georgia at Florida 5. Indiana at Ohio State 15. Oklahoma at Iowa State 6. Colorado at Missouri 16. Washington at Southern Cal 7. Nebraska at Kansas 17. Tennessee at Georgia Tech 8. Syracuse vs Army 18. Pittsburgh at Notre Dame 9. Navy at Duke 19. N. Carolina St. at Wake Forest' 10. Harvard at Princeton 20. Oregon St. at Washington St. Are You Committed to, World Responsibility? R* Come to mass meeting . Thursday-4:15... Aud A 9995 and up plus Fed Tax SEE THE NEW REM INGTION PORTABLES NOW AT State St. at North U. Ii I The Michigan Union presents football movies The WISCONSIN-MICHIGAN game 3 R S Union We are the Authorized VW bealer for this Area and Would Be Pleased to Service All VW's and POBSCHES We Reserve MON., WED., and FRI. To Service All VW Customers in the Ann Arbor Area Where We Have a Pickup and Delivery System on Those Days. EUROPEAN CARS, 506 E. Michigan, Ypsilanti HUnter 2-2175 7:30 P.M.- Wednesday, Nov. 2 -I- I1t 35Candidates for Bachelors or Masters Degrees the operations of business, industry, science, are invited to discuss opportunities In: and government. Across-the-Country Operations: Laboratory and IUIVI TWILL INTERVIEW NOVEMBER 16-17 Marketing and Sales Engineering and Science This is a unique opportunity to find out about the many career opportunities at IBM. 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