ALLY FRMAY, OCTO ER 22,1954 SAM, Taylor House Capture I-M Crowns; Richner Paces Delta Theta Phi Grid Win 4 furnish the only markers for the vanquished architects. Law Club Wins In a game 'marked by fine pass protection and pass defense, Law Club managed to cross pay dirt twice in the second period to down Phi Rho Sigma, 14-0. The com- bination of Dick Tinkham to Wen- dell Smith accounted for eight of the points and Dick Elliott garner- ed the rest on a run around end. The lawyers drove to the one yard line midway in the first half but the Phi Rhos staged a beautiful goal line stand to turn them back. They nearly turned the trick again in the second half as the Phi Rhos held solid until Smith grabbed Tinkham's fourth down pass. Although on the losing side, George Steele displayed some fine passing for Phi Rho. Nu Sigma Nu edged Alpha Kappa Kappa, 6-0, inthe hardest fought struggle of the day. The victors lone marker came midway in the first period on a toss from Harry Allis to Bob Kerry. Alpha Kappa Kappa continued to threaten to tie the score but never quite succeed- ed. Phi Delta Phi tallied twice be- fore halftime to gain a 12-0 triumph over Phi Alpha Kappa. Irv Stenn caught Doug Cutler's touchdown throw and Dave Ray hurled ano- ther six-pointer to Bill Cassebaum to fill the scoring column. Exhibition Pro Basketball Minneapolis Lakers 106, All- Stars 70 Syracuse 102, New York 93 -Daily-Chuck Kelsey TESTING THE DEFENSE--Assistant Coach Don Dufek gets the Wolverine reserves ready to run a play against the varsity defense in a midweek football practice session. MAENTZ TO START: Branoff May Play in Gopher Tilt;-' Works on Defense "{J BEAT IT OVER to the } NI 4 C?~LITTLE CLUB TON IGHT 9-12 MICHIGAN UNION The plague of Michigan foot- ball teams for the past few years -the injury-has hit the Wolver- ine squad again. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan an- nounced that veteran end Jerry Williams will not be in the lineup when the Maize and Blue meet the high flying Minnesota team on Saturday. The Michigan coach has chosen Tom Maentz, a tall sophomore from Holland, Michi- gan to replace the ailing Wil- liams. Oosterbaan said yesterday, "We were relying heavily on Williams. He's a real fighter and a ball hawk." An injuredrshoulder has Red-Blooded? INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (I)-Pro- fessional boxers and wrestlers hereafter must take a non-Com- munist oath before they can ap- pear in Indiana rings. This was decreed today by Arch Hindman, Executive Secretary of the State Athletic Commission. Hindman said he did not feel a state government department should further the livelihood of a Communist. Read and Use Daily Classifieds put Williams definitely out of the game. How soon °he will be able to get back into action is prob- lematical Branoff Back All was not gloom in the Michi- gan camp ,however. Tony Branoff, first string halfback from Flint, has stated that his knee is im- proved. He has a slight chance of playing against the unbeaten Go- pher aggregation. Branoff has "water on the knee," an injury sustained in the losing cause against Army. Ed Hickey, one of the major figures in the Iowa upset, is still out with his cracked shoulder. The Wolverines worked on de- fense primarily at Ferry Field yesterday. The day's drill, how- ever, did include some offensive play and fundamentals practice. Maentz Shines Maentz, working out at right end has shown well, particularly in the defensive department against Iowa and Northwestern. He is one of four sophomore ends who came up to the varsity this year. Besides the flashy Ron Kra- mer, there is Charley Brooks and Mike Rotunno. The professional oddsmakers have installed Minnesota as a sev- en point favorite. Saturday will tell the tale. Top H arrier Sets Record In -winning Kwicker Breaks Old Mark by 14 Seconds By JACK HORWITZ Setting a new intramural rec- ord, Lou Kwiker paced a field of over 100 men in the annual cross country run for social fraternities and residence halls. Kwiker broke the old mark of 10:42 with his time of 10:28. He finished about 50 yards in front of his nearest competitor. The team championship for so- cial fraternities was taken by Sig- ma Alpha Mu, and Taylor House copped the residence hall crown. The Sammies piled up 27 points to win, with Kwiker placing first, Paul ' Groffsky. finishing seventh and Joel Tauber taking the 19th spot. Taylor House had Dick Eg- ner in second place, Tom Jones finishing fourth, and Dan Chapel copping the seventh slot. Taylor tallied 13 points for the win, Lambda Chi Second Lambda Chi Alpha took second place in the fraternity division, with third, fourth, fifth, and sixth places going to Chi Psi, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Theta Xi respectively. The residence hall division had Gomberg House a close second with 18 points. Cooley House took third, with Adams, Allen-Rumsey, and Strauss Houses t a k i n g fourth, fifth, and sixth. George Rockwell, representing Sigma Phi Epsilon, finished second in the run, with Dick Brown of Lambda Chi Alpha close behind. The previous record-holder, Bob Weibel, running for Cooley House, finished fourth. Weibel set the record in 1949 and has just re- turned to school after a hitch in the armed forces. Never Headed Kwiker, Rockwell, and Weibel pulled out ahead of the pack. at the start of the race and were never headed. Kwiker took the lead with Weibel close behind for the first mile and one half. Weibel tried and fell back slightly with Rockwell pulling up into 'second spot. Near the finish mark, Brown pulled ahead of the fast tiring Weibel to capture the third position. Thirteen fraternities were en- tered in the meet as well as ten of the residence halls. These groups will receive points, ifi the order of their finish, in the In- tramural standings. Kwiker was the All-State cross- country record holder in Michi- gan when he ran for Central High School in Detroit. He also held the state mile record in high school. '4 w '4 F with WOODY HERMAN Saturday Night HAPPY#,ZESTFUL MERRIMENT! MUSIC TO LIFT YOUR HEARTS DANCING THAT WILL ENCHANT YOU! Gene KELLY Cyd CHARISSE Van JOHNSON ELAINE STEWART MGM's Marvelous New Musical... ;r V rBs "Brigadoon" Song Hits! I,. I Tickets on Sale at the Administration Bldg. 10 till 4:30 On thw Dinn Il ® III ' " N °oI11 I I I I ..t4!M~Ym - i