hPAt E{ SLR! THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12,195& PAGE ~1X TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, OCTOBER 12. 1951 Suman Le Gds Na Sigs To 13- 7 Win Over Phi Ghi Sigma Alpha Mu Edges Delta Upsilon In Social Fraternity 'B' Football Tilt FGRID'SELECTIIONS By PAUL BORMAN ed a pass to end Ted Dodenhoff Halfback Froncie Gutman was on the Phi Chi goal line for the the key figure in Nu Sigma Nu's, second and winning marker. 13-7, win over Phi Chi in the game which highlighted yesterday's I-M Break Tie pro fraternity football action at With three minutes left, Phi Al- South Ferry Field. pha Delta broke an 18-18 tie and The, first time the Nu Sigs got scored 13 points to defeat Phi Del- the ball Gutman outraced the Phi ta Epsilon 31-18. Dex Galloway Chi defense and took a perfect led the Phi Alpha Delta attack pass from quarterback Dave Jones with 18 points. for the tally. Gutman also bullet- Phi Alpha Kappa combined air- 0 0 PrncetonAthletLic ea Backs Grid I~-mpai r tight defence play and a powerful offence to whip Delta Sigma Pi, 20-0. End Don Piersma paced Phi, Alpha Kappa scorers with 12 points while quarterback Roger Golden contributed the other touchdown. In other pro fraternity games Alpha Kappa Kappa edged Phi Ro Sigma, 13-6, Phi Delta Phi shut- out Tau Epsilon Rho, 13-0, and; Alpha Chi Sigma nipped Alpha Kappa Pti, 1-0. In the top game between the social fraternity 'B' teams, Sigma Alpha Mu edged Delta Upsilon 7-6 in overtime. PHILADELPHIA-(*l- Elim- DU Drew First Blood thing; it's financial aid to players DU drew first blood and scored' inating football scholarships will he (Marshall) is talking out," on a long pass from quarterback not mean the end of college foot- iDon Mick to end Jim Baad. Thej ball, Phinceton Athletic DirectorF Sammies came back and scored in' b athletic scholarships is not going the closing minutes on a pass from Ken Fairman has said in answer- to do awayhwith college football Bill Stern to Bill Boorstein to tie ing charges the Ivy League was as long as there are kids to play the game. In the overtime period destroying the game. the game." I the Sammies dominated the play Fairman spoke yesterday before Fairman said the Ivy League and got the game winning point the Philadelphia Football Writers was looking for students as well for gaining the most yardage. Association. Last week that group as athletes to fill athletic scholar- Beta Theta Pi took to the air heard George Preston Marshall, ships. The idea was to eliminate and gained a 14-0 win over Zeta owner of the National Football wholesalerbidding among colleges Beta Tau. Left end Dave Redick sax h Tvy League was wrecking lara for fothall in universit JMIJ U~fl. - J d.fl.~ 't' T t~fJ V ~ j±L4'sUVJandLTHalJfJback Bil, LVMcLJ.VytAeachJ -Daily-Harding Williams COMMUNICATIONS CENTER-University students had a chance to view the new Stadium Communi- cations center yesterday. Athletic Director H. O. (Fritz) Crisler was on hand with other officials to conduct tours. Visitors were taken through all four levels of the center. The above picture was taken during the MSU game on the second level where the working press watches the game. This level also contains a central communications point to disper se information to the reporters. THIS WEEK'S GAMES (Consensus selections appear in capitals) CONSENSUS (32-8-.800) 1. Army at MICHIGAN 2. AUBURN at Kentucky 3. BAYLOR at Arkansas. 4. CALIFORNIA at Oregon St. 5. Holy Cross at PENN ST. 6. Indiana at MICHIGAN ST. 7. KANSAS at Iowa St. 8. Louisiana St. at GEORGIA TECH 9. MARYLAND at Miami. 10. NAVY at Tulane 11. Northwestern at MINNESOTA 12. OHIO STATE at Illinois 13. Oregon at WASHINGTON 14. Purdue at NOTRE DAME 15. SOUTHERN METHODIST at Duke 16. Texas vs. OKLAHOMA 17. TEXAS CHRISTIAN at Alabama 18. Vanderbilt at MISSISSIPPI 19. West Virginia at SYRACUSE 20. Wisconsin at IOWA * * * DAVE GREY (34-6--.850) - Michigan, Auburn, Baylor, Ore. St., Holy Cross, MSU, Kan., Ga. Tech. Miami, Navy, Minn., OSU, Wash., ND, Duke, Okla., TCU, Miss., W. Va., Iowa. STEVE HEILPERN (34-6-.850) - Michigan, Auburn, Baylor, Penn. St., MSU, Kan., Ga. Tech, Miami, Navy, Minn., OSU, Wash., ND, SMU, Okla., TCU, Miss., W. Va., Iowa. JIM BAAD (32-8-.800) -Michigan, Auburn, Baylor, Calif., Penn. St., MSU, Kan., Ga. Tech, Md., Navy, Minn., OSU, Wash., ND, Duke, Okla., TCU, Miss., Syracuse, Iowa. BRUCE BENNETT (32-8-.804)) - Michigan, Ky., Baylor, Calif., Holy Cross, MSU, Kan., Ga. Tech, Md., Navy, Minn., OSU, Wash., ND, SMU, Okla., TCU, Miss., Syracuse, Iowa. HANK ROSENBAUM (32-8-.800) - Michigan, Auburn, Baylor, Ore. St., Penn. St., MSU, Iowa St., Ga. Tech, Md., Navy, Minn,, Ill., Wash., ND, SMU, Okla., TCU, Miss., W. Va., Iowa. AL WINKELSTEIN (32-8-.800) - Michigan, Auburn, Baylor, Calif., Penn St., MSU, Iowa St., Ga. Tech, Md., Navy, Minn., OSU, Wash., ND, SMU, Okla., TCU, Miss., Syracuse, Iowa. GUEST STAFF (30-10-.750) - DICK HALLORAN (Daily Edt. torial Director) - Michigan, Ky., Baylor, Calif., Penn. St., MSU, Kan., Ga. Tech, Md., Navy, Minn., OSU, Wash., ND, Duke, Okla., TCU, Miss., Syracuse, Iowa. DICK CRAMER (30-10-.750) - Michigan, Ky., Baylor, Calif., Penn St., MSU, Kan., Ga. Tech, Miami, Navy, Minn., OSU, Wash., ND, SMU, Okla., TCU, Miss., W. Va., Iowa. JOHN HILLYER (29-11-.725) - Michigan, Auburn, Baylor, Calif., Penn St., MSU, Iowa St., Ga. Tech, Miami, Tulane, Minn., OSU, Wash., ND, SMU, Okla., TCU, Miss., Syracuse, Iowa. Go by tol 1Y _UVUWaW~~usjce rlu ui11a U1 i6tyS the sport it founded. over-all picture, the athletic direc- "Let's get to the heart. of this or said. r . . ,u. i e , Y Y. ,..i/ 'scored for th wnners.T Quarterback Tony Efremoff's in touchdownaerial to righttend Carl Borders proved to be the only scoring of the afternoon as Chi Phi defeated Theta Xi, 7-0. TheJ In the other social 'B' games dencet Chi Psi shutout Alpha Epsilon Pi, football 119-0, and Psi Upsilon won over night a Acacia by forfeit. I Scor MED if.- FASI reflect and so I ~They help fashionsj your stat patternso Fashion b Saffel &I suits. SAIFFELL & For over a Quarter C :.c:.:";n{ :.-.am?i:: i:t:" a;R:"Ssa Sri By GARY PECK first competition in resi- hall class 'B' intra-mural 1 got off to a slow start last at Wines Field. es were remarkably low, ... . '.v.*.*,e sisilin atilgssg 'S HIONS t simply t a time ciety... blocking was poor, and offences, on the whole, were quite slow. The lone exception in last night's saga of mediocre play was the Big Red of Gomberg. The se- cret of Gomberg's success as it downed Scott, 28-0, was its depth, and all-around prowess in both offense and defense. Donahue Sparks Big Red Pat Donahue was obiously Gom- berg's big gun. Donahue accounted for all four of Big Red's touch- downs by throwing TD passes to Dave Karr and Dave Stawski, by intercepting a Scott pass and run- ning for the tally, and by running 65 yards from his tailback position for another marker. Reeves house definitely out- played Adams, 13-0. Both teams concentrated on an air attack, al- though Reeves' wasmore effec- tive. Benedict Stars Mike Benedict was Reeves' sparkplug as he. tossed two touch- down passes, the first to Bill Har- rison, the second to Paul Babbas, and ran for the extra point. Strauss scored early on a touch- down pass from Lew Patuto to Bob Bailey and then held Van Tyne to win, 6-0. Strauss had good potential runners in Patuto and Dave Markey. Van Tyne, meanwhile, had a good passing combination going from Dick Ger- ber to Fred Appleman. mb erg, Reeves, Strauss Win Openers Residence Halls 'B' League Football Greene house won a nip-and- tuck ballgame with Anderson, 6-0. Greene capitalized on having two good passers and two good receiv- ers. Frank Lemky tossed the touchdown pass in the dying min- utes of the second half to Larry Pedrich. Both. teams had fair defences, and were both hurt by penalties. Anderson had a good passer in Pete Maher, but he seemed ham- pered by the fact that he couldn't find anyone to throw to. Other scores were: Michigan 12, Kelsey 7; Taylor 7, Hayden 0; Chi- cago 1, Allen-Rumsey 0 (decided in overtime); and Wenley over Hinsdale by forfeit. FRATERNITY TRACK MEET: Phi Gams Capture, Close Victory - - -- - - -- ~ - BROWNIE CAME RA Most popular snapshot camera ever built! Simple, sure, smart-no wonder it's the world's most popular camera. Just load, aim, and shoot for grand pictures by sun or by flash. Get 12 big, sharp black-and-white or color pic- tures from a roll of film. Come in today for full details. p create them. Good make your moods, e of mind, and your of behaviour. Create by wearing one of Bush's sportcoats or CAMERA $745 FLASHOLDER $425 By BOB BOLTON Phi Gamma Delta led by Gene Honeyman's double victory in the high and low hurdles took first place in the I-M social fraternity track meet yesterday at Ferry Field. Cold weather kept the times down and no records were set. In grabbing the victory the Phi Gams piled up a total of 21 points five more than runner up, Phi Delta Theta. Phi Kappa Tau and Alpha Tau Omega tied for third place honors with 13 points while last year's champion, Sigma Phi Epsilon picked up 11 points and a fifth place tie with Sigma Chi. Strong in Field Events Besides Honeyman's double vic- tory in the hurdles the Phi Gains showed very strong in the field events. Dick McCracken claimed a first place tie in the high jump with Phi Kappa Tau's Al Dangre- mond by going over the bar at 5'8". Phi Gam also picked up place points in the shot put, broad jump and pole vault. Last year's 100 yard dash cham- pion Charlie Gunn of ATO re- peated his victory again yesterday. Gunn, who runs in his stocking feet, won easily in :11.0, six tenths of a second off his own record per- formance. Mile Exciting The day's most exciting event was the mile won by George Rock- well of Sigma Phi Epsilon/ Phi Kappa Tau's Cal Covell set the pace for most of the run but didn't have the stamina to hold off Rock- "PURCHASE FROM PURCHASE" Purchase Camera Shop BUSH 'entury 'ZIme a mmmm Especially for you -- DESIGNED HAIR STYLES -V 715 N. University well's third. silon Place 1. 2. 3. 4. finishing kick and fell to Bob Mansfield of Delta Up- 1116 S. University NO 8-6972 was second. STATISTICS Team Phi Gamma Delta Phi Delta Theta Phi Kappa Tau Alpha Tau Omega Points 21 16 13 13 . ":l'f. " Make kiws w4ItW d 9 I 5. Sigma Phi Epsilon 11 6. Sigma Chi 11 7. Lambda Chi Alpha, 7 8. Delta Upsilon 5 9. Sigma Alpha Mu 5 10. Theta Chi 4 440 YD. DASH-1. Chuck Tur- ner (Sigma Phi Epsilon) 2. Paul Kors (Alpha Tau Omega) 3. Brien Harris (Delta Upsilon) Time--:57.4. 100 YD. DASH-1. Charlie Gunn (Alpha Tau Omega) 2. Don Dahm (Alpha Tau Omega) 3. Don Johnson (Phi Delta Theta) Time - :11.00. 880 YD. RUN-1. Don Daezner (Phi Kappa Tau) 2. Dick Cope- land (Lambda Chi Alpha) 3. Bob Steller (Alpha Tau Omega) Time-2 :15.4. MILE-1. George Rockwell Sigma Phi Epsilon) 2. Bob Mansfield (Delta Upsilon) 3. Cal Covell (Phi Kappa Tau) Time- 5:06.9. HIGH HURDLES-1. Gene Honeyman (Phi Gamma Delta) 2. James McCall (Sigma Chi) 3. Chuck Clarkson (Phi Delta Theta). Time-:10.0. LOW HURDLES-1. Gene Honeyman (Phi Gamma Delta) 2. James McCall (Sigma Chi) 3. Tim.Hays (Theta Chi) Time I- :09.6. SHOT PUT-1. Joe McKoen (Sigma Chi) 2. Bob Dunlap (Phi Delta Theta) 3. Fred Lyons (Phi Gamma Delta). Distance - 38'10". BROAD JUMP-1. Larry Levy (Sigma Alpha Mu) 2. Dave Cornwell (Phi Gamma Delta) 3. Dick Copeland (Lambda Chi Al- pha) Distance-19'84". HIGH JUMP-1. (Tie) Dick McCracken (Phi Gamma Delta) and Al Dangremond (Phi Kappa Tau) 3. Randy Tarrier (Phi Del- ta Theta) Height-5'8". POLE VAULT - 1. Chuck Clarkson (Phi Delta Theta) 2. (Tie) Chuck Schrader (Lambda Chi Alpha), Phil Burt (Phi Gamma Delta), Jack Cross (Theta Chi) Height-9'6". i ,. t J heads the class on flavor ! '4' I I IL I IVY LEAGUE POLISHED SHEEN KHAKIS $595 A XI;