THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 29. I THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER 20. 1~ i, -- f 1.1 LLLf1Y -% LvvV p w Jtah State Leads Nation n Total Yardage Gained ,I,> By The Associated Press Such traditional football rival- ries as Army-Navy, Oregon-Ore- gon State, Utah-Utah State and Oklahoma - Nebraska will have more at stake than victory, na- tional attention and area pride in the next two weeks. National championships in total offense, rushing and scoring will hang in the balance. Latest NCAA statistics show Utah State holding a one-point edge over Navy in scoring, both with a game remaining. The Utags have scored 294 points in nine games to the Middies' 293 in the same number. They are the only major college teams which have averaged better than 30 points a game. Utah State also is the total offense leader, averaging 402 yards each game. Utah State takes on Utah this Saturday, and the Army-Navy game is Nov. 30. Oklahoma and Nebraska will be Statistics TOTAL OFFENSE G Plays Yds. 1. Utah State 2. Wichita 3. Ariz. State 4. Nebraska 5. Navy 6. Pittsburgh 7. Cincinnati 8. Oregon 9. Baylor 10. Air Force 9 8 8 9 9 8 9 9 8 9 604 504 500 606 606 539 569 560 553 584 3,618 3,075 2,914 3,222 3,221 2,853 3,180 3,157 2,785 3,067 Avg. 402.0 384.4 364.3 358.0 357 9 356.6 353.3 350.8 348.1 340.8 Avg. 270.2 253.9 252.3 249.0 247.8 233.7 253.6 231.6 229.8 225.4 fighting it out for the Big Eight Conference championship Satur- day, and the national rushing title also will be at stake in this one. Nebraska and Oklahoma are running 1-2, with the Cornhuskers leading the Sooners by 16:3 yards a game, 270.2 to 253.9. It will be Nebraska's finale but Oklahoma will have one more game, against Oklahoma State the following week. Oregon State leads the nation in touchdown passes with 17 and Oregon is third with 15, one less than Mississippi. The Oregon teams play Saturday at Eugene. Baylor is the forward passing leader, with second-place Tulsa less than a yard behind. Each team has two games remaining. NVCAA Ban On Hoosiers MIay -Be Lifted INDIANAPOLIS W) - The pos- sibility that Indiana's powerful swimming team may be permitted to compete in the National colle- giate meet in March, after being barred for three years, was raised Tuesday by Walter flyers, NCAA executive director. Byers said the matter of Indi- ana's four-year suspension by the NCAA, which is due to end next April 28, likely will be taken up at the NCAA Council meeting in January. Indiana. has dominated colle- giate swimming in recent years without being able to prove it with NCAA trophies. Under colors of the Indianapolis Athletic Club, it has won the AAU outdoor team championship seven straight years. Indiana was barred from post- season competition and special events for four years in April of 1960 on charges of illegal recruit- ing of football players. It was charged some illegal offers to prospective students were made while Indiana already was under one-year probation in 1958. The six cases cited by the NCAA covered excessive offers of aid from alumni, including bonuses up to $800. Indiana's four-year suspension did not prevent its athletes from trying out for the 1960 Olympic team and its swimmers brought home three gold medals from Rome. HIG TEN PRACTICE: 'Stop Lewis' Says Illinois Coach Elliott By The Associated Press CHAMPAIGN-Illinois halfback Wayne Strauch was the No. 1 tar- get in yesterday's football practice sessions as the Illini concentrated on him in the role of Michigan State's Sherman Lewis. Strauch, a sophomore, and his mates repeatedly ran through MSU formations from the basic T. "MSU's Sherm Lewis certainly has proven to be one of the na- tion's great backs," Illini Coach Pete Elliott told Chicago football writers by phone from Champaign, Ill. "He is the greatest threat to go all the way that has been in the conference in years. But Lewis has been helped by the Spartans' good balance. At the other half is Dew- ey Lincoln, who also is a speed- ster. At fullback is Roger Lopes, who can go inside or outside and is one of the finest fullbacks in the Big Ten. "They have two quarterbacks, Dave McCormick and Dick Proeb- stle, who get the job done and pose the threat of passing. "We can't permit our defenses to play too much at Lewis, or the others will get loose. We would be glad to force Michigan State to do more passing - but that would take a lot of doing." Illini tackles Archie Sutton and Brian Duniec both showed excel- lent progress from ankle sprains suffered against Wisconsin. * * * Spartans Prepare EAST LANSING-Defense and more defense was stressed at the Michigan State football workout last night. "Defense was our strong point last week," said Coach Duffy Daugherty as he prepared his team to meet Illinois Saturday for a game that will decide Big Ten and Rose Bowl honors. "I'm be- coming more and more aware of the importance of defense." There were several times, Daugherty said, that MSU could have lost to Notre Dame in the game won 12-7 if it had not been for the defense. Daugherty scheduled a typical Tuesday workout with 35-minutes each of offense and defense and then a rehearsal of defensive plays. "Everybody is getting Rose Bowl hysteria," said Daugherty. "They are way up on cloud 16 and dreaming." By LLOYD GRAFF "The higher up you go, the more your rear end is exposed." So gymnastics coach Newt Lo- ken capsuled his outlook for the coming season. His charges are defending NCAA champions and have won the Big. Ten title for three consecutive years. The avow- ed aim of Loken and the team is "number four in '64." But if Loken is going to satisfy his ambitions he will have to find able replacements for two solid gymnasts and a magnificent one who exhausted their eligibility. The able ones gone are Jim Hynds who gathered points in several events and Barry Spicer, who turned in excellent work in floor exercise. Larose Gone Of course, the superb all-around performer, ex-captain Gill Larose is also gone. Larose was perhaps Michigan's greatest gymnast ever -and proved himself to be the finestin college last year as he won first places in two events, high bar andvaulting, and also winning the all-around competi- tion in the NCAA championship. Larose scored points in all events except trampoline and tumbling. He won the Big Ten all-around too. But even with the substantial losses the team has incurred Lo- ken is not spotting his trampoline with tears. He has confidence his Gymnasts Aim for Fourth Straight Title mats are well manned. And well he might. Lascari Captain His new captain is Arno Las- cari, a senior from Sacramento, California, who, though a superb gymnast in his own right, operat- ed slightly in the shadow of La- rose last year. "We expect Lascari to win as many points as Larose did last year and perhaps more," remarked Loken. This projection is not surprising in that Lascari got almost as many points as Larose last year and this year he will not have to com- pete against him. In fact, in the Big Ten meet both won three events although Larose picked up more points in other events to win the all-around. Loken is hoping that the many- skilled Lascari will sharpen his work on the rings and move up in the all-around. The parallel bars and the high bar rank as his specialties. Lascari will not be up to norm for perhaps a month because he sustained an injured wrist in prac- tice a week ago when he fell off the parallel bars. This will mean that he will probably miss the Midwest Open but should be in fairly good form by the Big Ten season. Power in Depth Michigan's power lies in its depth of personnel in each of the various gymnastics events, each a unique test of balance, strength and stamina. " Take tumbling for instance. Michigan's crew of jumping jacks is headed by Phil Bolton and Mike Henderson. "Henderson is looking very good right now and Bolton is looking better after recovering from a bout with mono," said Loken. Bolton finished second in the Big Ten behind the invincible Hal Holmes of Illinois last season, but Holmes has graduated leaving tumbling up in the air. John Hamilton also works on the mats as well as the tramp and in floor ex. Floor ex is his forte as he took the Big Ten and NCAA titles last year. Loken said he was looking "very fine in prac- tice." Dave Brod completes the tumbling aggregation. Safe in Trampoline. In the trampoline Michigan is about as safe as Sonny Liston at a sewing circle. Gary Erwin and Fred Sanders are almost sure bets to take first and second in the event. Sanders won first in the Big Ten and Erwin took top spot in the NCAA last year. This was the pattern of the entire season. On the sidehorse Loken will be The team will have a good stock using Paul Levy along with Las- of newcomers to supplement the cari. Levy finished fourth in the returnees. Alex Frecska, although Big Ten and is aiming to lift his a junior, will get an opportunity status this year. to make a second debut. Last year he injured his wrist early in the season and Loken kept him out for almost its entirety. "Frecska is in excellent shape now. He should give us some more strength in the all-around events and be a strong backup for Las- cari," said Loken. One sophomore who should def- initely add points is Rich Blanton of Denver, Colorado. "Blanton will help us in the rings, parallel bars and floor ex," he went on "and other sophomores like Ned Duke, Don Fillip, John Cashman and Dave Brod will all make a con- tribution to the team." Prepare for First Meet The members of the squad have been practicing since school be- the Midwest Open in Chicago on gan, honing up for the first meet, Dec. 6-7. The best teams in the country will be represented at that meet. It will be a good indication of what is in store later on. Loken envisions Iowa, Michigan State and Minnesota as his principal competitors in the conference with Southern Illinois, California and Southern Cal plus the Big Ten schools as those posing the big- gest threat to Michigan's repeat- ing in the NCAA. -Daily-Jim Lines EASY DOES IT-Gymnast Alex Frecska handles himself with ease on the side horse. Fresca, a junior, will try to aid in Michi- gan's quest for its fourth consecutive NCAA gymnastics cham- pionship. He was unable to compete last year because he broke his wrist early in the season. 4 AP PICKS MSU STAR: Lewis Given Top Back Award 41 RUSHING G Rushes Yds. 1. Nebraska 2. Oklahoma 3. Princeton 4. Kansas 5. Army 6. Air Force 7. Texas S. Ariz. State 9. Cincinnati 10. Syracuse PA 1. Baylor 2. Tulsa 3. Miami, Fla. 4. San Jose 5. Utah State 6. Oregon 7. Wichita 9. Navy S. Mississippi 10. Wisconsin 9 8 8 9 9 9 9 8 9 9 501 462 447 463 504 535 535 351 431 435- 2,432 2,031 2,018 2,251 2,230 2,103 2,102 1,853 2,068 2,029 ASSING Att. Com. Pet. Yds. PerI 266 273 204 230 218 186 157 174 174 205 145 151 105 125 119 100 87 114 95 104 54.5 55.3 51.5 54.3 54.6 53.8 55.4 65.5 54.6 50.7 Game 232.8 232.1 185.0 181.8 181.0 178.0 176.3 175.0 175.4 168.9 By The Associated Press When you've got Michigan State backed up against their own goal line, watch out. Notre- Dame penned the Spar- tans on their 15-yard line in the fourth quarter Saturday, and a 7-6 Irish lead was looking good. Then Sherman Lewis, only 152 pounds, burst all the way for the touchdown that gave Michigan State a 12-7 victory. It was the fifth time this year that Sherman had gone more than 80 yards, and the run earned the senior co-captain of the Spartans Back of the -Week honor in the Associated Press survey. Lewis Scores Twice Lewis, who comes from Louis- ville, Ky., also scored the first Michigan State touchdown. He was the leading rusher for the Spartans with 138 yards and play- ed on defense most of the same. "I don't see how any one man could be any more valuable to any team than Lewis has been to us," said Coach Duffy Daugherty after the game. It was a good Saturday for run- ning backs, elsewhere. Junior full- back Brian Piccolo of Wake For- est led his team to a 20-19 victory over South Carolina, breaking the nation's longest major college los- ing streak at 18. Piccolo gained 140 yards in 21 rushes and start- ed the comeback from a 19-7 deficit with a 16-yard touchdown run. Then he kicked the game- winning extra point. Martha Rambles Paul Martha, Pitt's left half- back, scored on a long run for the second week in a row to start the victory over Army. He had 103 yards on six carries. Fullback Steve Murphy gained 103 yards for Northwestern, more than the entire Ohio State team and had two touchdowns. Sophomore halfback L a r r y Shields scored both touchdowns for Oklahoma against Missouri, one on a blistering punt return, and made two important pass in- terceptions. Two quarterbacks, Terry Isaac-1 son of Air Force and Archie Rob- erts of Columbia, were outstand- ing. Isaacson scored twice, set up three other touchdowns and a field goal and punted for a 50-! yard average against New Mexico. Roberts passed for three touch- downs and ran for a fourth against Penn. Timberlake Mentioned Other nominees: Billy Ezell of Louisiana State; Tom Blanch- field of California; John Torok of Arizona State; Bob Timberlake of MICHIGAN; Sonny Fisher of Mississippi State; Jack McLean of Dartmouth; Armand Baughman ARNO LASCARI ... top performer seems to be running out. / Data-Guides pare down the subject to the important core facts. They con- centrate your final studying efforts. You'll review faster, with less strain -and remember more! I Data-Guides present these facts on permanent, single sheet loose-leaf charts (81"x 11"). No hunting through pages- on Data-Guides, your eyes can sweep in whole chunks of information, and re-scan again and again until the facts are fixed in your mind. # Data-Guides organize the facts for you. You know what is important. You learn and review in a systematic man- ner, as numbers, letters, colors and differing type faces lead you through the subject. 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At discerning stores. ~ rn COLLEGE GRADUATES- TRAINING PROGRAMS LEADING TO INTERESTING CAREER POSITIONS OFFERED BY THE STATE OF MICHIGAN STARTING ANNUAL SALARIES- $5,804.64 and $6,117.84 of Kansas; Fred Duda of Nebras- ka; Rick Norton of Kentucky; Tom Stockton of Texas; Kent Nix of Texas Christian; Larry Jerni- gan of Southern Methodist; Jim Keller of Texas A&M; Gene Flem- ing of Rice and Fred Marshall of Arkansas. Lineman Of the Week Denby Blackwell of Kansas State, an ex-halfback playing for an also-ran,was named Lineman of the Week by the Associated Press yesterday for his key per- formance in a streak-ending vic- tory. The rangy end did a vital two- way job as the Wildcats upset Iowa State 21-10 Saturday, snap- ping a string of 26 straight losses in the Big Eight Conference dat- ing back to 1960. Blackwell a 6-foot-2 183- pound mathematics major from St. Louis, caught a fourt-quarter pass on a 25-yard play that set up K-State's clinching touchdown. Later, he intercepted a pass and returned it 39 yards to the nine, setting up an insurance touch- down. SMU Man Listed Blackwell's closest competitor was Southern Methodist's John Hughes, an earlier AP Lineman of the Week this year. The Mustang guard's clutch defensive work led SMU to a 14-7 victory over Arkan- sas. On a goal line stand that stopped Arkansas on the SMU three Hughes made two tackles and batted down a fourth-down pass in the end zone. Then in the fourth quarter, on a fourth-down-and-two situation on SMU's 10, Hughes brought down the ball carrier a yard short of the first down. Iowa End Standout Guards Eddie McQuarters of Oklahoma and Bruce MacDonald of California and end Ivory Mc- Dowell of Iowa were among other line standouts. McQuarters excelled at pass rushing and also as a blocker as the Sooners trimmed Missouri 13- 3. MacDonald led California's of- fensive charge, made several key tackles and recovered an enemy fumble in the Bears' 35-22 victory against Utah. McDowell nailed Michigan run- ners in the open field twice, avert- ing apparently sure touchdowns, and recovered a fumble on his own two in helping Iowa tie the Wol- verines 21-21. Butkus Mentioned Other nominees - ends Jerry Kelley of Rice, Billy Truax of Louisiana State, Jim Ingram of Baylor and George Norman of Cornell; tackles Brian Schweda of Kansas, Dennis Wipfrey of Kansas State and Gerry Philbin of Buffalo; guards Jeff Ware of Pitt, Bob Brown of Nebraska, Olen Underwood of Texas, Ronnie Moore of Texas A&M, Steve Gar- mon of Texas Christian and Jus- tin Canale of Mississippi State; centers Dick Butkus of Illinois, Chris Stetzar of Arizona State and Ronnie Caveness of Arkansas. SSCOBESj AREAS: Administrative Analysis Agricultural Budgetary Control Chemistry Economic Research Employment Counseling Forestry Game and Fish Biology Geology Highway Planning Institutional Management Insurance Examining' Land Appraisal Library Science Mathematics Parole and Probation Personnel Methods Personnel Technical Processing Physics Property Appraising Psychology Purchasing Right of Way Buying Vocational Rehabilitation I Michigan Civil Service is now recruiting applicants for its current examination program. Trainee ;positions in- volving on-the-job development programs will be filled from this examination. Variations in majors required according to class. Write to the MICHIGAN CIVIL SERVICE COMMIS- SION, LANSING, MICHIGAN, 48913, for examination applications. An equal opportunity employer. BENEFITS AVAILABLE TO STATE OF MICHIGAN EMPLOYEES: Pay rates well in line with those of other employers Regular salary increases Transfer and promotional opportunities State contributory group health and life insurance pro- grams-State pays major share ri i 'i NBA Cincinnati 127, Detroit 102 Boston 12ยข, New York 98 San Francisco 129, St. Louis 96 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Greenville 67, Drury 57 So. State 71, E. Texas Baptist 62 Arkansas State 90, Lambuth 68 Indiana Tech 122, Spring Arbor 95 COLLEGE SOCCER Penn State 4, Pittsburgh 2 "i