THE MICHIGAN DAILY :lliott Starts Timberlake, Patchen They helped make a major advance in medical technology ! j By TOM ROWLAND Bump Elliott's charges fly off to Minneapolis this afternoon, graced with a 1-2-1 season mark, an eighth place seat in the Big Ten, and two new starters on the open- ing line-up. In the annual battle for posses- sion of the time-honored Little Brown Jug, the Wolverines are still in quest of their first conference victory, a fractional win picked up via a 7-7 tie with MSU being the sole cellar-saving salvation. Bob Timberlake gets the start- starting call at quarterback, the third Michigan signal-caller to get the first string nod this .fall, and junior Brian Patchen moves into the center spot vacated by injured Tom Cecchini. Timberlake's brief, two-TD per- formance last weekend against Purdue, his first major action of the year due to a shoulder injury, gave the Franklin, Ohio, junior the top Wolverine passing percentage 1 with 10 completions out of 16 at- tempts. Timberlake also scored both tallies personally, placing him second only to end John Hender- son in scoring. The Wolverines will be without the services of "fire-guy" Tom Cecchini, sophomore center who will miss the rest of the season after leaving the Purdue game last Saturday with torn cartilage and ligaments at the knee. Patchen moves up into the first-string spot, and junior letterman Jim Green gets the number two post. Patchen, a 5'11", 210-pounder from Steubenville, Ohio, was list- ed as fourth string center at the beginning of practice drills this fall, but quickly moved into the second-team slot. "Brian made all his improvements before our schedule began," Elliott comment- ed yesterday. "He's played a lot for us already this fall behind Cec- chini-he'll move into a first- string linebacker spot on defense as well as offensive center." Elsewhere, Elliott will go with the same starting unit that faced Purdue a week ago. Bill Laskey and Jim Conley will be at the ends, but offensive spe- cialists Craig Kirby and John Hen- derson will undoubtedly see plenty of action, especially if the weather is dry and the Wolverines take to the air. Besides leading Michigan in scoring with 18 points, Hender- son js also the top receiver with 13 completions for 166 yards and three touchdowns. Tom Keating and Bill Yearby at the tackles, and captain Joe O'- Donnell and Rich Hahn at the guards rounds out the starting forward wall. The Wolverines are 217 pounds-per-man up front; Minnesota will have a 211-pound average. In the backfield, Jack Clancy and Dick Rindfuss remain at the halfback spots and Mel Anthony is at fullback. GRID,,SELECTIONSI Don't try your luck. Contrary to popular belief, there is more to picking winners than luck. If you can be skillful enough to outwit all the other entrants, you will win two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre, now showing the "L-Shaped Room." ' Just turn your one entry into The Daily at 420 Maynard St. be- fore 9 p.m. tonight and you'll have a chance at all the marbles. In groping for a guest selector who will not embarrass the Daily sports staff by beating all of the knowledgable scribes, we have come up with Wolverine Club President Mervin (Mangy) Sharfman. Mangy promises that "I'll be sure to cancer any team I pick." THIS WEEK'S GAMES Consensus Picks in CAPS (Consensus: 59-41-,590), ..yet there's not an "M. D." in the house BRIAN PATCHEN ... moves up Wolverine Season Statistics MICHIGAN First Downs 58' Rushing 29 Passing 26 Penalty 3 Rushing Net Yards Rushing 474 Number Rushes 155 Yards Per 'Attempt 3.06 Passing Net Yards Passing 503 Passes Attempted 72 Passes Completed 38 Passes had intercept. 5 TD Passes 4 Ave. Gain per Comp. 13.21 Completion per cent .528 Total Offense Net Yards Gained 977 Number of plays 227 Ave. Gain per Play 4.30 PuntingI' Number 23 Ave. Dist. 35.8 Punts Had Blocked 0 Kick Returns' Yards Pu'ts Ret'd. 120 Yds. Kickoffs Ret'd. 112 Ttl. Yds. Kicks Ret'd. 232 Fumbles Total Fumbles 11 Bali Lost By 6 Penalties Number 14 * Yards Penalized 135 OPP. 70 32 33 5 513 178 2.87 752 83 49 4 4 15.31 .591 1265 261 4.86 23 38.2 0 21 157 178 5 219 Anthony' Bay Chandler Chapman Clancy Dodd Dehlin Evashevski O'Donnell Quist Rindfuss Rowser Sparkman Wells Timberlake Evashevski Timberlake Chandler PASS Conley Clancy Laskey Hoyne Henderson Kirby Kindfuss Rowser l; O'Donnell Rindfuss Stagg Prichard O'Donnell Timberlake Henderson Laskey' Rindfuss Anthony Totals Opp. Totals RUSHING Tries Net 39 115 1 0 '13 -61 1 75 18 70 1 5 13 52 20 52 1 50 2' -1 24 117 5 20 5 10 5 25 8 17' PASSING Tries 23 16 33 Comp. 12 10 16 S RECEIVING No. Yds. 3 51 3 45 7 105 1 19 13 166 7 81 2 23 Z , 13 PUNTING No. Yds. 17 616 4 147 1 15 Avg. 2.95 0.00 -4.69 5.00 3.88 5.00 4.00 2.60 50.00 -0.50 4.87 4.00 2.00 5.00 2.13 Yards 154 133 216 Avg. 17 15 15 19 12.9 11.5 11.5 6.5 Avg. 36.2 36.8 15.0 29.0 TP 16 17 18 6 6 6 59 72 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. MICHIGAN at Minn. (Score) ILLINOIS at UCLA Mich. St. at N'WESTERN Ohio State at WISCONSIN IOWA at Purdue Cincinnati at INDIANA Pittsburgh at NAVY Oregon State at SYRACUSE Rutgers at PENN DUKE at North Carolina St. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Louisiana State at FLORIDA MISS. STATE at Memphis St. MISSOURI at Iowa, State Rice at TEXAS Washington at OREGON Boston Coll. at AIR FORCE NOTRE DAME at Stanford' Texas Tech at SMU BAYLOR at Texas A & M WYOMING at Utah These six men were members of a team that developed an x-ray system so advanced that, even with exposure to x-radiation reduced by 80%, images come out much sharper on the diagnostician's viewing screen. By bring- ing to the task the unique talents, experience, and educational background of each member, this team of experts has made it possible for radiologists and phy- sicians to do a better job of medical diagnosis. Of these six men from General Electric's X-Ray Department, Milwaukee, four have degrees in engi- neering, one majored in physics and math, and the sixth in economics. Not one was trained primarily in medical science-although, of course, their Depart- ment works closely with the medical profession. Nor did any of them anticipate, when in college, that their major subjects would be put to use in providing improved tools for diagnostic medicine. But they did recognize - as their record shows- that better-thar- average performance could qualify them for challeng- ing jobs with a forward-looking company like General Electric. There are hundreds of such teams at General Elec- tric today. Their make-up varies, and almost every field of specialization, technical and non-technical, is rep- resented somewhere in the Company. The projects are just as varied: nose cones for missiles, desaliniza- atomic fuel. 1 tion of sea water, computers,or power plants to squeeze more electricity from a pound of coal or a gram of Women Face EMU Today The Michigan Women's Field Hockey team travels to Ypsilanti this afternoon for varsity and re- serve games with the Eastern Michigan squad. Last Saturday the team slumped from its great performance of beating Michigan State on October 12 by losing one game and tying another. Playing without several key players, the Wolverines lost to Central Michigan, 2-0, and tied Kalamazoo, 1-1, at Mt. Pleasant. The Ann Arbor Field Hockey team, with several Michigan play- ers, travels to Cleveland on Sat- urday for Inter-Sectional matches. Performances of players on all the squads will be evaluated to choose two teams of Great Lakes All- Stars to compete in a national tournament. NHL SCORES Detroit 2, Chicago 2 (tie) New York 2 Boston 0 The more than 36,000 college graduates at General Electric comprise one of the largest and most varied pools of talent in the nation. But the Company's future is, in many ways, wrapped up in people still in school and college. As projects increase in size and com- plexity, so will the need for able young people. People who demonstrate, through their college record, the best use of their educational opportunities, who know the meaning of excellence, who understand the dif- ferences between specialization and nartoWness, breadth and shallowness. Such people, working to- gether, will make up the teams of the future, and be the architects of what we call progress. The team (left to right): Jerry E. Rich, Georgetown Col- lege, Ky.,'53; Robert J. Mueller, Marquette,'44; William A. Mayer, Univ. of Calif.,'47; John P. Kelley, R.P.I.,47; William G. Waggoner, West Va. Univ., '33, Pratt Inst., 37; Arthur Pruneau, Univ. of Vermont, '52. l7*gress IS Our Most /mP017ntProdct GENERALSE L ECTRIC 1 SCORING TD 1 2 3 1 1 1 9 10 29 PAT 0 5 0 0 0 0 5 7 SPORTS STAFF SELECTIONS MERVIN SHARFMAN (Guest Selectors, 67-33-.670)-Michigan, Illinois, Mich- gan State, Ohio State, Iowa, Indiana, Navy, Syracuse, Rutgers, Duke, Louisiana State, Mississippi State, Missouri, Texas, Washington, Air Force, Notre Dame, Southern Methodist, Texas A & M, Utah. JIM BERGER (Associate Sports Editor, 62-38-.620)-Michigan, Illinois, Mich- igan State, Ohio State, Iowa, Indiana, Pittsburgh, Syracuse, Pennsy, Duke, Florida, Mississippi State, Missouri, Texas, Oregon, Air Force, Notre Dame, Southern Methodist, Baylor, Utah. TOM ROWLAND (62-38-.620)-Minnesota, Illinois, Michigan State, Wiscon- sin, Purdue, Indiana, Navy, Syracuse, Penn, Duke, Louisiana State,. Mississippi State, Missouri, Texas, Oregon, Air Force, Notre Dame, Southern Methodist, Texas A & M, Utah. TOM WEINBERG (61-39-.610)-Michigan, Illinois, Northwestern, Wisconsin, Iowa, Indiana, Pittsburgh, Syracuse, Penn, Duke, Florida, Memphis State, Mis- souri, Texas, Oregon, Air Force, Notre Dame, Southern Methodist, Baylor, Utah. CHARLIE TOWLE (61-39-.610)-Minnesota, Illinois, Northwestern, Wiscon- sin, Purdue, Indiana, Navy, Syracuse, Penn, 'Duke, Florida, Mississippi State, Missouri, Texas, Washington, Air Force, Notre Dame, Southern Methodist, Bay- lor, Wyoming. MIKE BLOCK (Associate Sports Editor, 60-40-.600)-Michigan, Illinois, Northwestern, Wisconsin, Iowa, Indiana, Navy, Syracuse, Rutgers, Duke, Louisiana State, Mississippi State, Iowa State, Texas, Washington, Air Force, Notre Dame, Southern Methodist, Baylor, Wyoming. DAVE GOOD (Sports Editor, 59-41-.590)-Michigan, Illinois, Northwestern, Ohio State, Iowa, Indiana, Navy, Oregon State, Penn, Duke, Florida, Mississippi State, Missouri, Texas, Oregon, Air Force, Notre Dame, Southern Methodist, Baylor, Wyoming. STAN KUKLA (58-42-.580)-Michigan, Illinois, Northwestern, Ohio State, Iowa, Indiana, Navy, Syracuse, Rutgers, Duke, Louisiana State, Mississippi State, Missouri, Texas, Washington, Air Force, Notre Dame, Southern Methodist, Bay- lor, Wyoming. BOB ZWINCK (Contributing Sports Editor, 58-42-.580)-Minnesota, Illinois, Northwestern, Wisconsin, Iowa, Indiana, Navy, Syracuse, Rutgers, North Carolina State, Florida, Mississippi State, Missouri, Texas, Oregon, Boston College, Notre Dame, Southern Methodist, Baylor, Wyoming. PERRY HOOD (56-44-.560)-Michigan, Illinois, Northwestern, Wisconsin, Purdue, Indiana, Navy, Syracuse, Penn, Duke, Louisiana State, Mississippi State, Missouri, Texas, Oregon; Air Force, Notre Dame, Southern Methodist, Texas A & M, Wyoming. BILL BULLARD (55-45-.550)-Minnesota, Illinois, Northwestern, Wisconsin, Iowa, Indiana, Navy, Syracuse, Penn, Duke, Louisiana State, Mississippi State, Missouri, Texas, Oregon, Air Force, Notre Dame, Southern Methodist, Baylor, Wyoming. GARY WINER (55-45-.550)-Michigan, Illinois, Michigan State, Ohio State, Iowa, Indiana, Navy, Oregon State, Rutgers, Duke, Florida, Mississippi, State, Missouri, Texas, Oregon, Boston College, Notre Dame, Southern Methodist, Bay- lor, Wyoming. LLOYD GRAFF (53-47-.530)-Minnesota, UCLA, Michigan State, Ohio State, Iowa, Indiana, Navy, Oregon State, Penn, North Carolina State, Florida, Memphis State, Missouri, Texas, Washington, Air Force, Stanford, Southern Methodist, Baylor, Utah. Koufax Wins Young Award BOSTON MP-Strike out sensa- tion Sandy Koufax-the Los An- geles Dodger lefthander who al- most lost a finger and his base- ball career a year ago-is the first unanimous Cy Young Award win- ner as the major league's out- standing pitcher. Koufax overwhelmed the selec- tors as he did opposing batters, sweeping all 20 votes cast by the designated committee of the Base- ball W r i t e r s' Association of America. Now five kinds of Chevrolets for all kinds of people! MISS AFFLERBACH'S GOLDEN JUBILEE: HURRAH! Y OU have heard us mention Miss Revera Affierbach who has been Forelady here at Eagle Shirts since 1918. It is not often that one sees such allegiance, and we appreciate it. Also, she has been very nice to allow us to bandy her name about in ads, books, etc. So we would like to proclaim something to honor her and also give us another excuse to bandy her name: The Afflerbach Golden Jubilee Year. * Now, ordinarily this wouldn't occur until 1968, but why wait until the last moment? Besides, we have already struck a medal (see above). The cloth in the shirt upon which the medal is hanging is also named after her: Afflerbach Cloth. It is made in Switzerland to her specifications, which are 20% wool and 80% cotton. Her reasoning is interesting. She wanted enough wool to make it very soft, but _enough cotton to make it light and washable. Any more wool than that and it's not a shirt so much as a nice, if bulky, garment for woodchopping or other hearty activities. * Additionally, it is mothproof; if for no other reason than that no moth would be willing to go to all that work for such scant nourishment. Afflerbach Cloth is the moth equivalent of pomegranates. The Affierbach Jubilee Shirt comes, complete with medal as shown, in solid colors (flame red, midnight navy, loden green, winter white, a^e Y fYY Yl1/1l}A.TT T IY" rYTT 't7- !"ITTIlV Tt Pl'r "M -"-L 1 ".. '