THE MICHIGAN DAILY nexperience Plagues EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the sixth article in _a series covering the Big Ten teams. Next-Michigan State. By DALE SIELAFF Coming off a mediocre 3-3-2 season, the Iowa Hawkeyes are in the midst of a rebulding pro- gram which Coach Jerry Burns hopes will bring them back to the champion status they enjoyed in the late '50's. The- squad is composed mainly of sophomores and juniors, with 18 of 29 lettermen returning from last year's team. Among the 11 men lost are Wally. Hilgenberg Iowa's stand-out guard; kicker Jay Behind these two veterans Roberts, and quarterback FreC Coach Burns must rely on soph- Riddle. omores. Tom Knutson, 6'3" and Gary Snook, who shared the sig- 218, and Dalton Kimble, at 5'11", nal-calling la'st fall with Riddle 165, are expected to fill in of- appears ready to take over thE fensively, while defensive special- team on a full-time basis. Snook ists Dave Moreland and Larry Mc. a 6-1,, 180-pound junior, hit on Dowell are termed "solid" by 34 of 90 pass attempts, and net- Burns. ted 667 yards. Behind Snook, the quarterback ranks are thin. Twc sophs, Dave =Bonior and Steve Wel- ter, are still untried, but will have to spell Snook during the coming season. The ineligibility o' top soph prospect Dave Dirkx haEr added to the already serious quar- terback problem. Missing Halfbacks At halfback, the Hawkeyes lost two of their stalwarts in Paul Krause and Lonnie Rogers. Roger: was the second leading ground gainer for the Iowa squad, while Krause was a defensive specialist. Junior returnees Gary Sifnpson and Karlin Ryan, at 5'11", 184 and 5'10", 185, respectively, are being counted on to man the of- fensive halves. Ryan rushed for a 4.4 average on 17 attempts last fall, while Simpson averaged 2.8.1 Fullback Gap The graduation of top rushei Bobby Grier leaves a gap in the fullback spot. Junior Karl Noon- an and 181-pound senior Bob Le- Zotte, are slated to run fullback While both men lettered, neither was used extensively last fall. Grier's 406 yards in 98 attempts led the Hawkeyes. in both depart- ments, and Coach Burns cites the fullback post as one of his big- gest trouble spots. Iowa is well-manned at the end posts, and the return of five vet- erans should give Snook some ex- perienced targets. Top end for the; Hawkeyes is Captain Tony Giaco- bazzi. The 6'1", '213-pound senior was the top receiver last fall, and is expected to be a steadying in- fluence this year. Playing oppo- site Giacobazzi at left end is 6 Hours open MON. -- SAT. from 8:30-5:30 Kr f Major League Standings l! I I near Kresge's -nd- AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct.' New York 93 59 .612 Baltimore 90 64 .584 Chicago 90 64 .584 Detroit 80 73 .523 Los Angeles 78 77 .503 Cleveland 76 77 .497 Minnesota 76 77 .497 Boston 69 85 .448 Washington 60 94 .390 Kansas City 55 97 .362. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled TODAY'S GAMESj New York at Washington (n) Baltimore at Cleveland (n) Chicago at Kansas City (n) Boston at Detroit Minnesota at Los Angeles (n) NATIONAL LEAGUE GB W L Pt. GB - Philadelphia 90 64 .584 - 4 Cincinnati 86 66 .566 3 4 St. Louis 86 67 .562 3 13% San Francisco 85 -68 .556 4% 16 Milwaukee 79 73 .520 10 17 Pittsburgh 77 75 .507 12 17 Los Angeles 75 78 .490 14% 25 Chicago 70 82 .461 19 34 Houston 64 90 .416 26 38 New York 51 100 .338 3732 YESTERDAY'S RIESULTS L'hicago 4, Los Angeles 3 Milwaukee 5, Philadelphia 3 St. Louis 4-4, Pittsburgh 2-0 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Milwaukee at Philadelphia (n) St. Louis at Pittsburgh (n), San Francisco at Chicago Los Angeles at Houston (n) Cincinnati at New York (2, t-n). Theater 1_ This is the time to have our experts ready your car for winter. Avoid the rush. Our Service Dept. Authorized new car dealer' TRIUMPH, VOLVO FIAT, CHECKER, ., . } ' . e ar:A>. : : , ,,., : : "a y t > i'4k .. fr f t ' . }* } Y }: 9 4 : < ."., r qv f t}, t } to}. r. . .. ,. k y yt " . ", . > k l , .Y t Wet grounds and poor footing hampered performers in yester- day's fraternity outdoor track meet, but the results were pleas- ing to Sigma Alpha Epsilon. SAE took three first places to help them capture the intramural' team championship. Phi Delta Theta took second with 181/2 points, seven points behind. Alpha Tau Omega also took three first places but was able to do no better than third in the overall stand- ings. Defending champ 'Sigma Phi Epsilon could do no better than fourth. A big man for SAE was John Artz who took a first in the broad jump with a leap of 20'3". Artz' also grabbed a fourth in low iur- dles. SAE's other winners were Dan Steigal in the shot put and Dick, Kimble in the pole vault. The finishers in the 65-yard high hurdles and the 100-yard low hurdles were identical. ATO's Dave Molhoek was first, followed by John Clawson of Lambda Chi Alpha and Ted Barrett of Sig Ep. ATO's other first place was picked up in the 100-yard dash where Barney Crouse won in a time of 10.5. (Consensus in caps) 1. Air Force at MICHIGAN 11. Ohio U. at PURDUE (score) 12. CLEMSON at N. Carolina St. 2. Northwestern at INDIANA 13. Kentucky at MISSISSIPPI 3. ILLINOIS at California 14. USC at OKLAHOMA 4. Idaho at IOWA 15. Lehigh at PENNSYLVANIA 5. MICHIGAN ST. at N. Carolina 16. Utah at MISSOURI 6. SMU at OHIO STATE 17. Kansas at SYRACUSE 7. NEBRASKA at Mninesota 18. Rutgers at PRINCETON 8. Boston College at ARMY 19. LSU at Rice 9. BUFFALO at Cornell 20. Edinboro St. at SLIPPERY 10. Notre Dame at WISCONSIN ROCK i 'f, " ,5;y : ' i ry BILL BULLARD (Sports Editor, 16-4-.800)-Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa, Michigan State, Ohio State, Minnesota, Army, Buffalo, Wisconsin, Purdue, Clem- 'son, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Syracuse, Princeton, LSU, Slippery Rock. TOM ROWLAND (Associate Sports Editor, 16-4-.800)-Michigan, North- western, Illinois, Iowa, Michigan State, Ohio State, Nebraska, Army, Buffalo, Notre Dame, Purdue, Clemson, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Lehigh, Missouri, Kansas, Princeton, Rice, Edinboro State. CHARLIE TOWLE (Contributing Sports Editor, 15-5--.750)--Michigan, In- diana, Illinois, Iowa, Michigan State, Ohio State, Nebraska, Boston College, Buffalo, Notre Dame, Purdue, Clemson, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Kansas, Princeton, LUS, Slippery Rock. GARY WYNER (Associate Sports Editor, 12-8-.600) -Michigan, Northwest- ern, Illinois, Idaho, Michigan State, Ohio State, Nebraska, Army, Buffalo, Wis- consin, Purdue, Clemson, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Syra- cuse, Princeton, LUS, Slippery Rock. DAVE MAGLOTT (Last Week's Winner, 17-3--.850)-Michigan, Indiana, Illi- nois, Iowa, North Carolina, Ohio State, Nebraska, Army, Buffalo, Wisconsin, Purdue, Clemson, Mississippi, Oklahoma, Pennsylvania, Missouri, Syracuse, Princeton, Rice, Slippery Rock. a:i X4 i I I e Came lhair Sweaters ffromEngland 'us sweaters of four-ply pure camel har § mae in England. Fully ashioned wi h smart saddle shoulders. E over, ntural camnel, only $2750 igu , atral caml, nly$3250 'fit 9l ± Af like V skint AMERICA'S FINEST JEANS Since 1850 TODD'S is, your Campus Headquarters for LEVI' all sizes - all colors I f LEVI S-T-R-E-C-H 'White' LEVI'S LEVI Slimfits 4 LEVI Sta-P.rest * LEVI Pre-Shrunk Jeans 0 LEVI-Super-Slims LEVI Heavy Duty Corduroy Slimfits I i I UI I