r THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY. OCTOR . A- IqR - - .._.-.-._._. _..- ._ . V. _. .. a...a- a, t '.11xl# . a 'S.SS4 v I > w~ SUUU 1~lI~fA l'Tll1 C' b AlRTANS COME TO TOWN: aw Injury May Sideline Lincoln C+' By GARY WINER Michigan State coach Duffy Daugherty has pasted together a formidable football machine this year, but the first cog came un- done last Friday night-left half- back Dewey Lincoln suffered a fractured jaw and in all probabil- ity will not play in Saturday's game against Michigan. Replacing Lincoln currently is junior Harry Ammon, but it ap- pears likely that the other two backfield men, Sherm Lewis and fullback Roger Lopes will carry much of the extra burden. The Spartans have been build- ing their hopes this season mainly around their two fleet halfbacks who have made havoc with Michi- gan the past two years. In the 1961 contest at Ann Arbor, State won 28-0 behind the running of Lincoln and fullback George Saimes. In that contest Lincoln picked up 60 yards on the ground in seven carries, with Saimes scor- ing one touchdown that afternoon. Ground Gainer Last year, with the Wolverines bowing by the same score, Lincoln charged again, this time picking up 138 yards in seven carries.n Although Lincoln's loss will no doubt raise more hopes in the Wolverine camp, the Spartans' big gun Lewis will be right back in his same role as the Wolverine killer. Lewis has only managed to ac- cumulate 57 yards in 13 attempts in the last two games, but he has scored no less than four times- half of State's tallies in those en- counters. Last year at East Lan- sing he ran wild with three scores. Daugherty had Lincoln running from the fullback slot last spring as he lacked talented material at that position, but Lincoln was too light. The Spartan mentor came up with senior Roger Lopes, 215 pounds, to do the job. Michigan coach Don Dufek, who scouted Michigan State last week- end, described their backfield as "fast and dangerous in any game." QB Filled Daugherty apparently has solved another one of his big problems, that being the quarterback posi- tion. With the graduation of Pete Smith and the shifting of Charlie Migyanka to defense, Daugherty has come up with an untried sophomore, Steve Juday. Dufek remarked, "Juday has been doing a good job for them as both a good passer and runner. Of course it's not fair yet to at- tempt to compare him with Navy's Staubach." Further complications hit State last year when six of their seven starting lineman walked out with diplomas. The only returning let- terman is right end Matt Snorton. "As far as I'm concerned," Du- fek continued, "they've got an All-America candidate in Snorton. Their other end, Tom Krzemien- ski, is also very good." Michigan State opened their season with a 31-0 drubbing of North Carolina, andnarrowly missed upsetting Southern Cal - fornia Friday night. The Spartans lost that game in the fourth quarter, 13-10. S* m* The propaganda and crying towels are showing up as usual, four days before this Saturday's encounter between Michigan and Michigan State. From East Lansing, MSU's coach Duffy Daugherty: "Michigan is tougher on defense than last year. They are big and strong. They will be 20 pounds per man bigger than us up front." In Ann Arbor, defensive back- field coach Don Dufek: "Their line has a lot more speed and is morehaggressive than last year's. I figure that the two lines averagej about the same weight per man."t Michigan averages, 214 pounds per man, while Michigan State tips the scales at 216 pounds per man. l GRID SELECTIONS Did you know that way back in the year 1902 that Michigan played Michigan State in football-and that Michigan won, 119-0? That's right. Grid picks were easy in those days. But this week they're rough. More facts to help you: between the years 1898 and 1935 Michi- gan scored 817 points while Michigan State tallied 38. Fascinating? You bet. Now try this: the last time Michigan beat MSU was back in 1955 when the Wolverines triumphed 14-7, and that loss was the only one State suffered all year-they went on to beat UCLA in the Rose Bowl. With all this background the first game on this week's picks should be a snap. Pick the others and get them into the Daily by Friday at 9 p.m. One entry per person is all you get. The winner picks up a pair of tickets to the Michigan Theatre, now showing "The VIP's." And as for that Michigan-Michigan State game: you see that you must enter the score with your picks. While we propose objectivity and loyalty, we do not suggest a 119-0 guess-for either team. THIS WEEK'S GAMES i 1. MSU at MICHIGAN (Score) 2. Louisiana St. at Miami (Fri.) 3. Syracuse at UCLA (Fri.) 4. Army at Penn State 5. Columbia at Yale 6. Indiana at Iowa 7. Minnesota at Northwestern 8. Illinois at Ohio State 9. Purdue at Wisconsin 10. Air Force at Nebraska 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. So. California at Notre Dame North Carolina at Maryland Oklahoma at Texas Duke at California Oregon State at Washington Texas Christian at Tex. Tech Oklahoma State at Colorado Villanova at Boston College Stanford at Rice Houston at Texas A&M i t i* 4~' ALPS BAVARIAN-STYLE ELBOW- PATCHED CARDIGAN FOR YOUNG MEN You liked the look of this handsome sweat- er so well, it's back as one of the season's smartest styles. It's the Bavarian - styled cardigan with buttons (8 of them) all the way up to the sharp mandarin crew neck. And it's patched at the elbows, too, in a smooth contrasting suede. Alps tailors it in soft brushed wool with constrasting wool trim (matches the suede patches) up the front and around the neck, Natural, 'lovat; sizes S, M, L, XL . It Mail and phone orders--665-886 t Add 4% Mich. safes tax I MENACE FROM MSU-That's Sherm Lewis, Michigan State halfback who will be leading the Spartan attack this Saturday against Michigan. Standing only 5'8" at 154 pounds, Lewis is re- garded.as probably State's best ball carrier, best pass catcher, best defensive back, et al. Chi Psi Trips BTP In Playoff Overtime LIE r ARTS By JERRY OUDERKIRK Chi Psi, Chi Phi and Zeta Beta Tau were victorious in first round fraternity football action yester- day at Ferry Field. In the highlight of the after- noon previously unbeaten Chi Psi tied Beta Theta Pi in regulation play and then went on to win in overtime. Chi Phi overpowered Theta Delta Chi 18 to 0 'as quar- terback Dave Voigt sparked the Chi Phis to a first-half three- touchdown lead. In the third game of the after- noon Zeta Beta Tau quarterback Jim Bronner never had a chance to show his talents. The men of Phi Sigma Kappa didn't appear and thus forfeited the game. The sparkling Chi Psi combina- tion of Tom Brown to Tom Sween- ey proved a little too much for , ALL DEGREE LEVELS Dick Lebrasseur and hisBeta teammates. The Chi Psi duo ac- counted for both touchdowns via the air route. Regulation play was fought on even terms with neither team managing to dominate the action. Beta quarterback Lebrasseur hit end Lionel Endley late in the second half to tie the score 8 to 8. With three and one-half minutes remaining Chi Psi was unable to score again and the game went into overtime. The ;Brown to Sweeney pair connected once again in the over-, time play to put the game on ice for Chi Psi. On the second play from scrimmage Brown lofted a long one and Sweeney pulled it in. The Beta's were unable to score on their remaining two downs and the game ended 14 to 9. Semifinal action in the frater- nity league will start next week. Chi Psi is favored to cop the crown, but will face strong opposi- tion. " Analytic Research " Language Program o Computer Programming " Mathematics q Statistics FRED PETERS. Master Barber Class of 1965 invites you to the U-M BARBERS next to Kresge's ALL ACADEMIC MAJORS NEEDED Training in Specialized Techniques Are Provided by NSA Liberal Arts Majors (except mathema- ticians) are required to take the PRO- FESSIONAL- QUALIFICATION TEST given on 26 OCT. and 7 DEC., 1963 Applications for 26 October tests MUST BE IN NOT LATER THAN 14 OCTOBER See your COLLEGE PLACEMENT OFFICER now for a Test Bulletin containing further details. Since no test is required for math majors, they should contact their college placement officer STEVE JUDAY ... soph QB I I Fire Run The Los Angeles to Detroit Olympic torch bearer runner will pass through Ann Arbor this Friday morning. The run is being sponsored by the De- troit Olympic Committee as part of their campaign to se- cure the 1968 Olympics for Detroit. The run began last week. The torch bearer will come down I-94 and exit at Jackson Avenue; then he will proceed along Jackson, down Huron, along Forest and out to Wash- tenaw, proceeding to Ypsilanti. For those who would like to cheer him along, he will appear some time between 4-5 am. OUR ARBORLAND STORE IS OPEN EVERY EVENING TO 9 P.M. PANTS! PANTS! PANTS! 2587 Pairs of Pants I NAVY-LIGHT BLUE-WHITE LODEN GREEN-CRANBERRY SEAL BROWN-SCARLET ROYAL BLUE-AQUA-GOLD BLACK-GREY-LAVENDER i I .. .I 12 BEIGE-YELLOW What are they? OFFENSE: Middies TopStats NEW YORK (P)-Navy traveled by air to and through its venture into the Big Ten last Saturday and firmly established itself as the nation's No. 1 major college football team in passing, total of- fense, and scoring. As Roger Staubach passed the Midshipmen to a 26-13 victory over Michigan at Ann Arbor, Navy came up with these figures released by the NCAA Service Bureau yesterday: Passing-49 of 66 completed for 723 yards, an amazing .742 completion percent- age and an average of 241 air yards per game. Total offense- 1,275 yards, an average of 425 per game, Scoring-105 point for an average of 35 per game. Thus Navy has gained more than half its yardage on passes. Northwestern, second in passing, has averaged 218 air yards a game. Pittsburgh, also pass-minded this season, is second in total offense with a 416.3 yard average for three games. Texas, with 104 points, is the only team other than Navy above 100 in scoring. Only one of last week's national leaders managed to hold it place. That was Princeton on defense against rushing. After two games, the Tigers have allowed only 87 yards on the ground, an average of 43.5. 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