Mx THE MICHIGAN UDAILY N" TY+:CT1Av nRr.r 14 voic& Gombr EtnsinStreabyTpig1 dWams i H ,, <1 Ends Kramer, Williams Sidelined With Injuries Michigan's first-string ends were fficially placed on the already ver-crowded injured list yester- lay. Jerry Williams suffered a badly ruised shoulder in the Wildcat ncounter Saturday while his mate t left end, Ron Kramer, was side- ined for part of the game after etting kicked in the knee. Williams m i s s e d yesterday's ractice but Kramer was in uni- orm although limping badly. Indi- ations were that Williams might e forced to sit out Saturday's :ame with Minnesota. Kramer is xpected to be ready to go even if ,he knee is not in top shape. Hairstyling To Please You!! o11 HAIRCUTTERS e LATEST METHODS and Equipment * NO WAITING The DASCOLA BARBERS near Michigan Theatre Right halfbacks Ed Hickey, out with a broken rib, and Tony Bran- off, bothered with a knee injury, will still be out of action this week. Fullback Lou Baldacci, reporting no ill effect from his return to ac- tion Saturday after an extended layoff, should be even stronger against the Gophers, while center Jim Bates was back to par after a blow on the head knocked him out of the Northwestern fray in the first quarter. The team ran through light drills yesterday before dressing and leaving for the Athletic Ad- ministration building to listen to scouting reports on Minnesota. BIG TEN FOOTBALL STANDINGS Champions Triumph, 20-0 To Remain Unscored Upon Gomberg House continued to run rampant over its Residence third was ruled no good when the Hall league opponents as Adams referee said that a pass was House succumbed yesterday, 20-0. caught beyond the end zone. In the only fraternity contest of The South Quad aggregation the day Pi Lambda Phi defeated remained unbeaten and unscored Sigma Nu, 14-0. The Pilams scor- upon as they turned a tight game ed in each half, with tailback Leon nto a rout early in the second Greenblatt figuring in both scores. half. After the first half ended He passed to Mary Cherin for the with the score only 7-0, the Gom- first half tally and ran across in berg team received the kickoff tO the second half as Jerry Stern open the last half. It took them scored both extra points. exactly two plays after that to in- Huber House scored on a first crease the score to 13-0. half pass, and spent the remainder Tailback Marsh Sylvan com- of the game protecting the lead pleted a thirty yard pass to end in a rough 6-0 win over Hayden Bob Woschitz who stepped into House. The touchdown came on a the end zone. A few minutes later pass from Dick Raider to Clark Sylvan completed the final scor- Bassett. ing pass to Jim McClurg who Van Tyne House overwhelmed caught the extra point pass also. Hinsdale, 16-0 as five men figured The first Gomberg score cli- in the scoring. Ted Clark threw maxed a long march from deep to Mort Segaard for the first in their own territory. Sylvan touchdown, and the extra point completed -short passes to spark was scored by Dusty Ottaviano, the drive, and scored the winning who later added two points by points on a one yard pass to Wos- scoring a safety. In the second chitz. Doug Monroe caught the half Al Rein scored on a thirty extra point pass. yard run and Ron Jones scored the Cooley House upset Lloyd in a extra point. disputed game, 7-6, as the losers Reeves House edged Michigan had three touchdowns called back. House by one touchdown, 6-0, as Two of the nullifications came as Tony Hoffman passed to Wally the result of penalties and the Koeser for the score. In other 3 F yL l 1 t W Ohio State .............3 MICHIGAN ...........2 Minnesota ....... 2 Wisconsin........ 2 Iowa ....................1 Michigan State .........1 Purdue...... ... ..0 Illinois................0 Indiana .................0 Northwestern ...........0 L 0 0 0 0 2 2 3. 2 2 2 Pct. 1.000 1.000 1.0001 1.000 .333 .333 .000 .000 .000 .000 0 FLY HOME FORo THE HOLIDAYS... t THE LOW-COST WAY! NORTHWEST AIR COACH TO NON- NEW YORK STOpu24 Plus Tax 0 Scheduled 4-engine service from Willow Run Airport, 0 morning and afternoon. Additional Air Coach and luxurious Stratocruisers coast to coast. Make reservations early! OwAIRLIN ES :(y0 *0 Phone: WOodward 3-3500 (Detroit) or your Travel Agent 0 JERRY WILLIAMS ... an old story Oklahoma Leads AP Poll Ag--ain By The Associated Press Oklahoma, Wisconsin, UCLA and Ohio State, the big four of the Associated Press nationwide foot- ball poll last week, remained on top of the college football pinnacle in that order again Monday, but four other teams tumbled from the top 10. The leading teams with first place votes and season records in parenthese (points based on 10 for first place, 9 for second, etc.) 1. Oklahoma (115) (4-0) 1,891 2. Wisconsin (42) (4-0 1,732 3. UCLA (23) (5-0) 1,590 4. Ohio State (8) (4-0) 1,387 5. Mississippi (9) (5-0) 903 6. Notre Dame (3-1) 787 7. Arkansas (4) (4-0) 706 8. Minnesota (4-0) 658 9. Army (3-1) 487 10. West Virginia (9) (3-0) 350 Second Ten 11. Colorado (2) (5-0) 212 12. Alabama (4-1) 156 12. Purdue (2-1-1) 134 14. Virginia Tech (4-0) 102 15. Georgia Tech (4-1) 84 16. Miami (Fla.) (4-0) 79 17. Southern California (4-1) 68 18. Florida (3-2) 47 19. Duke (2-1-1) 34) 20. Texas Christian (3-2) 251 Grid Picks For the second straight week,- the Daily failed to find a sin- gle entry which could top that of the sports staff. With over 400 hundred en- tries, only two prognosticators could tie Phil Douglis, Sports Night Editor, who finished with a 13-2 record. Bruce Bennett, 118 Wenley House, West Quad and Jerry Thornton 3109 Reeves House, South Quad, came closest. For the first three weeks of the contest, only four entries have topped the Daily experts. These all were entered in the first week. The Daily again invites the campus to participate in the Grid Picks contest. All entries must be mailed or brought to the .Daily .before .10:00 .p.m., Wednesday, October 20th. The games for this week are: 1. Michigan vs. Minnesota 2. California vs. Southern Cal. 3.Georgia Tech vs. Kentucky 4. Indiana vs. Iowa 5. Yale vs. Colgate 6. Michigan State vs. Purdue 7. Ohio State vs. Wisconsin 8. Navy vs. Pennsylvania 9. Pitt vs. Northwestern 10. UCLA vs. Oregon State 11. Princeton vs. 'Cornell 12. Texas vs. Rice 13. Illinois vs. Syracuse 14. Mississippi vs. Arkansas 15. Penn State vs. TCU Three Teams Become Conference Favorites Ohio, State, Wisconsin, Minnesota Victories Narrow Field of Choices in Bowl Race 5 f By DON LINDMAN Upstart Ohio State moved a big step closer to the Western Con- ference grid crown with a deci- sive 20-14 win over Iowa's falter- ing Hawkeyes Saturday. In contrast, Iowa's chances for the title were crushed under the determined onslaught of the vic- ious Buckeye running attack. Suf- fering their second Big Ten loss, the highly-touted Hawkeyes must now hope for the greatest series of upsets in conference grid his- tory if they are to retain any title aspirations. Ohio State, however, is riding the crest of a victory wave which may power it all the way to Pasa- dena by New Year's Day. The Buckeyes moved past one of their biggest opponents in conquering the Hawkeyes, and only Wisconsin remains as a major Big Ten ob- stacle in the way of Ohio State's title hopes. Cassady Rides Again The Buckeyes powered to 212 yards on the ground to continue the powerful running attack which has netted four consecutive wins for the Columbus crew. The run-. ning of Howard "Hopalong" Cas- Giant Catcher Turns to TV NEW YORK (A)-Joey Garagiola, veteran National League catcher with the New York Giants, is quitting baseball to go into radio and television work. Garagiola applied to Commis- sioner Ford Frick yesterday to be placed on the voluntary retired list. He said he planned to go into TV work in St. Louis. The receiver came to the Giants the first week of September, bought for the waiver price from the Chicago Cubs. He had been in the National League since 1946, playing with the Cardinals, Pi- rates, Cubs and Giants. Last sea- son he hit .280. games Wenley House romped over Greene with an impressive 18-0 win, and Scott House won, 7-6, in overtime from Allen-Rumsey. BINGAMAN, McGRAW STAR: Lions' Hopes for Third Consecutive Title Rest With League Leading Defensive Unit sady and Bobby Watkins was so successful that quarterback Dave Leggett almost completely distain- ed to use the equally effective aerial attack of the Buckeyes. Iowa managed to pierce the line of Coach "Woody" Hayes' squad for 153 yards, but the efficiency of the Ohio State defense is evi- dent in the fact that the Hawk- eyes were unable to organize any scoring drives. The two Iowa touchdowns were scored on bril- liant runs by Earl Smith, one on an intercepted pass and another on an OSU punt. Wisconsin's stock went down over the weekend despite its 20-6 triumph over Purdue. Outplayed during the entire first half, the Badgers gained nearly all their total yardage on two long scoring marches. On the passing arm of sophomore Lenny Dawson, the Boilermakers fell only ten yards short of equalling Wisconsin's yardage total and rolled up 15 first downs to 12 for the Madison men. OSU Next for Badgers Coach Ivy Williamson's crew may have been concentrating on the game coming up with Ohio State next Saturday, because the inept Badger squad of the first two quarters came to life in the second half and managed to keep, its *unbeaten record intact. On the basis of Saturday's per- formance, Wisconsin has its work cut out for it in facing OSU and Iowa on successive weekends. Minnesota is making a deter- mined bid to be included among the Big Ten squads which have serious title possibilities. The Gophers are fighting to overcome the public opinion that they are merely an early flash-in-the-pan and so far are succeeding. Coach Murray Warmath's split T offense sent Illinois down to its fourth defeat without a win Sat- urday to remain undefeated in the process. Four opponents have failed to come within 11 points of the surprising Gophers. Minnesota Rolls On Halfbacks Bob McNamara and John Baumgartner powered an attack which netted 369 yards as quarterback Geno Cappelletti sent play after play over the Illini tackles and between the guards. While it seems unlikely that Min- nesota will be able to play Michi- gan State, Purdue, Iowa and Wis- consin on even terms, the Goph- ers have shown that they may play an important part in the title fight. Northwestern, Minnesota and Purdue seem destined to play spoiler roles in the present Big Ten race. Their composite sched- ule includes two games with OSU, Iowa, and Wisconsin. With Iowa nearly out of the title picture, a loss by OSU or Wisconsin to one of the spoilers could well decide the Big Ten football title. 1 r t, - Ma ohkec (Author of "Barefoot Boy With Cheek,' etc.) i By LEW HAMBURGER Whenever the amazing success of the Detroit Lions football team thus far this year is discussed, the first thing to be mentioned is the passing of Bobby Layne and the running of Doak Walker and Bob Hoernschemeyer. No one speaks of defense. It would seem that an offensive team could provide a league winner with just an average defense. But National League players probably won't attest to this. They know, and aren't surprised as many spectators will be to know, that the Lions are the league's leading de- fensive team. The Lions' huge defensive line is spearheaded by one of the league's largest lads, Les Binga- man, who throws 335 pounds around the football field every Sun- day, and Thurmond McGraw, who at an even 100 pounds less than Bingaman is no source of enter- tainment for opposing linemen or backs to look forward to. Both men have been named on several All- League selections before and con- sidering their performances to date, are definitely in line for simi- lar honors this year. Hold Runners to 1.8 Yard Average The Lion forward wall have until the Colt game allowed 1.8 yards per running attempt, and have al- lowed the Chicago Bears and Los Angeles Rams 100 yards between the two teams in rushing. To bolster this conglamoration of manpower in the line, the Lions have a stellar defensive backfield led by Jack Christiansen and Jim- my David. The Lion secondary leads the league in pass defense, allowing only 36.8 per cent of passes attempted against them to be completed. The line performance against the Rams was even more astound- ing when it is realized that the West Coast team counted on their two great running backs, Dan Towler and Tank Younger, to car- ry them to a win over the Lions and a better grasp on their divi- sion title. Their hopes were smashed by the Detroit defense. It was the first time in 67 games WHAT EVERY YOUNG COED SHOULD WEAR Gather round, girls. Snap open a pack of Philip Morris, light up, relax and enjoy that mild fragrant vintage tobacco while Old Dad tells you about the latest campus fashions. The key word this year is casual. Be casual. Be slapdash. Be rakish. Improvise. Invent your own ensembles-like ski pants with a peek- a-boo blouse, like pajama bottoms with an ermine stole, like a hocky sweater with a dirndl. (Dirndl, incidentally, is one of the truly fascinating words in the English language. Etymologists have quarreled over its origin for years. Some hold with Professor Manley Ek that Dirndl is a corrup- tion of Dardanelle and is so named because it resembles the skirts worn by the women of that region. This theory is at first glance plausible, but begins to fall apart when you consider that there are no women in the Dardanelle region because of the loathesome local custom of female infanticide.) (Another theory is advanced by Dr. Clyde Feb. Dirndl, says he, is a contraction of "dairy in the dell" and refers to the milkmaidish appearance of the skirt. But again close examination causes one to abandon a plausible hypothesis. As every child knows, it is not "dairy in the dell" but "farmer in the dell", in which case the skirt should be called not dirndl but firndl. (There are some who contend we will never know the true origins of dirndl. To those faint hearted Cassandras I say, remember how everyone laughed at Edison and Franklin and Fulton and Marconi and Sigafoos. [Sigafoos, in case you have forgotten, invented the nostril, without which breathing, as we know it today, would not be possible.] The origins of dirndl will be found, say I, and anyone who believes the contrary is a lily-livered churl and if he'll step outside for a minute, I'll give him a thrashing he won't soon forget.) But I digress. We were smoking a Philip Morris and talking about the latest campus styles. Casual, we agree, is the key word. But casual need not mean drab. Liven up your outfits with a touch of glamor. Even the lowly dungaree and man-shirt combination can be made exciting if you'll adorn it with a simple necklace of 120 matched diamonds. With Bermuda shorts, wear gold knee-cymbals. Be guided by the famous poet Cosmo Sigafoos (whose brother Sam it was who invented the nostril) who wrote: Sparkle, my beauty, Shimmer and shine, The night is young, The air's like wine, Cling to a leaf, Hang on a vine, Crawl on your belly, It's time to dine. (Mr. Sigafoos, it should be explained, was writing about a glow- worm. Insects, as everyone knows, are among Mr. Sigafoos' favorite subjects for poems. Who can ever forget his immortal Ode to a Boll Weevil? Or his Tumbling Along With the Tumbling Tumblebug? Or his Fly Gently, Sweet Aphid? Mr. Sigafoos has been inactive since the invention of DDT.) But I digress. We were smoking a Philip Morris and discussing fashions. Let us turn now to headwear. The motif in hats this year will be familiar American scenes. There will be models to fit every head-for example, the "Empire State Building" for tall thin heads; the "Jefferson Memorial" for squatty ones; "Niagara Falls" for dry' scalps. Feature of the collection is the "Statue of Liberty," complete with a torch that actually burns. This is very handy for lighting your Philip Morrises, which is very important because no matter how good Philip Morrises are,'they're nowhere unless you light them. We come now to the highlight of this year's fashion parade-a mad fad that's sweeping the chic set at high tone campuses all over the country. All the gals who are in the van, in the swim, and in the know are doing it. Doing what, you ask? Getting tattooed, of course! You just don't rate these days unless you've got at least an anchor oh your biceps. If you really want to be the envy of the campus, get yourself-a four masted schooner, or a heart with FATHER printed inside of it, or a- I interrupt this column to bring you a special announcement. A runner has just handed me the following bulletin: "Th- origin of the word dirndl has at long last been discovered. On June 27. 1846, Dusty Schwartz, the famous scout and Indian < ,- Jr' el. . ' . ! 4. ;1 X enthuses over Jockey brand underwear Impeccably groomed Chisley J. Chisley ("Chi-chi" to his friends) says, "IJ like new-fashion fashion and old-fashion comfort. For instance, this week I give the nod to tartan cummerbunds and ascots of shock- ng pik-but every week I go for the at-ease eng of Jockey shorts! Take it from a clothes-horse ... never say Neigh to Jockey comfort!" Whether you share Chisley's taste for sartorial splendor or not, you'll enjoy the casual, at-ease ap- pearance that comes from wearing Jockey shorts. Better drop into your dealer's soon... buy a supply of Jockey shorts and T-shirts. . . and feel as good as you look! it's n style to be comfortable..,in a that the Rams have failed to score a touchdown. The defeat of the Rams coupled with the tie on the coast one week previous, puts the Lions in an ex- cellent position to win their third straight Western Division crown. If they split with the San Francisco 49ers and win the rest of their games, no easy task, they will an- nex the title. However, in winning the rest of their games coach Bud- dy Parker and crew must get by such obstacles as the Philadelphia Eagles, the Cleveland Browns, the Green Bay Packers, and the Rams, Colts, and Bears again. Defense becomes nore notably important when it is realized that the team which is second to the Lions in both defensive depart- ments is the Philadelphia Eagles, current leaders of the Eastern Di- vision. The Eagles had allowed only 2.2 yards per running try, and only 36.9 per cent of passes at- tempted against them had been completed before they routed the Redskins. It appears that the National Football League, always noted for its high-powered offensive teams is now beginning to develop and de- pend on stronger defensive units. Could it be that the team with a fair offense and powerful defense will win the championship this year? Quite a reversal from other years of the past decade. 's" I Maurice had a little shirt '5.- " y 'I COATS * WOOLENS * SWEATERS A pome by Ogden Gnash Maurice had a little shirt A sport-shirt, don't you know? And everywhere that Maurice went The shirt was sure to go. (He was crazy about it.) He'd wear it first to English class From thence to Physics Lab He found himself, like most young men Quite fond of his VAN GAB. (Van Heusen's famous rayon gabardine, A real darb!) He'd wear it when he went to bed Because he liked nice things, And Van Gab's special "finish'! Makes it soft as angel's wings. (Mrs. DiMaggio's) He'd wear it in the shower And his roommates thdught him daft But he knew that it was washable And so he merely laft. (Certified completely washable, even for commercial laundries, by American Institute of Laundering. No bull.) He loved its Sportown collar, Fine with tie and fine without. He was made for Van Gab's colors, Each one's virile-have no doubt! (Maury bought Van Gab in all 15 shades) jVote: It also has new Vanafit sizing, which means sportshirt comfort with dress-shirt fit. A great idea in a $4.95 shirt but not easily rhymable. C a s H M E R E 5 B E R M u D S Store-Wide SALE ! AT florihern /,ooNC BRIGHTON, MICH. !- NEW Two dresses for FALL DRESSES the price of one; Misses, Junior, and Half Sizes. NEW FLEECE COATS Milliam lining. Misses and Junior sizes. Large selection! SALE PRICE n95 d $ 39 95 Values to $60.00 Imported Cashmere Sweaters, Cardigans $29.95 and $35.00 values SALE $2250 You will know the make IMPORTED WOOL YARDAGE 60 in. wide, tweeds, gabardines, fleece, etc. 1,800 yards to choose from. $12.50 Value! SALE PRICE $395 The merchandise offered in this sale consists of the entire stock of our Brighton store and our resort stores I. .I if r I 1I I III il