) ,. n1r <« By MIKE .GILLMAN For the second consecutive day Michigan Coach Bump Elloitt sent his charges through their paces in a marathon practice session. Trying hard to polish up the offense for Saturday's big game here with Michigan State, the- Wolverines yesterday practiced well into the dinner hour. Elliott c finally called a halt to the pro- ceedings when the sun was setting on the rim of Michigan Stadium. For well over an hour the first three strings had run through their offensive patterns against a reserve unit, and as the practice drew to a close, ball handling be- came ragged. Starters The starting backfield looks toy be Stan Noskin at . quarterback, Tony Rio at fullback and Brad Myers and Darrel Harper at the halfback slots. Yesterday's practice saw Will Hildebrand running with the first line. Hildebrand has taken over the right tackle post from junior Don Deskins. The husky junior' fron Chillicothe, Ohio, w- 'ion- ored last spring as the n im- proved, player in spring training with the Morton Trophy. The biggest news to come out of East Lansing yesterday was the word that Spartan quarterback Dean Look would see little if any action in the annual classic. It is possible that Look will be called in for some kicking chores, but that would be theiextent of his duties. Sub Quarterback His replacement will probably be. Tom Wilson of Lapeer, a junior, who last spring was voted the most valuable player in MSU's an- nual Varsity-Old Timers game. He is the third member of his family to play football at State. There is also a chance that Jim Chesney of Bay City will see sig- nal-calling action for the Spar- tans. If so, he will be playing .against former prep teammate John Halstead. In Uigh school, however, Halstead was on the receiving end of Chesney's passes, rather than trying to break them ,up. i Michigan practice sessions man- .age to draw an illustrious grad or 'itwo virtually every day and yester- iday was no exception. In attend- Dance was Stan Wells, who lettered 'under Fielding. Yost in 1909-11, and gained All-American honrs. Wells would like to see the 'present-day Wolverines do as well ,against State as did the teams of this era. The Wolverines won both MSU contests of his playing days, 6-3 in 1910 and 15-3 in 1911, the fifth and sixth meetings of the two schools. Saturday will be the 52nd game in the history-laden series. FOR SALE FOR SALE: 1956 NSU motorcycle, 250 c.c., good condition, $250. Cali NO 3-1759. B28 TWO BOX SEAT tickets for Michigan, MSU game. Call NO 3-1841 and ask for Rolfe Worden. B27 FOUR Alumni tickets to Michigan, MSU game. Call NO 5-7003, evenings. "' B29 DISPOSING of part of my large librarlr at private sale. There are books of special interest to student teachers on many subjects. Showings 617 Packard St. from 11 A.M. to 4 P.M. every day except Sunday. B21 1956 TRAILER. 44x8', 2 bedroom. $500 down, take over payments. Call South Lyons, GE 7-7192. B25 TAPE RECORDERS: 2-speed, 2-hour $110; Revere, $45. NO 2-3472, Eves. B24 PORTABLE . MONITOR washing ma- chine. Cabinet style. Perfect condi- tion. $40. NO 3-9670. B CAMPUS TRANSPORTATION. 1959 BMW 250CC motorcycle for sale. Perfect condition. Call Bart at NO 2-3241 or NO 5-6968. B22 3 MEN'S SUITS, size 37-38, short. Call NO 8-6253. B23 EVERGREENS: Michael Lee, an em- ployee of chem. stores raises junipers, yews, arborvitae, etc., as a hobby, and'sells them at wholesale or less, $2.50 to $5.00. Call NO 8-8574. B9 FOR SALE: Lambretta Motor Scooter. 1958, buddy seat, spare tire, wind- shield. Call NO 2-4401, Rm. 11, after 6:30 P.M. B20 LET ME HELP YOU furnish that apart- ment, 17" TV, excellent picture, $125. Also ironing board, iron, fry pan, carving set, steak knife set, bread- box, canister set, 3 portable radios, tape recorder and record player. See at 1043 Ferdon or call NO 2-3617 aft- er 6 P.M. B16 PORTABLE Monitor washing machine. Cabinet style. Perfect condition. $40. NO 3-9670. B13 EVERGREENS: Michael Lee, an em- ployee of chem stores, raises juni-' pers, yews, arborvitae, etc., as a hobby, and sells them at wholesale or less, $2.50 to $5.00. Call NO 8-8574. B9. FOR SALE-Duo-Therm oil heater, bar- rels, tubing, etc. Call NO 5-5145 days. B 2 4 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS Make Grinnell's your headquarte for RCA, Magnavox, Zenith, Webc and radio, T.V. and stereo. ONE-DAY .80 .96 SPECIAL TEN-DAY RATE .39 .47 .54 GRINNELL'S 323 S. Main NO PIANOS--ORGANS NEW & USED Ann Arbor Piano &s Organ Co, 213 N. Washington NO 3-3169 X1. Grinnell's 80th anniversary specials --See the four speaker portable stereo. Regularly $9.05, Now $69.95. Figure 5 average words to a line. Call Classified between 1:00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. and 9:00 and 11 :30 Saturday -Phone NO 2-4786 GRINNELL'S 323 -. Main NO 8- DEAN LOOK ... may miss big game [GRID SELECTIONS This week's Grid Picks contest is heading into the final two days so hurry and get your entry in for the. opportunity to win two free tickets to the Michigan Theatre, now showing "The Devil's Disciple." The contest closes at midnight Friday, and all mail to Grid Picks, The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, must be postmarked before then. Just clip this article, circle the winners, include the score of the Michigan-MSU game, and you are a contestant. You can also enter at The Daily. Please include your name, address and telephone number with your entry sheet. 1. MSU at MICHIG THIS WEEK'S GAMES (Sc 2.. 3. 4. 5, 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Army at Illinois, Indiana at Minnesota Northwestern at Iowa Notre Dame at Purdue Marquette at Wisconsin Colorado at Oklahoma Boston U. at Kansas, Oregon State at Nebraska Clemson at Georgia Tech ore) 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Rice at Duke Georgia at South Carolina N. Carolina St. at N. Carolina TCU at Arkansas Navy at SMU California at Texas UCLA at Pitt Washington State at Oregon Dartmouth at Penn Maryland at Syracuse (. By BOB SCHMITZ and JOHN KOLESAR An 18-game I-M schedule yes- terday was highlighted by the successful debut of last year's Fraternity Class "A'l champions, Chi Phi; and the unsuccessful opener for the def ending Indepen- dent League Titlists, Fredrick House. Bruce Conybeare's deadly pass- ing arm paced Chi Phi to a first round 24-6 victory over Tau Delta Phi yesterday. Conybeare hit his ends for three touchdowns and points after touchdowns twice. Carol Gerbel snatched the first toss into the end zone and was on the receiving end again for the extra points. Conybeare added to the margin by hitting Terry Zieg- ler for two more six-pointers. Overtime Thriller In the only overtime struggle, Delta Upsilon tipped Zeta Psi 12-6. The victors copped the tight con- test on a touchdown pass to right end Wolf Schunter. A touchdown pass from Don Mast to Don Ce- bulski in the. second half evened ... .starting halfback j. t " ,. t V 1 .i i w ' } i ' h t . f i ' > d , i a " + f * ~k°' z, «I '' .., I the count in regulation play afterI Arnie Morawa, the left end, had snared a TD pass in the opening half. Alpha Tau Omega s o u n d ly whipped Triangle 22-6 in after- noon action. Don Pauline led the team with eight points on a touch- down and a two-pointer after the touchdown. Joe Tockwood, Jim Foley and Ron Zimmer teamed up to account for the remaining 14, points. Delta Tau Delta rolled past Al-! pha Sigma Phi by a count of 20-0. Driving fullback Noel MacIntosh paced the attack with two touch- downs. One Sided Beta Theta Pi rolled up the most lop-sided victory in action' yesterday with a 30-0 victory over Sigma Phi. Paul Sangster, Jon Hall, Ric Balgoozen and Warren Peacock each tallied one touch- down. Sangster, Hall and Peacock also added to the scoring column with extra pointers. The results of the other after- noon contest follow: In Class "A": Sigma Nu 16, Delta Chi 0; Psi Up- silon 8, Theta Chi 2; and in twoI contests won by forfeit: Kappa Alpha Psi 2, Alpha Phi Alpha 0; Phi Epsilon Pi 2, Alpha Sigma Phi '0. Defenders Lose In the Independent League, ac- tion was highlighted by the loss of the defending champions, Fred- erick House, to Hard Core, 6-0. Another hard-fought game took! place when the Hawaiians toppedJ the Newmans by a score of 6-0.1 This game, which was played on tied at the halif, 0-0. The score remained deadlocked until the water-soaked Wines Field was second half when the Hawaiians intercepted a pass and two plays later drove over the goal line for the score. In other Independent League games, the Zips were crushed by CMS, 20-0, Dan Clifford, Pete Clason and George Fink all scam- pered across the goal for CMS. The Canadiens nipped the Bean- towners, 8-6. Another close game was played by the Evans Scholars and Forestry, the Evans Scholars winning 8-0 in a real thriller. ROOM AND BOARD UPPER CLASSMEN or grads, linens furnished, also board. 1319 Hill St. near Forest, NO 2-6422. El BUSINESS PERSONAL BEFORE YOU BUY a class ring, look at the official Michigan ring. Burr Patterson and Auld Co., 1209 South University, NO 8-8887. Fil TEACHER of singing and speaking; class or private lessons. Carol F. Westerman. NO 8-6584. FF1 HELP WANTED--Male Excellent CAREER Opportunity Married or engaged male graduating seniors or grad students, any field, Write Box 1, Michigan Daily. Y1 HELP WANTED. WANTED: Part-time male or female telephone operators. Arthur Murray's. NO 2-5539. H27 FOREIGN CAR SALESMEN Part-time-commission-must have own car-familiarity with sports or foreign cars preferable--some retail sales experience. Write %,.Michigan Daily, Box 3. )H25 WANTED: Part & full time saleswomen at the Eliz. Dillon Shop on Forest off S. Univ. H23 HELP WANTED-Sales Representatives in Men's Dorms. Must be a member of respective house in dorm. Contact Chuck, NO 2-3241 1-5F.M. H19 BABY SITTER NEEDED for onedfour year old, Monday and Wednesday afternoons 12:45-3:15 p.m. during fall semester. Call NO 5-5585 anytime. H16 CERTIFIED. TEACHER to work with kindergarten age children. Hrs. 11:30" to 5:30 p.m. Call NO 8-7282. After Ssix call NO 2-3617. H18 WANTED: Part time or full time sales- man with the John Hancock (Mutual) Life Insurance Co. Call NO 2-2321 Tues. and Wed. from 12-3. H6 WANTED-Experienced Arthur Murray, teachers, full or part time. NO 2-5539. 1311 S. University. H10 PERSONAL WANTED: Exchange baby-sitting; half- day each spouse. We prefer mornings. Call NO 2-9385. F35 FRATERNITY RUSHEES: Get into the Fraternity of your choice. Guaranteed Plan: Bring first copy of Gargoyle with you during rush. This impresses the insides out of rush chairmen. Buy GARG today for a quarter. ,, F36 PERSONAL MICHIGRAS CENTRAL COMMITTEEl Mass Meeting Attention Sophs, Juniors, Seniors Thurs.. Oct. 1, 7:30 Union Ball- room. Petitions Available; Due Oct. 7. F32 NEED A CHEAP MURAL? Gargoyle of- fers 4 page fold-out panoramic cine- mascopic tableau replete with clev- erly disguised obscenities. On sale tomorrow. Paper your bathroom walls with it. P31 TEPS ARE TOPS. F29 FOR RENT FOR RENT: Available Oct. 10. - Fur- nished apartments for 3 girls, garbage disposal and large closets. 818 Church St. 070 LARGE, attractive rooms for weekend guests. 1002 Hutchins Ave. Call Mrs. Harold Andrus at NO 8-7493 or NO 3-0765. C69 FURNISHED Apartments for 2, 3 or 4. S. Division near William. NO 8-6059. C71 2 SENIOR ARCHITECTS desire room- mate, 2 blocks from campus. Call NO 3-0421. 018 ATTRACTIVE double or single room for' men. Across from South Quad. Linens furnished. 514 Monroe or call NO 3-3814. C65 SOUTH FOREST-Large 6-room fur- nished apt. $105 including utilities, NO 3-2800. 067 GEDDES-FOREST AREA-2-room fur- nished apt. 1st floor. $75. NO 3-2800. C66 APT. FURNISHED. 3 rooms. All utilities furnished. Private entrance with bath. 2 blocks from the Law Quad. $80. For boys. NO 8-6408. C68 DOUBLES ONLY. Linens furnished. Only % block from Law Qua at 804 S. State (at Hill). C64 WANTED: Girl to share apartment. $35 monthly including utilities. 32 block from campus. Call NO 3-7242, ask for Nellie or Carloss at NO 8-7942. C63 TWO BLOCKS from campus, unfur- nished 3 rooms and bath. New wall to wall carpeting, refrigerator, stove, heat and water furnished. This is perfect for faculty member or teach- ing fellow who appreciates clean and quiet. $115 per month. 905 Oak- land Ave. C61 GIRL'S large single room on campus, kitchen privileges, automatic laundry, T.V., parking. Call NO 5-5523. C60 ROOMS FOR RENT in a quiet house. Large closets - linens furnished. NO 5-5428. C57 FURNISHED ROOM in quiet home, semi-private bath and phone. 1208 Prospect St. Phone 2-0648 evenings. C55 CAMPUS ROOMS, large quiet singles, doubles, linens furnished. Reason- able. NO 3-4747. C2 FURNISHED student rooms: Male - 2 singles at $10, 1 double $14-linen near Packard and Hill. NO 2-8372. C3 812 PAULINE, 3 rooms and bath, gas heat, Oct. 1. $75. Clean and attrac- tive. NO 3-6415 or Pontiac, FE 2-6681. - C5 FOUR ROOM, two bedroom apartment. $125. All utilities included. Private entrance, NO 2-7531. C14 ON CAMPUS One block. Modern apartments. 514 S. Forest. Also rooms. NO 2-1443. C25 PARKING Space and garage. 514 S. Forest. NO 2-1443. 026 LARGE ROOM, single 8 per week. HU 2-4959, 5643 Geddes Road. C35 FURNISHED campus apts. for 3-4 single students. Pvt. bath. $105-$150 per month. 344 S. Division St., NO 3-8134. 030 BUSINESS SERVICES REWEAVING-2Burns, tears, moth holes rewoven. Let us save your clothes. Weave-Bac Shop. 224 Nickels Arcade.. NO 2-4647. Ji TYPING: Theses, term papers, reason- able rates. Prompt service. NO 8-7590. Jil Headquarters for garden repair Lawn rakes Lawn carts Grass seed Fertilizers Muehlig & Lanphear 311 S. Main St. J MEDIUM-SIZE semi-private stable has vacancy for one boarder. Outside Hunter Course and 2 jumping rings. Private and semi-private instruction in equitation, jumping and dres- sage. Indoor polo Sun. afternoon. Jerry Everett, 3551 N. Maple, NO 2-8026. J17 ONE-DAY SERVICE AT SANFORDS.. . Shoe Repairing Hat Cleaning Tailoring Pressing Shoe Shining 119 East Ann Street, Open Til 8 P. M. - Also Sundays & Holidays (Opposite court house since.1927)' NO 8-6966 J2 WASHINGS and/or ironings. Free pick- up and delivery. Specializing in cot- ton dresses. NO 2-9920. AA1 New coffee pot? Can openers? Dishes of all kinds- all this and more too at Ralph's Kitchen Hardware Department. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard NO 2-3175 J18 MORRILL'S, 314 South State Street is the dealer to see for world famous Olympia, portable typewriters. They invite you to come in and try one for yourself, MORRI LL'S 314 S. State St. NO 3-2481 325 Got the Lawrence Welk fever? Come in and take lessons in our private studio. 120 bass accordion for only $10 per month. All pay- ments apply onx purchase. GRINNELL'S 323 S. Main NO 8-7312 J33 BARGAIN CORNER ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$7.95; socks 39c: shorts 69c; military supplies. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. WI REAL ESTATE $18,500 4 bedroom (or 3 with study) ranch, near schools. Air-conditioned, wall- to-wall carpeting, drapes. Gas heat. Land contract or 4 ,S15.H.A. Fi- nancing. NO 3-0774 after 6 P.M. NEAR CAMPUS - 3 bedroom house within walking distance of University campus, garage, oil heat. Phone NO 3-5098 after 5 P.M. to see. R2 PETS AND SUPPLIES WANT THE FUN of having a Siamese cat without the expense? Take my beautiful 9 months old male for one year-I'l pay all expenses. Call NO 3-7835 between 6 and 8 p.m. T1 Complete line of HiFi components including hits; complete service on radio, phonographs and Hill equip- ments. HI FI STUDIO 1317 South University 1 block east atCampus Theatre Phone NO 8-79+ ORGANS and PIANOS BY WURLITZER, EVERETT, & THOMAS Makers, restorers, and dealers of rare violins and bows. Saes - Service - Rentals MADDY MUSIO 508 E. Williams NO 3.3395 X6 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and acesaor- les. Warranted & guaranteed. Be us for the best price on new & used tires. Road service-mechanie on duty., "You expect more from Standard and you. get iti" 1220 S. University at Forest NO 8-9168 Protect your tarti . Fall Changeover . Antifreeze Winter Lubrication Complete Tune-up Service Available GOLDEN'S SERVICE STATION 601 Packard NO 8-9429 83 WHITE'S AUTO PAINT SHOP Bumping and Painting 2007 South State NO 2-3350 82 USED CARS MGA, '56. Wire wheels, Motorola, strong Arnolt heater. Driven regularly, good condition. Call Detroit, TUxedo 51801. Grosse Pointe Farm .N14 1928 MODEL A SEDAN. Good campus transportation. Load it up. and head for the game. Cheap! NO 3-0364. N13 RENAULT DAUPHINE '57, Black. Ex- cellent condition. GL 3-1072. )B18 1953 VOLKSWAGEN. Export Sedan -- Strato-Silver (Silver-blue), $710. Call NO 2-9748 after 5 P.M. N12 1958 AUSTIN HEALY SPRITE: 7,500 mt., new condition, $1,600. NO 3-2329 after 5 P.M. N10 LOST AND FOUND ' LOST: Black Clutch Bag, Friday night, vicinity of Division & Williams. Re- ward. Call Univ. Ext. 446 before 5 P.M., or NO 3-3$95. Ask for Miss Sher- man. A LOST AT STADIUM. Black Framed Glasses -held together with paper- clip. Reward. Call NO 3-2391 after 6. TAPE RECORDERS' Revere-WebCor-Ekotape Parts and Service for almost all makes. Get off the campus beat - come down to Grinnell's and save $1.00 on all classical records, including London, RCA, Decca, Columbia, etc. GRINNELL'S 323 '. Main NO - I' A SOPHOMORES, JUNIORS: Time on your hands? Petition for 19609_J-Hop, 2534 SAB-Tues.-Sat, P27 C I AaL,_ 2 2 r 7.AA D 11 A * 1r. fAr r ^ !h r r- fr I-I11 . \ .0 % #1- .1