SATURDAY, OCTOBjM 20,1958 THE MICHIGAN DAILY F A GE PI V"! .11 SATURDAY. OCTOBEIL ZO. 1956 THE MICHIGAN DAItY 1'~GE ~WW Michigan's Starting Lineup Against orthwestern JIM VAN PELT TERRY BARR JOHN HERRNSTEIN ... quarterback . * . right halfback ... fullback RON KRAMER TOM MAENTZ *. . left end . . . right end JIM PACE-Michigan tailback, who is expected to start for the second week In a row, runs against Northwestern in last year's game in Ann Arbor. USC vs. Washington Is Top PCC Game; TCU Battles Texas Aggies in Southwest DICK HILL MARV NYREN ...left guard ... right guard Th irteen Head Coaches, Produced by Michigan Today finds the majority of col- lege teams throughout the nation getting down to the business of taking on teams in their own con- ferences after a spree of intersec- tional and non-league games t open the campaign. Some of the most interesting action will take place on the Pacific Coast, where there are four games scheduled that will have a direct bearing as to who will be the PCC's titlist. Trojans Undefeated The top game is the Washington at Southern Cal encounter in the Los Angeles Coliseum. The Tro- jans are undefeated and have visions of remaining that way for the remainder of the year, but the Huskies are strong. Stanford meets a weak Oregon team, but can't afford to relax be- cause of the suicide schedule they have left. Other West Coast games are Oregon State at Washington State and UCLA at California. Football fans in the southwest are looking toward the Texas Christian-Texas A&M battle to- day as being that sector's game of the year. TCU is undefeated and their running game features the flying feet of Jim Swink and Ken Wineburg. Pardee Doubtful Starter Bear Bryant's Aggies were tied by a surprising Houston eleven last By BRUCE BENNETT Ever wonder how many Michi- gan graduates are currently coach- ing football in the college ranks? The number of head coaches is thirteen, ranging from schols the size of Michigan all the way down to little Wesleyan University at Middletown, Conn., a school of 750 men, where Norm Daniels, '32, is the coach. The number one graduate, grid- iron wise, is of course, Bennie Oosterbaan. A great three sport athlete in the mid-twenties, Oost- erbaan has been head coach at his alma mater since 1948. During that time, up to today's game, his teams have won 51, lost 24 and tied two. Friedman at Brandeis A great teammate of his, Benny Friedman, is a veteran in the college ranks. Currently coaching at Brandeis University in Massa- chusetts, Friedman is a veteran of 13 years a a coach. One of the best quarterbacks in Michigan history, it was Fried- man's passes to Oosterbaan that made Michigan a powerhouse dur- $100,000 Suit Settled by NFL. PHILADELPHIA (,)-A $2,100,- 000 damage suit brought against the National Football League and its member clubs by the former Liberty Broadcasting System, Inc., of Dallas, Tex., was settled yes- terday for $100,000. Under the terms of the settle- ment, the trustees of the bankrupt Liberty Broadcasting System will receive $60,000 from the league at, once and the remaining $40,000 by Jan. 7 of next year. The suit was started when the Liberty system accused the pro- football league of unlawfully pre- venting the broadcast of its games in the home territories of NFL teams. ing the twenties. Veteran footballl followers will recall Friedman'si field goal that supplied Michigan with a 3-0 margin over Illinois and Red Grange in 1925. It is no coincidence that Fried-' man currently has one of the top passing quarterbacks in the east on his team in Jim Stehlin. Iowa Mentor 'M' Grad Another great Wolverine quart-I erback now coaching is Forest Eva- shevski, '41, now at Iowa. "Evy" cleared the way for the long runs of Tom Harmon and Bob Westfall during his playing days and has held a head coach's job for the past seven years. Several of the small colleges in Michigan are coached by Michi- gan graduates. Jack Petoskey, left end on Michigan's national cham- pion team in 1932, is Western Michigan's mentor. Others are Alan Bovard, '30, at Michigan Tech andl Fred Trosko, '40, at Eastern Michigan in Ypsilanti. Elliott at Nebraska Pete Elliott, who graduated from Michigan only seven years ago, has already ascended the ladder to, a big time school-Nebraska. A, great all around athlete in his undergraduate days, Elliott played, on Fritz Crisler's Rose Bowl cham- pions in 1948. Before taking the Nebraska job, he served as an as- sistant to Bud Wilkinson at Okla- homa for several years. The Yankee Conference in New England boasts two Michigan alums, Bob Ingalls, '42, at Con- necticut and Harold Westerman, '42 at Maine. Which coach has the better team this year will be determined at Storrs, Conn., today when these two schools meet. Ingall's Con- necticut team defeated Massachu- setts last Saturday, 71-6. Delaware is piloted by Dave Nel- son, '42. Two other Michigan men coaching in collegiate circles are George Allen, '47, at Whittier, Calif., and Ralph Kohl, '48, at Franklin, Ind. week and there is some doubt as to whether their pile driving fullback, Jack Pardee, injured last weekend, will be ready. But the Aggies have the home field advantage. The Auburn-Georgia Tech match will feature action in the South, but some other top-notch games will bring together Tennessee and Alabama, Vanderbilt and Florida, Mississippi and Tulane and SMU and Kentucky. Teacher vs. Pupil An interesting game may prove to be the Maryland-North Caro- lina encounter. This will be one of those teacher (the Tarheels Jim Tatum) vs. pupil (Maryland's Tommy Mont) games, with both teams holding back nothing in an effort to win. Each has nothing to lose and everything to gain. The best the East has to offer this weekend is the Army-Syracuse contest and it should be a good one. And out on the plains, Oklahoma travels to Kansas today. The Sooners beat Kansas 44-6 last year. They beat Texas too, 20-0 and this year increased the margin to 45-0. A similar percentage in- crease would give the Sooners an 85-point spread today. - Don't laugh! Despite the fact that Michigan is heavily favored to beat North- western today, past history shows that the game will more than 1951 NU 6 'M' 1952 M' 48 NU 1953 'M' 20 NU 0 14 12 1954 'M 1955 M' MICHIGAN 7 NU 14 NU - W-20, L-8, Sport Shorts likely not1 1892 NU 1893 'M' 1898 'M' 1901 M' 1917 NU 1919 'M' 1924 'M' 1925 NU 1932 'M' 1933 'M' 1934 NU 1936 NU 1937 NU 1938 'M' 1940 'M' 1941 'M' 1942 'M' 1943 'M' 1944 'M' 1945 'M' 1946 'M' 1947 'M' 1948 'M' 1949 NU 1950 'M' be a runaway. 10 'M' 72 NU 6 NU 29 NU 21 'M' 16 NU 27 NU 3 'M' 15 NU 13 NU 13 'M' 9 'M' 7 'M' 0 NU (Tie) 20 NU 14 NU 34 NU 21 NU 27 NU 20 NU 14 NU (Tie) 49 NU 28 NU 21 'M' 34 NU MIKE ROTUNNO AL SIGMAN JIM ORWIG .c. center ... right tackle . .. left tackle Wolverines Hold Edge in NU Series 0 2 T-1 8 6 5 0 12 13 0 2 6 0 6 0 0 0 13 7 16 7 0 7 14 21 0 20 23 By The Associated Press MIAMI, Fla. - Coach Wally Butts had his "pore lil' Georgia boys" keyed up to a fighting pitch last night and the Bulldogs shock- ed 42,682 Orange Bowl fans by battling Miami's heavily favored Hurricanes to a 7-7 deadlock. Jefferson Davis, a lanky half- back from Alabama, gave Georgia a 7-0 lead in the first period by the air and with its running at- tack, walloped Virginia Military last night, 40-14 in a Southern Conference football game at Grif- fith Stadium. It was the fourth win in five games for the unbeaten Colonials, who were tied last week by Boston University, and the fourth loss in six games for VMI. * * * latching on to a Miami punt and Prep Game of Year faking a host of Hurricane tacklers FLINT -Flint Northern, the off their feet in a beautiful 58- state's No. 1 high school football yard touchdown run. A desperate team, edged second-ranked Bay last-quarter drive by the Hurri- City Central 24-21 in the state's canes evened the count. "prep game of the year." * * * A 22-yard field goal in the first Colonials Still Undefeated quarter was the difference as pow- WASHINGTON--George Wash- erful Northern edged an equally- ington University's Colonials, un- potent Bay City Central crew be- corking scoring punches both in fore 15,680 spectators. for your eating pleasure... PIZZA at the Del Rio BEER- WINE -also takeout 122 W. Washington Closed Tuesday rr Ir I' i PETE SEEGER Concert of Folk Songs MASONIC TEMPLE MONDAY, OCT. 22 8:00 P.M. $1.25 Tickets at Music Center or Room 130, Lane Hall There's Lots Of Talk At Michigan I I IL a _® Hear the Superb g ft P d faftwnic Again & Again On DECCA /9r in RECORDS SYM. NO 88 IN G (HAYDN) - SYM. NO. 4 IN D MINOR (SCHUMANN) - FURTWANGLER SYMPHONY NO. 9 IN C (B. & H. NO. 7) (SCHUBERT) - FURTWANGLER SYMPHONY NO. 3 IN D (SCHUBERT) - SYMPHONY NO. 34 IN C (MOZART) - MARKEVITCH MATHIS DER MALER - SYMPHONIC DANCES (HINDEMITH) - CONDUCTED BY THE COMPOSER THE FOUR TEMPERAMENTS - SYMPHONIC METAMORPHOSIS (HINDEMITH) - HINDEMITH DIE HARMONIE DER WELT (HINDEMITH) - CONDUCTED BY THE COMPOSER MISSA SOLEMNIS IN D (BEETHOVEN) - WITH SOLOISTS & CHORUS - CARL BOHM A MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM (MENDELSSOHN) - WITH SOLOISTS & CHORUS - FRICSAY A GERMAN REQUIEM (BRAHMS) - WITH SOLOISTS & CHORUS - LEHMANN EL AMOR BRUJO (FALLA) - ESPANA RAPSODIE (CHABRIER) - LEHMANN PIANO CONCERTO NO. 19 (MOZART) - SYMPHONY NO. 29 IN A (MOZART) - HASKIL, FRICSAY ElU I r~~nr I~r~D~IEADf and on other Campuses too! This adds up to a continuing need for more and more communica- tions facilities. As the world's largest manufactur- er of such equipment, Western Electric needs some additional top-flight engineers, scientists and mathematicians, the kind that are here on the Ann Arbor campus. 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