TUESDAY, NOV. 23, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Football Squad Is Awarded 26 Major Letters List Includes Only Eleven Seniors; Captaincy Will Be Announced Today Following close on the heels of the last game of the season; came the announcement yesterday afternoon: of the football awards for the current year. There was a total of 26 M letters, 11 Secondary letters and 15i Junior Varsity letters which will be received by 20 sophomores, 20 juniors and 12 seniors. It was also announced that the l election of the football captain for L the 1938 season will take place to- morrow noon at the Union.- The list is as follows: M awards, William C. Barclay, '38, Flint, Mich.; John C. Brennan, '39, Racine, Wis.; Robert D. Campbell, '38, Ionia, Mich.; Douglas A. Farmer, '38, Hinsdale, Ill.; Elmer J. Gedeon, '39, Cleveland, Ohio; Ralph I. Heikkinen, '39, Jack- son, Mich.; Archie J. Kodros, '40, Alton, Ill.; Louis Levine, '39, Mus- kegon Hts., Mich.; Earle B. Luby, '39, Chicago. r George A. Marzonie, '38, Chicago; I John E. Nicholson, '39, Elkhart, Ind.;1 Frederick C. Olds, '39, East Lansing; Ernest A. Pederson, Jr., '38, Grandl Blanc, Mich.; Norman B. Purucker,' '39, Hercules Renda, '40, Jochin, W. Va.; Joseph M. Rinaldi, '38, Elkhart,I Ind.; C. Stark Ritchie, '38, Battlef Creek, Mich.; Roland Savilla, '40, Gallager, W. Va.; Donald J. Siegel, '39, Royal Oak, Mich.; Dan Smick, '39, Hazel Park, Mich.; William A. Smith, '40, San Antonio, Texas; E. Cramon Stanton, '39, Charleston, W. Va.; Fred Trosko, '40, Flint, Arthur, L. Valpey, '38, Detroit, and Clarence H. Vandewater '39, Holland. Secondary awards go to Harold J.1 Michigan sportdom officially op- ened its winter season yesterday with basketball leading the parade in the (:agers first afternoon practice of the year. TWEDELL Guard Thirteen men drilled at the Field ' Minnesota) House under Coach Franklin C. Cap- pon with five more expected to bring the squad up to its playing number of 18 by the end of the week. The Wolverines open their season Dec. 11, facing Michigan State in the Field House. Yesterday's session found two teams working on offense and de- fense in a makeshift scrimmage with one group working the ball in from mid-floor against a defensive crew. Cappon had Leo Beebe, Herm Fishman, Eddie Thomas, Jim Rae, ater SCHNREYER ackle Russ Dobson, and Bill Barclay on his te) .(Purdue) offensive team while Fred Trosko, Charley Pink, Ben Weaver, Dave Wood, Dick Long, Bob Palmer, and Vince Valek made up the defense. Capt. John Townsend, brilliant Wolverine center, was absent due to an afternoon lab as were several of the football men who took a day of grace after the grind of the gridiron season. Besides Trosko and Barclay, Dan Smick, John Nicholson, and Lou Le- vine are ex-gridiron aspirants for back ZARNAS Guard cage berths and all will report before (Ohio State) the week is out. Other squad mem- bers are Mannie Slavin, veteran sen- will undoubtedly be taken over by an- ,ior forward, and Bill Lane, lanky ocenter. other sophomore, Edwin "Smack" Al- Townsend, Barclay, and Fishman len. Allen who comes from Niagara at this stage are certain of starting tario amateur circles and is consid- berths with Smick, Beebe, Thomas, ered as being able to fill Heyliger's Ray and Long holding the edge for shoes. the other two positions. Floersch, Wyandotte; Wallace R. Hook, Jr., '39, E. Grand Rapids; John H. Kinsey, '40, Plymouth; DerwoodI D. Laskey, '40, Milan; Harry K. Mul- holland, '40, Bay City; Norman J. Nickerson, '39, Detroit; Robert P. Pitrowski, '39, Manistee; Joseph C. Rogers, '40, Royal Oak; Horace C. Tinker, '40, Battle Creek; Frederick G. Ziem, '38, Pontiac, and Dennis A. Kuhn, '40, River Rouge. " I, i Bueks, Gophers Top All-Stars! Don As Six Heap, Isbell Repeat Injuries Bar Many; Schools Represented r r J MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM WEDNESDAY ...e.. being the day before a school holiday, all students not attending the Union dance will be given three bolts instead of the usual one, and may flunk the course. 1 0 till 1 $1.00 per couple MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM Heikkinen, Siegel Make Second Team CHICAGO, Nov. 22. -(P)--Thej 1937 Big Ten All Star gridiron team,' selected by the coaches' for the As.- sociated Press, lines up today with a. trio from Minnesota's championship, three from Ohio State, two from Pur- due, and one each from Indiana, Northwestern and Iowa in the mythi- cal battlefront. After voting battles as close, at most positions, as the scores which l decided the championship season's big struggles, two members of last7 year's. all star "Varsity," halfbacks Don Heap of Northwestern, and Pur- due's Cecil Isbell, again made places on the team. Injuries were largely responsible for three others, sensa- tional Andy Uram of Minnesota, and Northwestern's great defensive pair, quarterback Fred Vanzo and End John Kovatch, yielding their posi- tions. Rugged Jim McDonald of Ohio' State, his brilliance undimmed by a shift from a ball-carrying assign- ment to blocking drudgery, succeeded Vanzo at quarter. Isbell, last year's honor fullback, moved to Uram's halfback position, and Corby Davis, Indiana's 200-pound powerhouse, key-'man of the Hoosier offense,f earned Isbell's 1936 post. There was no unanimous choice,1 but King and Davis came as close as possible, each receiving nine first team votes, and one secondary bal- lot. Only Twedell, a junior, kept the team from being an all-senior affair., The second-string, Fitzgerald and Benz, ends; Alex Schoenbaum of Ohio State, and Dori Siegel of Michi- gan, tackles; Sirtosky and, Ralph Heikkinen, a n o t h e r Wolverine, guards; Miller at center; Vanzo at quarter, two sophomore stars, Nile Kinnick of Iowa, and Harold Van Every of Minnesota, halfbacks, and' Larry Buhler of Minnesota at full - back, gave all but Illinois representa- tion on the two teams.C The First Team: E Ray King, Minn., senior, 6 ft. 3 in., 195, Duluth, Minn. T Louis Midler, Minn., senior, 6 ft. 1 in., 210, St. Paul, Minn. G Francis Twedell, Minn., junior, 5 ft. 11 in., 218, Austin, Minn. C Ralph Wolf, Ohio State, senior, 6 ft. 2 in., 194, Youngstown, O. G Gus Zarnas, Ohio State, senior, 5 ft. 10 in., 198, Brackenridge, Pa. LETTER WINNERS ATTENTION All football letter winners for 1937 must /meet at Rentschler's studio, 319 East Huron St., for the squad picture today at 12:15 p.m. Fred Colombo. T Martin Schreyer, Purdue, senior, H ockey Tea 6 ft. 2 in., 218, South Bend. i oeae a E. Robert Lannon, Iowa, senior, 6 ft. 2 in., 198, Winner, S.D. To QB James McDonald, Ohio State, senior, 6 ft., 190, Springfield. HB Donald Heap, Northwestern,I Test Saturda senior, 5 ft. 11 in., 200, Lowell, Ta Ind. HB Cecil Isbell, Purdue, senior, 6 ft., Facing the initial game of a stren- 189, Houston, Tex. Iuous 1937-38 schedule with only five FBCretHDavsn iadays to spare, Michigan's Varsity FB Corbett Davis, Indiana, senior, hockey squad moved onto the ice yes- 5 ft. 11 in., 200, Lowell, Id. terday for its first real workout of1 Second Team the season. ENDS-Robert Fitzgerald, Chicago, Opening its card against the Uni- and Fred Benz, Wisconsin. versity of Western Ontario here Sat- TACKLES - A 1 e x Schoenbaum, urday night, the Wolverine sextet will Ohio State, and Donald Siegel, Mich. need plenty of work and practice GUARDS-James Sirtosky, In- beforeait'sready to take on the vis- itors, Coach Eddie Lowrey said yes- diana, and Ralph Heikkinen, Mich. terday. He will send the squad CENTER-George Miller, Indiana. through heavy drills every afternoon QUARTERBACK - F r e d Vanzo, this week, except Friday, hoping to Northwestern. bring the outfit around to a better HALFBACKS-Harold Van Every, physical condition. Minnesota, and Niles Kinnick, Iowa. Only one player from last year's FULLBACK - Lawrence Buhler, Big Ten championship aggregation Minnesota. is lost to the team this year due to graduation. ,Vic Heyliger, last year's Ccaptain and center, is now playing heerleader Hedess Iwith the Chicago Blackhawks in the Of Any Broken Bones National Hockey League. The forward line will again see Gib All football heroes aren't made James and Johnny Fabello as Low- on the gridiron. rey's first wing choices. Both Fa- During the Ohio State game bello and James are good passers and Saturday afternoon, Bob Williams fast skaters and did a great deal of '38, head man of the Michigan scoring for Michigan last year. Ed cheerleading staff, favored his Chase, former spare, is again return- sore arm that, he injured when ing to the forward wall. he slipped on the ice between the Coach Lowery's defense will con- Field House and the Stadium sist of two veterans of the previous prior to the game but he thought season, Burt Smith and Captain Bob nothing more of it then. Simpson. Both Simpson and Smith However near the close of the payed almost every minute of the en- I HwvrnathclofteI tire former schedule. game it began to swell dangerous- The goalie position is wide open ly. Alarmed, Bob reported to the with Bill Chase, who held the posi- Health Service after the game tion last year, and Spike James, where he was informed that he sophomore brother of Gib, fighting had broken his arm in two places for the position. when he had fallen on the ice. 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I JingeBells JOHN STOTZER, a Swiss dairyman of Tuscarawas County, Ohio, has an imported Swiss bell on each of 40 cows, and the Ohio farmer relates that, in the evenings when the cows are, turned out to pasture, visitors come to the farm to listen to the melody of the bells which have been harmonized. . a football hero to get along with a beautiful girl. But capturing the one and only does require an extra bit of smoothness - nsmoothne I