THE MICHIGAN DAILY MHO'S NUMBER ONE? National Rankings Due for Shuffle i N the game's the thing.' Fred Katz, Associate Sports Editor 1' By CLIFF MARKS Who the nation's number one football team is can be considered a logical question after the wave of upsets and close calls which rocked the college gridiron scene Saturday. Louisiana state, last week's num- ber one team, suffered its first loss of the season at the hands of an alert Tennessee squad, 14-13, end- ing a 19 game winning streak for the Tigers. Northwestern, previously num- ber two, had its six game skein shattered by ninth ranked Wis- consin 24-19, throwing the Rose Bowl picture into a muddle. Ron Burton of the Wildcats tried mightily to bring his club victory with dashes of 69 and 47 yards from scrimmage, only to fumble it away on the six-yard line late in the contest.j Texas, the heretofore number three team, squeaked by against unranked Baylor, 13-12 on a con- version by quarterback Bobby Lackey, andSyracuse likewise had a scare against seventh ranked Penn State, 20-18. Fifth ranked Mississippi, how- ever, took advantage of -a breath- er and walloped Chattanooga, 58-0, thrusting itself back into conten- 4-- tion for the top spot. The only "Ole Miss" lossawas 7-3 to LSU. What .does all this prove? It simply goes to show that the poll- sters will have a rough time select- ing the order of this week's stand- ings, especially the number one slot. Who's to say if Syracuse should be rated over Texas because they beat a supposedly tougher team or whether Northwestern or LSU should drop from the lofty rat- ings each had last week. The fact remains that national rankings still are published every week by the wire services and there will be the usual howls heard across the country. However, after last Saturday's surprises, the cries this week will probably be louder than ever. r1 OBSERVED ONE succinct analyst on the return lap of this week- end's successful Champaign pilgrimage: "Stan Noskin has _a defi- nite propensity for throwing to men in white shirts." This is a neat left-handed compliment indelicately tinged withj sarcasm, and adequately sums up the fortunes of quarterback Noskin the past three games. But before the implications of the statement become crystal clear, a few explanations are needed. First, football, contrary to protocol of most sports, has the home team in colored jerseys, the visitors in white. Second, Michigan has been on the road two of its last three games. Third, Noskin was a great passer away from home, completing five of nine against Minnesota three weeks ago, and seven of 10 in Michigan's 20-15 win against Illinois Saturday. Neither time did he have passes intercepted. But in expansive Michigan Stadium two weeks ago Noskin ap- peared to get Wisconsin confused with his own teammates. He threw five passes into waiting Badger arms, and successfully completed only three of 12. Now, everyone likes to play doctor, and there probably isn't a student or alumnus (Jimmy Cannon defines the latter as "a college graduate with a kindergarten mind") who hasn't diagnosed the ills of the sometimes-ailing Mr. Noskin. The compassionate psychiatrists say Stan's suffering mentally. "How can the poor boy have confidence in himself at home when everybody keeps booing him." The more hardened sawbones recommend amputation-of his right arm. "He has no business playing out there; he isn't a Big Ten quarterback." As a consulting physician in the case, I can't buy either opinion. Three years ago a freshman quarterback, Harvey Lapides, attended his first Michigan practice session. As is the custom, the line and backfield men were segregated in order to learn the fundamentals peculiar to their positions. RECALLS THE ASPIRING signal caller: "At the outset one self-appointed leader immediately started giving the orders. He was so antagonistically self-confident that at the time I was hoping some guy bigger than myself would punch him in the nose. This was the first time I met Stan Noskin." His story continues: "In a couple of days, our coach asked if anyone had ever played the single wing. I was the only one who had so I was named first-string quarterback. "It was my duty to teach the other guys the spinning movements and handoffs the single wing quarterback is supposed to make. The speed in which Noskin picked up the new system was amazing. In three days he was performing everything better than I had hoped I could do in four years at Michigan. Here was a football player!" Lapides, who quit the team before the season was over, is not the only one who has gotten these two impressions of Noskin: A talented but cocky quarterback. It might be noted, however, that this first impression isn't always a lasting one. The above player now expresses only the highest personal admiration for Noskin. As for his ability, the forecast preceding Noskin's arrival from Evanston Twp. High School stated that here was Michigan's best passer since Chuck Ortmann. At times, he has looked it. Of course, he certainly didn't when he had nine passes intercepted in just two games this year-against Missouri and Wisconsin, both at home. But it must be remembered that in both contests Noskin was operating with a slippery pigskin and on a soggy field. In his five other games, defenders have nabbed only two other passes. So far, he has completed a respectable 41 of 80. Noskin is no superstar. Even in ideal weather conditions he has made plenty of mistakes. Some of these may have been averted had he a more devastating backfield and line to reduce the pressure placed on him. But everything clicked Saturday against Illinois and Noskin has reverted once again from goat to hero. Even Ortmann couldn't have done better. t i r t 'B' Football Crown Won By Kelsey Kelsey quarterback Chuck Stif- fier tossed a 15-yard scoring pass to Ted Parnell to beat Wenley, 6-0, in the showdown battle for the residence halls "B" champion- ship last night at Wines Field. Parnell's jaunt into the end zone after grabbing the pass at the Wenley 10-yard line came on the final play of the first half and was the only breakthrough in a game marked by the hard-charg- ing defensive lines of both squads. The extra point failed. Wenley had threatened first midway through the opening stan- za on a brilliant 70-yard sprint by quarterback Bill Heller. Heller Need Cash? Tutors WANTED, in all Subjects Register at Union Student Offices 3-5 Daily _ UII:Y V VL11 Z1 0 9 Y 1 Championships ! Four major intramural foot- ball championships will be de- cided this evening on Wines Field. Tonight's schedule of title games includes profession- al fraternity play at 6:00 (Phi Alpha Kappa vs. Nu Sigma Nu), independents at 7:00 (Blue Devils vs. Cooley Elders), resi- dence hall "A" at 8:00 (Taylor vs. Kelsey), and social frater- nity "A" at 9:00 (Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Zeta Beta Tau). Formal time is here The After Six PLAYBOY is the All-American Campus favorite. Excellent style, good fitting characteristics and popularly priced at $45. y ti kp Other styles in After-Six tuxedos 'are shown at $55 and $65. Tie and cummerbund sets are $5 up. Rental service available for emergencies. STATE STREET AT LIBERTY :.; . RON BURTON ... from hero to "goat" NFL Standings WESTERN DIVISION W L T San Francisco ... 6 1 0. Baltimore.......4 3 0 Green Bay ...... 3 4 0 Chicago Bears ... 3 4 0 Los Angeles......2 5 1 Detroit ..,.. .....1 5 1 EASTERN DIVISION New York ....... 6 1 0 Cleveland ....... 5 2 0 Philadelphia .... 4 3 0 Washington ..... 3 4 0 Pittsburgh ...... 2 4 1 Chicago Cards .. 2 5 0 Pct. .857 .571 .429 .429 .286 .167 Pct. .857 .714 .571 .429 .333 .286 was trapped back on his own five- yard line, dodged several defenders near the goal-line, and reversed his field several times as he sped all the way to the Kelsey five- yard stripe. On the next play, however, Wen- ley halfback John Abad was nailed for a five-yard loss and the losers could advance no further. The victory capped an unde- feated season for the Kelsey squad, which sends its "A" team into the first-place final tonight. In residence hall "A" action last night Strauss smothered Winchell 22-0 to win the third-place crown. Bill Matakas, Jerry Frankel and Hal Parivek notched six-points for the winners with Bill Marx tally- ing the only extra point. Other scores were not available last night due to a mix-up but will be published in tomorrow's Daily. Grid Picks Last week's Grid Picks contest was "no contest" as Gautam S. Jani, '60E, of 528 Walnut smashed all opposition with a 17-3 mark to win the two free passes for the Michigan Theatre, now showing "But Not for Me," starring Clark Gable and Carroll Baker. Jani waded through the upset- filled 20 games in fine style, and thus his vanquished opponents will merely have to try their hand at picking again this week by circling the winners in this article or coming to The Daily and filling out a blank. Each contestant may enter only once and should include his name, address, and telephone number with his mailed-in entry. I / M 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. THIS WEEK'S GAMES MICHIGAN at Indiana (score) Northwestern at MSU Illinois at Wisconsin Iowa at Ohio State Minnesota at Purdue Notre Dame at Pitt Army at Oklahoma Georgia Tech at Alabama Auburn at Georgia Wake Forest at Duke Maryland at Clemson Mississippi at Tennessee Arkansas at SMU Baylor at Southern California TCU at Texas Colorado at Nebraska Washington at California Stanford at Oregon State Oregon at Washington State Yale at Princeton 11 lilt,..r You're looking for a job. Not just any job, but one where you know for sure you'll be doing exactly the kind of work you are most, interested in. One-that will give you every chance to grow with the company. Sure, fringe benefits are fine. Link Aviation offers as good or better than the rest. But how about the day-to-day operation? What kind of assignments will you get? 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Link Aviation will be on the University of Michigan campus on Wednesday, November 11, or if you prefer, forward a brief resume of your qualifications to: I COMBINED CONCERT presented by University of Michigan and Ohio State University MEN'S GLEE CLUBS on Saturday, November 21-8:30 P.M. at HILL AUDITORIUM I I