TUESDAY, OCTORM 23,1954 THE MICIIIGAN DAILY PAGE TIMEt TUESDAY OCTOBER 23, 1958 TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE 'Hin sdale, Weitley, Heyden Whin I'llJ Grid Til0 ..........________________i ________,".~ - -~".,.,.,~.-...., (" - Scenefrom the 4 .EL NE S by Dick Cramer Minnesota Threat Looms AS IT must be on Tuesdays during the football season, thoughts turn from of the preceding Saturday's performance of the Michi- gan football team to prospects for the weekend ahead. After a "breather" that turned out to be not quite a breatherl last week against Northwestern, the Wolverines cannot expect an easy time of it this Saturday either. They take on a Minnesota squad that is a strong contender, along with Michigan, for the Big Ten championship and the bid to the Rose Bowl. Present Conference standings show the Gophers in fourth place, one position above the Wolverines. Coach Murray Warmath's eleven has two Big Ten victories over Purdue and Illinois, while beingI held to a scoreless tie in the rain against Northwestern. You can be sure the Gophers will be fired up for the Homecoming game this Saturday at the Stadium. A victory for them would put Michigan in a desperate position in its battle for the top of the Big - Ten. The Wolverines would have two losses. Minnesota then would be able to lose a game (probably to its toughest opponent after Mich- igan -- Michigan State) and still stand ahead of Michigan in the standings. Concern over the other eligible contender for the Rose Bowl, undefeated Iowa, wouldberonly slight, because the Hawkeyes have Michigan, Minnesota and Ohio State on their schedule on succes- sive weeks. That's a summary of the dreams of Minnesota. But the play of the Wolverines to date indicates they are quite capable of dealing with the Gophers. Saturday's 34-20 victory made it all the more evident that of- fense has replaced defense as the key to Michigan's gridiron suc- cess. The Wolverines have a 125-56 point edge over their first, four opponents as compared with their four-game 1955 record of 96-18. .i. Sustain Drives.. . THE difference is even clearer when one recalls that the Michigan football team of last year made a large share of its points by capitalizing on opposition mistakes. This year the Wolverines have repeatedly shown they're capable of the long scoring march. Reliance on a strong defense has been relaxed somewhat be- cause Michigan now has the varied and consistently powerful at- tack it has lacked in recent years. This is not to say the Wolverines are any weaker on defense; on the contrary, they have a completely veteran line. But the head- lines have gone to the offensive stars - Terry Barr, Jim Pace, John Herrnstein, Ron Kramer and the other backs and ends - who have produced at least five touchdowns on three of the last four Saturdays.. Injuries may be the major stumbling block for Michigan this coming Saturday. Although most of the casualties from the North- western game have :already recovered, Coach Bennie Oosterbaan ex- pressed concern yesterday over the condition of Barr who is suffering from a severe charley horse inside his knee. The prospect of Barrs possibly missing the. Minnesota contest is very disquieting. Already recognized as one of the best defensive backs in college football today, he has also become a dependably fast* and smart runner. His average yardage gained per carry is a team- leading 6.2 and his passing has been responsible for some of Michi- gan's longest gains this season. Gomberg, Cooley Remain Unbeaten; Williams Upset QUESTIONABLE STARTER-A top defensive back and Michi- gan's leading ground gainer, Terry Barr (41) is a questionable starter in this week's game with Minnesota. He sustained a severe charley horse in last Saturday's action with Northwestern. EastSurprises Big T'en; Penn S tate Downs OSU By RUDE DiFAZIO Hinsdale knocked Williams from the unbeaten ranks with a 6-0 up- set in Residence Hall "A" football Monday afternoon. Wenley followed the pattern by defeating previously u n b e a t e n Scott while Heyden scored a mild upset over Kelsey. In the biggest surprise of the day Hinsdale scored on a pass from Pete Parker to Bob Bolton and then hung on to gain the victory. Scott Surprised Wenley not to be outdone sur- prised Scott by getting off to a 7-0 lead in the first half on a touch- down and extra-point by Dick Le- may. Scott bounced back early in the second half on a scoring pass from Jack Mogk to Don Weise. Wenley scored again, however, taking the victory, 13-6, on a touchdown by Norm Dane. Heyden's defeat of Kelsey came on a score in the first half by cap- tain Jim Parkington. The victory put Heyden over the .500 mark and leaves them with a mathamatical chance to tie for first place in their division. Gomberg, leading their division, was hard pressed in the first half by Allen pumsey but gained mo- mentum to win 20-7. The Big Red was plagued by a mix-up in signals which resulted Correction L a s t Thursday Phi Rho Sigma defeated Law Club, 1-0, and Friday Owen Co-op edged Wesleyan, 2-0, not the reverse as reported in last week's Daily. in a string of offside penalties in the early minutes of the game. They rebounded, however, to en- joy a 7-0 halftime lead on a pass from Brue Fox to Bill Wheat. A toss from Fox to Fred Channon made the extra-point. McVay, Treder Score In the second half Fred McVay and Don Treder scored touchdowns to insure the victory. Cooley House remained unbeat- en with a 20-0 victory over Adams. Cooley was led by Bruce Conybare who passed for two scores and an extra-point and scored the other seven points on his own. In the only fraternity game of the afternoon Pi Lambda Phi de- feated Sigma Alpha Epsilon 19-12 in the Social "B" league despite the fact that Dick Agnew scored two touchdowns for SAE. In other games Anderson scored three touchdowns in the second half to beat Chicago, 25-13; Win- chell rolled over Reeves 27-0; and Huber beat Taylor 18-9. The Mich- igan-Strauss game was postponed because the field was littered with rubbish left by Sunday afternoon picknickers. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.' 14. Minnesota at MICHIGAN California at Washington Colgate at Yale Iowa at Purdue Kentucky at Georgia Maryland at Tennessee Miami (Fla.) at TCU Michigan State at Illinois Navy at Pennsylvania Northwestern at Indiana 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. North Carolina State at Duke Oklahoma at Notre Dame Oregon at Pittsburgh Oregon State at UCLA USC at Stanford Texas at Rice Texas A&M at Baylor Tulane at Georgia Tech Wake Forest at N. Carolina Wisconsin at Ohio State Grid Selections It was a disastrous weekend for the "experts" on The Michigan Daily Sports Staff whose forecasting percentage was a dismal .561, or approximately 11-9. However, Phil Smith of 1223 Hill Street wasn't fooled by the many upsets as he posted an amazing 16-4 mark to win two free tickets to either the State or Michigan theatres. Entries may be mailed or brought in person to "Grid Picks," Student Publications Building, 420 Maynard Street. Please send your name, address and telephone number on the entries and be sure to pick the score of the Michigan-Minnesota game as this will decide multiple ties. THIS WEEK'S GAMES Michigan Grid Statistics FIRST DOWNS Rushing Passing Penalty NET YDS. RUSHING No. of Attempts Yds. per Attempt. MICH. OPP. 70 43 48 33 20 9 2 1 851 659 212 176 4.01 3.74 PUNTS 14 . 21 Average Distance per Punt 33.8 36.8 KICKOFFS, 'RETURNED BY 12 By BOB BOLTON De-emphasized eastern football may not be in the same class as the Big Ten version but you'll never prove it by looking at Penn State. The Nittany Lions rolled into Columbus Saturday and beat un- defeated Ohio State at its own ball possession sgame by a 7-6 count. Penn ran' 75 plays to the Buckeyes 58 and their persistance payed off when they shoved across a touchdown in the fourth quarter. MSU, Iowa, Ind. Win. Ohio, however, was 'the only team to rub luster off the Big Ten reputation as college football's t o u g h e s t Conference. Michigan State, Iowa and Indiana all won non-conference tilts. In an attempt to climb into first place in the national ratings Mich- igan State poured six second-half touchdowns through a battered Notre Dame defense to completely crush the Irish, 47-14. For the second straight week the Spartans showed the ability to move through the air as well as on the ground. Junior quarterback Jim Ninow- ski engineered an 83 yard touch- down drive by throwing three times for 55 yards and Dennis Mendyk fired 16 yards to Mike Pantich for another tally. Indiana Edged Nebraska Indiana found the winning com- bination for the first time'this sea- son as they countered twice in the second half to edge Nebraska, 19-14. The Hoosiers who have lost twice in Conference play this year showed little strength in their vic- tory Saturday and cannot be re- gardeduas a threat to their more powerful Conference foes. In a practice for future Big Ten games Iowa used mostly second and third stringers in racking up Hawaii, 34-0. The Hawkeyes who are casting envious looks at Pasadena and a possible Conference title displayed little for opposing scouts to take back with them in Saturday's romp. Gophers Sniff Roses Minnesotadrew a bead on the Rose Bowl by squeezing past high- ly favored Illinois on Dick Bor- stad's fourth-quarter field goal, 16-13. Gopher quarterback Bobby Cox put on a fantastic one man show as he scored both Minnesota touchdowns and set up the field goal. In the other Conference con- test Purdue and Wisconsin fought to a 6-6 deadlock. The Badgers muffed five other scoring oppor- tunities when their attack bogged near the goal line. For Hair Styling That Satisfies, next time try 715 N. University FUMBLES 11 Ball lost, by fumbles 8 18 18 15 NET YDS. PASSING 462 Forward Passes Attempted 51 Forward Passes Completed 29 Passes Had Intercepted 319 44 18 PENALTIES Yds. Penalized POINTS 17 17 155 175 124 56 3 0 % of Passes Completed 56.9 Yds. Per Pass Attempted 9.1 NET YDS.-RUSHING Number of Plays Yards per Play AND 1313 263 5.0 40.9 7.25 PASSING 978 220 4.45 Herrn Barr, Ptace Pace, Sham Madd VanP Byers INDIVIDUAL RUSHING ATT. NET astein, fb 53 237 hb 35 218 k, hb 20 82 hb 44 158 non, hb 10 30 lock, qb 7 26 elt, qb 12 -13 , fb 10 28 AVG. 4.5 6.2 4.1 3.6 3.0 3.7 -1.1 2.8 bad cr 1 I V II I MLAMOUR 'GREA T DA TE CONTEST You can, win A trip to New Yo " A date with the helor of your chc A dazzling outfit hosen just for yo s easy.. It'sfu Enter today! == MENMM"mm DO YOU WEAR GLASSES? '3 oice t I In t Iu See the New Type, Tiny, Plastic, Invisible, Fluidless CONTACT LENSES 4 "KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR" Try our COLLEGIAN STYLES * NO WAITING. e1i BARBERS ' The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theatre MAINTAIN LEAD IN NFL: Lions, Cardinals Crush Division Foes Safe and practical for work and play, Write or phone for a free booklet about contact lenseskor drop in for a free demonstration. BETTER VISION CENTER 706 Wolverine Bldg.-4th and Washington Sts. Ann Arbor Phone NO 8-6019 Full detalls Ii NOVEMBER IA JO U. Now onr sale I z.._ '. ir_....._ ._ . ---I I Two Mid-West surpises, the Chi- cago Cardinals and the Detroit Lions, continued their winning. ways last Sunday aft remain aloft, as the only unbeaten teams in the National Football League. While these two clubs are lead- ing their divisions, it is interesting to note that last year's champions, Los Angeles and Cleveland, are presently inhabiting the cellars. HSU Lineman Injures Knee EAST LANSING, (A) -- Tackle Pat Burke, one of the standouts in Michigan State's line play, may be out for the season as a result of a knee injury suffered in the 47- 14 beating of Notre Dame last Saturday. It is feared that Burke tore a ligament in his right knee. If X-rays turn up the suspected in- jury, the junior linesman from Massachusetts probably will ride the bench for the rest of the sea- son. v The Cards had to come from be- hind in their 20-6 win over the Philadelphia Eagles. Trailing 6-3 at the end of three quarters, the powerful Cardinal offense finally exploded for 17 points in the final quarter to win the game. In the other division, the De- troit Lions held their lead as they edged the San Francisco '49ers 20- 17. The big gun in the Lion attack was quarterback Bobby Layne who scored 14 points and completed 15 passes for 14 yards. Layne's 17-yard field goal with 17 seconds of play remaining broke the 17-17 deadlock and kept the Lions ahead of the second place Chicago Bears who have suffered one loss. Bears Slaughter Colts The Bears literally slaughtered the Baltimore Colts, whd inflicted the only Chicago loss in the open- ing game of the season, as they rolled to a 58-27 win. Enos Bill McColl and Harlon Hill and fullback Rick Casares each scored a pair of markers in the Bear romp. '' Quarterbacx Chuck C o n e r 1 y threw three touchdown passes and set up a fourth as the New Yo'k Giants retained second place with a 38-10 win over the Pittsburgh Steelers. The Giant offense accumulated a grand total of 455 yards against the Steelers in their new home at Yankee Stadium. The lowly Washington. Redskins won, their first football game of the season as they beat last year's World Champion Cleveland Browns, 20-9. Quarterback Tobin Rote passed for three tallies and set up a fourth, as a fired up Green Bay team sent last years division champions, Los Angeles, to a 42- 17 defeat. How would ' , graduate degree affect my chances. for advancement at Du Pont? What's the most versatile $ style in collars? r fra f4. a + o r M e. Nw ,. Nw IN IN vpy - vJ w a w e w ut o IT'S FOR REAL! by Chester Field John C. Nettleton expects to receive his B.S. in chemical engineer- ing from Villanova University in June 1957. He has served as presi- dent of the student chapter of A.I.Ch.E., and as secretary of Phi Kappa Phi fraternity. John is now wondering about the pros and cons of advanced study in his field. i ..._.. ---i . VT, W- r . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . TS A ManhattanO Burt - the button-down collar with the right degree of roll. Goes smartly with every suit you own. Definitely the THE INSIDE-OUT PEOPLE The thug who blows the bank apart. Is often a bashful boy at heart.d The clean-cut man with clean-cut grin Is apt to be a sinner within. To end this confusion, make it your goal To take ff tat mask and play a< A ti '. smart choice! Come down and see us and browse around Roberti. Such, M.S., Ch.E., came to the Engineering Devel- opment Section of Du Pont's Grasselli Research Division from the University of Louisville four years ago. Since then, he has engaged in many kinds of chemical engineering work, from pilot- plant operation to evaluation of the potential of proposed re- search programs. Within the last year, Bob has taken the re- sponsibility of procuring B.S., M.S., and Ph.D. technical gradu- ates in all phases of chemistry and chemical engineering for the Grasselli Research Division. N advanced degree would undoubtedly have a favorable effect in technical work, John, but let me enlarge on that just a little. In your own field (and mine, too) a ,iaorria ro .-a i nailrr t oay - at a fnhiits in But I've noticed this at Du Pont. Once a man lands a job in his chosen field and actually begins to work, his subsequent advancement depends more on demonstrated ability than on college degrees. That's true throughout the entire company-in scientific work, administration, or what not. So an advanced degree is not a royal road to anything at Du Pont, John. But when coupled with proven abili- ties, it is unquestionably helpful to a man in research and development work. It often gets him off to a faster start. Are you Interested -research work? 4bout 2,000 Du Pont scientists are currently engaged in research, aided by some 3,500 other employees. Laboratory Retail at $4.95 -7~ r t'.tAlL 3rr'%AA/Kl 3 t-rnoC nr ) A A I II If-A kl A ACrkI