PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1963 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1963 I, Wide Variety of Tours planned for students only SORBONNE STUDY TOUR 70 days, $1388 including England, Holland, Belgium, France, Spain, Portugal DISCOVERY ADVENTURE TOUR OF EUROPE 76 days, $1295 Many other Student Tours featuring Europe, Israel, Greece and USSR. Ask for Plans and Profitable Organizer Arrangements SPECIALISTS IN STUDENT TRAVEL 1TRAt SINCE 1926 for folders and details SEE YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT or write UNIVERSITY TRAVEL COMPANY Cambridge 38, Mass. Rangers Let Harvey Go In Dispute NEW YORK (P)-Doug Harvey, one of hockey's alltime defense stars, was given his unconditional release yesterday by the New York Rangers of the National Hockey League. The 38-year-old defenseman was acquired from the Montreal Canadiens to become player-coach of the Rangers for the 1961-62 season. He dropped the coaching reins last season to concentrate on playing. Harvey, one of the highest paid stars of the NHL, received an estimated $25,000 salary. keep trim § ARCADE BARBERS NICKELS ARCADES Cagers Face Ball State, Tulane While most of Michigan's bas- ketball fans will be home for the Thanksgiving holiday this week- end the Wolverines will take to the road to initiate the regular 1963-64 schedule against Ball State at Indianapolis. Coach Dave Strack's crew then returns for its Yost Field House debut Monday night, facing Tu- lane. Tip-off time is 8 p.m. The Wolverines ran into a tough Ball State team in the opener last year but won on a second-half rally, 68-58, with center Bill Bun- tin tallying 21 points in his col- legiate debut. Buntin showed the potential that finally gained him All-Big Ten honors last year when he held Ball State star center Ed Butler to only six points. The 6'6" Butler, who averaged 17 points and 17 rebounds a game last winter, is back this year along with three other regulars and five of the top 1962-63 scorers. Scorers Return Guard John Lee returns to the backcourt after picking up 16.7 points per game last winter, and John Heady is back at the for- ward post. Heady led the Cardinal scoring against Michigan with 17 points last year. Tulane boasts strength at the pivot to face Buntin with 6'7" center Bob Davidson, averaging 18 points a game at the close of last season. The Green Wave have a new coach, Ted Lenhardt, after the team compiled a 6-16 record in the Southeastern Con- ference a year ago. Along with Davidson, who pac- ed the SEC in rebounding last season, Lenhardt will have three other starters in Dale Gott and Denny Shoup at the guards and 6'3" Mike Kurtz at forward. Mov- ing in at the other forecourt spot to fill graduated star Jim Ker- V.' By GARY WINER Michigan basketball fans, hop- ing to follow the team "in per- son" this year, received a big jolt yesterday as Don Weir, Althetic Department ticket manager, an- nounced that basketball seating would be somewhat curtailed for, the coming season. Weir remarked that the ticket office "would try to fit in just as many students as possible. I know a lot of people will be disappoint- No Contest The sports editors of The Daily regret to announce that{ due to the death of President Kennedy, resulting in the can- cellation of most of last week- end's football schedule, and due to the Thanksgiving vacation this weekend, the weekly Grid Picks Contest has been termin- ated, and last week's selections are therefore void. Those of you among the peas- ants who wish another attempt at revenge will, unfortunately, have to, as we say in the moth- er country, "Wait 'Til Next Year!" ed with this i'dea, but it's the best we could come up with under the circumstances." Simple Math In simple terms, the mathemat- ics breaks down to this: the max- imum number of people allowed in Yost Field House will be some- where over 7000; of this number, 800 will be the regular season ticket holders (already sold out), and the remaining 6200 places will go to the more than 14,000 ath- letic coupon holders on campus. This means that approximately 8000 students will be left out in the cold for each game. If you're an early riser, you're in good shape, for the distribution system works in your favor. The day prior to each basket- ball game, the ticket office in the Athletic Administration Bldg. at State and Hoover will issue tickets from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., or as long as they last. Each stu- dent may present no more than two athletic coupons, accompan- ied by student identification cards for the same students, in order to receive his basketball ticket(s). Friday for Monday For Monday games, the tickets will be distributed on the pre- ceeding Friday. Last night at the freshman-varsity game at the fieldhouse, the new policy was an- nounced, plus the fact that tickets for the Tulane game next Mon- day will be handed out today. The announcement as a whole brought down a great chorus of boos, especially the part about the two-tickets-per-student limit. Weir said that there would be no preferential seating, no stand- ing room, and no general admis- sion tickets sold for any game. He! cited the fire hazard and "rea-1 sonable comfort" for keeping the attendance down. He also reveal- ed that last year's estimates in the 9000's for some games were greatly exaggerated. All Saturday afternoon games will begin at 2 p.m., except for televised contests which start at 4:30. All evening games begin at 8 p.m. The Duke game on Saturday, Dec. 21, has been rescheduled for 8 p.m. since final examinations are still in progress that after- noon. M. Hall Hurt In Practie CHICAGO (IA) - The Chicago Black Hawks, beaten only once in their past 17 National Hockey League games, had another cas- ualty yesterday when forward Murray Hall suffered a forehead cut from a puck in practice. Hall required 14 stitches over his nose after a puck struck him during a drill for Thursday night's game here with Toronto. Defense stars Elmer Moose Vaske, Pierre Pilote and Wayne Hillman, along with Hall, may see only partial service against To- ronto. Vasko, with a trick knee, missed yesterday's practice. Hillman par- ticipated in his first scrimmage since injuring his knee at Mon- treal Nov. 7. Pilote suffered a broken nose here against Detroit Nov. 20. Limit Basketball Seats I THE SAFE WAYto stay alert without harmful stimulants win's shoes will be 6'5" Fisher. NOVEMBER 26 Freshmen-Varsity, 8:00 30 Ball State George Home Away NoDoz keeps you mentally alert with the same safe re- fresher found in coffee and tea. Yet NoDoz is faster, handier, more reliable. Abso- lutely not habit-forming. Next time monotony makes you feel drowsy while driving, working or studying, do as millions do ... perk up with safe, effective NoDoz tablets. Another fine product of Grove Laboratorie DECEMBER 2 TULANE, 8:00 Home 6 NEBRASKA, 8:00 Home 11 Butler Away 14 WEST. MICHIGAN, 2:00 Home 21 DUKE, 2:00 Home 26-27-28 Los Angeles Classic (3 games) Away Ilinois, West Virginia, NYU, Michigan, Yale, UCLA, Southern Cal, Pittsburgh) 31 DETROIT, 8:00 Home CARDINAL STARTER - Bob Heady is a 6 41" forward who will be slated to see lots of action this year for Ball State, Michi- gan's opponent in the season-opener for basketball this Saturday. Heady underwent a knee operation last year but averaged 12.7 points during the season. FOR BOWL BID: MISU Holds Secret Practice; Illini Set NBA EASTERN DIVISION W L Pet. Boston 12 1 .923 Cincinnati 12 9 .571 Philadelphia 7 8 .467 New York 7 13 .350 WESTERN DIVISION Los Angeles 11 7 .611 St. Louis 11 9 .550 San Francisco 8 8 .500 Detroit 5 10 .333 Baltimore 3 11 .214 GB 4 6 1 2 6 Pro Standings I Have you met our man on campus yet? Better see him soon, if you want to save money and see the world. The Sheraton Campus Representative will give you free a Sheraton Student ID or Faculty Guest Card. With it you can stay at any of 87 Sheraton Hotels round the world at special low discount rates .. . even in single rooms! Save even more with 2 or 3 in a room. Group rates for clubs and teams. Wherever Sheraton is, there's a world of things to see and do: For more information and your ID Card, contact this Sheraton Campus Representative: Michael Margolis, 425 Hill, Apt. 304 Sheraton Hotels a Motor Inns Coast to coast in U.S.A.; in Hawaii; Canada; Nassau; Jamaica; Mexico; Puerto Rico; Venezuela; Tel Aviv, Israel; Tokyo (opening Sept., 1964) 4 11 18 21 25 JANUARY-1964 NORTHWESTERN, 2:00 Purdue OHIO STATE, 2:00 MINNESOTA, 8:00 Michigan State Home Away Home Home Away 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 Don Nelson, Don Carter, or Mary Ann 7W- w- AVIATION, INC. Municipal Airport NO 3-9321 Special To The Daily EAST LANSING-The gate to the practice field was locked again at Michigan State yester- day as the Spartans prepared for their Thanksgiving Day foot- ball showdown against Illinois. Either Illinois or Michigan State will be giving thanks be- fore the day is over Thursday for the Big Ten football title and almost automatic assurance of a Rose Bowl bid. The conference showdown, like most major football games, was postponed from last Saturday be- cause of the death of President Kennedy. No Sellout Enthusiasm for the showdown is building up again. The attend- ance, however, is expected to be well below the 76,000 sellout first predicted. The delay until Thanksgiving resulted in one injury. Illinois Coach Pete Elliott was hit by a player during practice Monday and suffered torn ligaments in his left knee. He is expected to direct strategy from the bench with his knee in a cast. The teams have identical 6-1-1 overall records. Michigan State has the edge in the conference play with a 4-0-1 mark against the Illinois 4-1-1 record and can win all with a tie. Ground Struggle The meeting shapes up as a slug-it-out power struggle of the around. Both outfits have pulver- izing running attacks, only indif- ferent passing, and solid defenses. Michigan State is tops in the Big Ten on defense and Illinois is second. State is the fourth-ranked team in the nation and Illinois is eighth. Both squads have stars sure to be given All-America considera- tion. Dick Butkus, a 237-pounder who calls defensive signals from center, is the heart of the Illinois line. Fullback Jim Grabowski has bulled for 406 yards to lead his team in rushing. Spartan scatback Sherm Lewis, a mighty mite at 152 pounds, has five runs of 84 yards or better and is a constant threat to go all the way. Fullback Roger Lopes has racked up 568 yards rushing. Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 115, Baltimore 113 NFL EASTERN DIVISION W L T Pts. PF PA New York 8 3 0 .727 337 222 Cleveland 8 3 0 .727 282 194 St. Louis 8 3 0 .727 269 217 Pittsburgh 6 3 2 .667 260 223 Dallas 3 8 0 .273 231 296 Washington 3 8 0 .273 225 291 Philadelphia 2 8 1 .200 195 289 WESTERN DIVISION W L T Pts. PF PA Chicago 9 1 1 .900 233 Green Bay 9 2 0 .818 304 Baltimore 5 6 0 .455 220 Detroit 4 7 0 .364 261 Minnesota 4 7 0 .364 248 Los Angeles 4 7 0 .364 159 San Francisco 2 9 0 .182 157 SUNDAY'S RESULTS Mnnesota 34, Detroit 31 Los Angeles 17, Baltimore 16 Chicago 17, Pittsburgh 17' Cleveland 27, Dallas 17 St. Louis 24, New York 17 Green Bay 28, San Francisco 10 Washington 13, Philadelphia 10 NHL W L T Pts. GF Chicago 13 2 4 30 73 Toronto 9 6 3 21 54 Montreal 8 6 4 20 56 Detroit 6 8 2 14 34 New York 5 11 2 12 47 Boston 3 11 3 9 33 SUNDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 7, Montreal 3 New York 3, Toronto 3 Detroit at Boston, postponed SATURDAY'S RESULT Toronto 4, Boston 1 106 1162 1239 218 319 283 322 -Associated Press ZWOLAK WINS NCAA CROSS COUNTRY - Vic Zwolak of Villanova crosses finish line to win the 25th annual NCAA cross country run at Michigan State yesterday with a fast time of 19.35.0. Finishing second about ten yards behind is John Camien of Kansas State Teachers. MSU Places Fifth; 'San Jose State Wins By The Associated Press f__ GA 40 51 54 44 56 52 _ __ i Friday Night, Saturday Night, Anytime . . . Have Your Own ho Oote n an n y ! z 3 S-S 323 S. Main St. When a group gets together for fun and music, that's a hooten- anny! Grinnell's is your head- quarters for .. . GUITARS & BANJOS CLASSIC * FOLK * GIBSON ELECTRIC* GOYA "FENDER EAST LANSING - Sophomore Dick Sharkey helped Big Ten champion Michigan State along to a fifth-place finish in the 25th annual NCAA cross-country run here yesterday. Sharkey, running on his home course, came in tenth in the in- dividual race, while Illinois' Al Carius, who had outsprinted Sharkey for first in the Big Ten meet earlier in the month, came in a bedraggled 38th. Michigan, looking forward al- ready to the indoor track season, sent no one to the meet. Wiscon- sin, runner up to the Spartans in the Big Ten meet, was the only other Big Ten team to break into the top 21 teams; the Badgers were 11th, just behind Western Michigan. San Jose Wins The team titlist, as expected, was San Jose State, which placed Jeff Fishback third, Danny Mur- phy fifth and Ben Tucker eighth. Vic Zwolak of Villanova, a slen- der former Marine, was the indi- vidual winner, but could help his team finish only ninth in the team standings. Zwolak, the recent IC4A win- ner, had a good time of 19:35.0 over the four-mile course. The record is 19:12.3 by Max Truex of Southern California in 1957. "I ran it safe and hung back," i said the Wilmington, Del. runner "I got beat last year when I was fourth and two years ago, when I was 14th by trying for the long bomb." Zwolak, who will be 25 Satur- day, finished 10 yards ahead of John Camien of Kansas State Teachers. Sharkey Saves Spartans Individual Standings 1) Zwolak, Villanova; 2) Camien, Kansas State Teachers; 3) Fishback, San Jose State; 4) Walker, Houston; 5) Murphy, San Jose State; 6) Brown, Montant State; 7) Schramm, Miami (0.); 8) Tucker, San Jose State; 9) Scott, Idaho State; 10) Sharkey, M i c h i g a n State; 11) Steinke, Oregon; 12) Hewlett, Har- vard; 13) Clerk, Notre Dame; 14) Moore, Oregon; 15) Wighton, Color- ado; 16) Carver, Notre Dame; 17) Bachelerk, Miami (O.); 18) Gurule, San Jose State; 19) Lingle, Missouri; 20) Straub, Army; 21) Marin, South- ern California; 22) Lynch, George- town; 23) Lerner, Oregon; 24) El- liott, Houston; 25) Manley, Wiscon- sin. Team Standings 1) San Jose State, 53; 2) Oregon, 68; 3) Notre Dame, 128; 4) Kansas, 130; 5) Michigan State, 175;.6) tie between Houston and Ohio U., 192; 8) Miami (O.), 214; 9) Villanova, 236; 10) Western Michigan, 245; 11) Wisconsin, 329; 12) Brown, 339; 13) Bowling Green, 369; 14) Providence, 377; 15) Syracuse, 429; 16) Drake, 430; 17) William & Mary, 444; 18) Rutgers, 466; 19) Oklahoma City U., 475; 20) West Virginia, 501. I .... .......... 4 ....... ....: .4...:........... .... ....v . v n . ..w ::"::-r:.w:::':. :+;"r:.i:v" r::..... : i .... ..:.:::.::::::::: ::"::: ..:.:.::.>:.::: ::." ":+ . . :: :, r-:arr" ; .:.;..::-: .. ....Y s- , e.a >::::: ti> , ....k :.;;:;:, {,, >{ : :: ; ; ...;. ?::: "f .iE J ryr ::: :r. «:: ,..? " -=<::>; ' :.: ::. :s:. : :x:}«:: >:. k' our bike has feelings,too! a \ '4 Bring it in out of the cold over the vacation and give it a complete WINTERIZATION U - ea ::::{ :>F ::>> 't" ' '. s ': : . : ;,.. ' '::, :'s;:ti y' : ':# ;fi:>; h f hAs. i+: ". 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