TAE MICHIGAN DAILY ense Worries - ' NOTE: This is the first standout Charlie Burt has been. series examining the forced to quit because of ill health and Brandt will be backed up by only junior Jesse Kaye and sopho- RICK STERN more Dick Wiesener, neither of 's Badgers this year which has much experience. potential but so are Line Candidates 3ig Ten squads. Leading the offensive line can- Sthe basis of the didates are lettermen Lee Bernet, te basis .he 17 John Hohman, Bob Freimuth and termen the Badgers Ernie von Heimburg. Hopefuls considered as a first Mike Sachen, Phil Sobocinski, Dick eat, yet even Coach La Croix, and 244-pound Al Pi- feels that it will be raino also figure prominently in hich to rebuild." Bruhn's plans for '64. ose Bowl win in 1962, After playing host to Kansas s Badgers started off State, the Badgers will try to spoil mr in a row. A 13-10 Ara Parshegian's debut as Notre State paved the way Dame coach. An open date is next feats in the final four and then the team journeys to a fifth place tie. Purdue. A home game against ndouts Gone Iowa and a trip to powerful Ohio consin takes the field State follow. Homecoming at day against Kansas'. Camp Randall Stadium will be 1 be without such '63 Oct. 31 with the Michigan State send Bobby Johnson, Spartans. Wisconsin's schedule y Wojdula and Roger concludes with road games at ers Ken Bowman and Northwestern and Illinois and a left halfback Lou HOI- home contest against Minnesota. adger MVP Jim Pur- Wisconsin is loaded with ques- whom have graduated. tion marks, but if Bruhn finds is All America' end the right answers, the Badgers .ck _ ephat_ t o rh could be a contender this fall. IM Sports Boast Foreign Flair SPORTS SHORTS: Constellation Takes First of Cup S( By CHUCK VETZNER The intramural sports program is designed to meet the needs of athletic minded students-whether they be from Michigan, New York, or New Guinea. The International Center pro- gram meets the needs of students in the latter category. This divi- sion differs from the other pro- grams because of the sports which are offered. Most of the foreign students who come to Michigan have prob- ably never seen a football game before and would certainly have a tough time competing in such a game. The International Center offers competition in soccer, vol- leyball, table tennis, indoor ten- nis, basketball, swimming, bad- minton and cricket. In order to accommodate those students who are familiar with other sports, small social fraterni- ties may invite a few foreign stu- dents to play for their house in the fraternity sports programn. (Any foreign student wishing to take part in this plan is asked to register with the I.M. depart- ment.) There is also a proposal to have physical education majors act as coaches for international teams in basketball and other American sports.. The number of teams competing in the International Center ar- ies from year to year, depending on which countries send students in sufficient numbers to form a team.. In some cases students from several countries will join togeth- er to form one team. The alliances are not guided by political factirs. Two years ago the soccer cham- pionship was won by a group of Afro-Arab students. Points are awarded for each sport and one team becomes the year's sports champion. Each individual on a champion- ship team gets an individual trophy, which is valued quite highly. Recently the I.M. depart- ment received a letter from a box- ing champion in the 1928-29 sea- GRD;~ son. The man, Jack Yuen, who lives in Hong Kong, had lost his By The Associated Press trophy and wondered whether heyd could get a replacement. The I.M. NEWPORT, R.I.-Constellatior Department was glad to oblige. all but sank the British Ameri- The biggest sport for interna- ca's Cup hopes yesterday with ar tional students is soccer which overpowering defeat of the chal- begins this Sunday. The teams, lenger Sovereign in the first race which are divided into two leagues of the best-of-seven series for the of four teams each, play after- old yachting trophy. noons in Wines Field. . The 'white-hulled American A Greek team and a U.S. entry sloop led from start to finislb are the defending champions, but and won by 5 minutes, 34 sec- the real power is Turkey which onds. The Sovereign indicated she has won the title 15 times since was willing to race again today.' 1938. The winning team has its Only on the third leg, a reach name placed on a trophy in the did Sovereign cut into its deficit display case of the Sports Build-;Already trailing by a minute, 54 ing. The trophy was presented to Aeady tr a inte the University back in the 1920's Seconds after the first two legs by an Indian princess, Miss Neil the British challenger cut off six Kantia. seconds. -Thereafter the race settled intc a stately parade under blue skie: as Constellation stretched her leas AFCT11 NS . at every mark. . l THIS WEEK'S GAMES 1 Air Force at Washington (score) 2 Oregon State at Northwestern 3 Kansas State at Wisconsin" 4 Navy at Penn State. 5 Syracuse at Boston College 6 Missouri at Californiaf 7 Oklahoma at Maryland{ 8 Florida State at Miami 9 Memphis State at Mississippi 10 North Carolina State at North Carolina 11 Colorado State at Wyoming 12 Stanford at Washington St. 13 Brigham Young at Oregon 14 Southern Methodist at Florida 15 South Dakota at Nebraska 16 Houston at Auburn 17 Buffalo at Boston U. 18 Citadel at Army 19 Texas Christian U. at Kansas 20 Vanderbilt at Georgia Tech Baltimore Chicago New York Detroit Los Angeles Cleveland Minnesota Washington Kansas City w 88 87 84 77 76 72 73 65 57, 54 L 60 61 59 70 72 72 74 83 90 92 Pct. GB .595 - .588 1 .587 14 .524 l10 .51412 .500 14 .497 14i .439 23 .388 30'/2 .370 33 M aCor League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Decathlon LOS ANGELES - The U.S. Olympic Track and Field Commit- tee selected the three members of the decathlon ,team yesterday for the Tokyo Olympic Games:. Paul Herman, of Santa Barbara Calif., and the Army; Don Jeisy of Oceansile, Calif., and the Ma- rines, and Dick Emberger, also of 'Oceanside and the Marines, were named.. The announcement was made by Art Lentz, assistant executive di- rector of the U.S. Olympic Com- mittee, after two days of com- mittee study since the final trialE. ended here Sunday night. S* s Heavyweight Furor NEW YORK -- The scheduler fight between Doug Jones of New York and George Chuvalo of To- ronto on Oct. 2 now is being billed as a heavyweight elimination bout. and has been changed from 10 tc 12 rounds, Madison Square Gar- den managing ,director Harry Markson announced yesterday. The new billing was approved by Tony Petrocella, chairman o' the rating committee of the Worlc' Boxing Association which strip- ped Cassius Clay of his title Mon- day. The WBA action was taken aft- er Clay had signed for a forbid- W INTERIZING This is the time to hove our experts ready your car for winter. Avoid the rush' Our Service Dept. is tops. H ERB ESTES A UTOMART Authorized new car dealer TRIUMPH, VOLVO FIAT, CHECKER 301 W. HURONI 665-3688 "Serving Ann Arbor Since 1950" den title defense against Sonny Liston for Nov. 16 at the Boston Garden. The WBA's top four candidate. are 1. Ernie Terrell of Chicago; 2. Cleveland Williams of Houston; 3 Floyd Patterson, of Scarsdale, N.Y. and 4. Jones. " " * Mele Out MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL - President Calvin Griffith of the Minnesota Twins said yesterday he' was disappointed in the Twins' showing this year and sounded a; if Sam Mele doesn't have the manager's job cinched for next season. Griffith's views were contained in a question and answer inter- view with Max Nichols of th'e Minneapolis Star. The Twins boss said he has de- cided what he is going to do about the managership next season, bu; added, "I am not going to tell anybody" until probably World Series time or right after. ' Announcing THE OFFICIAL BLOCK ~1 Grid Drills Tighten. As Schedule Nears YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 7, New York 0 Minnesota z, Baltimore 1 Chicago 3, Detroit 2 (10 inn) Boston 8, Kansas City 0 Washington at Cleveland (ppd) TODAY'S GAM1ES Minnesota at Baltimore (n) Los Angeles at New York Chicago at Detroit Washington at Cleveland (2, t-n) Kansas City at Boston NATIONAL LEAGUE "I ' By GIL SAMBERG' For the football team it isa suddenly late in the practice sea- son and their play and attitude. is beginning to tighten. At practice yesterday linemen began to hit with genuine au- thority, clearing out lanes for the hard running of Carl Ward, Mel Anthony, John Rowser, Dick Wells, Rick Sygar, and the rest. Others were pressing for positions on the first three platoons, hop= ing to slhow Head Coach Bump Elliott that certain something which would shoot them to start- ing roles. Visual records ofthe entire session were taken from atop the grandstands of the base- ball field. The defense, which used to sto- ically absorb the onslaughts of ? practicing offense, was keyed u and straining to stop the Blue and Gold offenses cold. Because of this, injuries since Saturday, although minor, have been occur- ring with greater frequency. Dave Fisher bruised his knee at the Saturday scrimmage. Jim Detwil- er started the practice today, but had to retire early because he was slowed by a right ankle which' was bruised yesterday. Dorie Reid also left the field towards- the end of practice with a bloody nose which he received while try- ing to stop a Bob Timberlake run. Timberlake Switched? Very significant too, was the' fact that Timberlake has worr a gold jersey for the past two days. The Blue team is, at the moment, being piloted by Rich Volk, with Wally Gabler and Petr Hollis, also in blue, behind him "We have .made no definite chang-. es as of now," commented Elliott. "We're experimenting in the backfield right now. There may be some changes later this week though." The offensive and defensive teams arc settling on their plays, and practice will become increas-. ingly closed up as the Air Force game nears. Practice passes wil be needed to view the goings-on at; Ferry Field and the Stadium from now on. Asked about specific defensive plays, Coach Bob Hollway would only classify the Wolverines as multiple defense team, saying sim- ply and frankly, "If the Air Force read The Michigan Daily we would lose the game.'" Learn from Pros Last Sunday the Philadelphia Eagles successfully stifled the of- fense of the New York Giants when they used a red-dogging safety to stop Y. A. Tittle's pass- ing, with a defensive halfback filling in the hole which the miss- ing man left. Elliott, asked if the same thing could possibly be used against Navy's elusive Roger Staubach in a few weeks, said "Well first we like to take the games one at a time, and right now we're thinking about Air Force. But we don't have any- thing like that in mind right now. And if we did decide on anything as radically new for us as that, it wouldn't be good strat- egy to tell anyone, would it." During the short scrimmage which usually ends the practice sessions, play was mostly in the running department. John Hen- erson and Steve Smith, the 6'5". 230-pound junior from Park Ridge Ill:, still played the end for the Blue offense most of the time Clayte Wilhite again made a goor; showing at that position for the Gold offense. Yes, football fans, once again Professor Joseph Melnicke of Baylor University has come up with one of the top betting systems in the nation. Coming off a big season, this system should be tough to beat. What about you? Will Vanderbilt beat Georgia Tech? Can Mis- souri top a rough California squad? Now is the chance to display your gridiron knowledge and show all your friends that you really do know something. This week the odds are quite strong in your favor, with only three entries in so far. Remember that each week's winner gets two tickets to the Michi- gan Theatre, which is currently showing "Night of the Iguana." Fol- lowing the ten weekly contests, each winner will be eligible to compete for the season's grand prize. Each student is allowed one entry, and is obliged to pick the score in one game, to eliminate chances for a tie. Blanks for the contest are available at the Daily Building, 420 Maynard, and must be turned in by midnight Friday, or you can mail in your entry. Philadelphia x-St. Louis x-San Francisco Cincinnati x-Milwaukee x-Pittsburgh X-LOS Angeles Chicago Houston x-New York x-Piayecd night WL 88 57 81 63 80 65 79 65 74 70 74 69 7 2 72 66 78 59 88 49 95 game. Pct. GB .607 - .562 6y2 .552 7% .549 8 .514 i3?4 .5I7, 12i/ .500 15 .458 21 .401 30' .340 38 PR ACTICE f Saturday Morning Sept. 19 9:45 A.M. Please Be Prompt! This is our only practice-PLEASE ATTEND-Gate 8 Bring Membership! YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 6, Cincinnati 1. St. Louis 11, Milwaukee 6 (2nd, inc) Philadelphia 1, Houston 0 Pittsburgh at Los Angeles (ine) " New York at San Francisco (inc) TODAY'S GAM4'ES New York at San Francisco Cincinnati at Chicago Phiadelphia at Houston (n) St. Louis at Milwaukee Pittsburgh at Los Angeles 0 VFW HALL 314 EAST IBERTY AIR CONDITIONED FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 18 9-12 P.M. STAG OR DRAG ONE DOLLAR DONATION-REFRESHMENTS f i E I I 'a ARDEN MIESEN'S BAND I Sponsored by Graduate Student Council ".ammmmm#EM###M##mMsmmm# I . ____ i FREE GIFT for male students. at WLL D'S j State St. on the Campus The most practical assortment of fine, nationally-adver- tised products-courtesy of these famous manufacturers. i I G i :'{ : : % :ti} ",: { : is v: : :v ::?", I i d ( :tisi I I 'rr ': f .,.. K N G Y N 14 E Q H F 03 J S R H M E G M I. 5 N N '4, 1 R E S B Jai .f f: i J:' . ri V ' i t } rV 1'M1 J. XX {{ . 4:. R i i r J Sr: c ?'. 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