THE MICHIGAN DAILY' TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7, If. THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 7,1 HI-Fl SERVICE&REPAIR BY EXPERTS FRED FLACK, M.A.E.S. DIAMOND NEEDLES NOW only $5.95 guaranteed. H[IFl & T.V. CENTER 304 S. Thayer - (Across from Hill) Injuries Hamper 'M' Interior Line, Fulibacks Hurting for Tilt With Illinois after Inter-conference Win After Duke Game For the BEST in Shirt Laundering By AL GRASS Having done its part to continue the Big Ten's domination over outside threats, Michigan is now making ready for the more difficult matter of winning internal strug- gles as it prepares to meet a de- ceiving Illinois squad at Cham- paign next Saturday. The unpredictable Wolverines, after walloping Duke's Blue Devils 28-14 for their third victory in as many non - conference ventures this season, gave the impression of a reasonably healthy outfit as they pushed the North Carolina visitors around almost at will throughout the entire first half before settling down to a comfort- able, two-touchdown triumph. Team Sick In reality, however, this year's Michigan squad is as sick as a Lenny Bruce punch line, and any *try KYER MODEL LAUNDRY 627 S. Main 814 S. State and Cleaners 601 E. William 1023 E. Ann NO 3-4185 I r SIC FLICS I doubter need only pore over the team's medical lists or visit the locker room to have this fact brought painfully home. Accidents and injuries began to hamper the Wolverines even be- fore they took the field for the opener against UCLA less than six weeks ago, and when the steady decrease in personnel, especially among the ranks of the interior linemen, persisted from one game to the next, Head Coach Bump Elliott was moved to note somberly that "injuries will be a key factor in determining our offensive and defensive units." Efficiency Down But the stream of wounded play- ers to the sidelines continued, and last Saturday saw Michigan even more crippled than Elliott must have contemplated as tackle Jon Schopf, end Scott Maentz, and fullbacks Bill Tunnicliff and Ken Tureaud joined the list of tlse out of action or operating at much less than full efficiency. Schopf and Tureaud, in fact, didn't event take the field, suffer- ing respectvely from a shoulder injury and a pinched leg muscle. The latter is not expected to play against Illinois. While Michigan was able to withstand these; losses without a collapse, as well as the impaired efficiency of Tunnicliff, Maentz, who was utilized only on spot oc- casions, and linemen Todd Grant, John Minko, and Lee Hall, the team would desperately like to have some of its injured guns back for the upcoming games. After their initial scrimmage for this weekend's Big Ten tilt with Illinois, the Wolverines heard Coach Don Dufek's report of last Saturday's Illinois-Purdue game. Pracice Notes Illinois, also hampered by a rash of minor and major injuries, fought valiantly against the erratic Boilermakers before succumbing 23-9. Intent on improving their conference standing by notching what would be their first victory after six disheartening losses, the Illini are expected to be "no push- over." Highlighting last week's game for the losers was dangerous half- back Cecil Young, who broke an Illini record by returning a Boiler- maker kickoff 96 yards for his team's lone touchdown. Chandler Shaken Quarterback Bob Chandler, whose talents, given the chance, VOTE VOICE JEFFREY, MAG I DOFF, McELDOWNEY, ROSS PAID ADVERTISEMENT Read and Use Daily Classifieds' came to light against the Blue Devils last Saturday, continued to look fine, although shaken slightly when running a practice play Monday. Chandler, whose football for- tunes depend greatly on his sensi- tive left leg, indicated pleasure at his "chance to play a major portion of the game for the first time since last year's Oregon game, before my injury," aided by quarterback Dave Glinka in directing Michi- gan's aerial attack throughout much of the Duke game. Chandler complete oneaof three passes during his spot appearances, a ten-yard pass to end Bob Brown in the second quarter. Two series of downs before he had attempted a 40-yard strike to halfback Jack Strobel near the right sideline, but the pass was slightly overthrown. He also showed no reluctance for running, trying several quar- terback sneaks when his receivers were covered. Big Ten Shines The trio of Wolverine victories over UCLA, Army, and the Blue Devils boosted the Big Ten's over- all record against outside opposi- tion to 16 wins, 5 losses, and a single tie. In these 22 games, con- ference teams have outscored their less fortunate opponents by a 438- 221 margin. When the two conference cellar- dwellers, Indiana and Illinois, are disregarded-which Michigan has no intention of doing this weekend -the league's record against non- members jumps to 15-3-1. As a result, all of the remaining con- ference teams, Wisconsin excepted, have achieved some degree of prominence in -national ranking polls. Ohio State's win over Iowa and Minnesota's upset of Michigan State moved both teams ahead of the Spartans in the rankings. 4 ;.. .4 A -Daily-Fred Shippey COME TO PAPA-It looks like Duke halfback Dean Wright (28) is about to make a somersaulting catch of Walt Rappold's fourth-quarter pass against Michigan Saturday. But Wolverine defenders Frank Maloney (56) and Paul Raeder (in background) have broken up the play. Wright had caught two key passes in Duke's second touchdown drive three series of downs before. Detroit, San Francisco Miss Chance To Advance in NFL By BILL BULLARD The title race of the Western Division of the National Football League tightened up last Sunday as the first and second place teams, Green Bay and Chicago, were de- feated. By tying 20-20 at Kezar Sta- dium, San Francisco and Detroit "All I have to do is flyto St.Louis and back and then I'm initiated?" l ~~ies" ING t. GA C UN TER S 0C ,GFRID SELECTIONS We told you so. For the first time this season the score of the Michigan game has decided the Grid Picks winner. Well, not quite. It's worse than that. For the first time in memory we have an exact tie, a dead heat, between two pickers, Eugene Gambis, 6350 Abington, Detroit, and Joseph Kotler, 333 E. Ann, Ann Arbor. They both had 16-4 records and missed 28-14 the Michigan score by nine points each, Gembis guessing 26-7 and Kotler picking 36-13. Henry Yee also got 16 right but missed the score by 15 points. Gembis and Kotler can shoot crapps at The Daily Building to determine the winner of the tickets. To enter this week's contest for two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre, now showing "Breakfast at Tiffany's," bring or send in your choices by Friday midnight to Grid Picks, Michigan Daily, 420 May- nard, Ann Arbor. THIS WEEK'S GAMES each missed the opportunity a victory would have given them of climbing within one game of first place. But the tie left both teams one and one-half games behind the Packers which is not an impossible gap to close in the next six games. Even fifth, place Baltimore, just two games from first place, has a chance at least to tie the leader by the close of the season. Tough Schedule Green Bay has to face San Fran- cisco, Detroit, and the tough New York Giants in three of its last six games. Any one of the four teams below the Packers are cap- able of moving into the first spot if the Packers falter. In the case of the Lions and the 49ers, they can aid their cause by defeating Green Bay themselves. The 49ers or the Lions could have really set themselves up for a title bid by winning Sunday., Both teams received the results of the other NFL games as their late-starting west coast game pro- gressed. They knew that Green Bay had been blasted 45-21 by the Balti- more Colts and the second place Chicago Bears had been nipped 16-14 by the Philadelphia Eagles. Gunfight in Frisco.. A battle between the "scatter-! gun" offense of ,the Lions and the "shotgun" offense of the 49ers went to Detroit in the first half by the score of 17-0. It looked like a far different game than the 49-0 beating the 49ers gave the Lions in their first meeting. San.- Francisco got back six points when Abe Woodson ran back a Yale Lary punt 80 yards for a touchdown in the third period. Their second touchdown came in the last quarter after a Jim Ninow- ski pass was intercepted on the Lion 15-yard line. The extra point rhade the score 17-14. Tommy Davis tied the score at 17-17 with his 34-yard placement with 1:05 remaining in the game. Nino Moves Lions It seemed that a tie was certain unless Lion quarterback Ninowski could engineer a quick scoring drive. And that's just what he did. In 39 seconds he moved his team 63 yards to the 17-yard line of the 49ers by completing four passes. Then Jim Martin came off the bench to put his toe into a 24-yard boot that sailed through the up- rights for a 20-17 Lion lead. Twenty seconds remained on the clock when the Lions kicked off. But two passes from; John Brodie to J. D. Smith for 22 yards put San Francisco in position to tie the game again. Davis kicked the 41 - yard three - pointer and the game was tied 20-20 with four seconds left. Before the Lions could start another play, time had run out. Pro Grid ae Standin gs NFL WESTERN DIVISION Gree Ba L T' Pet. PF PA reen Bay 0 .750 243 113 Chicago 5 3 0 .625 155 141 Detroit 4 3 1 .571 126 168 San Francisco 4 3 1 .571 197 128 Baltimore 4 4 0 .500 175 198 Los Angeles 2 6 0 .250 133 180 Minnesota 1 7 0 .125 135 226 EASTERN DIVISION W L T Pct.PF PA Philadelphia ' T 1 0 .875 195 125 New York 6 2 0 .750 199 16 Cleveland 5 3 0 .625177 162 St. Louis 4 4 0 .500 149 139 Dallas 4 4 0 .500 134 177 Pittsburgh 3 5' 0 .375 153 142 Washington 0 8 0 .000 62 228 A 21 GREAT TOBACCOS MAKE 20OWONDERFUL SMOKES! AGED MILD. BLENDED MILD-NOT FILTERED MILD -THEY SATISFY *.I 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. MICHIGAN at Illinois Minnesota at Iowa Michigan State at Purdue Ohio State at Indiana Wisconsin at Northwestern Notre Dame at Pittsburgh Dartmouth at Columbia Duke at Navy Arkansas at Rice Stanford at Southern Cal. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Princeton at Harvard Clemson at South Carolina Georgia Tech at Tennessee S. Methodist at Texas A&M Nebraska at Iowa State, N. Carolina St. at Maryland Oklahoma at Missouri Kentucky at Vanderbilt Oregon State at Washington Baylor at Texas E rl ppY1 Mf ,3+ a; s r t : t r 1/fnprecelented Bright futures in data transmission at W. E. New engineers with initiative who can meet Western Electric's high standards are offered many exciting career opportunities with our company in data processing development work as it relates to communications. For example, Western's engineers-working closely with Bell Telephone Laboratories-have solved development and manufacturing prob- lems connected with the Bell System's new DATA-PHONE Data set (made by Western Electric). DATA-PHONE service lets business machines, such as computers, "speak" to each other in a language of numbers and symbols over existing telephone communication networks. This represents a tremendous boon to business; and consequently, it is estimated that some day there may be more machine talk than people We need high-caliber, forward-thinking en- gineers now to help us. transform these plans into realities or to work with us in scores of other key communications areas. Your future, the future of Western Electric, and the future of America's comiunications-could well de- pend on your first career connection. Challenging opportunities exist now at Western Electric for electrical, mechanical, industrial, and chemi- cal engineers, as well as physical science, liberal arts, and business maors. All qualified applicants will re- ceive careful consideration for employment without regard to race, creed, color or national origin. For more information about Western Electric, write College Rela- tions, Western Electric Company, Room 6106, 222 Broadway, New York 38, New York. And be sure to arrange for a Western Electric interview when our 11 9POOr~'Cp(~auid.ie i &'hi t I 4A aia ri I AAAOMl0R 1 I 11 II 11