SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 7, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Once Beaten Wolverines Underdog to Illini Eleven Michigan Out To Stymie Rose Bowl Hopes Of Unbeaten Orange and Black Grid Team (Continued from Page 1) scored 54 points on nine touch- downs while galloping for 427 yards through opposing lines. FALKENSTEIN, a'senior who warmed the bench behind the gregt Tommy O'Connell last year has moved right in to the signal- calling spot and has passed for 358 yards and four touchdowns on the strength of a 23 for 44, .523 aerial average. Foresters Fall To Wesleyan On Extra Point' By JOHN LOWE The brilliant pass receiving of Dave Church sparked Wesleyan to a 7-6 victory over a hard fight- ing Forestry Club in Independent League play yesterday. Late in the last half Church intercepted a Forester pass at mid- field. He then made a fine catch of Jerry Dangl's 20-yard pass to put the ball on the Forester's 15 yard line. THE FORESTER'S line play stiffened, however, and on third down Wesleyan still had five yards to go. Then Dangl faded to pass. He spotted Church on the one yard line, and let go with a bullet pass. Church gathered the ball in, and spun away from the lone. Forestry defender to score Wes- leyan's only touchdown. Church ., then took a Dangl pass for the extra point. Forestry Club wasn't beaten yet, however. On the second play af- ter the kickoff Larry Davis threw a 30 yard pass to Jim McArdle for a Forestry touchdown. On the try for the extra point Forester's passer was badly rushed, and he couldn't get the ball away. This failure to score the extra point provided the margin of Wesleyan's victory. * * * IN THE ONLY other game play- ed yesterday Men's Christian Fel- lowship defeated Fletcher Hall 7-0. The only touchdown came on a long pass from Bob Debryn to Chuck Didier. The pass was taken by Didier on the 20 yard line. From there he ran the remaining 20 yards to score. Debryn scored the extra point on an end around. Rocky Ryan and Cliff Wald- beser form a pair of highly rat- ed targets for Falkenstein's tosses. Ryan has caught- 11 for 201 yards and Waldbeser has snagged five for 68 yards. Michigan has yet to return to the form that it displayed in its opening 50-0 rout over the Uni- versity of Washington. The Wol- verines have compiled a five and one won-lost record, but they haven't been very impressive in victory and looked mediocre in their one road defeat at Minne- apolistwo weeks ago. ONCE again they will sport the traditionally "jinxed" white jer- seys as they attempt to outguess the experts. All week long the Wol- verines concentrated on defense designed to stop the power- laden Illini, while placing less emphasis on their varied offense which has turned in a commend- able job so far this season. Whether Michigan will be able to stop Illinois will onlyhbe decided after the kickoff here at 1:30 this afternoon. Michi- gan's offense will be once again led by the startng backfield combination of quarterback Lou Baldacci, tailback Ted Kress, wingback Tony Branoff and full- back Dick Balzhiser. The sharp-passing Duncan Mc- Donald and hard-running Bob Hurley both are counted on for offensive punch. End Bob Topp, who last week rated as 14th among the nation's pass receivers with 17 snared for 283 yards and two touchdowns, teams with Gene Knutson at the starting ends for the seventh consecutive game. THE WHOLE starting unit with the exception of John Morrow,' still subbing for Captain Dick O'Shaughnessy at center,will be the same that has opened every game. A hardier O'Shaughnessy, his ankle finally mended and a sol- id Art Walker-all over his leg trouble, will aid the Wolverines against Illinois today. Topp, Baldacci, Morrow and guard Ted Cachey, all bruised in the 24-14 conquest of Pennsylva- nia are reported in good shape for the game. Michigan took a brief workout here yesterday at the Il- lini Stadium to get "land legs" back after the plane ride from Willow Run. s * PAST ILLINI-MICHIGAN RECORD 1898-Michigan 12, Illinois 5 1899-Michigan 5, Illinois I 1900-Michigan 12, Illinois 0 1905-Michigan 33, Illinois 0 1906-Michigan 28, Illinois 9 1919-Illinois 29, Michigan 9 1920-Illinois 7, Michigan 6 1921-Michigan 3, Illinois 0 1922-Michigan 24, Illinois 0 1924-I11inois 39, Michigan 14 1925-Michigan 3, Illinois 0, 1926-Michigan 13, Illinois 0 1927-Ilinois 14, Michigan 0 1928-Michigan 3, Illinois 0 1929-Illinois 14, Michigan 0 1930-Michigan 15, Illinois 7 1931-Michigan 35, Illinois 0 1932-Michigan 32, Illinois 0 1933-Michigan 7, Illinois 6 1934-Illinois 7, Michigan 6 1935-Illinois 3, Michigan 0 1936-Illnois 9, Michgan 6 1937-Michigan 7, Illinois 6 1938-Michigan 14, Illinois 0 1939-Illinois 16, Michigan 7 1940-Michigan 28, Illinois 0 1941-Michigan 20, Illinois 0 1942-Michigan 28, Illinois 14 1943-Michigan 42, Illinois 6 1944-Michigan 14, Illinois 6 1945-Michigan 19, Illinois 0 1946-Illinois 13, Michigan 9 1947-Michigan 14, Illinois 7 1948-Michigan 28, Illinois 20 1949-Michigan 13, Illinois 0 1950-Illinois 7, Michigan 0 1951-Illinois 7, Michigan 0 1952-Illinois 22, Michigan 13 BOB LENBINI ART WALKER . . . Illinois captain . . . ready for starting duty Gridders Bracing for 'M', Says Illinois Sports Editor By LOU KESSEY Daily Illini Sports Editor CHAMPAIGN - Illinois is pre- paring for Michigan harder than it has for any other opponent this fall. Coach Ray Eliot and his team now know they have an outstand- ing chance to win the Big Ten crown and get the Rose Bowl nod. Eliot considers Michigan the big- gest obstacle on the road to the conference title. *' * * THE ILLINI have been the sur- prise of the Big Ten this season. Even Eliot cannot give a reason for the tremendous showing the Illini have made. Halfbacks J. C. Caroline and Mickey Bates have given Illi- nois the running punch it lacked a year ago, but the biggest im- provement has been in the line. About the only 'game that the Illinois linemen looked good in last fall was the 22-13 upset of Michi- gan. The line has been playing that same way this year. * * * CAROLINE, who set a new rush- ing record for Illinois against Pur- due Saturday, is a different type runner than most break away ar- tists. The Columbia, S.C. speed- ster is 6-0 tall and has a stride resembling Li'l Abner's. Although he is very shifty in the open field, he also hits hard on line plunges. Caroline is hard to pull down and often gains an extra two or three yards by running backwards after being spun around by a defender. Bates, whose real weight is 206, keeps the defense true by doing most of his running up the middle. For his weight he is very fast, which he showed in scampering- 35 yards for a touchdown against Purdue Saturday. * * * BATES AND Caroline comple- ment each, other very well. Ohio State was set for Caroline, but it had little advance warning about Bates. When the Bucks stopped Caroline on the wide plays, Bates went up the middle. Another surprise in the Illi- nois backfield is quarterback, Elry Falkenstein. When Tom O'Connell graduated last year, quarterback became one of the worst manned posts on the team. Falkenstein had been playing right behind O'Connell, but had not been too effective during his brief appearances. Sophomore Em Lindbeck won the starting assignment from Fal- kenstein before the opener with Nebraska. But Falkenstein won the job back again with his fine play in the Stanford game. * * * FALKENSTEIN is not nearly the passer that O'Connell was, but is fairly accurate. He is very adept at faking and surprisingly enough is one of the best defense men in the Illini backfield. Stan Wallace, the regular full- back, will miss the game Satur- day because of a knee injury. Ken Miller, who made several long runs against Michigan a year ago, will fill in at fullback. Miller is the top Illini punter, but yields the punting duties to Caroline when Wallace is in the game. Much of the success of the Illini has been due to the fine play of the guards. In Eliot's offense the guards pull out and run interfer- ence. Jan Smid and John Bauer have filled the bill for Illinois as running guards. * * * BAUER, HOWEVER, will miss the Michigan game with a knee injury. Bucky Tate will take over for Bauer. Wally Vernasco is an- other top guard that has seen a lot of action. He is just returning to action after being out with a knee injury. The Illini have had little trouble bowling over five straight oppon- ents since it tied Nebraska, 21-21, on opening day. Although Illinois only beat Syracuse, 20-13, Eliot's team was not up for the game as the Orangemen were. Syracuse, however, did throw one of the toughest defenses we've seen this year against Illinois. TopBig Ten Grid Squads Meet Today By The Associated Press CHICAGO-The Big Ten foot- ball race reaches the cut-throat stage today with four top teams having a chance to feed or starve their title hopes. The day provides a full program of five conference games. * *.* THE GAME of the day is un- beaten Illinois (3-0) stand against Michigan (2-1) before a capacity 71,119 at Memorial Stadium inj Champaign, Ill. With the winner figuring to profit from a possible Illinois stumble, Michigan State and Ohio State, each with a 3-1 record, collide before 82,000 at Columbus, Ohio. The Buckeyes play seven conference games, while Illinois, Michigan and Michigan State each play six. Wisconsin, with a 2-1 record, also can keep a finger in the title pie by disposing of Northwestern (0-3) at Evanston, Ill., in a game to be televised throughout the midwest. *, * * THE OTHER two league con- tests send Iowa (1-3) to Purdue (1-2) and Indiana (0-3) to Min- nesota (2-2). The Illini, geared by half- backs J. C. Caroline and Mickey Bates, are seeking an unprece- dented fourth straight victory over Michigan. After the Wol- verines, the Illini play Wiscon- sin and Northwestern. Michigan State's lone setback of the season was a startling 6-0I upset by Purdue, while Ohio State's sole conference defeat was a 41-20 spanking by Illinois. Port Huron Loses PORT HURON, Mich. - VP) -- Grosse Pointe high school scored a 7 to 0 football upset over Port Huron Friday night to end the longest class A winning streak in the state at 26 games. OTHER HIGH SCHOOL SCORES Ann Arbor 14, Jackson 0 Detroit Pershing 21, Detroit 0 Detroit Pershing 21, Detroit South- eastern 0 Detroit Miller 14, U. of D. High 7 Detroit Mumford 7, Detroit Cass 6 Detroit Western 12, Detroit Macken- zie 0 Birmingham 14, Waterford 6 COLLEGE SCORE Auburn 29, Miami 20 MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .60 1.34 1.96 3 .70 1.78 2.94 4 .90 2.24 3.92 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. LOST AND FOUND LOST - Alpha Gamma Delta Sorority pin, gold and pearls, Saturday. be- tween 1000 Hill and 1322 Hill. Please call 2-4547. )29A LOST-Red leather change purse. Re- ward. Call Henrietta, 2-0018. )32A KAPPA SIGMA fraternity pin lost NW of campus. Reward. Cali 8612, )49A LOST-Silver and gray Parker 51 pen. Phone 5560 Alice Lloyd. )52A LOST -Mexican tooled purse. Phone Nancy Teeters, 3-8222. Reward. )53A FOR SALE 1936 DODGE 4-door sedan. 1949 Motor, 4 new tires. $100.00. Phone 2-7720 after 5 p.m. )133B 1949 FORD V-8-Radio and heater. One owner. Phone 2-3163. )134B BRAND NEW7 Webcor phonograph and tape recorder. Excellent buy. Call 3-0521. Extension 627. )88B ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$6.88. Sox, 39c: shorts, 69c: military supplies. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )14B 1938 CHEVROLET 2 door, runs good. Phone 2-3163. )138B CORONNA PORTABLE - Call 2-7326. )56B 1947 CHEVROLET, 2 door, black, heater, and radio, very plain. Ph. 2-3163. )137B 1948 JEEP-4 wheel drive, heater, good rubber. Ph. 2-3163. )135B 1946 FORD station wagon. Radio and heater, new tires. Ph. 2-3163. )136B "PURCHASE FROM PURCHASE" Argus C 3 with case and flash. Like new. $49.50. Purchase Camera Shop, 1113 So. Univ. )143B 1948 FORD CONVERTIBLE-$450. Call 2-7450. )142B I--_ _- FOR SALE CANARIES in full song. Parakeets, ex- hibition quality. Also used cages. Mrs. Ruffins, 562 . 7th, 3-53-0. )144B 1950 STUDEBAKER CHAMPION, over- drive, very good condition. $570 cash or take over payments with $80 or old car down. Ralph Hayes, 1002 W. Lib- erty, rear basement apt. )147B ENGLISH Standard Vanguard, Ideal Economy Car. 5 passenger, leather interior,. ,1951 model. Willing to sac- rifice. Best offer. Phone 2-4591. Ext. 72. )146B FOR RENT FURNISHED CAMPUS APTS. with baths. One and two bedroom units for men or women. For appointment phone 3-8454. )130 ROOMS FOR RENT TWO SINGLES near campus. Maid ser- vice, modern bath and refrigerator facilities. Privileges. Call 2-7108. )13D OVERNIGHT GUEST ROOMS Reserve rooms now for Football Week- ends. Rooms by Day or Week. Campus Tourist Homes. Ph. 3-8454. 518 E. Williams St. (near State) )3D LARGE double room near campus. Cooking privileges. Men students. Phone 3-8454. )17D BRIGHT comfortable lodging ideally situated near campus. 725 Haven Call 3-5938. Mrs. O'Leary. )18D PERSONAL STUDENT WIFE will do baby-itting in own home. Reaso:able rates. Phone 3-0980. )30F TRANSPORTATION TWO GIRLS want ride to N.Y. City Thanksgiving vacation, 391 Jordan. )15G 2 RIDES WANTED to N.Y.C. vicinity Nov. 24 after 1 p.m. One driver. Call 2-4591, Rm. 222 after 7 p.m. )14G HELP WANTED FULL OR PART TIME cab d':ivers, male or female. Apply 113 South Ashley. Phone 9382. )32H OPPORTUNITY for "GI" wife. Cashier- Clerk-Typist. Steady job five hours, afternoons Mon. through Fri. Steady job, give references. Write Box No. 3. .. ) 40H HELP WANTED GIRL for part time housework and b aby-sit tit, in exchange for room, and board in Professor's home; close to campus. To be Lin next fall. Phone 2-2009. )41H BUSINESS SERVICES TYPEWRITERS! Portable and Standard for rent, sales ard service. MORR ILLS 314 S: State St., Phone 7177 HOME TYPING SERVICE done at rea. sonable rates. Call Mrs. Conner, 2-7605. )138 RADIO SERVICE Auto - Home -- Portable Phono and T.V. Fast and Reasonable service ANN ARBOR RADIO AND T.V. "Student Service" 1215 So. Univ., Ph. 7942 1 blocks east of Sast Eng. )31 WASHING, Finished Work,- and Rand Ironing. Ruff dry and wet washing. Also ironing separately. terse pick- up and delivery. Ph. 2-920. )21 MAKE $20.00 DAILY - Sell luminous name plates. Write Reeves Co., Attle- boro, Mass. Free sample and details. WANTED TO RENT SENIOR ENGINEER will work, tutor, baby sit; for room. Reply Box 4. )4K Daily, Classif ieds Bring Quick Results -.-I ENDING TODAY ORPHEUM 1:30 60c 1:30 P.M. TODAY & SUNDAY SURRENDER TO SPELL OF ROMANTIC RIO MG-M's BIG TROPICAL ROMANCE ! -. - -r ' r T. It's your time for LAUGHTER!! The funniest satire since "Ninotchka". A GAY ROMANTIC PEEK BEHIND THE "IRON CURTAIN"!... -where the "Loyalty Test" >>v starts with 8 1"8 Champagne- ( for-two! * * -~ .*..CHNCLOR ALSO WILD ADVENTURE OF NOTORIOUS WEST! STUDENTS ANY SEAT IN THE HOUSE 50c THURSDAY, NOV. 12 Department of Speech Production -r -m 7m a at Startsk Starts Today I _ * .0Today '4,1 66azateih the Quen . . . . dr I i BY MAXWELL ANDERSON NOW PLAYING "DESIRE UNDER THE ELMS" By Eugene O'Neill ARTS THEATER CLUB 2091/2 East Washington Phone 7301 YEAR OR SEASON MEMBERSHIP ON SALE Bob Marshall's Book Store Wahr's Book Store Music Center Arts Theater Regular Rate $1.20, 90c, 60c All Seats Reserved \ M A MORT BRISKIN ,soDUcinoN VIVECA UNDFORS sPAUL CHRISTIAN Filmed in K Occupied Austia ~1 NOT A WAR PICTURE ... BUT MGM'S HILARIOUS HIT ABOUT THE MAKING OF A SOLDIER ...another rowdy, ribald, HARD roaring high...in true-to- as nails. to his guys- life entertainment! a softie for a dame' T Nov. 12, 13, 14 and 1 6 8 P.M. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre HIGH GROUND!'~ in ASC~n w vstarring U Cinema SL uid PRESENTS CLEVELAND ORCHESTRA CLIFTON WEBBI in CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN GEORGE SZELL CONDUCTOR RICHARD WIDMARK KARL MALDEN SUNDAY, NOV. 8, 8:30 HILL AUDITORIUM Carleton CARPENTER-RussTAMBLYN RIM!and Ui n