THE MICHIGAN DAILY GRID SELECTIONS As usual on Friday, a guest among the predictors. He is Tom Curner, Daily Editor, who has shifted to sports for the day. THIS WEEK'S GAMES (Consensus Picks in Caps, Consensus, 81-39-.675) Phi Alpha Kappa To Meet, Nu Sigma Nu in Grid Final Pro Standings Lucas Leads Penn Stc Man Bost Det3 Tor New Chic L. MICHIGAN at Illinois (Score) 2. PURDUE at Michigan State 3. Indiana at OHIO STATE 4. Minnesota at IOWA 5. Wisconsin at N'WESTERN 6. GA. TECH at Notre Dame 7. AIR FORCE at Missouri 8. NEBRASKA at Iowa State 9. SYRACUSE at Penn State 0. PRINCETON at Harvard 11. YALE at Pennsylvania 12. Duke at CLEMSON 13. LSU at Tennessee 14. KENTUCKY at Vanderbilt 15. ARKANSAS at Rice 16. Baylor at TEXAS 17. SMU at Texas A&M 18. California at OREGON 19. W. Va. at SOUTHERN CAL. 20. UCLA at Stanford SPORTS STAFF SELECTIONS TOM WITECKI (80-40-.667)-Michigan, Purdue, OSU, Iowa, >rthwestern, Ga. Tech, Air Force, Iowa State, Syracuse, Princeton,. nn, Clemson, LSU, Kentucky, Arkansas, Texas, SMU, Oregon, S. il., UCLA. JIM BENAGH (Sports Editor, 80-40-.667)-Michigan, Purdue, SU, Iowa, Wisconsin, Ga. Tech, Air Force, Nebraska, Syracuse, arvard, Penn, Clemson, LSU, Kentucky, Arkansas, Texas, SMU, regon, S. bal., UCLA. * * * * DAVE LYON (Associate Sports Editor,' 79-41-.659)--Illinois, irdue, OSU , Iowa, Wisconsin, Ga. Tech, Air Force, Nebraska, Syra- ise, Princeton, Yale, Clemson, LSU, Kentucky, Arkansas, Texas, MU, Oregon, S. Cal., UCLA. MAL APPLEBAUM (75-45--.625)-Illinois, Purdue, OSU, Iowa, orthwestern, Notre Dame, Air Force, Iowa State, Syracuse, Princeton, enn, Clemson, LSU, Kentucky, Arkansas, Texas, SMU, Oregon, S. al., Stanford. By BILL PHELPS As a result of their overwhelm- ing victories yesterday, Phi Alpha Kappa and Nu Sigma Nu advanced to the first place finals in the I-M professional fraternity football playoffs. Quarterback Jack Faber scored. 22 points and passed to ends Hank Visser and Tom Newhoff for 14 niore as Phi Alpha Kappa beat Alpha Kappa Psi, 38-0. Sharp-passing Francie Gutman and speedy Harold Netzer led Nu Sigma Nu to a 28-0 victory over Delta Sigma. Delta. Sethi-Finals In the second-place semi-finals, Phi Delta Phi and the Falcons came through with winning efforts. IPhi Delta Phi end Len Treash was high-scorer as he accounted for all 12 points to shut out Delta Theta Phi, 12-0. Bob Topp's two touchdowns inspired the Falcons to their 20-0 win over Phi Rho Sigma. The third-place final will be a battle of dentists and lawyers. Psi Omega and the Law Club won their semi-final games over Phi Chi and Phi, Delta Epsilon, 1-0 and 2-0, respectively. Gamma Alpha beat Delta Sigma Phi, 32-6, and Alpha Chi Sigma beat Phi Delta Chi, 30-0, in the semi-finals for the fourth place championship. Right half Jerry White contributed 12 points and right half Dave Haartz eight to Alpha Chi Sigma's winning effort. Alpha Omega gained the right to play for the fifth place cham- pionship as they won by forfeit over Tau Epsilon Rho. WVL TPts. GFC ntreal 9 2 3 21 48 ;ton 7 5 1 15 48 trolt 6 3 3 15 28 onto 6 3 2 14 30 vYork 2 9 2 6 33 cage 1 9 1 3 19 LAST NIGHT's GAMES Montreal 8, New York 2 Boston 8, Detroit 3 EASTERN DIVISION W L Pct. G ton 5 0 1.000 ladelphia 3 0 1.000 1 w York 22 .500 racuse 2 3 .400 WESTERN DIVISION Louis 2 2 .500 roit 2 3 .400 cinnati 2 4 .333 1 nneapolis 1 5 .167 Ros Phi New Syr St. Det Cii Min TONIGHT'S GAME Detroit at Minneapolis GA 31 43 23 25 50 34 1 2% ! 3 1 2 I L t) tt u. Q h c: the game's the thing!# Fred Katz, Associate Sports Editor He Who Lives by the Sword .. . When the blue jerseyed Nittany Lions of Penn State Universityk trot onto the turf of Beaver Field to face the powerful Syracuse Sat- urday, 60,000 eyes will be focusedt on one man. His name is Richie Lucas. The tall senior quarterback< holds the key to Penn State'st chances of upsetting the fourth- ranked Orangemen in the east's1 top football attraction of the sea-, son. His coach, Rip Engle, said, "He's the best all around back in the country." The statistics on Lucasl verify this statement.. Unbeaten RecordI In leading Penn State to their unbeaten record Lucas has thrown six touchdown passes, scored five more himself, and set up a half dozen more scores with his alert offensive and defensive play. Against Missouri Lucas com- pleted 10 of 11 passes, against Vir- ginia Military Institute he hit on eight of 11. He was masterful in the Nittany Lions' 17-11 victory over Army and scored twice in their 21-12 win over Boston Uni- versity. His best game came at Cleve- land as the Lions roared past Il- linois, 20-9. Besides intercepting two Illini passes in a starring qe- fensive role, he ran for 66 yards, passed for 77 more and finished the day by scoring Penn States' final touchdown. A national magazine at the start of the season called him "The East's top quarterback, a solid old-fashioned triple threat." Engle has called him, the best back he ever coached, and Engle has coached some good ones, in- cluding Baltimore Colt star Lenny M~oore. Moore.At His Best However, Saturday Lucas will have to be at his All-American best as the tough Syracuse team is also unbeaten. The rough Or- angemen have rolled over six foes and in the process have managed to become the nation's top offen- sive and defensive team. Coach Floyd Schwartzwalder's strong team has held opponents to an average of 96 yards rushing and passing, while their offense has averaged 426 yards per game. They rank far above all other ma- jor college teams in the battle of statistics. To match Lucas, Syracuse will have bruising Ernie Davis running at full steam from his usual half- back position. The Orangemen have beaten good teams like West Virginia by huge scores, downing the Mountaineers, 44-0, two weeks ago. But as Lucas goes so goes Penn State and he has yet to have a1 bad day. RICHIE LUCAS , . . best in the East Volleyball Scores 1 * * * * BUZ STEINBERG (73-47-.609)--Illinois, Purdue, OSU, Iowa, Northwestern, Ga. Tech, Air Force, Iowa State, Syracuse, Princeton, Yale, Clemson, LSU, Kentucky, Arkansas, Texas, SMU, Oregon, S. Cal., UCLA. MIKE GILLIAM (72-48-.600)-Michigan, Purdue, OSU, Iowa, Wisconsin, Ga. Tech, Air Force, Nebraska, Syracuse, Princeton, Penn, Clemson, LSU, Vanderbilt, Arkansas, Texas, SMU, Oregon, So. Cal., UCLA. CLIFF MARKS (70-50-.583),-Illinois, Purdue, OSU, Iowa, North- western, Ga. Tech, Air Force, Nebraska, Syracuse, Harvard, Yale, Duke, LSU, Vanderbilt, Arkansas, Texas, SMU, Oregon, S. Cal., UCLA. * * * * TOM TURNER.(Guest Selector, 66-54-.550)--Michigan, Purdue, OSU, Iowa, Northwestern, Ga. Tech, Air Force, Nebraska, Syracuse, Harvard,, Yale, Clemson, LSU, Kentucky, Arkansas, Texas, SMU, Oregon, S. Cal., UCLA. *, * * * FRED KATZ (Associate Sports Editor, 63-57-.525)-Michigan, Purdue, OSU, Iowa, Northwestern, Ga. Tech, Air Force, Nebraska, Syracuse, Harvard, Yale, Duke, LSU, Kentucky, Arkansas, Texas, Texas A&M, California, S. Cal., UCLA. A eolum of hscid nfal infr igenco by ocv /brmd "THE woRM TURNS" Shakespeare said it this wayr "The smallest worm will turn,-beingtrodden on.' But Miguel de Cervantes beat him to it in"o Quixote", Part I, Book 3: "Even a worm when trod upon, will turn again." Bus. Ad. 6, Soc. Research 0 Cooley 'A' 6, Psych. 'E' 0 Psych. 'A' 6, English 'B' 0 Nat. Resources 4, Romance Lang. 2 Psych. 'C' Zoology 'B' 0 Geology 6, Sociology 0 SOCIAL FRATERNITIES Delta Sigma Phi 6, Tau Kappa Ep- silon 0 Acacia 6, Delta Clii 0 Theta i 6, Phi Kappa Sigma 0 Phi Sigma Delta 4, Sigma Alpha Mu 2, Lambda Chi Alpha 6, Trigon 0 Chi Psi 6, Phi Kappa Psi 0 Kappa Sigma 6, Delta Kappa Epsi- Ion 0 Alpha Epsilon Pi.5, Triangle 1 Delta Upsilon 5, Tau Delta Phi 1 Alpha Delta Phi 5, Sigma Phi 1 Psi Upsilon 4, Zeta Psi 2 Phi Gamma Delta 6, Beta Theta Pi 0 Sigma Phi EpsiloU 4, Beta Theta Pi 2 Zeta, Beta Tau 4, Sigma Chi 2 Ua jUST A LONG forward pass from Illinois' Memorial Stadium is a J cemetery. Michigan's football teams of both the distant and recent 1 past will tell you this is symbolic.+ To them the double-decked horseshoe arena is more than a1 gridiron-it's an appropriately-placed annex to the burial ground. Plowed beneath this 100-yard stretch of Prairie State loam are enough Wolverine championship hopes to fill a good-sized family plot. Athletic Director and Head Coach Fielding H. Yost must have had his suspicions raised the first time he took his Michigan charges, onto the Illini's present field.- It was the Stadium's dedication day in 1924. The players across the line from the Wolverines were real enough. Unfortunately, so was the 39-14 score. Only the damage was inflicted by a "ghost"-a carrot-topped apparition visible to all but the 11 Michigan men on the field. For euphonics sake he was dubbed the "Galloping Ghost." Red Grange's many trips down the sidelines that day 35 years ago should have been the tip-off to the ghoulish mischief Illinois teams were to perpetrate in the future. We can skip over the 1930's and '40's, not because Illinois didn't occasionally look like world-beaters at home against Michigan; but because the Wolverines will be in Champaign tomorrow to put an end to nonsense that has occurred the past decade.- Beginning in 1951, and in every other year following, Michigan has invaded the Illini open-air wigwam. In- each of those seasons, the Wolverines were the bookies' darlings in pre-game point-spread estimates. Return of Big Ten victory trophies to Ann Arbor weren't con- sidered unlikely if . . . if the Illini hurdle could becleared. But the Wolverines tripped every time. In '51 it was a Tommy O'Connell-to-Rex Smith pass in the swirling snow that put Michigan title talk in cold storage. Illinois 7, Michigan 0. J. C. Caroline was an All-American in 1953. The Wolverines will tell you he earned it. Illinois 19, Michigan 3. Abe Woodson wasn't accorded much high national honors in 1955. He would have been had he played the Wolverines every Saturday. Illinois 25, Michigan 6. Bo'jby Mitchell was no disgrace to the long line of Illinois' death- dealing halfbacks in 1957. Illinois 20, Michigan 19. McNitt To Replace Inured Tureaud in 'M' Backfield This afternoon at 2:30 Coach Bump Elliott and his beleaguered Wolverine squad will leave for Champaign where they will try for their third victory of the sea- son Saturday against Illinois. However, Ken Tureaud will not be making the trip because ,of a shoulder injury received in the Wisconsin game. In his place at left half in the second team back- field will be Gary McNitt. Elliott also named Paul Palmer to take over the second string quarter- backing duties formerly held by Don' Hannah, who will not make the trip. Others who are making the trip for Michigan are: Jerry Bushong, Reid Bushong, Alex Callahan, Keith Cowan, Guy Curts, Tom DeMassa, Don Deskins, Guy De- Stefano, Mike Fillichio, Dennis Fitzgerald, George Genyk, Todd Grant, Lee Hall, John Halstead, Darrell Harper, Willard Hilde- brand, Tom Jobson, Bob Johnson, Fred Julian and Gary Kane. Also, Jim Korowin, Scott Maentz, Bennie McRae, George Mans, Gary McNitt, Harry New- man, Stan Noskin, Paul Palmer, Lou Pavloff, Paul Poulos, Paul Raeder, Tony Rio, Jon Schopf, Gerry Smith, John Stamos, Steve Stieler, Bill Stine, Bill Tunnicliff and Rudd Van Dyne. i I ¢r-S "While-you-wait" repairing W INTERIZE *your bicycle TODAY!, PROTECTION FROM WINTER RUST! KEEPS NEW BIKES LOOKING NEW MAKES OLD BIKES LOOK NEWER ... the tobacco that outsells all other imported tobaccos combined! Try it and your very first puff will tell you why. There's more pleasure in smooth-smoking, even- burning, long-lasting, mild 'AMPHORA. Popular priced, and more for your money, too -- full 2 ounces in every pack! Blended in Holland. In handy pouches and tins. Come in and try it today! 2-OZ. POUCH Supply Continues -. . LLINOIS' Coach Ray Eliot still hasn't run out of speedsters. He' call on sophomores Ethan Blackaby and John Counts tomorroi to carry on the tradition against Michigan. But one thing Eliot won't be able to do is to pull his favorit upset shenanigans. Illinois is a one-touchdown favorite. Through the years, no coach in the country has acquired reputation to equal Eliot's for inspiring a team to dizzying heights o one or two Saturdays a year. Eliot is far from popular with the lay critics in Champaign an outlying districts. Many have felt he's been a poor successor to Bo Zuppke the past 17 years. There was silent rejoicing among thei when Eliot announced last year that this would be his last season o the field. That he's lasted there as long as he has can be attributed in n small way to his skills of oratory in the locker room. Michigan hasn't been the only one to feel the indirect effect of his powers of persuasion and mesmerism. In 1956, his Illini am bushed Michigan State, 20-13, then ranked number one in the countr This alone was enough to quiet the wolves who might have otherwis been displeased with an overall 2-5-2 record. And it wasn't such a long time ago, 1957 to be specific, tht Minnesota was thought to have the best football team in the lan( Most everyone believed it until Illinois shouted "It's a lie!" an pasted the Gophers, 34-13, for proof. Michigan, underdogs in'Illinois' Stadium for the first time i many moons, would deem it only fitting and proper that it bid a fins adieu to Mr. Eliot using his favorite weapon-the upset. 11 w t a rn d b m n ts a- y. se at Bicycles 95 Bicces 95 REPAINTED WINTERIZED "Our Side-Street" location will save you money!" camnpus BI1KE & TO Y 'r y. t 514-16 E. William near Maynard NO 2-0035 - ~ - ~I '-' "MUSIC HAS CHARMS" The 17th Century playwright, William Congreve, was the first to set down this classic metaphor concerning the powers of sound and rhythm. You'll find the whole quote in "The Mourning Bride", Act I, Sc. 1: "Music hath charms to soothe the savage breast, To soften rocks, or bend a knotted oak." 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