1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FAG din Bolsters Elliott's Outlook " i TWICE IN A LIFETIME: Lions' 49-0 Loss to San Francisco Second Such Loss by Wilson Team, Hall and Joe O'Donnell and cen- ter Todd Grant range from Hall's 210 lbs. to Houtman's 230.7 Now, although Elliott is reluc- tant to;make any predictions, he points out there is no loss of speed from last year's edition, a fact which showed up when the Wol- verines threw UCLA's heralded tailback Bobby Smith for 46 yards in losses, giving him a net of only 18 for the day. Elliott Not Satisfied "We had some trouble with Smith's fake pass and runs, and there were a lot of other mis- takes," contends Elliott, who is worried that the mistakes might be costly against a stronger team. Smith was gang - rushed re- peatedly, often losing big yardage after evading two or three tacklers only to be brought down by the rest. Almos Thompson, UCLA's hard- nosed fullback, netted only seven. yards in five carries up the middle against Michigan's unyielding in- terior line. As a result of the hard-charging line tactics,, guard John Minko was able to tip Smith's arm in the play which resulted in Xen Tu- reaud's 92-yard touchdown run on an interception. Running Fine Offensively, the line gave backs Bill Tunnicliff, DRave Raimey and. Ben McRae more running room than they have been used tot Tun- nicliff gained 58 yards up the mid- dle, while Raimey and McRae had a field day with 59 and 74 yards, respectively, on the outside. PRACTICE NOTES. .'..... Elliott is making sure that there is no letdown in team morale for the Army game this Saturday. He had the starters go through light drills during which they could "look at" what Army's lonesome end attack would be like. The reserve units went through game-type scrimmages with some body contact. The leg injury which forced Houtman to leave the UCLA game as a precautionary measure is not considered serious, but O'Donnell and Lou Pavloff were not so lucky. O'Donnell's bruised left arm is in a cast and will prevent him from playing against Army. Pav- loff is still out until more X-rays are taken of his knee injury. Wolverines Rated Ninth in AP Ranking By The Associated Press teasily. The Owls had sped by a upset Kansas the previous week. 9. Michigan. ... .. over UCLA Saturday set the Wol- strong LSU team the week before The tie dropped the Buckeyes from 10. Baylor ............. ove UCA Sturay et he ol-and were favored over Georgia third. verines into the ninth slot of yes- Tech.a lordBouncegBacr.Others receiving votes: t terday's Associated Press poll of TBaylor Bune s B tac Dame, Navy, Maryland, 1M the nation's top ollegiate powers. Alabama had trouble with Tu-j Baylor came from behind to beat (l) uun isui Ih ' n =Iatispcleg mianedwers.lane before winning 9-0 but Texas, Pitt 16-3 for its second victory. (ete), AU ,Msrm ,tn Iowa's Hawkeyes maintained rising a spot, romped over Texas The top ten teams in order of western, TCU, Army, Sta their grip on- the top spot, and Tech, 42-14. Michigan State, fig- selection (points figured on a 10- Penn State, Washington, I powerful Mississippi continued as ured to contend for the Big Ten 9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-f basis from first Utah State, Colorado, Men the number two team. title along with Iowa and Ohio place on down: first place votes in State, Rice, Purdue, LSU, Ka But after the Hawkeyes and Ole' State, also won handily, beating parentheses): North Carolina, Southern Miss, things became rather scram- Wisconsin 20-0 to rise from 10th i. Iowa (24)...........434 fornia. .G gT ,n m h place.2. Mississippi (16) ......325 top ten a week ago, zoomed into Syracuse, now 2-0, beat West 3. Georgia Tech (5)...... 266 third place after walloping a Virginia 29-14, but dropped from 4. Alabama (1) .......... 259 Read and Ust strong Rice team 24-0 Saturday fifth a week ago. Ohio State was 5. Texas (2) . ......... .218 for its second victory in as many surprised by Texas Christian, 6. Michigan State (1) ... 203 starts. which held the Buckeyes to a 7-7 7. Syracuse..9.D...l.y. . ...191s MSU in Fifth tie. But TCU was no patsy, having 8. Ohio State .. . .......:.128 - Alabama remained fourth, fol- lowed by Texas, Michigan State, Syracuse, Ohio State, Michigan, and Baylor. Iowa's 28-7 victory over Cali- fornia was not unexpected,-though the klawkeyes held only a 14-7 halftime lead. However, their tal- ented team, headed by an all vet- eran backfield, played at its own pace in the second half. Ole Miss, now 2-0, had to work for its 20-6 victory over .a tough Kentucky team, finishing strong under the guidance of quarterback Doug Elmore. Tech is the big surprise. It open- ed the season with a 27-7 victory over Southern Cal, and passed itsj ______ L AU NDRY S ERV ICE . .. first stern test in handling Ricef U NO YE V C .. Major League Standings * FAMILY LAUNDRY SERVICE FINAL STANDINGS AMERICAN LEAGUE By BOB WAZEKA The year was 1941. George Wil- son had just walked off the field with his head down. His team had been beaten; 49-0. The scene shifts to 1961, twenty years later. George Wilson is seen walking off the field. Again his NFL Standings WESTERN DIVISION W Detroit 2 Baltimore 2 San Francisco 2 Green Bay 2 Minnesota 1 chicago I 'Las Angeles 1 L 1 1 1 1, 2' 2 2> T 0. 0 0 0 0 Pet. Pts. .667 33 .667. 76 .667 94 .667 67 .333 77- ,333 34 .333 '65 EASTERN DIVISION OP .77 73 33 27 68 78 6 QP 57 56 57 51 56 73 68 k Philadelphia Dallas St. Louis Cleveland New York Washington Pittsburgh W' 2' 2 2 ,2 ;8 4 =L 1 1 1 3 3 _T 0' 0 0 0 ,9: U 0 Pct. Pts. .667 68 .667 55 ,.667 68 .667 65 .667 51. .000 32 .000 52' head is looking down. His team had just lost, 49-0. When the powerful Chicago Bears crushed the Detroit Lions,, 49-0, in 1941, George Wilson had played an end position. On Sun- day; as coach of the Detroit Lions; he had watched his team fall to the San Francisco 49ers, 49-0. The 49ers played almost flaw- less football. They scored twice following Lion fumbles and twice, following pass interceptions. But the 49ers made their own breaks -and the Lions couldn't contain any of San Francisco's quarter- backs-Kiliner, John Brodie, or Bobby Waters. NFL place kickers had another field day. At Baltimore, Steve Myhra kicked a 37-yd. field goal with two minutes to go, putting the Colts ahead of the Minneso- ta Vikings, 31-30. Then rookie; Steve Mercer booted a 29-yd. field. goal with only 32 seconds remain- ing to put the Vikings' back on top. Mercer had earlier booted three field goals of 20, 26, and 10 yards. But the Colts came galloping back. Myhra, on the last play of the game, booted a mammoth 52-yd. field goal to give the Colts a 34-33 win., Gerry;Perry kicked a 27-yd. field goal with .five seconds to play to give the St. Louis Cardi- nals a 30-27 upset win over the defending champion Philadelphia Eagles. Y. A. Tittle, a fine old pro, com- pleted' 27 out of 46 passes for 325 yards to lead the New York Gi- ants to a 24-21 victory over the Washington Redskins. Washington has now lost 11 regular season games in a row and 16 straight including exhibition action. ex-Michigan All-American Ron Kramer scoring a touchdown, out- classed the Chicago Bears, 24-0. The Los Angeles Rams, sparked by a 96-yd. touchdown pass from Frank Ryan to Ollie Matson in the last three minutes of play, won their first league game of the year, defeating Pittsburgh 24-14. Titans Lead League In American'Football' League action, the New York Titans moved into first place in the Eastern Di- vision by defeating the Boston Patriots, 37-30. -Other action saw Dallas retain its. second-place standing in the Western Division by downing de- fending AFL champion Houston, 26-21. Rounding out the sched- ule, Oakland beat Denver, 33-19. NATIONA Cincinnati Los Angeles. $SA Francisco Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Philadelphia 1 L LEAGUE W L Pet. 93 61 .604 89 65 .578 85 69 .552 83 71 .539 80 '4 .519 75 79 .487 64 90 .16' 47 107 .305 New York Detroit Baltimore Chicago Cleveland Boston Minnesota Los Angeles Washington Kansas City W 109 101 95 86 078 76 70 70 61 61 L 53 61 67 76 83 86 90 91 100 100 Pct. .673 .623 .586 .531 .484 .469 .438 .435- .379 .379 GB 8 14 23 3%/ 33 38 471% 471/2 GB 4 .8' 10 13 18 29 46' SUNDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 49, Detroit 0 Cleveland 25, 'Dallas '7' Baltimore 34, Minnesota 33 Green Bay 24, . Chicago 0 St. Louis 30, Philadelphia 27 New York 24, Washington 21 Los Angeles 24, Pittsburgh 14 AFL Standngs CAMPUS-WIDE ENTERTAINMENT Michigan Union Social Committee's STUDENT TALENT LISTING Bands, Singers, Musicians, Dancers, Comedians, MC's, Etc. The file will be open to all campus organizations in search of entertainment. The Union will also draw on this file for its functions: MUG, TGIT's, LITTLE CLUBS, TALENT SHOW, ETC. REGISTER AT THE UNION Student Offices - Week Days 3-5 & Fifth Ave. PHON;E NQ ,2-3123 - ZINDELL OLDSMOBI LE Use Or, Convenient Drive-In Service Complete body shop service Ann Arbor, NO 3-0507 EA New York Boston Houston Buffalo WEE San Diego Dallas Denver Oakland STERN DIVISION W L Pet. Pts. 3 1 .750 124: 2 2 .500.118 1 2 .333 100 1 3; .250 83 OP' 119 96 60 95 STERN DIVISION W L Pet. Pts. OP 4 0 1.000 123 45 2 '1 .667 78 82 1' 3 .250, 86 123 1 3, .250 68 160 LAST SATURDAY'S 'RESULT, San Diego 19, Buffalo 11 LASTSUNDAY'S RESULTS Oakland 33, Denver 19 Dallas 26, Houston 21 New York 37, Boston 20 'Kramer Scores The Green Bay Packers, with needs young engineers today for spectacular achievements tomorrow &wool;nghar...n nvi ara mialifiad :P.OA ran' nffpr