v 'I THE MICHIGAN DAILY fTT TT?In A'ir' 1V7 f1tww --U'X7, L ~LV.A1*RSt Go i ern .. .. sa~T E M CHeAW B.. . ATTY. ~un MAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1959 4lpha Tau Omega Blanks SAE, 12-0, in Finals F )ale Hackbart, Ron Burton Considered [fop Stature as All-America Candidates Phi Gams Dump Theta Xi; Chi Psi Takes Theta Delts. CHICAGO {A')-Wisconsin's Dale Hackbart gained stature as an All-America quarterback candidate in the Badgers' 24-19 conquest of erstwhile undefeated Northwestern last Saturday. But Ron Burton of the van- quished Wildcats didn't lose any ground as one of the nation's finest halfbacks. Hackbart, strapping pass-run star, had his best game of the season against Northwestern, fir- ing two touchdown passes and otherwise plaguing the Wildcats as the tailback in Wisconsin's new short punt spread.. Burton Draws Acclaim Yet, it was Burton who drew loudest acclaim from the midwest selection board for the AP's 1959 All-America team. The fleet Wildcat back dashed 69 yards for one touchdown, set up two touchdowns with runs of 47 and 12 yards and in 12 carries amassed 169 yards. On defense, he was a swift and fearless tackler. Burton's 69-yard touchdown run, shortly after one of his three fumbles afforded a Badger score, was a masterpiece. He exploded ...= through four Wisconsin defenders, the last one of whom had Burton tightly grasped'with both arms. Dick Cullum, of the Minneapolis Tribune, rated Burton "at least even with LSU's Billy Cannon." Hal Middlesworth, of the Detroit Free Press, said Burton "proved he is one of the greatest running halfbacks of the Big Ten, despite trouble with laterals." Hackbart Hampered The midwest board noted that Hackbart, hampered by injuries from the start of the season, played his best game Saturday. "He is the best third-down and long yardage back I've seen in a long time," commented Cullum. The crop of standout ends con- tinues to ripen in this precinct. Board member Bill Fox of the Indianapolis News reported Notre Dame's Monte Stickles "lived up to pre-season All-America ratings for the first time against Georgia Tech." Stickles scored all Notre Dame's points in the 14-10 Irish loss to Tech. Iowa's ace wingman, Don Nor- ton, a 174-pounder who has grab- bed 27 passes, is considered the best end Coach Forest Evashevski has had at Iowa. "He's better than Jim Gibbons, Curt Merz and Frank Gilliam, said Evashevski. "He can do anything, despite his size. He's the greatest offensive end in the nation." Other Ends Included Other ends well regarded by the board include Northwestern's El Kimbrough, Indiana's Ted Aucre- man and Wisconsin's Allan Schoo- nover. With time running out, promi- nent midwest All-America candi- dates also include guard Jerry Stalcup and tackle Dan Lanphear of Wisconsin; center Jim Andre- otti and tackle Gene Gossage of Northwestern; quarterback Dean Look of Michigan State; guard Bill Burrell of Illinois. Newcomers to the board's list included center Jerry Smith and quarterback Stan Noskin of Michi- gan, fullback Vic Jones of Indiana and halfback Johnny Counts of Illinois. KCDL ANSWER BOFF BOA RAZZ O G RE A! L 0L 1 O MEATBALL ANN T ORO T O E NGE SKAT ETA TEND Alpha Tau Omega, led by swift quarterback Herb Deromedi, de- feated Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 12-0, to win the Fraternity 'B' football championship. Deromedi provided the margin of differencerbetween the two evenly-matched teams. He passed for both ATO touchdowns and helped to set up the first score with a long run. SAE looked like it was deter- mined to draw first blood as it held ATO on the first set of downs and then completed a neatly exe- cuted double pass play the first time it got the ball. But the ATO defense tightened up, and SAE was forced to punt. ATO Sparked It was here that quarterback Deromedi made his presence felt. He sparked ATO With a long run for a first down. Bill Kile, SAE defensive back, broke up the at- tempted pass on second down. But on the next play Deromedi fooled the SAE defense with a de- ceptive maneuver, by pitching the ball to his halfback and then run- ning downfield to catch the well- timed pass. This put ATO within striking distance. On the next play, the quarterback passed to John Two- "WATCH OUT, STAN"-Stan Noskin (27), Michigan quarterback, is about to be tumbled by a host of "Fighting Illini" in last Saturday's game. Trying to clear a pathway is Wolverine captain George Genyk (70). Noskin has earned himself quite a reputation for successfully leading the "M" gridders in away games. This Saturday he will be trying to live up to that reputation once more by taking the helm for Michigan at Indiana against the Hoosiers. " Broken lenses duplicated " Frames replaced " Contact lens fluid sold CAMPUS OPTICIANS 240 Nickels Arcade NO 2-9116 i "Artists in Haircutting" You'll appreciate the difference in a cut carefully styled by us. TRY US f t THE DASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theatre NATION'S RECORD SPOILER: Tennessee Hopes for Another Upset. J = mmmmmummmoSo - -- a - 1 It YOUR DESTINY! EUROPE BSS1 LOWEST STUDENT RATES. Private (2-7 people) or large groups Private Car * European Student Guide and Driver FLEXIBLE PLANS AND PRICES INDIVIDUAL ITINERARIES MEETING TONIGHT at 7:30 Lobby of S.A.B. Coronet Travel, Inc. Call NO 2-9890 IN New breakfast drink you can keep in your room ! Can the upset minded Volun- teers of Tennessee do it again this Saturday? After their 14-13 shocker over Louisiana State they run into an- other powerhouse, fifth ranked Mississippi at Memphis this Sat- urday. Twice this fall Bowden Wyatt's eleven has knocked off unbeaten teams - the other being a 3-0 victory over Auburn. These two wins snapped two of the longest major college winning streaks. In the season opener, lineback- er Ken Sadler hopped on an Au- burn fumble on the Tiger 45-yard line. After the Vol drive was halt- ed on the Auburn 20, Cotton Let- ner booted a field goal to give Tennessee the only score of the GRID SELECTIONS 1 day and it snapped the Auburn win streak at 24 games. Surprise of the Year Last week, in the surprise of the year, the Vols did it again. Another Tiger team was the vic- tim this time. Tennessee not only snapped LSU's 19-game winning streak, but also knocked coach Paul Dietzel's Bayou Bengals from' the top spot in the national wire service polls for the first time in almost two seasons. The Vols won on another break last week. After Jim Cartwright's 59-yard sprint for a touchdown with an LSU pass, Sadler .again pounced on a fumble. This time on the Bengal 29-yard line. Four plays later, Neyle Sollee romped 14 yards to give Tennessee the win. On the basis of these two vic- tories and other wins over Mis- sissippi State, Chattanooga and North Carolina, the Volunteers are presently ranked ninth na- tionally. They have lost to Georgia Tech, 14-7 and battled to a 7-7 tie with Alabama. Another Task This Saturday they have anoth- er huge task facing them in the Rebels of Ole Miss. Mississippi, fighting for the Conference and national titles, blasted Chattan- ooga last week, 58-0. The huge Rebel line and powerful backfield has made Tennessee an underdog again. But don't count Tennessee short. The spirit and will to win- of a team cannot be measured by point spread and Tennessee is fully equipped with both. Have Fumble Recoveries Besides the two big upsets in which their opportune play has played such a big part, they also turned two fumble recoveries and an intercepted pass, into touch- downs at North Carolina and beat Mississippi State via the same route. However, the Volunteers are not without their own stars. Running out of Wyatt's single wing is tail- back Billy Majors, brother of former Tennessee All-American Johnny Majors, who has done a great job. Sadler and Captain Joe Schaffer have headed a tough Tennessee defense and several of the sophomores counted on so heavily by Wyatt at the start of the season have played well, also. This is a young Tennessee team -one with only seven seniors- and one with plenty of spirit and a will to win. They will be under- dogs again against Mississippi but considering what they have al- ready accomplished, who knows? mey for ATO's first touchdown. The two-point pass was broken up. Early in the second half both teams were unable to move the ball. Soon, SAE made its bid to even the score. Taking over deep in its own territory, SAE began to move toward the opponent's goal line. Quarterback Pincura com- pleted two straight passes, with the second toss to Jerry Levan- dowski being good for a first down. But just as things began to get complicated, Roger Simpson made a crucial interception for ATO. This was the turning point in the game. As a result of the incomplete pass, ATO took over possession of the ball close to the enemy goal. Quarterback Deromedi made the margin 12 points, as he passed to John Tinetti for the second score. On the extra point play, Deromedi ran out the clock, and Alpha Tau Omega had won its first fraternity 'B' football championship. Second Place Finals In the second place finals, Phi Gamma Delta won over Theta Xi 12-6. Phi Gam scored first when quarterback Phil Matthews passed to Dave Barron. But Theta Xi evened the score when its quarter- back, Pete McLean threw to Mike McKenzie for six points. Late in the game Phi Gams re- ceived a short punt =and scored the. winning touchdown on a pas from Matthews to Jim Kay. In the third place finals, Chi Psi defeated Theta Delta Chi, 18-0. Paul Babas had two touchdown runs for the winners. Intramural champions RESIDENCE HALL "A": First place-Kelsey, 6-0 over Taylor; second place-Huber, 20-0 over Scott; third place-Strauss, 22-0 over Winchell; fourth place, - Michigan, 7-6 over Hinsdale; fifth place-Hayden, 6-0 over Reeves. RESIDENCE HALL "B": First place-Kelsey, 6-0 over Wenley; second place-Williams, 8-6 over Allen-Rumsey; third place - Greene, 12-0 over Hayden; fourth place-Van Tyne, 6-0 over Gm-. berg. SOCIAL FRATERNITY "A": First place-Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 32-0 over Zeta Beta Tau; second place-Alpha Epsilon Pi, 8-6 over Sigma Chi; third place-Chi Psi, 26-0 over Acacia; fourth place- Delta Kappa Epsilon, 12-0 over Theta Chi. Warmath On. Way Out MINNEAPOLIS (P)-A drive by a group of businessmen and Uni- versity of Minnesota alumni to buy up the balance of the contract of Murray Warmath, Gopher foot- ball coach; was reported under way last night. The report could not be con- firmed immediately. Warihath could not be reached for comment. Approximately $37,500 would be involved in the 21/2 years War- math's contract has to run. Under. the unconfirmed reports, the group would pay that or a compromise sum to Warmath in return for his resignation. Since Warmath came to Minne- sota in 1954 the Gophers have had a 23-27-2 record and so far this year have lost 5 and won 2. WLD EUROPEAN STUDY, The proprietor wishes to point out the virtues of this sweater r4 V ,k : Y ap Can Michigan win its third straight victory away from home this year when the Wolverines battle Indiana Saturday in the Hoosiers' homecoming contest? This is only one of 20 ragged questions that Grid Picks aspirants must solve this week in order to win two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre, now showing "But Not For Me," with Clark Gable and Carroll. Baker. Anyone wishing to enter the contest should send his (or her) entry to Grid Picks, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard, Ann Arbor, or come to The Daily and fill out a blank. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7., 8. 9., 10. THIS WEEK'S GAMES MICHIGAN at Indiana (score) 11. Maryland at Clemson Northwestern at MSU 12. Mississippi at Tennessee Illinois at Wisconsin 13. Arkansas at SMU Iowa at Ohio State 14. Baylor at Southern California Minnesota at Purdue 15. TCU at Texas Notre Dame at Pitt 16. Colorado at Nebraska Army at Oklahoma 17. Washington at California Georgia Tech at Alabama 18. Stanford at Oregon State Auburn at Georgia 19. Oregon at Washington State Wake Forest at Duke 20. Yale at Princeton JOE FOOTBALL: TANG has a real wake-up taste for great get- up-and-go on the football field. I drink two glasses every morning --and watch outi SALLY SORORITY: TANG is really great mornings. I always have a jar in my room; it's so much easier than squeezing or unfreezing orange juice. LAZY LARRY: I have such trou- ble getting up for breakfast that a fast glass of TANG gets me through my first class so I can have a late breakfast. * HELEN HOME EC.: TANG is the perfect breakfast drink. It con- tains more Vitamin C and A than orange juice and is so handy to store on any shelf. K.DL KROSSWORD No. 8 ACROSS 1. Big laugh b. It's very con- stricting 8. Berries in Bronx? 12. Repulsive type 13. Fail without the "F"' 14. Sundry assort- ment 15. Make it dill-y and it's a Swedish-. 17. Not a woman author 18. Nut who sounds buggy 19. Odd-balls are 21. Current expression 28. Start hunting; 24. His heroine made cigarettes (not Kools!) 26. Doggy frosh 29. Gew's com- panion $0. Pitts' fore- runner $1. Double-hull boa 33. It's either.-- 84. Pony-tail temptation 85. Menthol Magic makes Kools taste- 40. Describing bathrooms 43. Feel seepy? Have a little snoozy 44. Unbalanced upper 46. Subject of Mexican bull session 47. Heel's alter ego 48. Snicker.. 49. Old card game; go away I is s 50. It's backward in fraternity 51. Watch over DOWN 1 Atomic or aerosol 2. Exclamatory molding . Small boys' club 4. Festival 6. Sheepish expression 6. Texas' money 7. "Come up,...... -"up to S. Lollabrigidian 9. He's in balance 10. Monroe-like kiss feeling 11. Area of defense 16. Tell all 20. Rutgers' routine 22. Kool is 1 Z 3 4 12 1 15 i6 s a '13 If a 111 14 17J IIa ! I-a ._a -a *ARE YOU KDL 21 Z22 2 SNOUN " 24 25 WRACK THIS?" -- 29 30 31 32 33 34 26 27 29 A 4. Mot1 America's most 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 refreshing- 25. "Iz - so?" t 26. Snooty London 43 44 45 27. The 50 best 28. Humor's black 46 47 48 sheep 80. Goofiest 31. Not a pro! 49 50 51 82. Numbers' racket 85. Baby beds 86. Kool, from the wrong end, se W ei yojur throat hell s~ 87. Pound of 4 . ,8. Shawt's time for a change St. Lawrence K~ 9. Cheer from theneed 41. Not a bit oddrhange... 42. Colored fatally? ......en 45. Type of green g 11 yI MORE VITAMIN C THAN ORANGE JUICE! :i~auuu~, i±pJ. TANG2 has eal n1watn r'.ta fP