THE MICHIGAN DAILY IlY, OC Tay loi By BOB SCHMITZ Taylor's offensive might and Greene's defensive strength guided the two Residence "A" title con- tenders to their third straight vic- tories without defeat in Intramural action. Taylor "A" coasted to their third straight triumph by trouncing Adams by a 28-0 margin. In their three lop-sided wins, Taylor has held the opposition to, one touchdown a game while aver- aging 27 points per game on of- fense. Greene "A" of South Quad also r, Greene Stay Unbeaten 1' stayed undefeated by edging Lloyd, last year's runnerup's in the "A" league, 6-0. The victory also ex- tended Greene's streak of not be- ing scored upon to three games. Greene House's strong defensive line has eased the pressure on the offense which is tallying just under 13 points per game. The winning touchdown came on a pass to the center Larry Stimson. . Hinsdale Also Unbeaten Hinsdale became the third team in the league to enter the select 3-0 circle last night, thwarting Scott House by a 12-0 margin. Hinsdale's substitute quarterback, Bob Schlecte, tossed two touch- down passes. Early in the contest he had a 30-yard touchdown toss called back, and an alert Hinsdale defense completely stopped all Scott's drives. Hinsdale's strong line continued to give Schlecte time to set up his receivers and he finally hit Tim Ray with a long looping pass to give Hinsdale a 6-0 lead which they never lost. Strauss Stops Williams Strauss bounced back from a shutout last week to break over the .500 with a 14-0 win over Williams House. Hal Parizah and Jerry Frenkel snaged passes for Strauss' two touchdowns. Parizah added two points after the first touch- down. Quarterback Rich Honig led his Van Tyne mates to a 12-0 triumph over Anderson House by passing for one touchdown and catching a pass for the other. Huber, looking stronger since their opening lots to Michigan House, captured their second straight in a breeze over Winchell House 26-8. Michigan Nips Chicago In other "A" action, arch intra- quad rival Michigan tipped Chi- cago on Mike Richardson's points after touchdown, 8-6. The two West Quad squads struggled for 30 minutes in one of the day's closest fought contests. In two night games Gomberg blanked Hayden 12-0 on two long passes from Dick Lang to Roger Baker and Lippman respectively; and Wenley won its first, topping Cooley 8-0 on a TD by quarter- back Dick Davis. Kelsey Unbeaten in 'B' In "B" league action, Kelsey ex- tended its unbeaten string to three by whipping Strauss, 30-0. Kelsey has yet to yield a touchdown in winning contests 16-0, 32-0 and 30-0 yesterday. Left halfback Chuck Strifler passed two touch- downs and Steve Schmidt, right half, scored 14 points to pace Kel- sey to the lopsided win. Adams edged Rumsey 1-0 in an overtime hussle for its third con- secutive, and Cooley dropped Michigan 7-6 in the afternoon's other extra-session tussle. Huber Wins With Comeback Huber "B" netted a come from behind 6-2 win . over Winchell House. An off - side penalty on fourth down enabled Huber to re- tain possession of the ball for one more play, all they needed to pick up a first down and score three plays later. Van"Tyne's Ray Merier, playing in the right halfback slot, tallied the game's only touchdown in a 6-0 win over Taylor. Hinsdale fought back a good Lloyd offense to win 14-6 on touch- downs by Jack Ralph and Bob Noah and points after touchdown by Joe Pizzern. Completeing the nine-game "B" card, Anderson and Scott downed Reeves and Wenly via the forfeit. r------------------------------------------------------------------ I I I I I I I A Campus-to-Career Case History 7 i 1 1 1 WORLD OF SPORTS: Van Pelt Tosses TD's; MacKay Spurns Offer Engineering of microwave relay and carrier systems keeps Bryan Clinton's job interesting and challenging. #'I got the engineering career I wanted .. .and right in my own home state" By The Associated Press REGINA, Saskatchewan-Quar- terback Jic Van Pelt, former Wol- verine quarterback, threw four touchdown passes to lead the Win- nipeg Blue Bombers to a 27-14 victory over the Saskatchewan Roughriders in a Western Inter- provincial Football Union game yesterday. Halfback Leo Lewis scored two of the Bombers' touchdowns while ends Ferrell Funston, a ;standout in the game, and Ernie Pitts ac- counted for the others. The touch- down by Pitts was his 14th on a pass this year to tie a league record set by Saskatchewan's Jack Hill last year. Fullback Ken Carpenter and end Ron Dundas tallied the Rider touchdowns. .s . Small Pay for :MacKay SYDNEY, Australia - Barry MacKay wants too much money and Alex Olmedo isn't available, so no Americans will play the Aus- tralian tennis circuit this year. Australian officials reportedly are unhappy over this turn of events. Absence of Americans is expected to hurt the various gates. "We should boycott the next United States Championships as a i 1 f 14 1. f 1 1 1 t 1 1 t 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 f t In 1955, William Bryan Clinton, Jr., got his B.S. in Mechanical Engineering at Clemson College. Now Bryan's'with Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company at Columbia, South Carolina. He's doing specific planning of long dis- tance communications projects involv- ing cable carrier facilities and microwave radio relay systems. Bryan chose a career with Southern Bell over several other offers. "There were three things that were most impor- tant to me," he says. "First, I wanted to go with an established, growing company where I could grow, too. Second, I wanted thorough basic training to get started off right, plus participation in development programs to keep me moving ahead. And, third, I wanted to stay in the South." After 15 months of on-the-job training in various phases of company operations, Bryan was assigned to the Engineering Department at Columbia, S. C. His work with carrier systems and microwave radio projects has involved him directly in the growth of the company. And he's broadened his experience through devel- opment courses in management, general engineering, engineering economy, and microwave relay systems. "I know I'm with a fast-growing com- pany and I feel I'm really participating in its growth," Bryan says. "What's more, I'm getting the training I need to keep me abreast of new communications de- velopments and take better advantage of advancement opportunities when they come along." Bryan Clinton earned a B.S. degree in Mechanical Engi- neering. He's one of many young college men pursuing rewarding careers with the Bell Telephone Companies. Find out about opportunities for you. Talk with the Bell interviewer.when he visits your campus-and read the Bell Telephone booklet on file in your Placement Office. BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES Rent a TYPEWRITER (pbrtables) OVERBECK BOOKSTORE, 1216 South University reprisal," commented one angry official. The Australian season opens with the New South Wales Tour- nament in Sydney, in November, and winds up with the National Championships in January. Olme- do won the title last year in Ade- laide. MacKay, Davis Cup star from Dayton, Ohio, by way of the Uni- versity of Michigan, requested 500 Rugby Meeting Bert Sugar, president of the Ann Arbor Rugby and Cricket Club, has announced the or- ganizational meeting for the club on Thursday, October 15 at 7:00 p.m., at 1212 Hill Street. All of those interested in either sport are welcome to at- tend, as well as those desirous of forming a lacrosse team. Australian pounds ($1,120) for air travel, plus living expenses. The Aussie officials thought the sum too much. Olmedo said he was "unavail- able." The two leading United States Juniors, Earl Buchholz Jr. and Charles McKinley of St. Louis, turned down invitations because of studies. Dressen Fined NEW YORK - Baseball Com- missioner Ford Frick today slapped a $300 fine on Charley Dressen, Los Angeles coach, for acting up inthe final World Series game last week. The Commissioner said Dressen must pay $200 for using profane language and threatening gestures Sound Familiar? NASHVILLE, Tenn. (P) -- Vanderbilt football coach Art Guepe yesterday summed up his team's 33-0 loss to Missis- sippi Saturday night: "We believe in educating the boys at Vanderbilt. They cer- tainly got .an education' Satur- day night!" and $100 for "showboating" after he had been thumbed off the field by Ed Hurley, the first base um- pire. This is the second time Dressen has been fined for his actions in a World Series. He drew a $100 pen- alty for protesting a strike decision when he was manager of the Dodg- ers at Brooklyn in 1953. Frick said World Series fines are rare but added: "We occasionally hit them for a little money." " b a , W r M 3 PIECE SCOTTISHHOPSACK SUITS vww www wvv vvv vvvvvv vvvv- I I1NWTYVW WV~h' ---ryr~----- ------------------ ---------- - -- - -----I -.- RE SEARCH ENGINEERS: THE MEN BEHIND THE HEADLINES NAA's On-Campus Interviews OCTOBER 15, 16 EARLY EVERY DAY you read of another ad- the chemistry of propellants, the physi vance in science ... whether it's a space nents and what happens within them, ig vehicle streaking toward Venus or a sub- bustion of fuels, and the transfer of hea marine gliding beneath the polar ice. 2 These are the events that make head- 2,000 mph manned weapon systems lines ...but even as they are announced The Los Angeles Division is the home to the world, engineers and scientists are manned weapon systems-the Mach 3 planning new and greater achievements F-108 Rapier-and America's first mann -and research shows them the way. X-15. Research engineers in this division Scientific research always has had an important role at facturing techniques, conduct studies in a North American Aviation. Today, research projects are rials and processes, and thermodynami underway at more than 185 laboratories in the six North with physiologists, biotechnologists, bio American divisions. They encompass the full scope of mod- chologists to solve design problems conc ern science. bilities and limitations that arise from in Is air stiffer than steel? research systems. Not all research has the headline appeal of a space ship Building better Navy aircraft or nuclear power. For example, research engineers at the Analysis of aircraft carrier operation Autonetics Division, which designs and manufactures space- project at the Columbus Division. This di age navigation systems, found new and different ways of built the Navy's T2J Buckeye jet trair building rotating bearings...and found that air is stiffer than supersonic, all-weather A3J Vigilante. steel for some purposes. Improved gyroscopes and magnetic are diverse here-from how to illuminate recordings were important results of this research. to developing unmanned vehicles and A cigarette's place in research within the earth's atmosphere. Even the ordinary cigarette has a role in .cientific research. Developing the peaceful atom Scientists at the Aero-Space Laboratories, an organization The work at the Atomics Internationa within North American's Missile Division, use'a burning cig- American is part of a large national rese arette in a still room to illustrate the difference between the peaceful atom. Success in the develop laminar flow and turbulence in the boundary layer, the very power from the atom depends on thor thin air space that lies along the outer skin of an aircraft or every phase of atomic power systems an missile. This research is part of a program to find ways to construction. Atomics International reset protect missiles, satellites and space ships from burning when service in Japan, Denmark, West German they re-enter the earth's atmosphere. Italy. Toward the conquest of Space Opportunities for college graduates The Rocketdyne Division has designed and built the bulk Today at North American there is outst of today's operating hardware in the high-thrust rocket field. for young engineers who want to share t. Explorer I, America's first satellite, was boosted into orbit by problems that face science. You can rap a Rocketdvne engine. .nr th.+ i..a,, , * u .-- .c-.- -- - __a._, cs of engine compo- nition of fuels, com- Lt. of next-generation B-70 Valkyrie and ed space vehicle, the r investigate manu- aerodynamics, mate- ics. They also work physicists, and psy- erning human capa- nodern weapons and is a major research ivision designed and ner and the Navy's Research activities e an aircraft cockpit systems to perform l Division of North arch effort aimed at ment of economical ough knowledge in d their materials of arch reactors are in ny, West Berlin, and anding opportunity he unusual creative pidly build a sound 4 M4 +4 4 4 4, 4 4 4A~ 4 4 4 4l 4i 4' 4f 4 4M 4 b t a 4i 4l N X4 'I 4 4t 1 4 r 4 f 14 . "p 4 ,,r. 1000' The sports car maneuverability and performance of the MORRIS will imme- diately convince you that there's more to a MORRIS than meets the eye! MORRIS is not a small car-It's just the right size. These hardy, comfortable SUITS are equally at home in town and country. 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