TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1963 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE CF.VF.V TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5,1963 THE MJCHIE~AN DAILY PAEU' ~ rtlL k zTA 4 Elliott Commends Defense on HaltingCats' Attack WB"Probably the biggest reason Besides the defensive line and Advocates of the old adage, "It why the secondary played as well backfield receiving praise, Elliott ?.N ' .=ttakes a good defense to stop a as it did, Elliott remarked, was commented on the defensive ends. good offense," have recruited an- "They played a beautiful game. a:: other ardent believer in Michi- because they were just playing Northwestern has been running 4}fgan's football coach Bump Elliott. wide all year, so they didn't sur- "I think the whole team played prise up with those outside plays." a real good ball game, especially The Wildcats junior halfback Dick the defense," Elliott commented . . McCauley was injured in last and then repeated his last three week's contest against Michigan xwords. State so Northwestern ran their Labelled as another test foi the senior speedster Willie Stinson. L Michigan secondary, Tom Myers Stinson did most of the running Northwestern's passing ace, found around the ends when he could, paing fody but Wolverines Bill Laskey and "_-. :: ' ,,',..- : > ...., the going rough most of the day. t, Jim Conley permitted him only The Wolverine line continually nim n 1 carries. aadsr nine yy sosn 4 ard int 1heardies caught Myers behind the line ofr n scrimmage beforehe even had an g No Interference opportunity to look for his re- JAh One of the key plays in the cyiers. Mersng wond peosng 4h4 .g. . defdefenseae occurfreinte sond perh-4 yards rusng. rn thodist's iod with Michigan ahead 7-0. 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That play sure helped us out of a hole." Myers attempted another pass on fourth down, but it too went in- complete and Michigan took pos- session of the ball. Tallies Twice End John Henderson scored twice in the contest and Conley once, with Henderson's two tallies coming on some nifty running. Elliott commented, "We always} knew John was a pretty good run- ner, he just hasn't had the op- portunity to demonstrate it much before this." Henderson's first touchdown was early in the second half when he picked off one of Myers' aerials and raced 23 yards to paydirt. Henderson had been billed an offensive specialist all year, but Elliott corrected this. "Henderson is used mostly on offense, but he practices defense every day and he's been in on defense in every game this year." Michigan's third score occurred in the same period as Henderson took a pass from quarterback Bob Timberlake, side stepped two Northwestern defenders, and raced 23 yards for the score. It ap- Conley Catches The Wolverines' final six points came in the fourth period as Tim- berlake combined with Conley for a 23-yard pass play. Conley gi'ab- bed the ball on his finger tips and went in untouched. North- western's Mike Buckner was de- fending on the play and made no effort to catch Conley. Elliott con- cluded, "It appeared that Buck- ner either thought Jim couldn't reach the ball or that once he did have it he would step out of bounds as he was just straddling the line." DICK RINDFUSS ...stalwart at safety Student & Faculty FLIGHT HEADQUARTERS " Expert flight instruction " New Cessna aircraft * Safety-inspected planes " Economy with efficiency " Comfortable lounge * Pleasant atmosphere " "Snack Patio" " Ground School, YM-YWCA --CALL US NOW- Ask for Dan Nelson, Don Carter, or Mary Ann AVIATION. INC. Municipal Airport NO 3-9321~ 1209 S. University Officials Ask For Changes NEW YORK (P) - Cliff Mont- gomery, captain of Columbia's 1933 Rose Bowl champions, said :yesterday that Eastern college football officials are preparing to recommend that the goal posts be restored to the goal line, side line coaching be legalized and the sub- stitution rule be changed. Montgomery, an executive in the international division of a' publishing company, keeps his hand in football by officiating on weekends. He is a field judge. "For the first time, as far as I know, the officials are getting to- gether to recommend s o m e changes in the rules," Montgom- ery told the members of the New York football writers association. "We are just getting our ideas together but there seems to be a strong feeling that tie goal posts should be back on the goal lines. Those new goose neck posts elim- inate the possibility of injury. We also think the substitution rule should be changed a little so that they can get one man in there at any time. SMontgomery said the officials from the six Eastern chapters in New, York, Syracuse, Boston, Pittsburgh, Baltimore and Phila- delphia would draw up recom- mendations to be forwarded to Asa Bushnell, Commissioner of the Eastern College Athletic Confer- ence. Bushnell, in turn, would be asked to pass them on to the rules committee of the NCAA for consideration at its meeting in January. GRID SELECTIONS John Krauskopf should be merry, merry as he was the winner of last week's Grid Picks contest and received two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre, which is currently showing "Mary, Mary." John won with an impressive (to some) 17-3 record. We of The Daily defy him to do it two weeks in a row. Much thought, cogitation, consideration, deliberation, and skill- full, experienced, premeditated guile went into the choosing of this week's games, and upon examining them, you will agree that there is little probability of skillfully deciding more than three or four without the assistance of a coin. So hurry to The Daily at 420 Maynard and fill out an official, quasi-official, or non-official entry blank with your selections and drop it into the battered, sickly gray box by 9 p.m. Friday, If you are not sure that all of your picks are the best, and you do not want to be recognized for fear of being ridiculed, feel free to disguise yourself as anything intelligent enough to circle a winner. THIS WEEK'S GAMES PITCHING FOR POWER: Mets Deal Craig for Altman NEW YORK () -- Encouraged by their success in the trading mart last year, the St. Louis Cardinals pulled off another play- er deal yesterday-their fifth in less than 12 months-acquiring pitcher Roger Craig from the New York Mets in exchange for out- fielder George Altman and minor league pitcher Bill Wakefield. The trade, first of any signifi- cance since the close of the base- ball season, was expected to bene- fit both clubs. St. Louis, with the best hitting club in the National League, was beaten for the pen- nant by the Los Angeles Dodgers largely because of a pitching shortage, Craig is expected to fill that void, both as a starter and reliever, He demonstrated he could do both adequately last year de- spite his 5-22 won and lost rec- ord with the last place Mets. New York was woefully weak on attack last season. Altman is in position to provide some of the much-needed punch if he can re- turn to the form that made him one of the National League's most respected batters before the Cards acquired him from the Chicago Cubs last winter. The 30-year-old left-handed slugger batted only .274 in 135 games with St. Louis in 1963. But he hit .303 and .318 as a Cub in 1961 and '62 respectively, driv- ing in 170 runs with 49 home runs. Wakefield, a 22-year-old hope- ful, who attends Stanford Univer- sity during the off-season, was 4-10 at Tulsa and Atlanta last season but he comes well recom- mended. MICHIGRAS E A E S T S N 7:30 P.M. SUN., NOV. 10 UNION BALLROOM 1. MICHIGAN at Illinois (score) 2. Minnesota at Iowa 3. Michigan State at Purdue 4. Northwestern at Wisconsin 5. Penn State at Ohio State 6. Oregon State at Indiana 7. Dartmouth at Columbia 8. Princeton at Harvard 9. Pittsburgh at Notre Dame 10. Maryland at Navy 11. Clemson at North Carolina 12. Auburn at Miss. State 13. Georgia at Florida 14. Texas Christian at La. State. 15. Arkansas at Rice 16. Kansas at ;Nebraska 17. So. Methodist at Texas A&M 18. Baylor at Texas 19. UCLA at Air Force 20. California at Washington Vairs, 1 i. Rugby Club Triumphs The Michigan Rugby Club de- feated Wisconsin 13-3 Saturday. Alan McLean scored twice for Michigan and Doug Mead once. A penalty kick accounted for the lone Wisconsin score. The victory brought the club's season record to 1-1-2. Two games remain. Distinctive Haircutting FOR PEOPLE WHO CARE!! " 8 Hairstylists * No Waiting try Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theater hate ggour, e I you drive an MG 1100 after you've bought another small car. For MG-1100 isn't "another" small car. It's got crosswise engine for more room, front wheel drive for better handling, luxury finish be- yond comparison with other economy cars. Don't hate yourself. Drive the. MG-1100 now. 1100 Sedan 1964 MODELS NOW IN STOCK OVERSEAS IMPORTED CARS, INC. 331 S. 4th Ave. 6 IT REALLY DOESN'T GROWCON TREES .. . S-but money does grow when it's in " an Ann Arbor Bank savings account. Your savings will grow rapidly with Ann Arbor Bank's 312 per cent inter- est paid on all, savings. Why not stop -v, in today at any of Ann Arbor Bank's ECUMENICAL FACULTY-GRAD LUNCHEON I r t t TUESDAY, November 5th, 12:00 U.M. International Center (Students 35 cents; others 50 cents) SUBJECT: SYMBOLS-EMPTY OR FULL I III I I I