"Y OCTOBER 19, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE IL} fP%.O aL. VnLV~nRER 19 ..55T. ICIAN.AI U JIichigan Still Top eam In ation rps, Sooners Behind 'M ' Schedules Tough Saturday Gridders Prepare Seriously -" For Vital Tilt With Gophers STUDENT DIRECTORY All-Campus Sale MONDAY, OCT.24 By The Associated Press ichigan, Maryland and Okla-t ia still are the nation's top t e college football teams but' 1 r the upheavals of last week3 even this formidable trio cant considered a cinch to stay up loes have given the Sooners some tough games in the past, tying them 21-21 in 1952 and losing only by 13-6 a year ago. Of the other members of the top 10, only Navy and Auburn, the lat- ter a newcomer to the select set, appear to have easy pickings. Na- vy plays unhappy, unwinning Penn at Philadelphia. Auburn should roll up a score against visiting Furman. there. Notre Dame, Georgia Tech, Wis- consin and Texas Christian all suffered their first defeats Satur- day and dropped out of the first 10 with a crash. Now the elite 10 lines up in this er: 'Michigan; 2. Maryland; 3. ahoma; 4. Navy; 5. Duke; 6. V olleyball All persons who wish to form an independent volleyball team dhould have their entries in to the I-M Building by October. 26. Competition will start No- vember 2. Michigan State; 7. UCLA; 8. West Virginia; 9. Auburn; 10. Southern California. Notre Dame Drops Notre Dame fell to 11th, Georgia Tech to 13th, Wisconsin to 15th and TCU to 18th. Michigan, 4-0, this weekend journeys to Minnesota for the bat- tle of the Little Brown Jug. The. Gophers don't need added incen- tives when Michigan is the foe anid they can take heart from the Wolverines' narrow 14-2 victory over Northwestern. Minnesota's y victory of the year was over orthwestern, 18-7. Maryland, 5-0, visits Syracuse Rhere the Orangemen still are celebrating their 13-0 upset of Az my. Sooners Host Colorado Oklahoma, 4-0, aiming for its 24th straight victory and its 49th in the Big Seven, hosts Colorado in. the only clash of all-winning urns this weekend. The Buff a- Duke Meets Pittsburgh Duke takes on tough Pittsburgh, Michigan State meets rugged Big Ten opposition in Illinois, UCLA entertains Iowa on Friday night, West Virginia opposes a tough eastern rival in Penn State, and Southern California visits a tra- ditional foe, California. Notre Dame hopes to rebound against Purdue while Georgia Tech should get back in the winning column easily against Florida State. Wisconsin clashes with Ohio State in an important Big Ten conference test. Top 20 Teams -Daily-Dick Gaskill JIM PACE An Arkansas Traveler with the skill and the desire to be one of Michigan's great football players. JIM PACE In weather finally touched with a football chill, the Michigan grid-t ders got down to the serious busi- ness of getting ready for Minne- sota. The coaches -kept hammering at the fact that the Gophers will really be up for this one. A year ago Minnesota came down from the North sporting an undefeated record. Underdog Michigan gave them a 34-0 beating in one of the real upsets in the Big 10. The Minnesota veterans haven't forgotten that game, and will be out for blood on Saturday. As a reminder to this, the pictures of these returnees from last year's Gopher squad are posted on the locker room walls with quotes run- ning along the lines ... "Michigan is good, but they're not unbeat- able, and we are going to be the ones to do it," Warmath Waiting , math has been thinking about the muth has 'oeen thinking about the coming game since he walked out of Michigan Stadium last fall. Posted in his office is the result of the 1954 encounter and right underneath it the 1955 game with big question marks in place of the scores. The Wolverine veterans realize, too, that the tables are turned this year, and that it is going to take more than plays to win this one. Plenty of spirit was appar- ent yesterday as the varsity de- fense was tried out against some of Minnesota's offensive plays. Injury List Smaller The injury list is growing small- er day by day. Fullback Dave Hill -seems to be back in top shape, but Lou Baldacci is still having trouble with his ankle. The ends are the worst hit posi- tion with only Charlie Brooks managing to stay unbruised over the weekend. Other than this Coach Bennie Oosterbaan indicat- ed that everyone except Ron Kra- mer will be ready to go this week- end. Kramer worked out very lightly and very briefly yesterday for the second day in a row, but it is I, __ }. £+ . Touch of Indian Lore very unlikely that he will see ac- tion this weekend. Read Daily For snug and nimble comfort afoot . .. and smart style in the casual manner, here's the wardrobe favorite. The Moxee genuine Classifieds Tea 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. ati T 1 E m W-L Michigan .... 4-0 Maryland ....5-0 Oklahoma ....4-0 Navy .....,, 4-0 Duke .........4-0 MSU .,........3-1 UCLA .........4-0 West Virginia .4-0 Auburn ......3-0-1 S. California ..4-1 F 76 33 29 7 15 4 3 9 5 1 Total 1,603 1,487 1,434 997 907 801 715 583 426 253 242 137 83 74 72 53 39 30 25 19 I) with hand-sewn vamp wardrobe favorite, too. Slip on a pair soon. COLORS BLACK BROWN SIZES 6B-12 °:.:.WIDTHS SB -D THE SECOND TEN Notre Dame ...3-1 Texas A. and M. 4-1 Georgia Tech . 4-1 Colorado ......4-0 Wisconsin ..... 3-1 Baylor........4-1 Boston College 3-0 1 Texas Christian 4-1 Yale ........ 4-0 Holy Cross ....4-0 By JOHNSON WOODS Ever since the fall of 1954 there has been constant talk about an Arkansas Traveler by the name of Jim Pace. From the first day of practice freshman coach Wally Weber and assistants were amazed by the tremendous speed and unconquer - able desire of this lithe youth to play football. At first he was crude in the execution of Michigan's intricate offensive formations and shifts, but swiftly acquired the technique of the single wing, and began to splash off long yardage against the Freshman and Junior Varsity defensive units. i elts Edge ATO In I- Grid Contest;' POther Squads EarnTop Playoff Spots During spring practice Pace continued to show brilliant play and caught the eye of many of the news agencies and magazine publications. Injured in the first few minutes of the final spring scrimmage in the Stadium, he was unable to show his abilities against the Varsity units. This fall, Michigan was picked to place high in the national rank- ings, and Jim Pace was picked to contribute quite prominently to the Michigan effort. In the Missouri game, Pace lived up to his press notices and put on a dazzling display of broken- field running in the few minutes he appeared on the field. Gains Called Back Again against Army and North- western, he broke away for long yardage although having most of his gains called back. In the process he became somewhat of a crowd-pleaser as chants intermit- tently went up, "We want Pace!" Pace never thought he would be coming to a school like Michigan and even now it all seems like a dream to him. Even now he is so overawed by Michigan, its tradi- tion and size that he finds it difficult to lose himself in foot- ball. A history major and a sopho- more in Literary School, he would like to play professional football or baseball after gradua- ting and then go into coaching. A Sense of Morals Jim Pace is a religious boy and although on the way to becoming a great sports hero knows that one must keep his sense of morals. As everyone knows, Pace has had over 150 yards and one touch- down called back. He was asked if he was disappointed because of these costly penalties. The answer was no, it did not disappoint him very much, but if the fate of winning and losing those games depended on that yardage and those touchdowns, it would have hurt him very deeply. - U By 190OB McELWAIN Delta .Tau Delta, behind the :flashy passing of Jack Demorest, edged Alpha Tau Omega in an air duel yesterday, 20-19, to gain the first-place playoffs in the I-M Social Fraternity League. The Delts had to fight all the way for their victory, however, as ATO had its own passing wizard in Dick Davidson, who almost pulled the game out of the fire. Neither team was forced to punt, as they both scored every time they got their hands on the ball. A Demorest to Ray Hockstead pass, covering 30 yards, got the scoring under way, and Vic Krause tallied the all-important extra point. ATO came right back, as Davidson hit Charlie Gunn in the end zone, but the extra point try failed. Demorest Scores Seven Demorest scored the second lta Tau Delta touchdown on a yard run, and added the decid- cg point on another run. Alpha u Omega took the -second-half ckoff, and marched to the Delt's yard line, where Dave Ward red in a Davidson pass for core. Again the try for point! s .^ .wc Sigma Phi Epsilon also gained the first-place playoffs, as it de- feated Beta Theta Pi, 20-0. Al- though both teams had 2-1 re- cords, the point spread between Sig Eps' victories and defeats was greater than that of Beta Theta Pi's, and thus it was chosen as league champs. Excellent Passing In a day that featured sterling passing performances, George Rich of Phi Delta Theta proved no exception, as he led his teammates to a 19-0 win over Phi Sigma Del- ta, in another top league play- off duel. Rich threw -touchdown passes to Dick Little, Bill Mac- Farland, and Andy Samosluk, and accounted for the lone extra point with an end run. Phi Gamma Delta, paced by former Varsity halfback Jack Wheeler, smashed Delta Kappa Epsilon, 19-0. Wheeler, operating from tailback, ran 20 yards for one touchdown, and also hit pay- dirt on passes to Fred Lyons and Van King. In a tight defensive battle, Phi Kappa Psi edged Theta Delta Phi, 7-6, and also gained the playoffs. Bill Myer hit Bill Roeder for Phi Psi's touchdown, and a Myer to Gordon Busby pass clicked for the deciding point. Heartbreaking Loss Phi Epsilon Pi, a new fraterni- ty on campus, and participating in its first I-M game, lost a heart- breaker to Theta Delta Chi, 2-0. With less than a minute to go, Roland King got caught behind his own goal for the deciding points. In another passing exhibition, Fran LeMire led Lambda Chi Al- pha to a 12-0 win over Alpha Ep- silon Pi. Dick Heusel and Dick Good were on the receiving ends of LeMire's TD throws. In other fraternity games, The- ta Xi blanked Phi Kappa Tau, 7-0; Chi Psi whitewashed Phi Kappa Sigma, 12-0; Delta Upsilon behind Jim Surgeson's passing and running, beat Chi Phi in a high-scoring affair, 26-12; Alpha Sigma Phi edged Trigon, 13-11; FJ L r r Parker Will Remain Coach At Detroit DETROIT (MP)-President Edwin J. Anderson of the winless Detroit Lions football team has expressed confidence in head coach Buddy Parker. "Rumors . . . that the Detroit Football Company contemplates a change in its head coaching posi- tion are positively groundless," An, derson's statement said. It continued: "Vicious rumors have been start- ed that we have contacted coach Ivy Williamson of Wisconsin. I, personally, do not know coach Williamson, and I have had no contact, directly or indirectly, with coach Williamson at any time. "Coach Parker is our head coach, and will remain so." In Wisconsin, Williamson term- ed the rumor "utterly ridiculous." CAMP!US 619 E. Mi~AST'S STORE Liberty Phone NO 2-0266 '.ti :. ...fir.....: '.'::.... v. .. ..... .. '{ R: i.:::"::: ::. ..}". :.:::: ::::::. ".}':. :. : ".Y. '.°.; 4;. i :1Y"' L":"ft '{.'ti l : t".' : ;.. y: }1C 1f,'" "'.. . .t'.HRj. .1 C',. '.Y:::.Y.Y:::..':.".:::...:::: : :'::::J:'.:".:: .: .::1. :.'.: :::.::::::.Yf,":::t::J:::::....."...........nv........... ::':ti...w............1....... IJ...... f.s . 4 and Kappa 16-7. 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