THE MICHIGAN DAILY Given Gridiron [IS squad of 60 University of1 higan freshmen were recom-. nded for football numerals for 1960 season by frosh coach n Dufek and approved by Ath- * Director H. O. Crisler. 'he list includes 10 halfbacks, e uarterbacks, five fullbacks; ends, 12 tackles, 13 guards and ecenters. nds included were Doug Bickle, verse City; Gerry McCants, Detroit; ig Schmidt, Des Plaines, Ill.; Larryi owski, Bay City; Dave Ong, Allen k; John Youngs, Bay City; Bill eson, Bad Axe; Dan MacLeish, De-, t; John Yanz, Chicago; and Tom t, Rockford, 111. ackles were Dick Bubick, South d, Ind.; Dick Dworsky, Portland, Paul Woodward, Cincinnati; Jim ey, Portland, O.; Tom Keating, Chi- o; Fred Janke, Jackson; Bill Mich- ritz, Chicago; Dan Striegel, Wheel- Il; Phil Garrison, Wyandotte; Lovel, Birmingham; DanBern- i, Oak Park and Charles Prochas- Southgate. mong guards were Mitchell Garter, oklyn, N.Y.; Dave Brich, Saginaw; ve Kovacevich, Chicago; John Mar- a, Monroe; John Pasch, Toledo, O.; ve Volmer, Detroit; Bill Coplin, Ir- , Pa.; Dave Ramsey, Niles,, 0.; ve Kurtz, Toledo, 0.; Pom Perriello, w Kensington, Pa.; Ron Pocorus,' ited, Pa.; Del Nolan, Clare and Jim wens, Monroe. enters were Paul DeMarke, Lincoln k; Bill Muir, Cuyahoga Falls, 0.; n Blanchard, Sturgis; Dave Voight, adusky, O., and Joe Sligay, Dearborn. [alfbacks included were William tclff, Pontiac; Bruce McLenna, Fen- ; Dick Robinson, Monroe; Harvey apman, Farmington; Mike Vuocola, c Haven, Pa.; Jim Locke,Biring- m, Ala.; Mike Shirley, Dearborn; a Kornowa, Toledo, 0.; Peter Geis, kc Park, Ill., and Jack Gilbert, Pitts- rgh. quarterbacks were Frosty Evashev- iIowa City, a.; Tom Watters, Pitts- rgh, Pa.; Dennis Alix, Birmingham;' n Tate, Akron, O.,. and Tom Prit- ard, Marion, O. ullbacks were Paul Ewing, Detroit; yne Sparkman, Plymouth; Dan ty, Hastings; Bill Dodd, Virden, Ill., d Bill Kodros, Alton, I1. GRID SELECTIONS Going into the final week of the Grid Picks contest, there will be a few tight races this weekend. Not only will some of the games on the list be close, and not only will the winner of the contest be de- cided in a close race, but the sports staff of the Daily is putting on a little battle of its own. Last year at this time, the leaders were Jim Benagh and Tom Witecki with 104-56 records. This year, Dave Andrews and Mike Gill- man are tied for the lead with 103-57 records, with Witecki one game behind at 102-58. The consensus last year was the same as the leaders, with 104 correct games. This year, it is the same story, with the consensus tied for the lead. This is the final column of the year, and your last chance to win two free tickets to the Michigan Theater, now showing "The Captain's Table." Your entry may be returned to the Daily by hand to the main office on the second floor, but it must be in by midnight tonight to be eligible. This week's guest selector is Terry Barr, former Michigan half- back and defensive specialist. He is now a star halfback for the De- troit Lions. CONSENSUS PICKS IN CAPS (Consensus, 103-57-.644) By TOM WEBBER Purdue and Iowa found success in the air against Ohio State and beat the Buckeyes. Will Michigan do the same? So far this year the Michigan passing attack has shown great potential at times and been some- what less spectacular at other times., The biggest indication of the sputtering attack is the low .389 completion percentage and the seven interceptions. Curious Fact A curious fact about this year, however, is that it has been the pass in key ;situations which has 1jelped the Wolverines to a winning season. Such occasions occurred in thie Illinois and Indiana games. DAVE GLINKA ... soph on the spot 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Michigan Aerial Game Ready for OSI Michigan at OHIO STATE MINNESOTA at Wisconsin ILLINOIS at Northwestern Indiana at PURDUE Detroit at MICHIGAN STATE IOWA at Notre Dame Kansas at MISSOURI COLORADO at Oklahoma St. Nebraska at OKLAHOMA TCU at RICE 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. ARKANSAS at Texas Tech Florida State at AUBURN DUKE at North Carolina Kentucky at TENNESSEE TULANE ,at Vanderbilt YALE at Harvard Penn State at PITTSBURGH Stanford at CALIFORNIA OREGON at Oregon State UCLA at Southern California IN AL MEETINGS: Cronin Announces Plan To Stock New Teams The Illinois game was decided on two pass plays. One was a dar- ing fourth down play and the other - the two-point conversion play. The turning point in the Indiana game was a long TD pass to end Scot Maentz. In addition, quarterback Dave- Glinka almost pulled the Wiscon- sin game out of the fire in the last minute with a flurry of passes. But on the whole the aerial show has now supplemented the running aatack as much as was hoped most observers have noted. . Complete Seven This was largely the case with Iowa until last week's encounter with the Buckeyes. The Hawkeyes are eighth in the Big Ten in for- ward passing, but last week they managed to complete as many passes in one game as they had in the seven previous ones. This was considered to be one factor which contributed heavily to the Iowa win. Purdue, boasting Bernie Allen, one of the conference's finest quar- terbacks, went to the air repeated- ly and emerged with a 24-21 vic- tory. Last week Michigan, perhaps giving an example of things to come, went to the air 20 times against Indiana. The number, however, is not as significant as the type which were thrown. The six completions went for a total of 140 yards which is a sharp de ation from the usually short pass patterns. When asked about this, Coach Bump Elliott replied, "It all de- pends on the team that you're playing. We thought we could throw long against Indiana and so' we did." Michigan fans hope that the Wolverines can also discover weak- ness of this sort and exploit 'it against the powerful Buckeyes. The traditional Ohio State- Michigan game is certain to pro- vide some thrills with the un- predictable Woody Hayes and the Michigan mentor matching plays. Anyway, some 83,000 lucky tick- et holders are looking forward to Saturday's 57th encounter in the long series between the two Out of Ohio State came yester- day the news that starting right I-M Volleyball PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITIES First Place Playoff Phi Epsilon Kappa 4, Phi Rho Sigma 2 Second Place Playoff Phi Delta Phi 4, Phi Chi 2 Alpha ChiSigma 4, Gamma Alpha 0 Third Place Playoff Delta Sigma Pi 4, Delta Theta Phi I Fourth Place Finals Alpha Omega 4, Alpha Kappa Phi 0 FACULTY SCORES Social Psychology 5, Zoology 1 English "B" 5,*Philosophy 1. end Tom Perdue, who has been a standout all season in the Buck- eye defense, will definitely be out of the contest. He sustained a head injury last week in Ohio's 35-12 loss to Iowa. , . N Pratice Notes For the first time this season the football squad went through prac- tice without wearing any padding. There was very little body contact as Bump Elliott attempted to prevent his injury list fl'om grow- ing any longer. In the annual"after point" con- test held by the seniors, Paul Poul- os booted 13 consecutive drives through the uprights to win. John Halstead, the regular kicker for the Wolverines, was forced to kick left-f ooted and split the posts on his first try. His second attempt failed. Dave Raimey, the major injured player on the team, ran well and will see considerable action in Saturday's game against Ohio State, though he probably will not be at his peak efficiency. I1 j NBA Standings EASTERN DIVISION W L Pct.I Philadelphia 9 4 .692 Boston 6 3 .667 Syracuse 4 6 .400 New York 2 10 .1671 WESTERN DIVISION W L Pct.1 St. Louis 9 3 .727 Detroit 6 6 .500; Cincinnati 7 8 .467 Los Angeles 5 7 .417 Yesterday's Results Syracuse 106, Philadelphia 105 St. Louis 112, Detroit 105 NHL Standings W L T Pts. GFI Montreal 10 5 3 23 68 Detroit 9 6 422 61 Chicago- 9 6 4 22 59 Toronto 8 6 4 20 55 Boston 3 96 12 46 New York 5 12 1 11 54 Yesterday's Result Chicago 4, Boston 2 MIKE GILLMAN (Associate Sports Editor, 103-57-.644)-Mich., Minn., Ill., MSU, Iowa, Mo., Colo., Okla., Rice, Ark., Auburn, Duke, Tenn., Tulane, Yale, Pitt., Cal., Ore., UCLA. DAVE ANDREWS (103-57-.644)-OSU, Minn., NW, Purdue, MSU, Iowa, Mo., Colo., Okla., Rice, Ark., Auburn, Duke, Tenn., Tulane, Yale, Pitt., Cal., Ore. St., UCLA. TOM WITECKI (Sports Editor, 102-58--.638)-Mich., Minn., Ill., Purdue, MSU, Iowa, Mo., Colo., Okla., Neb., Rice, Ark., Auburn, Duke, Tenn., Vand., Yale, Pitt., Cal., Ore., UCLA. BOB ROMANOFF (100-60-.625)-OSU, Wis., Ill., Purdue, MSU, Iowa, Mo., Colo., Okla., Rice, Ark., Auburn, Duke, Tenn., Tulane, Yale, Penn St., Cal., Ore. St., UCLA. FRED STEINHARDT (100-60-.625)--OSU, Minn., NW, Pur- due, MSU, Iowa, Kansas, Colo., Okla., Rice, Ark., Auburn, Duke, Tenn., Tulane, Yale, Pitt., Cal., Ore., UCLA. BRIAN MacCLOWRY (99-61-.619)-OSU, Minn., Ill., Purdue, MSU, Iowa, Mo., Colo., Okla., Rice, Ark., Auburn, Duke, Tenn., Tu- lane, Yale, Pitt., Cal., Ore. St., UCLA. GARY GUSSIN (99-61-.619.)--OSU, Minn., Ill., Purdue, MSU, Iowa, Mo., Cola., Neb., Rice, Ark., Auburn, Duke, Tenn., Tulane, Yale, Pitt., Cal., Ore., UCLA. HAL APPLEBAUM (Associate Sports Editor, 97-63-.606) - Mich., Minn., Ill., Purdue, MSU, Iowa, Kansas, Colo., TCU, Ark., Au- burn, Duke, Tenn., Tulane, Yale, Pitt., Cal., Ore., UCLA. CLIFF MARKS (88-72-.550)--Mich., Minn., NW, Purdue, MSU, Iowa, Mo., Colo., Okla., TCU, Ark., Auburn, Duke, Tenn., Tulane, Yale, Pitt., Stanford, Ore. St., UCLA. TERRY BARR (Guest Selector, 85-75-.531)-Mich., Wis., 111, Purdue, MSU, Iowa, Mo., Colo., Neb., Rice, Texas Tech, Auburn, Duke, Tenn., Tulane, Yale, Pitt., Cal., Ore., UCLA. NEW YORK (AP)-Elwood Que- sada, administrator of the Fed- eral Aviation Agency, was award- ed the new Washington f ran- chise and the Los Angeles club went up for grabs as Hank Green- berg dropped out of the picture in yesterday's startling develop- ments in the American League expansion picture. Joe Cronin, American League president, announced a plan for stocking the two new clubs in the ,10-team league with player talent and offered to negotiate with Wal- ter O'Malley, owner of the Los Angeles Dodgers, for damages. "We'll operate with 10 clubs in 1961," said Cronin after a long meeting which will be continued today. "We will operate at Wash- ington and at Los Angeles, sub- ject to the Commissioner's clari- fication. There are no Insur- mountable obstacles. Cronin spelled out a plan to stock each new club with 28 men from the current 40-man player rosters of the eight league teams. Each of the eight teams must des- ignate a list of 15 by noon today, seven of whom must have been on the club's active list Aug. 31, 1960. Before midnight, Nov. 20, each new club must have taken 28 players, including at least 10 pitchers, two catchers, six infield- ers and four outfielders and six others for any desired position. The 28 at $75,000 each will cost $2,100,000. Each of the eight American ANN ARBOR RECREATION STUDENT RATES MODERN -AUTOMATIC ... ....... . .. BOWLING 605 E. Huron NO 2-0103 J League clubs that operated in 1960 will lose seven!.men. T. GA . M. GB 3q1 GB 23 3 CAFE GALERIE PRESENTS - "The country's No. 1 balladeer"-San Francisco Chronicle. ED McCUIDY Nov. 19-Dec. 8 Nightly (except Monday) First Show at 9 P.M. I (Thank Goodness It's Musket) S featuring Friday, Nov. 18 Last Evening with ROWENA Special Program with folk songs of many lands AL YOUNG. GA 55 52 44 59 74 CAFE GALERIE 19940 Livernois UN 2-4455 NORTH OF OUTER DRIVFE F SUMMER TOUR IN EUROPE ~i1 TODAY at 3:00 P.M. UNION CAFETERIA ISA Presents a *LJ DANCE TONIGHT 8:30 to 11:30 Women's Athletic Bldg. *Square 11 with Thurs., 3 - 5 SABBATH EVENING SERVICES (I 11 at HILLEL Tonight..s.Nov.18-7:15P.M. ZWERDLING-COHN CHAPEL followed by group singing and dancing Everyone Welcome COME SEE KISMET 2539 Wed. SAS and MUST BOOK EARLY m " r r../ FOR YOUR DINING PLEASURE ... F 1111 1i rI S RESTAURANT Di 9ami'u4 "P 91ine 9""4 EL Rio RESTAURANT FREE DELIVERY Also STEAKS - CHOPS - CHICKEN SPAGHETTI - RAVIOLI - LASAGNE BEER and WINE-- (in or Out) SUBMARINE SANDWICHES Closed MondayP- Washington Phone NO 2-9575 I , Continental Dining NOW OPEN 2 MinihtOdSuMNDAYS: 20 o:0PM ENCHANTING ATMOSPHERE-- PROFESSIONAL SERVICE EXOTIC INTERNATIONAL CUISINE 341-5 South Main - REAR ENTRANCE Adjacent-to Municipal Parking Lot FOR RESERVATIONS of 6 and over, please call NO 3-2701 Inquiries for BANQUET FACILITIES are welcomed. * U* * * * * * * * I offers you a taste treat of a traditional Italian dish 122 W.' PIZZA .. .# , ... :x. Q ""' r'te' a SPAGHETTI A L SHOUSE and other ITALIAN SPECIALTIES CARRY OUT & DELIVERIES EL A will be served daily from 12 Noon to 2 P.M. and 5 P.M. to 4 A.M. F-LEE DELIVERY from 5 P.M. to 2 A.M. Expertly prepared by our special pizza pie maker and baked in new modern ovens to give you the "best tasting pizza in town." TAKE-OUT SERVICE AVAILABLE 301 E. Liberty NO 3-7363 0 LEO PING SAY: There were two big sides "pulling" oppo- site in the election. But now, we must all "pull" together. o Enjoy the finest Cantonese Food Closed Monday '1 TENDERLOIN STEAK skillfully broiled to per- fection, crisp, seared, on the outside, tender with in, covered with F rench ~. fried onion rigs, Frencoh fried or baked potato' served with sour cream and chive dressing, homemade rolls and butter and our colorful relish tray. '' All I -- Recommended .. by Duncan Hines .. by the Gourmet Club .. by the AAA ,. and by hundreds *f regular gust Our Steaks ..are the finest ,, a I 11 I