THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE M' Poised To Ski Army Mule MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIEDS ^ * * * Top Teams Face sets NEW YORK-(JP)-More teams are expected to drop from the un- defeated class today with untaint- 'ed Texas out to stop Oklahoma's string! of 23 consecutive victories. Texas is aiming for a post-sea- son bowl bid already while Okla- homa is just aiming to keep its Victory string going. The Texans are slight favorites just because the Sooners had to come from behind in the last 37 seconds to defeat Texas A & M last Saturday. COACH Bud Wilkinson's two offensive weapons, fullback Leon Heath and quarterback Claude Arnold, w'll, determine Saturday whether Oklahoma approaches its great 1948 and '49 teams. Texas claims to have one of the finest lines in the country plowing the way ahead for Byron Townsend. Two more undefeated teams, Southern Methodist and Okla- hema A & M, will trample the same Cotton Bowl turf Satur- day night in a unique day-night double header. SMU, ranked. no. 2 nationally, expects to win on Fred Benners' passing and Kyle Rote's running. But the Mustang's realize A. & M already has whipped two other- strong Southwest Conference elev- ens, Arkansas and Texas Christ- lan. SEVERAL OTHER top games, are on the card. Defending Cham- pion California plays Southern California in the prilie Pacific Coast Conference battle. Lynn Waldofs boys are favorites against the disappointing Tro- ans Notre Dame's dynasty which ruled footbaU with little mercy for nearly five years until Pur- due- cracked it last week, might see tomorrow its first team in a decade lose two games in a row -but it isn't likely. Tulane iA the target of Notre Dame in Sugar Bowl Stadium with the Irish the pick to win by two touchdowns. Tulane goes into the game with two good legs under every good man, while ;Notre Dame has a long casualty list from the Purdue encounter. Billy- Gay, Dave Flood, Bill Barrett, and Chet Ostrowski will appear on. the grid-iron with tape and bailing wire, if they ap- Overflow Crowd To See Year'sTop Grid Battle (Continued from Page 1) three stirring pass interceptions Perry made off Johnny Clayton, the East's best tosser, and a fine 47-yard play that saw Perry grab a Bill Putich aerial and cross the goal line untouched. In case Perry isn't' enough, the Wolverines can call on de- pendable Harry Allis, who also scored on a long play last week, Les Popp, Ozzie Clark and Fred Pickard. Then there is the Pete Palmer to Jim Skala duo that looked great in the closing minutes of the Dart- mouth win. With Ortmann, Putich, CHUCK ORTMANN .. . ready and able BIG TEN ROUNDUP: OSU Opens at Indiana; Wildcats Meet Gophers CHICAGO--(P)--The still young Big Ten football race today gets down to cases with a three-game conference card. Co-champion Ohio State, a strong pre-season favorite, in- vades Bloomington, Ind., to open League play against Indiana, the 1949 tail-ender which already has upset Iowa. *. * * WISCONSIN, whose rain-splat- tered 7-6 win over Illinois told little about the Badgers, engages pass-worried Iowa at Iowa City. The third hoop fracas .sends twice-beaten Minnesota against undefeated Northwestern in the Conference debut for both at Evanston, Ill. Occupied in non-loop activity today will be Michigan vs. Army at New York and Purdue at home against Miami of Florida, while Illinois sparred with UCLA at Los Angeles last night. OHIO STATE is a two-touch- down favorite over Indiana. But the up-surging Hoosiers plan to unveil offensively their heralded sophomore back, Gene Gedman from Duquesne, Pa. If Gedman, rated as one of the best backs at Indiana in the past decade, can give Hoosier sophomore passing star, Lou D'Achille, some help, Ohio State may need the best Vic Janowicz can do, and that's plenty. Iowa, befuddled last week by D'Achille's sharp-shooting, runs into more of the same against Wisconsin's Bob Petruska. How- ever, the Badgers may have trou- ble: halting the running of Hawk- eyes Jerry Faske and Bill Reich- ardt. Wisconsin is rated a one- touchdown favorite. NORTHWESTERN, which op- ened impressively by beating Iowa State and Navy, gets a tougher as- signment against Minnesota than meets the eye. The Gophers have stumbled before Washington and Nebraska, but their season actual- lini Lead LOS ANGELES, Calif.-(A)- At the end of the first quarter Illinois leads UCLA, 7-0, in a night game here. ly may have begun last week when, trailing 26-0, they started to roll and finished behind Nebraska only 32-26. After Texas and Notre Dame, Miami's hurricane originally figured to be a "breather" for Purdue. But the Boilermakers now have become a choice tar- get as "The team that beat the Irish." THE POOR INDIAN-alias the injury-riddled William and Mary football eleven-could be in a spot to pull a surprise ambush at Mich- igan State College's homecoming in East Lansing today. Palmer and Don Peterson throw- ing to a sextet of glue-fingered ends, Army's pass defenses may get a severe test. NOT TO BE forgotten is Michi- gan's ground attack, the only de- partment that was effective in last. year's loss. Koceski has been run- ning his favorite reverse with tell- ing results and the bull-like Dufek is on hand to soften the Cadet middle. These boys are backed by' improving Ralph Straffon at the bucking spot and sophomore Frank Howell on the wing. Michigan's defensive line, not. as stubborn as pre-season esti- mates predicted, claims the de- termination needed to stop the T-formation Army attack. But what an attack they'll be called on to halt. Blaik has his son Bob directing a backfield that is sheer explosive dynamite. Michi- gan fans who viewed last year's classic will never forget the flitting Jim Cain around the ends, and hard -driving Gil Stephenson, in- jured last season, is ready and willing. Frank Fischl, a capable riglht half, rounds out the starting backfield. THE BRILLIANT Don Foldberg is the lone holdover from Blaik's 1949 offensive forward wall. Fol- berg was bottled up last year, but his pass-catching ability keeps him a constant threat. Army's defensive aggregation is the same stubborn outfit that slowed the Michigan attack to a walk in the '49 game. Back are a pair of Bruces, Ackerson and Elmblad, who are a road block to any Wolverine line plays. Nearly 70,000 fans, almost half of them Michigan supporters, will be on hand as the Wolverines make their last bid for several seasons to break a Knight jinx of five years running. The incomparable Glen Davis-Doc Blanchard duo turned back Michigan in 1945 and 1946 and Arnold Galiffa paced a high-powered eleven in last year's streak-snapper. Who will it be carrying Army to victory this time? Or can boys like Ortmann, Perry, Koceski and cap- tain Al Wahl put the shoe on the other foot? MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .54 1.21 1.76 3 .63 1.60 2.65 4 .81 2.02 3.53 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, daily except Saturday is 3 P.M. Saturdays, 11:30 A.M. for Sunday Issue. BUSINESS SERVICES AL CHASE and his ORCHESTRA Ann Arbor's Finest Dance Music! Phone_3YP-4427 )21B VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist at 308 S. State. Legal Masters, Doctors dissertations, etc. Call 2-9848 or 2- 4228. )12B TYPEWRITERS AND FOUNTAIN PENS Sales and Service Morril's- 314 S. State St. )4B TIME & LIFE at special reduced Stu- dent Rates. You needaonly be a stu- dent to qualify. Your chance to get something for that tuition you paid last week. Phone 2-82-42 to order. Student Periodical Agency. )2 60OD RENTAL TYPEWRITERS now available at Office Equipment Ser- vice Company, 215 E. Liberty. Guiaranteed repair service on all makes of typewriters. )6B SYLVIA STUDIO OF DANCE, 603 E. Liberty, over Michigan Theater Lobby. Call 8066 for information. )20B FOR RENT WNTE D-Malenstudent to share. All conveniences. Ph. 34073. White St. apt. 1229 ) 16F Daily Classifieds Get Quick Results b I HELP WANTED GIRLS NEEDED to baby sit during foot- ball games. Call Kiddie Kare. 3-1121. )10 STUDENTS! Do you have any sales ex- perience. We can show you good earn- ings*for part time work; also an op- portuniti to follow a successful sales organization that offers an excellent future to those who qualify. Write Box No. 302. The Michigan Daily. )30H A BRIGHT, FRIENDLY engineering stU- dent made over $5 an hour selling the student rates on TIME & LIFE last year. He had no sales experience. If you would like to do the same, call 2-82-42 right now so that you can get busy at once. Student Periodical Agency. )2 TYPISTS NEEDED soon Speed import- ant. Use own typewriter. Call Don Anderson. Student Periodical Agency, 2-82-42. )2H FOR SALE WHIZZER-Running perfectly with ac- cessories. Reasonable price. Phone 3-1076 after 5:30 p.m. )57 1941 PONTIAC. Radio - heater - 5 tires. $375. "Clean." Student owned. Law Club, room F-32. )59 TUX, Size 38. Tails, size 40. $10.00 each. A-i condition. Phone 22133. )58 WINCHESTER 32-Special carbine. Ex- cellent condition. Phone 3-8942 eve- nings. __)5 6 TAILS-Size 37. Excellent condition. Best offer. Call 2-7504. )55 $60 TUX for $25. Size 40 short. Excellent condition. Also Camel's hair overcoat. Call 5044. )19F CANARIES--$15.00. PARAKEETS $5.95. ZEBRA FINCHES-$6.00 a pair. Mrs. Ruffins, 562 S. 7th. )2B SEASON TICKETS on main floor: 2 Choral Union Concert Series. 1 Extra Concert Series. 1 Lecture Series. Phone : 2-0209. ) 44 HEADQUARTERS FOR LEVIS - SAM'S STORE-Levis-3.55, your best buy for work or play. The original cowboy dungarees. We have Levis for boys, men and ladies-also Levi jackets. 122 E. Washington. )5 NOW SHOWING A Blowout of LAUGHTER F' '.9 - FOR SALE GET TO A PHONE now to order your Student Rate subscription to TIME or LIFE. Rates available.for eight months or full year. Dial 2-8242, Student Periodical Agency. _____ - COUSINS- on State Street Genuine Levis $3.95, Sanforized 22 inch waist line and up ) EVERGREENS at half nursery prices to Univ. personnel. Junipers, Arborvitae, etc. See Michael Lee, 1208 Chem. Bldg. or call Univ. Ext. 2412 mornings. )41 ROOMS FOR RENT $10 A MONTH for room plus services. Male student. Ph. 2-2052. )37R SINGLE ROOM in private home for Grad student._308 E. Madison St. )39R BLOCK and half from Engineering Arch. 1 of double room to share with male student; also large double room. 714 E. University. Ph. 9310. )38R TOURIST HOME for Overnight Guests. Bath, shower, reasonable rates. 518 E. Williams St. Phone 3-8454. )12R NEAR RAKHAM-One double for men, $5.50 each. % double $5.00. 120 N. In- galls. Phone 2-6644. )35R 2 ROOM SUITE for 3 men. 1218 Olivia. Call 8746 after 5:30. ) 34R 3RD FLOOR STUDIO NEAR CAMPUS- Prefer two to four art or arch. men students. Linens, use of dark room. Student landlord. Ph. 2-8545, 6-7. ) 23R ROOMS available for students' guests football week-ends. Private home ac- commodations. Phone 2-9850, 12:30 to 1:00 or 7:00 to 8:00 p.m. )14R TWO double rooms for men students. 524 Hill St. Ph. 3-8126 after 1:00. )29R PERSONAL TUTOR: South American student ur- gently desires tutor for economics 51 and accounting 11. Call Pancho, 2-2915, 1231 Olivia. )21P MICHIGAN-ARMY game football dance. Sponsored by the 400 Club. Sat., Oct. 14. 211 S. State Street or. (Millers Cafeteria, Ann Arbor, Mich.) Music by Johnny Harberd and his Combo. 9 to 1 a.m. $1.25 admin. )23P NO. MAIN-OPP. COURTHOUSE Whose Eyes? ABBOTT & COSTELLO in Turn To Page 5 -M Continuous from 1 P.M. - Last Times Today - I I RED SKE T GLORI ', -" U Iespired by G0ETHE'S DRAand 6fiNed l5S OPERA,"FU3T" ' 6LrrRg N DIN YE- star i-g Faueat1 :30 ibretto by Michel Cared and Jutes 8arbier"With added musical interpretations of ARR1GO SOIT0tschestva 3:30 - 5:20 - 7:25 - 9:30 of the ACCAOeMA di SANTA CECIL * MARCHAND Egish Titles HERMAN G. WINBERG'* Produced by GREGOR RAINOVTCH "OM Ubu oCARMINE GALLONg 11 pear at all. ^r DMiner Dates by Thomas Iva TODAY! -"""" W~s ~t~o* yTo E A . e .f~ "Cracker, my eye! I want a steak dinner from Allenel!" ALLENEL HOTEL DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) Studio, Barbour Gymnasium. Men and Spanier," League, Sun., 8 p.m. and women students invited. Everyone invited. Sigma Gamma Epsilon: Annual picnic, Sun., Oct. 15, 1:30 p.m., Graduate History Club: Tues., Inter Arts Union: Meeting, Sun., Island. Oct. 15, 2 p.m., League. Interested Oct. 17, 8 p.m., East Lecture Room, persons welcome. Ballet Club: Mon., Oct. 16, 7 Rackham Bldg. Election of offi- p.m. Organizational meeting for cers. Members of the department Fortnight Skits Directors: Meet- old and new members in Dance will discuss library facilities for ing, Fri., Oct. 20, 5 p.m., League. -research and other matters of in- We can pull the curtains for ex- terest to graduate history Stu- actly one minute. Every person in your skit must be at rehearsal 314k & Cip4 RESTA RANT 301 E. Liberty at Fifth Ave. SEE THE MICHIGAN-ARMY GAME ON TELEVISION We also offer a choice selection of foods III U l o L I n ,'.-- tel/gl A Aaj 1itailed - TELEVISION for the stay-at-homes. We'll all have a fifty-yard line seat for the ARMY-MICHIGAN GAME I STARRING PELEANORpTRFIROMRU I I