'TEMBER 29 1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY TEMBER 29, 1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Elliott Discloses First Three Lines By PETE DiLQRENZI than defense, and the opposite Michigan will have three lines will hold true for the defensive ready for action in this week- line. end's season opener with UCLA- * * * the starting line, the second team; practice No defensive line, and the second c otes team offensive line. The Wolverines ran through of- The starting line will be the fensive drills today, concentrating same one that has been slated to on passing and reverses. Quarter- start all season, with Scott backs Dave Glinka, Bob Chandler, Maentz and Captain George Mans and* Bob Pritchard put the backs at the ends, John Houtman and through their paces. Jon Schopf at the guards, Lee * * * Hall and Joe O'Donnell at the In addition to practicing of- guards, and Todd Grant at cen- fense, the Wolverines had a light- ter. contact defensive workout as they r r Smith, Left End The defensive line is the normal' second team' line. Senior JeffI Smith will start at left end; im- proving sophomore Tom Keating has moved up to second-team left tackle; junior tackle John Minko has moved to left guard; John Walker, a senior, is still at center; senior Lou Pavloff has moved from third team center to ,second team right guard; senior Guy Cur- tis remains at right tackle; and junior Dave Mongeau is at right end. The third team line, or the second team offensive line, will have seniqr Bob Brown at left end, junior John Lehr at left tackle, sophomore Bob Lovell at left guard, senior Frank Maloney at center, sophomore Dave Kurtz at right guard, sophomore Jim Wiley at right tackle, and sopho- more Doug Bickle at right end. This gives the Wolverines five sophomores in the first three lines, but only one of them is in the first two. Averages 224 Pounds The first line averages 224 pounds; the second averagesr 211 pounds; and the third line aver- ages 213 pounds. The switch to separate offen- sive and defensive second team lines does not mean that the of- fensive line will play only in of- fensive situations or that the de- fensive line will play only in de- fensive situations. What it does mean is that the offensive line will be likely to enter in the game when offense is required more diagnosed and rehearsed the favorite plays of the UCLANS, as run by the red-shirts from the [single-wing. One of the plays they concentrated on was the UCLA quick kick-a threat on every play from the single wing. They also concentrated on UCLA plays with- in the ten-yard line, and on the Golden Bruins' bread-and-butter plays-their end sweeps. Michigan's ends will be a key to the outcome of Saturday's game. If they can stop those Bruin end sweeps, they'll have removed their best ground-gainer. * * * Tomorrow, the Wolverines will hold a short, light workout, con- centrating on punting and kick- ing. Grid Injury Fatal To Middie ANNAPOLIS VP)-A Navy foot- ball player died yesterday of an injury received when he was tackled at practice. The victim was Donald G. Foley, 19, of Pasadena, Tex., a sophomore fullback on the junior varsity. His death was the second in Navy football history resulting from a gridiron injury and the first re- ported in college football this year. Capt. Asbury Coward, Director of Athletics, said Foley's death was "a severe blow to the naval academy in general, the brigade of midshipmen, his classmates and teammates. It was a great trag- edy." Foley was injured late Wednes- day. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Foley of Pasadena, were flown to Annapolis and were at his bedside when he died in" the Academy Hospital yesterday morning.I Capt. Coward said Foley's death resulted from a "one in a million chance mishap."He said the "cir- cumstances at the exact moment of impact were just a little differ- ent than they have ever been be-' fore". He said Foley was carrying the ball and had his head lowered and his chin against his chest when he was hit. The Academy Hospital said he suffered a "fiexion disloca- tion" between vertebrae with a division of the spinal cord. Doctors likened the injury to a broken neck and said it was simi- lar to that suffered by former baseball catcher Roy Campanella in an auto accident several years ago. I-M FOOTBALL: Alpha Chi Sigma Triumphs; Phi Alpha Kappa, Beats EKN By TOM ROWLAND and ED HEISER Alpha Chi Sigma began its season successfully by trouncing Phi Delta Chi, 26-0 in Profession- al Fraternity action yesterday. All scoring resulted from the strong passing arm of Bob Mills. Mills made good a sustained Al- pha Chi Sigma drive when he con- nected with a short pass to John Brokloff in the first quarter. Later in the half Mills connect- ed with a long pass to Jude Sum- merfeld in the end zone for the second. TD. In the second half Mills tossed two more long touchdown strikes., The first was a long pass to Don Evans, and the second was a tre- mendous aerial again to Summer- feld. Defensive Battle Meanwhile, Alpha Omega ran into much tougher competition, the strong defense of Delta Theta Phi. The two teams battled back and forth across the field and at the end of regular play the score was deadlocked, 0-0. Alpha Omega managed to ad- vance the ball farther in their four allotted overtime plays and were given the win. The only scor- ing threat of the game came on a long pass from AO's Dave Berent to Harold Plotnik which- brought the ball within a few feet of the goal line. D In fraternity "B" play strong defenses and good offenses went hand-and-hand as lopsided vic- tories prevailed. Delta Upsilon de- feated Pi Lambda Phi, -36-0. Al- pha Tau Omega trounced Acacia, 20-0, and Zeta Beta Tan whipped Trigon, 20-0. Phi Sigma Delta edged out a tough Taau Delta Phi team, 6-0; Theta Xi won by forfeit over Tri- angle and Phi Kappa Sigmag for- feited their game to Chi Phir. Faber Stars In evening Professional compe- tition, Phi Alpha Kappa quarter- back Jack Feber put on a triple- threat show as he directed his team to a conVincing 32-0 victory over Eta Kappa Nu. Faber sprint- ed for 40 yards and six points on Phi Alpha Kappa's first play from scrimmage. Faber passed to Dick Lenters and Ed., Meyering for touchdowns, and then grabbed a Jim Biel aerial for a final tally. Phi Epsilon Kappa scored early on a Butch Nielten-Mike Bazany aerial combination and then went on to defeat Phi Delta Zpsilon, 40-0. Nielsen notched two more touchdowns through the air with Glary McNitt and Virg P=Pum on the receinend.. Phi Chi Win Phi Chi opened their n*ram=- al seasonevwith an 14g win over Phi Rho. Sigma. After Phil Kueb- bier opened' up the 'ftin wT" an aerial strike- to" 3ob Mirra7 Dick Dickersoh, picked a peas" out of an opponent's grasp and sprint- ed 50 'yard for the second Phi Chi touchdown. Law Club WI. Scoring once in:each half. Law Club defeated Gamma Alpha by a 12-0 count. Quarterack d err Hickman rounded end for theifirst touchdown and chalked u the second tally via the airwa's on a pass to Eb CraWford.' Phi Kappa Taeu forfeited to 8*- ma Chi, and Alpha Pap Psi won by default from Tau Npilon Rho. MOVING UP-Sophomore tackle Tom Keating, a 6'3", 200 pound- er from Chicago, has been moving up in the tackle ranks. He is now the second-team left tackle behind John Houtmqan. B'NAI B'RITH H ILLEL FOUNDATION SABBATH SERVICES This evening ore sponsored by ATI D tfe college age organization MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Dodgers Clinch Second Place in NL; Held Drives in Five as Indians Win Zwordling-Cohn Chapel 1429 Hill St. 1 n4 By The Associated Press 1 PHILADELPHIA-Th1e Los An- geles Dodgers clinched second place in the National League by beating the Philadelphia Phillies 10-0 last night behind the six-hit pitching of Don Drysdale. It was the sixth straight win for Drysdale over the Phils this season. The Dodgers took advantage of four errors to score six un- earned runs. Three of the tallies a- -~ - as a a a - - S- - r T 'zi Want to be a PILOT? came on Daryl Spencer's 12th homer of the season in the five- run seventh against Robin Rob- erts, third of four Phils' pitchers. Drysdale, who fanned eight to, increase his major league total to 1,004, scattered the Phils' hits, walked only two and won his 13th game against 10 losses. It was his third shutout of the season. The big pitcher also hit his fifth homer of the season, a rooftoi blast off southpaw Ken Lehman in the eighth. Cleveland 12, Minnesota 5 MINNEAPOLIS -ST. PAUL - Woodie Held drove in five runs and Wynn Hawkins pitched steady relief ball yesterday as the Cleve- land Indians walloped the Minne- sota Twins 12-5. Held doubled in two of Cleve- land's four first inning runs and then added a two-run homer in the four-run third, and his 23rd roundtripper, a solo shot, in the ninth. Hawkins relieved Jim Grant in the second and allowed seven hits and two runs, including Harmon Killebrew's 46th homer, the rest of the way in recording his sev- enth victory in 16 decisions. Giants 7, Pirates 4 PITTSBURGH-Brothers Mat- ty and Felipe Alou figured in all of the San Francisco scoring last night as the Giants downed the Pittsburgh Pirates 7-4. Matty belted a pair of doubles and two singles, scored two runs and drove in another Felipe scor- ed twice and drove in two runs on three singles. Dick Stuart hit his 33rd home run of the' season for Pittsburgh and Smoky Burgess socked his 12th. TONIGHT at 7 and 9:15 SATURDAY and SUNDAY at 7 omd 9 MIN AND BILL MY CHILDHOOD with Marie Dressier, Wallace Berry Marjorie Rambeau Mark Donskoi's The Gorky Trilogy, Pat I PLUS Arne Sucksdorffs 1955 Edinburgh Award THE GREAT ADVENTURE (nature film) Short: THE WITNESS (B nchte ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 cents Gordon Flying Service. FAA Approved Flight Instructors Cessna 150 172 Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GB New York 106 53 .667 - Detroit 98 61 .616 8 Baltimore 93 67 .581 13% Chicago 86 74 .538 20% Cleveland 77 81 .487 28% Boston 76 83 .478 30 Minnesota 70 87 .446 35 a-Los Angeles 67 90 .427 38 Kansas City 60 98 .380 45% a-Washington 59 98 .376 46 a-Played west coast night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cleveland 12, Minnesota 5 Washington at Los Angeles (inc.) Only games scheoulea TODAY'S GAMES Boston at New York Chicago at Baltimore Washington at Kansas City Cleveland at Los Angeles Detroit at Minnesota " Student Instruction Aircraft Rental " Charter HUnter 3-4864 McENNAN AIRPORT 5830 Stony Creek Rd. - Ypsilanti, Mich. CAMPUS-WIDE ENTERTAINMENT Cards Place Hammack On Waivers List ST. LOUIS ()-The St. Louis football Cardinals, crippled by left-leg injuries in their backfield, asked waivers yesterday on Full- back Mal Hammack in order to place him on the injured reserve list. Hammack will be idle at least a month with a partially torn lig- ament in the left knee. The in- jury, suffered in the National Football League opener against the Giants in New York Sept. 17, at first was not thought to be serious. Hammack follows halfbacks John David Crow and Joe Chil- dress to the sidelines, all with left- leg injuries. Crow suffered a brok- en leg in a pre-season game, but is expected to return to action by Oct. 29. Childress is out for the season with a knee injury, also suffered in a pre-season game. NATIONAL Cincinnati Los Angeles San Francisco Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Philadelphia LEAGUE W L Pet. 92 59 .609 88 64 .579 84 67 .556 81 70 .536 78 74 .513 73 78 .483 63 89 .414 47 105 .309 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 10, Philadelphia 0 San Francisco 7, Pittsburgh 4 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Cincinnati at Pittsburgh San Francisco at Milwaukee only games scheduled GB 4% 8 11 14% 19 29 45% Michigan Union Social Committee's STUDENT TALENT LISTING Bands, Singers, Musicians, Dancers, Comedians, MC's, Etc. PERDITION G FRankly, th for the wh Company, refuse toI are tacklin of wheelles Is "tomorrol to the men oped the1 replaces t forated dis to support you will-o traveling s riding on a unerringlyI by power Levacar. *Meanwhile the job ofI So we ho wheels jus I centrate on GmFmL~ va a um@wg .: , The file will be open to all campus or- YOUNG MAN finds the going great in great glen vested suits by Cricketeer. Great idea: these toned-up traditionals in patterns larger than usual, plaids of black-blue, olive-blue or just greys. .Great tailoring. true to form shoulders, narrower trousers. Great glens: a "musthave" for every successful young executive. ganizations in search of entertain- e Nw1 " " 1 lZ ere is. no practical substitute heel today. But at Ford Motor our scientists and engineers give "no" for an answer. They g, among others, the problenw ss vehicles for tomorrow. ow" really.far off? Not according at Ford. Already they've devel- Levacar as one possibility. It he wheel with Ieyepads, pet. cs which emit powerful airtiets the vehicle. Air suspension-if f an advanced degree. Imagine wiftly, safely at up to 500 mph, a tissue-thin film of air.:Guided by a system of rails. Propelled ful turboprops. This Is the ewe've, still dot the wheel. And building better cars for today. pe you won't mind rldlng;ot st a little longer while we Con- in both tasks. ment. The.Union will also draw on this file for its functions: MUG, TGIT's, I ITTI FCi l RS TAI FNT SHOW ETC. I