THE, MICHGAN D ATIV A4~~~~-~'. A.A ~ .L .A 34 pAgr- SEVEN ..... _. 1 1l1 lI =, 1T1 1 lI 11 yd \'} 21 S 1 11 1-1j. 1 1.I L ' ,., , .... I Gophers Face Buckeyes In Today's Top Conference Game P orthwestern, Creates "inient" In lig Ten Football Inue1nesKe1Rtigr S ouedKes Kee Rlne, Iowa To Play ! Smith From Pacing l Bia Ten' Rivals, .?fIR.s~nx 2 ! IE_ _ Owen Football Team VictOos r~ Wildcats, Hawkeyes Seek Third Consecutive Wins Over Badgers, Indiana COLUMBUS, O., Oct. 18 - (" - Minnesota's gigantic Golden Gophers come out of the Northwest Saturday to offer a "make or break" test as to whether Ohio State can rebound from last weeks Northwestern defeat and salvage something, from the early- se--in wreckage. The Gophers, with victories over Washington and Nebraska, are defi- nite favorites. But 72,000 fans will, pack the Buckeye horseshoe to watch the Gophers attempt to prove their superiority - the largest crowd sinc& Notre Dame beat the Bucks 18-13 with that last-period three-touch- down splurge in 1935. For the first time in many moons, the Ohioans will take the field out- weighed in every department. Also they'll be facing a team with a better ground attack, and with an aerialj offensive almost as good as theirrown." Two lineup changes for Ohio were definite, Coach Francis Schmidt said. The shifts send Lennie Thom to left guard in place of Eddie Bruckner, and Jack Stephenson to right tackle in place of Maag. Iowa Looks Too Tough For Hoosiers " MADISON, Wis., Oct. 18 (P) Northwestern Jniversity, victor over Ohio State and Syracuse, meets a crippled Wisconsin football team in a Western Conference game Saturday. Two regular Badger linemen, guard Dick Embick and tackle Dick Thorn- ally, were injured in last week's Iowa garne, and probably will not see ac- tion. Although Wisconsin held a weight advantage, Northwestern, well sup- plied with regular and reserve backs, rated a decided favorite. Wisconsin trounced Marquette in the opener twop weeks ago, but fell before Iowa last Saturdayg30-12. A crowd of 30,000 was expected for the 2 p.m. (CST) kickoff. Northwestern Rated Decided Favorite BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Oct. 18 - ').- Indiana, defeated in its two non-Conference starts, opens its Western Conference c a m p a i g n against Iowa tomorrow. The Hoosiers lost to Texas, 13 to 6, in the season's openersand fell before Nebraska, 13 to 7, last Saturday. The Hawkeyes have displayed pow- er in their two games, routing South Dakota, 46 to 0, and Wisconsin, 30 to 12. A crowd of 20,000 is expected. Temple Owls Upset State Team, 21-19 PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 8.-()-An underdog Temple University eleven inspired by Jimmy Powers' 105 yard return of the opening kickoff for a touchdown, scored one of the major upsets of the football season tonight by beating Michig'nh State, 21 to 19, in a see-saw battle before 15,000. The Owls, getting in the first punches and keeping the Spartans back on their heels for most of the first half, led at intermission, 21 to 0, and from the looks of things ap- peared on the road to a rout of the visitors. Michigan State, with Wy Davis passing and running, roared back in the second half, however, and but for two missed conversion kicks would have tied the count. The two were missed by Chuck Carey, I . -V............... Now .Timnrv SZmith was t,hP12c3 that; , Fate has dealt Illinois a cruel blow. passed to George Rettinger on a Last Nov. 4 the men of Champaign "sleeper" play last Nov. 4 to score a created what the sports editors of touchdown which practically demor- Associated Press papers called the alized the confused Wolverines. And greatest upset of the year in any Jimmy Smith won't be in the lineup Three Tilts Other lintramuUral Won On Forfeit SUNDAY I~ SurP E R sport." They decisively whipped a heavily favored Michigan team, 16-7.1 P3 obably the biggest reason for the lilini victory was an unheralded soph- omore, Jimmy Smith. He ran and passed the Wolverines dizzy. He was all over the field at once, making tackles and batting down passes with uncanny thoroughness. Smith Best Ground Gainer He was the outstanaing ground- gainer on Bob Zuppke's fighting ag- gregation which finished sixth in the conference last year. But Jimmy, who was counted on by! Zuppke to provide the impetus to the, Illinois attack, was operated on early in September for a knee ailment and was forced to withdraw from school until the 1941 season. Detroit Noses Out Win Over Manhattan, 6-0 NEW YORK, Oct. 18. --UP)- Al Ghesqiire's 80-yard touchdown run from scrimmage in the third quarter gave Detroit University's Titans a! 6-0 victory over Manhattan tonight before a slim crowd in the Polo grounds. This happened after Manhattan had fought the 1 to 3 favorites to a standstill for two periods, and pooh- poohed Ghesquiere's passing reputa- tion.« Saturday to plague Michigan's grid- ders; he's out for the year. The other half cf the Smith- Rettinger combination was going great guns until a scrimmage Tues- day. Then fate loosed its fury once again and out went Rettinger, the pass-catching fullback who "slept" on the sidelines, catching the Wol- verines off-guard. Rettinger's knee was injured in that scrimmage and Bob Zuppke found another of the men he was counting upon to squelch Michigan, unavailable. Setbacks Won't Stop Zup But if Bob Zuppke lives up to tra- dition, you can be sure that these two setbacks won't deter him from "'throwing the works" at his good friend Fritz Crisler today. With the biggest bag of tricks in the business, Zup may still dig deep and pull out that ole sleeper. However, injuries have erased the two men that executed so beautifully that age-old fooler that fateful. day in November of 1939. That was a cruel, cruel blow Fate dealt Illinois, wasn't it? Chilly weather seems to have scared the boys away from Ferry Field yes- terday for of the four speedball and touch football games scheduled, three were won on forfeit. Delta Upsilon forfeited to Phi Kappa Tau in the fraternity speedball league: Hill Billy won on forfeit from the Rams. and the Phys Eds forfeited to the Newman Club m the independent football league. The only game played was in the' cooperative football league. In thisl game Robert Owen defeated Congress, 8-0. Robert Owen scored first in the first quarter when Werner Wass- mandorlf touched Jack Mitchell of! Congress behind the Congress goal. During the next two quarters the game was very close with most of the play taking place in the center of the field. In the last quarter Robert Ow- en scored again on a pass from Harold Ehlers to Wassmandorlf in the end- zone. Capt. Bob Young missed the try for the extra point. In this very exciting game packed! with many thrills. Garby, Robert Owen's freshman center, was out- standing in his play. Irv Weiss starred for the losers. October 20, 1940 Pecan Wafle, Ma Sle ru/> Grilled Little Pig Sausage Ice Cream or Baked A/>/>le Beverage 50e Union Special Club Sandwich Pumpkin Pie, Whip ped Cream or But/er Pecan Ice Cream Beverage 50e Spanish Omelette French Fried Potatoes Fresh Peas Chocolate Butter Cream or Caramel Su dae Be verageS Cake Charlie; aag of Ohio State, giant 215-pound tackle and place- kicking specialist, two weeks ago booted the field goal which whipped Purdue, 17-14, in the last twenty seconds of play. Investigation has revealed that the field goal should have been nullified because Maag had previously been illegally substituted in the game. And whether signifi- cant or not, Jack Stephenson will be starting in Maag's right tackle slot when Ohio State meets Minnesota in Columbus this afternoon. ANTIQUES-Just in from China just the thing to brighten up your home - beautiful, novel, practical. Junior Sport Yogis Select Victors Again Nothing daunted by last week's mediocre success, the junior sportsI staff of the Daily again try their hands at picking the winners of to- day's twenty leading games. Last. week, the juniors picked 12 winners correctly with seven misses and one tie. In the Louisiana State- Rice tilt and the Navy-Princeton contest one of the six experts had the right dope. Here they are:I Michigan (6) over Illinois (0). Tennessee (6) over Alabama (0) Notre Dame (6) over Carnegie Tech (0). Duke (6) over Colgate (0) Army (3) even with Harvard (3). Ohio State (4) over Minnesota (2). Northwestern (5) over Wisconsin (1) Texas A.&M. (6) over Texas Christian (0) Dartmouth (5) over Yale (0) one tie picked. Penn (6) over Princeton (0). Mississippi (5) over Duquesne (1) Holy Cross (6) over N.Y.U. (0). Georgia Tech (4) over Vander- bilt (2)I Fordham (5) over Pitt (1). Navy (6) over Drake (0). North Carolina (6) over North Car- olina State (0). Tulane (4) over Rice (2). Texas (5) over Arkansas (1). Iowa (4) over Indiana (2). Columbia (5) over Georgia (1). I-M NOTICE Entries for Intramural volleyball must be in the activities office at the Sports Building by 5:30 p.m. today. Fraternities which have not received entry blanks for fall sports may get them at the Sports Building. Earl N. Riskey, Asst. Director Of Intramural Sports Frosh Hold Long Scrimmage As Backfield Men Flash Form By BUD HENDEL Angelo Trogan, spectacular runs by Freshman foqtball coach Wally IPaul White and Don Boor, plus rip-l Weber drove his charges through one ping line plunges by Austin Miller of their most grueling, yet most en- suplied the ycontacwith plenty of joyable, workouts of the season yes- The highlight of the workout was terdy ashe ent he earlngsfurnished by Boor, aided by superla- through an hour scrimmage after a tive blocking on the parts of his long session devoted to brushing up teammates. Boor took the ball off on plays. left tackle, broke through the line The frosh locked horns and battled ran to his left, cut back to the right up and down the length of the field and raced 65 yards to a touchdown. without respite, but they enjoyed it- There is a wealth of good backfield enjoyed it probably more than any material on the freshman squad this other practice this year. Every foot- year. Yesterday's practice was feat- ball player, no matter how good or ured by the work of quarterback Jos- how bad, likes nothing better than to ephs, fullback Miller, and halfbacks scrimmage. The thrill of getting his White and Boor. The next session shoulder under a bone-parring block can just as easily see John Aller- or his body behind a vicious tackle dice, Walt Derby, Tom Kuzma, Chuck is the reason that every gridder loves Kennedy, and Seymour Roth steal to play the game. the show. They're all good backs And that's what there was plenty who, with the polish they will gain of yesterday as the freshmen went under the frosh coaching staff, may through their paces. Charging blocks develop into definite assets to future by Joe Josephs, smashing tackles by Wolverine teams. Consomme Royal Chicken a la King Pa/tie Parsley Potato Bakeid Hubbard Squash Warm Mince Pie or Raspberry Suande Beverage 75e GOOD FOOD Excellent Service 6 to 7:30 o'clock MAIN DINING ROOM MICHIGUAN UNION' : E : F t i i i i CHIME BOWLS These bowls were made in Kor- ea and are of pure Chinese gold. When struck they produce beautful tones. Handy for din- ner gongs. SEAL BOOK ENDS Genuine municipal seals - dec- orated by Foo dogs. One of the most practical novelties you can own as they will make *marvelous book ends. CHINAWARE--NEW, FASCINATING We have many new pieces of unique chinaware. A plaque from the freize of a Chinesc temple will be of special interest to you. OR IENTAL GIFT SHOP 320 South State Read The Daily Classifieds 1± II - __.. """" r Us -- - - - , - 1 i Yost Tesinonial To Be Held Tonight (Continued from Page 1) new Yost march 'played by the Uni- versity Band under the direction of former coach of Michigan baseball Prof. William D. Revelli and com- teams, and Yost himself. The Var- posed by Louis Elbel, who wrote the sity Band will supply background "Victors" in 1898 after Michigan de- music. feated Chicago. The University Glee Alumni, students and guest celebri- Club will sing old Michigan favor- ties will occupy 1,940 seats in the ites and plans are being made for Gymnasium which will be converted electrical transcription of the entire into a huge indoor stadium with banquet. chairs and tables arranged to re- The celebration heralds the "grand semble a mammoth gridiron. Ad- old man's" 40 years of service to the mittance tickets are modeled after University and the sports field in the 1940 football ducats and mem- general. Yost will become 70 years bers of the M Club will act as ushers. old on April 29 and therefore must Included on the program will be retire at the end of the coming school the first rendition anywhere of a year GAS, HEAT LIGHTENS THE TASK OF j I U_ MICHIGAN Banners and Pennants Blankets Song books Michigan Illustsated (A View Book) STICKERS - SEALS - JEWELRY - BOOKENDS PILLOWS - NOVELTIES , There is no "handling" problem with this modern fuel. You merely set the thermostat to the degree of comfort you want and automatically just enough gas is delivered to your heating system to assure that comfort. Gas has none of the unpleasant by- products of other fuels. The only by-products of gas are welcome ones - comfort, cleanliness, con- stant healthful warmth, complete freedom from heating care -new leisure hours for busy hands- A THE JANITROL AUTOMATIC GAS BURNER EKI Dial 2-3136 And Our Representative Will Give You An Estimate of 1 i I I 11 I