rAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY qArpttnnAv vnvipmawo 9 lea* i C UYhA ~ WVK~a~I AYt1 i~ jv Ed1j~Esfl Z, 1863 Elliott Plans Two-Prong Game Tactics Titles on Line in Key Games By TOM WEINBERG By DAVE GOOD Sports Editor Coach Bump Elliott has been telling newsmen across the Mid- west this week that he has two plans of action to try against Northwestern, w h i c h invades Michigan Stadium at 1:30 p.m. to- The Lineups Northwestern Logan Szczeko Powell Cerne Robinson Pike Burman Myers Stinson Buckner Swingle LE -LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH RH FB Michigan Conley Keating O'Donnell Patchen Hahn Yearby Laskey Timberlake Clancy Rindfuss Anthony day for a game expected to attract 51,000 Homecoming fans. First, he says he wants his de- fensive line to put the big rush on drop-back Wildcat quarterback Tommy Myers. Second, he hopes to have his backfield produce a more diversi- fied offense than it has so far this season. Michigan is nestled in ninth place in the Big Ten with a rec- ord of 0-2-1, while Northwestern has only a slight chance for the conference title, ranking sixth with a 2-2 record after beginning the season as one of the favorites. Overlooks Gift In doing all this thinking out loud before the press, however, El- liott has been overlooking one big advantage that his Wolverines will have going for them today: Northwestern has been touched with the kiss of death this week- The next week, on the Sept. 301 getting a plug on the front cover cover, who but Whitey Ford of the of the nation's leading weekly New York Yankees should demon-I sporting magazine. strate his pitching motion? AndI In an unprecedented show of who indeed should proceed to go accuracy-far outshadowing its out and drop two of the decisions weekly football predictions - the in the World Series to the Los An- magazine has hit for a .500 per- geles Dodgers? centage in September and October, Well, if this is an "on" week hexing three of six sports figures for the magazine, "The North- to appear on its cover. western Line," charging in purple The Dallas Cowboys, who dec- and white across the cover of the orated the Sept. 9 cover, now are Nov. 4 issue, will be the next vic- firmly entrenched in last place in tim. the National Football League's Happily enough for Elliott, this Eastern Division. just happens to fall at the right Put Under Spell d time for Michigan to win a game. x:George Mira, Miami of Florida's Not Counting on Help candidate for All-America honors Ignoring any supernatural aid at quarterback, peered out at read- he might get, Elliott has been ers from the Sept. 23 cover and stepping up work in this week's promptly went his first four games practices for both the defense into the season without throwing and the offense. a touchdown pass. "Sure, we'll rush, but our sec- 21-12 and being held to a scoreless ondary will have to be unusually This afternoon's games will go tie by Memphis State the first, ondry,"wllihavt tso ednuay along way in deciding who will week of the season. i;ag E was quok. win the titles of practically every LSU is out to regain the title Chicago paper this week. "Myers still is the most accurate collegiate conference in the land. before a South regional television thrower in college football. We Down South, Mississippi and audience and a sellout crowd in trowen'tibe le el foorba min-: Louisiana State match perfect Baton Rouge. Mississippi won the won't be able to relax for Southeastern Conference records crown last year, taking it away ute," he added. Myers, who leads the Big Ten for the fifth time in the last six from the 1961 champions, LSU. in total offense, has completed 68 years. Ole Miss has the top de- Elsewhere in the SEC, Auburn, passes in 135 attempts for 1,138 fense in the country, despite los- which is tied for the top spot, is yards and five touchdowns for the ing an unexpected match to Rice, looking for its eleventh straight season. Last week in a 15-7 loss to | Michigan State, however, he made ' R a tF v r only nine completions and five C I times was thrown for losses behind the line of scrimmage. Elliott hopes his line can dup- Over Indian Davis Cuppers licate the Michigan State rush. beter addition, heu twahis of ense BOMBAY, India s tP) - Chuck a virtual unknown in internation- which consisted almost entirely of McKinley and Dennis Ralston, al tennis, in the first match. Mc- quarterback Bob Timberlake and admittedly in fine shape, were Kinley defeated Lall easily 6-3, fullback Mel Anthony in l favored to sweep the opening 6-1 in the Queens Club tourna- week's 6-0losstoMinesot. ter s Davs eCup fnals between mentat London last spring. "What we need to exploit our the United States and India Then Ralston will tackle India's offense to the fullest is a betteri ta No. 1 player and Asian champion, distribution of the run and pass," The winner of the best-of-five Ramanathan Krishnan. The 26- Elliott told a Detroit newsman sev- series which ends Monday will year-old Krishnan defeated Ral- eral days ago, qualify to meet cup-holding Aus- ston at Wimbledon this year 6-3, "One hasn't complemented the tralia in the challenge round at 6-3, 3-6, 12-10. other like it should. We've been Adelaide, Australia, Dec. 26-28. McKinley and Ralston will be able to do one or the other fairly M c K i n I e y, t h e Wimbledon the American doubles combination well, but not at the same time., 1 champion, will meet Premjit Lall, Shn amegicansdonbldantem homecoming win against Florida. Jimmy Sidle will lead the Auburn revenge attack against the team which pulled a 22-3 upset last year on the Tigers and which pulled off a surprising dumping ,; Alabama a few weeks back. In other action, Alabama hosts Mississippi State which will try to rebound from last week's stunning by Memphis State. Georgia Tech and Georgia venture to the At- lantic Coast Conference to meet Duke and North Carolina. In the East, undefeated Prince- ton and Harvard. 2-0-1, are ex- pected to have little trouble stay- ing on top of the Ivy League by beating Penn and Brown. Yale hosts a tribe of Dartmouth In- dians who will be trying to make amends for last week's streak-end- ing defeat by Harvard. In the Big Eight, three teams are currently undefeated with two of them-Missouri and Nebraska -meeting in a must game for both. The other leader, Okla- homa's Sooners, shouldn't have any trouble with the tame Buf- faloes from Colorado. Texas puts its 6-0 record against inconsistent So u t h e r n Metho- dist. SMU defied all logic by beat- ing Navy three weeks ago after losing to the Wolverines who of course had crumbled before Stau- bach's mastery. Baylor, Texas' big competition in the Southwest, puts the nation's top passer, Don Trull, on display before a homecoming crowd against Texas Christian. Out in the Far West, Southern California, preseason wonders but upset victim of Oklahoma and Notre Dame, meets the biggest competition in the Big Six at Seattle a g a i n s t Washington. UCLA, somewhat of a mystery, plays California tonight 'in one of the few significant contests under the lights in the nation. The Stan- ford team that upset Notre Dame last week will need its best to get by Oregon State. In one of the top independent contests, Chicago hosts its version of the service teams' playoff with the Soldier's Field Army-Air Force game. Elsewhere, Penn State meets Maryland, Syracuse hosts tough Pittsburgh, and in one of the biggest games, Navy's Stau- bach will try to break up the Notre Dame secondary at South Bend, ,x BIG WEEKEND: Big Ten Powers Fight For Bowl Opportunity CHICAGO (/,)-November's kill- ing football frost starts setting in today with a full round of Big Ten games. And Rose Bowl hopes could wither for no fewer than three less hardy contenders. Key contests in a program ex- pected to attract a combined at- tendance of 330,000 are Purdue, 2-1, at Illinois, 2-0-1; Wisconsin. 2-1 at Michigan State, 2-0-1; and Iowa, 1-2, at Ohio State, 2-0-1. It is conceivable all three co- leaders-Illinois, Michigan State and Ohio State-could tumble. In this case, Wisconsin and Purdue would be projected into the con- ference lead. The Badgers are in- eligible for a Rose Bowl encore. All title signs favor Ohio State a one-touchdown choice over in- vading Iowa before a capacity 84,000 in the Buckeyes' big bowl. Can't Slip After Iowa, the Bucks meet Northwestern and Michigan, re- bounding out a six-game confer- ence card. However, since a con- ference tie counts a one-half game won and one-half game lost in the standings, just one slip prob- ably would bounce Ohio State out of the Rose Bowl picture. The same applies to Illinois and Michigan State, although the surprising Fighting Illini, ranked No. 2 in the Associated Press na- tional poll, play seven conference games. Michigan State, like Ohio State, plays six. Host Illinois is slightly favored over Purdue, whose sharpshooting Ron DiGravio has developed into the Big Ten's most dangerous quarterback. Purdue also plays seven conference games, as does still formidable Wisconsin. The Boilermaker-Illinois crowd may exceed 65,000. Wisconsin, nipped by Ohio State 13-10 for the first Badger loss in five starts, may prove more than Michigan State can handle al- though an expected Spartan throng of 70,000 waits to be con- vinced. MSU's Sherman Lewis al- most single-handedly upset North- western last Saturday as the Spar- tans won 15-7. still to be decided. On Monday, Ralston will meet Lall in the opening match with the big battle between the two stars-McKinley and Krishnan-coming in the last match. Indian sports writers, realism taking preference over pride, were fearful of a United States sweep. The 6-foot, 170-pound Krishnan, a big man by Indian standards, has the equipment to beat any player in the world on a given day. Court Decides For Survivors LOS ANGELES (JP)-The widow and two small sons of a college football player killed in a plane crash will soon #start receiving $70 a week from the State of California. A court has decidd that Gary Van Horn's death was an indus- trial accident.. He was a member of the 19601 1I -Daily-James Keson UNION TAKES DIVE-The sun was shining yesterday as the Daily cast its big shadow upon the Michigan Union jock-pile in a convincing 12-6 Bier Bowl triumph. Ron "Wahoo" Wilton, with a helping hand and a pat on the back from Bob "The Zephyr" Zwinck, intercepts another Union-to-Daily toss. Losing in the stretch are Bobby "Porky" McKenzie, diving, and stablemate "Lazy Ray" Rusnak, 'tripping him. Such exciting action brought the return of the coveted Little Brown Wastebasket to The Daily, where it will be on special display to- day only. After that it goes back into use. GOOD CONQUERS EVIL: Daily Wins Trash Award from Union California Polytechnic seam which was returning from a game when their plane crashed and burned at Toledo. His widow asked the State In- dustrial Accident Commission for $21,500 in benefits, claiming his scholarship made him a school employe. Scores A -1 AFL Boston 45, Houston 3 NBA Boston 119, Philadelphia 102 (Continued from Page 1) Rowland to Bill "The Bully" Bul- lard for a first down. Two plays later Rowland tossed a pass to his halfback Bob "The Zephyr" Zwinck who then hit Bullard with a pass in the end zone. The con- version attempt failed. Zwinck dropkicked off to the Union. On the Scabs' first play from scrimmage the Zephyr inter- cepted a poorly aimed pass and lightly skipped 60 yards for anoth- er six-pointer. Before you could say Union-League merger the Lib- els were 12 points up. As was expected the Union pan- icked. They sent in President Ray "The Rooster" Rusnak who was dressed appropriately in sweat clothes and a bow tie. Rusnak, whose offensive moves were far less smooth than a lumpy frosty shake, confused the Union enough so that it could manage just two ineffectual plays before the half ended. During halftime, James "Knute" Berger gave an inspiring pep talk to the Libels that ended in the enduring words "win one for Lipp- mann." The Union, on the other hand, discussed ways to bribe the referees. As usual the topic was delegated to a committee. They ended their conclave with the thrilling words, "let's have some organization." The second half started with Daily Editor Ron "Wahoo" Wilton playing end and City Editor Gerry "The Scorcher" Storch at the oth- er end. Zwinck intercepted another Un- ion pass and raced to the Union three. The Daily was then penaliz- ed thirty yards for miniscule tech- nicalities like clipping. The Union finally took over and picked up a lucky score on a pass to Bob "Porky" McKenzie. The extra point attempt failed, of course. The Daily then lost the ball on downs, thanks to a series of biased calls by the refs. A zealous Daily cheerleader aimed a caustic barb at one referee at that point. "Kill the bum for 73 years of editorial freedom," she yelled. The Union showed signs of scabbing out another touchdown but a last second interception by Storch sealed the outcome. So alas, after two years in the Union, the little brown wastebas- ket is home. It is Union madness to think they will ever get it back. t Does a man really take unfair advantage of women when he uses Mennen Skin Bracer? 1 All depends on why he uses it. Most men simply think Menthol-Iced Skin Bracer is the best after-shave lotion around. Because it cools rather than burns. Because it helps heal shaving nicks and scrapes. Because it helps prevent blemishes. So who can blame them if Bracer's crisp, long-lasting aroma lust hannr, to ffec~ft wome n oremarLkly? MiNNaN skin bracer "rs.r w.+..v j i~...:.: iiiru l~lII 1 II