tv Letters lapac Chosen Unanimously Again For Cmnference A WlStar Cage Squad Are Awarded To Ten Cagers Coaches Also Announce Four Reserve Awards And Yearling Numerals Coach Bennie Oosterbaan an- nounced yesterday afternoon that 10 men on the Wolverine basketball squad will be awarded varsity let- ters and that four others will receive reserve awards. At the same time Coach Ray Fisher announced the winners of freshman numerals. The M winners are as follows: Herb Brogan, '41, Lansing; Bill Cart- mill, '41, Verona, N. J.; Bob Fitz- gerald, '42, Kalamazoo; Joe Glasser, '41, Enid, Oklahoma; Jim Grissen, '42, Holland; Charles Pink, '40, De- troit; Capt. Jim Rae, '40, Toledo, Ohio; George Ruehle, '41, Detroit; Mike Sofiak, '41, Gary, Ind.; and Dave Wood, '40, Detroit. Players who received minor awards were: Norm Call, '42, Norwalk, Ohio; Bill Herrmann, '41, Detroit; Don Holman, '42, Detroit; and Harold Westerman, '41, Adrian. Fisher awarded numerals to 14 members of the yearling court squad and they are as follows; Bob Bart- low, Cattaraugus, N. Y., Leo Doyle, Pequaming; Lawrence Fadler, Pitts- burgh, Kansas; Sam Gorsline, Battle Creek; Bill Houle, Bellvue, Ohio; Richard Lazar, River Rouge; Wal- lace Keating, Detroit; Robert Krejsa, Shaker Heights, Ohio; James Mand- ler, Chicago, Ill.; John Mikulich, Traunik; Edwin O'Donnell, Norwalk, Ohio; Nowell Pridgeon, St. Clair; Fred Stein, Ann Arbor; and Richard Wakefield, Chicago, Ill. The ten varsity letter winners will meet this afternoon to select a cap-, tain for the 1940-41 season to suc- ceed Jim Rae, the present Wolverin leader. CAGE LETTER WINNERS All basketball varsity "M" win- ners will meet at 12 noon at Renschler's studio today to have their picture taken. At the same time a new captain and next year's manager will be elected. Coach Oosterbaan Purdue's Boilermakers, the Big Ten champions, along with Illinois, Indiana, Wisconsin and Northwest- ern, placed one man on the All-Conference mythical basketball squad announced yesterday by the Associated Press. Fred'Beretta of Purdue and Illinois' great senior forward and Conference high scorer, Bill Hapac, each received all the ten possible votes of the coaches who participated. Jim Rae and Charley Pink of Michigan were placed on the second team. * * * *) * * * CHICAGO, March 5. -(- The honor of scoring a "double"-making the mythical team two years in a row -fell this season to Bill Hapac, the high scoring Illinois basketball star who was a unanimous choice for a place on the Big Ten all-star team selected by Western Conference coaches for the Associated Press. Hapac, named as a forward in 1939, again was placed at that position this year by all 10 mentors, who also gave unanimous recognition to Fred Ber- etta, guard on the Purdue Big Ten championship squad. Among stars who were selected for the team two or more years in recent seasons were Ernie Andres, 1938 and 1939; Jewell Young, Purdue, 1937 and 1938; John Townsend of Michigan, 1937. 1938 and 1939; Martin Rolek of Minnesota, 1937 Tippy Dye of Ohio 1937. The selections: Player Pos. Bill Hapac .:.. F Paul Armstrong F and 1938, and State, 1936 and School. Illinois Indiana Year Senior Junior Gene Englund C Wisconsin Junior Fred Beretta .. G Purdue Senior Dick Klein ... G No'western Soph. Second Team: Don Blanken, Pur- IN THIS CORNER F,- By MEL FINEBERG i Scarty Cats... Just as we thought. They're1 scared. Yes, scared. It's a nastyI thing to say but we're forced to say it. They're scared, scared, scared. Who's scared? Why the coaching staff at the University of Michigan. It's abominable but alas, apparently true. Every year since time immemorial (starting last year) the coaching staff has played the football team a hockey game. This year, hoping' that a football player is as dumb as tradition would have him, they've (ungrammatical with staff as an antecodent) hoped that the gridders would forget all about the annual affair. They've made no mention of it, even among themselves, without first carefully glancing over their, collective 'shoulder to determine that no spy is lurking to overhear. But thank heaven for the alertness of the press. We're here to insist that the game be played. We remember last year's game. Oh how well we remember it. Why we recall that, that . . . Yes, it was certainly a great game. Ah, here's that clipping. Yes, how well we remember it. We quote from The Daily of March 15, 1939: "Slightly handicapped by an extremely slippery surface and the fact that some rules called for shoes with runners, Michi- gan's football players and the varsity coaches refought the Battle of Bull Run last night at the Coliseum with the mentors out-roughing the undergrads, 2-1. "The game' was catch-as- catch-can which the coaches claimed gave the students the advantage since Evashevski was the catcher on th'e baseball team. The gridders retorted that Ray Fisher, the coaches' goalie, could do the pitching so the battle started. "Thirteen spills later the coaches scored the first goal. Fritz Crisler, who felt he could protect himself from the ruf- TYPEWRITERSI OF ALL MAKES Office aad Portable Models fians by playing on their more chivalrous side, by wearing a pair of lady's yellow pajana pants, took a flat pass from hockey coach Eddie Lowrey, went through the defensive left half and scored standing up. "But the football players were not done. Wally Hook, varsity fullback, abandoned the punt and pass but retained the prayer when he dropkicked the puck past netminder Fisher. The game was halted as Hook main- tained that he should get three points for his heroic effort but he was finally placated. "With the score tied at one all, the gridders threw eaution to the winds and sent ten forwards down the ice, Ray Fisher promptly retaliated by turning the nets around baekwards. "But the hordes of football players continued to descend and only the sterling work on the part of referee Mill Marsh, who sat on a folding chair, saved the coaches. "Shortly afterward Lowrey scored. Somehow Major Bowes got in and rang a gong. The coaches, leading 2-1, seized on this flimsy excuse and said the game was over. "The game was marred iy 327 spills (actual count) and a cut head for Ed Czak." This then was the story of a land- mark in Michigan athletics. Shall it be allowed to die? Shall it fade away as though it never had existed, as though it had never seen the dawn? No, we say, no, no, no! So, on behalf of the football play- ers who as yet know nothing about all this, we challenge the coaching staff to a hockey game, the public to be invited free of charge. Coaching staff: name the date and the time. Our second stringers await you. Aside to the football players: they can't hurt us. _-- --- ._.. r a..r arrrko ; yy 1 WELLALOOK ATrlv4AT.' WE WENT OFF TO A MOVIE AND FOR GOY TO DISCONNECT ' NE ELECT~RIC EA- I(ETLE. WHEN WE COME 140IOME -fNE K~EKLE HAS DISCQA'A/CCTED f1 MAGED A LITKY FR D~ v)liI ISY UNP-OU't ?LUG Is CERTAIN:V : . : :L " G R A N t 3 1I1S N.- ' AN: ~IN AMERICA- -", "' -' '° - New and Reconditioned Bought, Sold,