w TUESYD, OCTOBER 28, 1940 TTP MTVUTV-A IV 1 "A TT V AW. TI10PM"p A KJL vil ivx A q, It A %-W LV IN , J-P Lk I J x P A f V 'rDVW Is Gridders Rest Before Starting PreparationFor Mini nesota Tough Half Of Schedule Nears As Wolverines Head For Title By HARRY ANDERSON Minnesota 34, Iowa 6! Northwest- ern 20, Minnesota 7! Cornell 21, Ohio State 7! What do the scores of these games played last Saturday mean to Michi- gan? Just this: following an open date this week-end the Wolverines must engage Minnesota, Northwest- en, and Ohio on consecutive week- ends, and the scores posted on Sat- urday indicatr that the road to an undefeated season will be strewn with boulders, three big boulders. Michigan has one advantage which it might be able to capitalize on. While the Wolves are enjoying a well-earned rest this week-end North- western and Minnesota will tangle at Evanston. The following week a well-rested Michigan team will face a battle-scarred Minnesota eleven Battle-scarred or not, the Gophers have a fast stepping backfield headed by George Franck and Bruce Smith and a 210-pound line with sopho- mores Wildung and Odsun being out- standing. , The following weekend will find the Northwestern squad in Ann Arbor ready to do battle, with a galaxy of stars including Bill De Correvant, Don Clawson, Alf "Lil' Abner" Bau- man, Paul Soper, and Ollie Hahen- .stein. If Northwestern and Michigan can remain undefeated up until this game, November 16 will be a red-let- ter day. A contemplated Harmon- De Correvant meeting would draw more fans through the turnstiles than the much-publicized, but ill-fated Harmon-Reagan duel. Michigan wil close its season at Columbus against 'Ohio State. You can bet that other dollar that the boys from the capitol city will be out for blood. They will be striving to salvage some glory from an other- wise disastrous season. Add to this the fact that the Buckeyes will be out to avenge last year's humiliat- ing last-minute defeat at the hands of the Wolverines and you can readi- ly realize what a task awaits Michigan on November 23. MIDWAY SHOE REPAIR INVISIBLE SOLING EXPERT SHOE REPAIRING DYING and CLEANING Free Call for and Delivery Service Phone 6520 322 E. Liberty St. ONO jl !I All sophomore men eligible for basketball manager tryouts report to the Sports Building at 7:30 p.m. today. Five Players Found Injured In Penn Game . Open Date Gives Varsity Time To Reach Top Shape For Minnesota Coach Fritz Crisler gave his squad a much deserved rest yesterday which was well received by the group as a whole. Captain Evashevski, Reuben Kelto, Al Wistert, Dave Nelson and George Ceithaml particularly enjoyed the respite as they were the chief casual- ties as a result of the Penn game Saturday. Both Evashevski and Kelto are temporarily incapacitated with the same type of injury, a severe bruise' at the union of the collar bone and shoulder blade. In all probability they will take it easy for several days but should be in top shape for the Minnesota game two weeks hence. Wistert and Davie Nelson, ironical-_ ly enough, have similar injuries too. They both have severe bruises around the knee joints, Wistert on the outside1 and Nelson on the inside. According to trainer Ray Roberts, both injuries will react favorably after a few days treatment. It was discovered late yesterday that George Ceithaml sprained an ankle early in the game, yet played on it throughout. Too much praise can't be dished out towards the sophomore quarter-I back, who filled in so stoutly after Evashevski was forced out. Not only did he block and back up the line1 well, but he exhibited the type of courage (guts in football terminology) playing as he did with such a badt ankle, that augers well for the Wol- verine cause next fall. Movies of the Penn game will be run over today for the squad's bene-t fit, and mistakes and suggestions wille be pointed and handed out in a gen- erous fashion, no doubt, by the coaching staff.1 There isn't a man on the team who wouldn't figuratively give hisF right arm in return for a victory over those Minneapolis Golden Gophers,F come the 9th of November. Phi Beta Delta Win FeaturesSpeedballf Melvin Colvin led his Phi Beta Del-s ta mates to a 12-10 win over Thetag Chi in the feature of a five-game fraternity speedball card yesterday. Colvin counted seven points to topi the day's scorers, while Eric Wrightb made four for the losers.t The other tilts were all one-sided 1 affairs, with Pete Wege tallying four points for Chi Psi as his team beata Lambda Chi Alpha, 8-4, in the onlyh other fray that came close to beings a contest. In the remaining games, Phi Sigma Delta licked Delta Upsilon, 9-2; Phi Kappa Psi swamped Phi Gamma Del-c ta, 12-1, as Jim Gunn scored sixq points; and Beta Theta Pi took anh 8-2 victory over Phi Kappa Tau. There will be an important meet- ing for all varsity and freshman swimmers at 5 p.m. today at the Sports Building pool. Matt Mann, Coach I. don wirtehafter's DAILY DOUBLE May We Quote Youe. . America's foremost sports writers were in town last week. They've come and gone, those type- writer wizards, but their descriptions of Saturday's gridiron clash will live on. Here are a few of them: Henry McLemore, United Press . .. "Tommy Harmon, a combination of poetry of motion and you know what on wheels, gave a 60-minute show of power and speed today. . - "Harmon, the chief target of the fierce hitting Penn line all afternoon. was running just as wild at the fin- ish as he was at the start. His jersey (torn, his pants ripped, his face smeared with dirt, Tommy roared to 17 and 15-yard gains just before the game ended. "If Penn had dented his whipcord and whalebone armor, he didn't show it." Gayle Talbot, Associated Press .. "Any doubts that the Michigan star (Harmon) would retain the All-American laurels accorded him last season were erased as he turned in one of the most brilliant performances of his career." Robert F. Kelley, New York Times . . "It's true what they say about Harmon. "For 60 minutes while almost 60,000 persons peered through the haze of a1 pleasant Autumn afternoon in the Wolverines' huge stadium, the black- haired Harmon played football of a type that few individuals have played on any gridiron, and when it was all over he had to fight his tired way through a queque of clutching admir- ers to reach the shower." John Sabo, the Detroit Free Press "The Michigan All-American played like a human dynamo. Hee was spectacular. He was consistent He was an iron man with a mission1 -to crush Pennsylvania. And crush Penn he did." Which all goes to show you, this kid Harmon has possibilities. Some- v day he may even be famous. * *: *c Poor Al Wistert. We felt so sorry c for him the other eve. They had to send him to the hospital after theF game. He was sick. Yep, so sick. Well, anyway, soon after he arrived y there, the husky tackle had otherI ideas. He had a bruised knee, sure, but he also had a date. So when things quieted down, when the lights were low and the nurses busyhe climbed into his clothes, the same clothes that he made 'Jeep' Mehaffey help him put on earlier in the day, slipped out of the window to the fire- escape and off to freedom. The date was fine, Al relates. It lasted way into the morning. Then came his return to sickness. He quietly and carefully moved up the! hospital steps till he reached what he thought was his floor.. He was wrong though. He was on the fourth ; instead of the fifth. He was caught. As he tried to get up one more floor along came a nurse. She motioned to him to come along with her. "I'll get you to your right room," she said. Porterhouses Take Honors In Pentathlon By BOB STAHL Working off steam, sweat and ener- gy, the varsity track team has been enmeshed in the throes of the Second Annual Fall Pentathlon at Ferry Field for the past four weeks. De- vised by Coach Ken Doherty last year as a means of keeping the men in good physical condition and keep- ing their interest at a peak until they move inside with the advent of cold weather, the event proved so suc- cessful that it was decided to make an annual affair of it. This year the squad was divided into two teams, the T-Bones, man- aged by Jeff Hall, varsity hurdler, and the Porterhouses, managed by Karl Wisner, miler. Inspired by the fact that the losing team would have to provide the steaks for the win- ners in the annual Steak Roast, which was held Sunday night, both teams strove to make a fight of it. And the race rolled right down to the finish line before the winner was determined. The Porterhouse super- men trod roughshodly over the lowly T-Bones by a score of 88,397 to 86,655. The scores consisted of the total points made in all events in accord- ance with the Pentathlon scoring system. Sunday night the affair was held for which all of the men had been working so hard for so long a time. Under the personal supervision of Coach Doherty, both teams gathered in the Arboretum to indulge in a lit- tle horseplay under the guise of at- tending a formal steak roast. It should be of interest to note that the men who amassed the most points on both teams were sopho- mores, something which augers well for the hopes of future Michigan track champions. He brushed past her, yelped "never mind," and flew back to the fire- escape. Up one more floor, down the hall with all the speed he had during the afternoon struggle, and into his room. Off went the clothes. And with a gainer and a half dive, into the bed went his 212 form, bad knee and all. The head nurse opened the door and looked in. Al turned toward the other side and moaned. She left. She got a call from the floor below. Back she went. "And now, Mr. Wistert, where have you been?" I. 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