WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1964 THE MIC~~ U f £A m nA r K K i11L' 1 M~IEfI1VLAmT #ffhATT - I Iowa 'Bombs' Threaten Blue By SCOTT BLECH Noonan lettered behind Paul "Ban the Bomb" appeared on Krause, Iowa's leading scorer, last nuBanothepBombrdsppnarhd Ol season. Noonan has grabbed 51 numerous placards on the Ohio passes for 806 yards this year to State campus two weeks ago. shatter the former Iowa season F p I: The Buckeyes were off to Iowa mark (36 for 587) set by Jim Gib- to try and stop the devastating bons in 1957. Giacobazzi has passing attack which has ruled caught 25 passes and O'Hara 27. the Big Ten. Iowa usually has Noonan as a This week Michigan is aiming wide flanker with Giacobazzi at to halt the Iowa passing attack tight end and O'Hara at split end. which is keyed around Gary Nourse and sophomore Dalton Snook. Snook is third in the coun-I Kimble usually lineup behind try in passing, having completed Snook in the running back posi- 130 passes for 253 yards and sec- tions. ond in the country in total offense Kimble Top Rusher with 1,804 total yardage. Kimble, with 48 points, is second "Iowa basically uses a pro-type in Big Ten scoring to Bob Timber- offense," explained Coach Jocko lake. He also leads all Iowa rush- Nelson, who witnessed the Hawk- ers with 275 yards gained in 62 eye losses to Ohio State, 21-19,1 carries. The 166-pound sophomore and Minnesota, 14-13. missed the Minnesota game with a Noonan Leads Receivers leg injury and thus weakened the Snook's favorite receivers are Iowa ground attack. The Hawk- flanker back Karl Noonan and eys, lacking a powerful back, have ends Tony Giacobazzi and Rich depended upon Kimble's speed to O'Hara. Scatback Craig Nourse balance their passing attack. also figures in the pass receiving Kimble is expected to play Satur- department after gnaring a Snook day. aerial to complete an 87-yard "The defense is similar to an touchdown play againct Minne- Oklahoma defense with five line- sota Saturday. men, two linebackers, two backs, and two rovers," Nelson said. The "Hawks," as the rovers are called, shift according to the offensive ofverines formation. Junior Ivory McDowell and Terry Ferry play the roving P Lpositions. Top i a io Replace All-America Linebackers Senior Del Gehrke and sopho- I11 R.hmore Dan Hisabeck perform the R ushing1 linebacking chores for the Hawk- eyes. The two have the difficult task of replacing graduated All- By The Associated Press America linebackers Mike Reilly and Wally Hilgenberg. The two, in Going by the book next Satur- Nelson's opinion, have done an day's game between Michigan and adequate job although he was Iowa will be a contest between quick to add that it is rather dif- grind it out football and air power. ficult to match the work of the Latest NCAA statistics, which two All-Americans. include last Saturday's games, Two former Michigan prep show that the mighty Wolverine stars anchor the defensive line. ground game has maintained its Former Detroit fullback Phil position as the nation's top rush- Deutsch is at one tackle. Flint's ing offense. Michigan is reeling Bob Mitchell, 5'10", 223, holds off 256.7 yards a game on the turf. down the other tackle spot. Mich- igan athletes also flood the of- The Hawkeyes, however, rank fensive unit. Giacobazzi ishfrom second in passing yardage and are Farmington a n d Kimble and also eighth in total yardage. Nourse from Flint. Punter Mickey Bump Elliott's charges, who ses is a native of Gladstone and BikdumpElliotsa rges,25 whodsoffensive tackle Bob Ziolowski paie uI , totafrug e255rdefens hails from Detroit De LaSalle last weekend, are number five in High School. total offense, averaging just over Practice Notes 384 ard a gme.spend most of the time this week Michigan's rushing total just trying to contain the Iowa pass barely edged out Bowling Green ing attack and stop the stunting which is running for a total of "Hawks." Yesterday, defensive 249.8 yards every Saturday after- halfbacks Dick Wells, who is re- noon. placing injured Dick Rindfuss, The Wolverine ground game is Rick Volk, and Rich Sygar went centered around Bob Timberlake through an extensive workout who leads the Big Ten in scoring against an Iowa-type passing with a total of 66 points. game. Gerry Mader and Bill Keating alternated at John Yanz's Tulsa, lead by Jerry Rhome, right guard spot. Keating also tops the country in passing offense worked with Bob Mielke at left and total offense. guard on the first defensive unit. SCRIBE DECLARES: Decries Football As Sadistic Sport -Daily-Bruce Taylor IOWA QUARTERBACK Gary Snook flees from Michigan end Bill Laskey in last season's Michigan-Iowa game, a 21-21 tie. Snook, who is second in the country in total offense, constitutes a powerful passing threat in the forthcoming game at Iowa City. GRID SELECTIONS Rumors that all of the Grid Picks winners to date have been related to members of The Daily Sports Staff have been circulating lately. We feel that these nasty innuendoes have been started by some unsuccessful Grid Picks entrant. The integrity of the Sports Staff is, of course, above reproach. Just ask last week's winner Maud Bullard. So, please disregard this idle gossip. You can win even if you're not related to a member of the Sports Staff. All you have to do is pick up an entry blank at The Daily office, 420 Maynard St. Entries must be returned to The Daily by midnight on Friday, only one entry per person, please. The weekly winner receives two tickets to the Michigan Theatre, now showing "Send Me No Flowers." All weekly winners become eligible for the grand prize to be awarded at the end of the season. You're looking at the intelligent product of one week's work. (Some might be in your campus library.) They're technical bulletins written by some very talented scientists and engineers at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory. JPL people write over 500 such documents each year. Documents with titles like "Evaporation Effects on Materials in Space," and "Simple Guidance for Deep-Space Booster Vehicles." Pretty heady stuff. But then designing spacecraft to reach the Moon and planets is a pretty head.y assignment. And it takes a lot of bright people to make it happen. Where do these bright people come from? Better colleges and universities around the country. Yours, for example. Why not sign up for an interview with a JPL man? Besides working at the most fascinating job in the world, you'll also have lots of good books to read. JET PROPULSION LABORATORY 4800 Oak Grove Drive, Pasadena, California "An equal opportunity employer." Jet Propulsion Laboratory is operated by the california Institute of Technology for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration. ON CAMPUS INTERVIEWS: Contact University Placement Office for Appointment November 12 & 13, 1964 THIS WEEK'S GAMES 1. MICHIGAN at Iowa 2. Purdue at Minnesota 3. Northwestern at Ohio State 4. Wisconsin at Illinois 5. Michigan State at Notre Dame 6. Oregon at Indiana 7. Air Force at Wyoming 8. Alabama at Georgia Tech 9. So. Methodist at Arkansas 10. Colorado at Kansas 11. Brown at Harvard 12. Baylor at Kentucky 13. Mississippi at Tennessee 14. Missouri at Oklahoma 15. Oregon State at Stanford 16. Pittsburgh at Army 17. Texas A&M at Rice 18. UCLA at Washington 19. Texas at TCU 20. Georgia at Auburn .1 STUDE TSI! 'I LONDON (P)-A leading Brit- ish sports columnist wrote yester- day that American football is "the world's worst game" and totally unsuitable for high schools and colleges. J. L. Manning of the London Daily Mail made his comments in a dispatch from Chicago. He re- corded the 37th death in American football this season-an Alabama high school footballer who died Monday. Source of Manning's 37 fatal- ities this season is not known. Both the Associated Press and the National Football Coaches Asso- ciation agree that the total is 24. Only in America "I know it is the world's worst game because no country outside the United States will play it and I hope they never will," Manning wrote. Manning is known as one of Britain's most outspoken sports writers. He has often attacked professional boxing as an inhu- mane sport. He compared American football with British Rugby Union-a game played with 15 men on a side with a similar, egg-shaped ball though less pointed at the ends. But, Manning added, American football is played "with a senseless crudeness without equal in any of the world's seven forms of foot- ball." The article said the United States is the most sporting nation in the world. Then it added: "Yet the fact remains that the country, with the highest standard of living, which can afford to pay professional clubs and college teams $28,280,000 annually for televising this lethal game, tragic- ally has the highest standard of dying in the world of sport. "So American football is a sad affair on two counts. It has this frightening death and injury role among high school and college footballers and it is helping to isolate the greatest sports playing nation from the rest of the world." Soccer generally is regarded as the most universal of team sports. 10 GAi E SPECI, L *'I. .. 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