TIE MItHIGAN DVAILY PAGE T!IUEE Michigan 3rd In Associated Press Standing Minnesota Passes Irish To Take Second Place; Texas A.&M. In Fourth NEW YORK, Nov. 4.-(P)-Mid- western elevens st ll are breathing on Cornell's neck in the 1940 football ranking race, but this week it is Minnesota's Gophe s who have dis- placed the Irish of Notre Dame as closest pursuers of the all-conquer- ing Ithacans. The fifth of the weekly Associated Press ranking polls, with 178 foot- ball experts throughout the country participating, finds Cornell on top as it has been since the start of the season. The Big Red, three games away from its second successive sea- son without defeat, was placed first on 119 ballots and second on 24 for 1,560 points. Gophers Win Close One But the way Minnesota has worked its way through a tough schedule- winning close ones, perhaps, but win- ning every one-put the Gophers in second place, only 140 points away. The Bernie Bierman powerhouse, runnerup ,in first-place votes with 18, was ranked second by 72 of the experts as it piled up 1,420 points. Just as last week, when they came through by the margin of an extra point over Northwestern, the Gophers stand the best chance of improving their position and the greatest risk of ibeing knocked down this coming week-end. They will meet a Mich- igan team that, like Northwestern, also comes up to this contest unde- feated and untied, with the added advantage of a week's rest. The Wolverines, as a week ago, are given third place. Aggies Meet Mustangs Two other decisive games next Saturday will involve members of the "First Ten." Texas A. and M., up from fifth place to fourth, will take its string of 17 straight victories into action against Southern Methodist, undefeated, tied only by Pitt, and ranked 14th. While Minnesota was being boost- ed from fourth to second this week, Notre Dame skidded down the ladder from runnerup to seventh, back of Tennessee and Stanford. The Irish looked anything but great in barely beating Army, but may climb again if they can bounce back to keep their slate clean against a Navy team which out-statisticked but neglected to outscore Penn last Saturday. Leaders Look Safe For the rest of the leaders Satur- day's assignments look less arduous. The word from Ithaca is that Con- nell may try to better Penn's 50-7 score against Yale; Tennessee can take a virtual vacation aganst South- western; Boston U. hardly is in a class with Boston College; Georgtown shouldn't have any trouble getting by Maryland to make it 23 without a loss, and Northwestern, only first- tenner which has been beaten, should get back on the winning track against Illinois. . This, incidentally, is quite a season for streaks. In adidtion to George- town's 23-game string, Cornell has come through 17 games with only one tie; Texas A. and M. has won 17 in a row, and Tennessee, not counting post-season games, has won 28 in succession since losing 13-7 to Van- derbilt in 1937. The standing (points figured on 10-9-8-7-6, etc. basis.) First-place votes in parentheses: don wirtehafter's DAIL-Y DOUBLE Captain Evashevski Will Play Against Minnesota Saturday Sports Prognosticators Overlook Michigan'sSoftSpoken Kelto OS.U. Blues* * I hate to believe rumors, especially this one. Over the airwaves yesterday came the announcement that it was Ohio who charged Tom Harmon was ineli- gible because of his participation on a quiz program about three weeks back. Not that I am worried about the charge. No, Major Griffith of the Big Ten had already informed the world that the Michigan All-American was clear and able to finish his ca- reer. According to the Commissioner, "Harmon did not show up on invi- tation and was not advertised as a participant. He did not violate our conference rule which prohibits our boys from broadcasting on a spon- sored program." Griffith pointed out that as far as he knew,the whole question had been settled "to the satisfaction of all con-' ference authorities." No, it's not the charge that in- furiates me. It's merely the rumor that Ohio State was responsible for making it. As far as I'm hconcerned, if any school in the Conference made such a charge, I would point to the Colum- bus lads as the first on my suspicion list. of the paper's most outstanding col- umn picked 17 out of the 20 games. In second place was a comparitive unknown, a chap named Harmon, who guessed sixteen correctly. Trail- ing far behind were our corny city editor, who yelpsabout playingcfor keeps in his messy column Sunday, and Evashevski, the so-called brains of the Michigan football team. My office will be open all day to- morrow for contributions from my three unworthy opponents. Swim Championships EAST LANSING, Nov. 4-(YP)-The 1941 National Collegiate Swimming championships will be held March 28 and 29 at Michigan State College's new pool, R. B. Daubert, swimming coach at the college, announced to- night. The University of Michigan team will defend the title it won last year, at Yale. Operation Is Cancelled After Conference Of ConsultingPhysicians (Continued from Page 1) other medical men called into the case. The shoulder had been chipped, "probably before the California contest and was loosened when he threw a block in front of Tom Harmon as the Michigan star was re- turning one of Quaker Frank Rea- gan's punts. The new decision puts Evashevski back into the same situation he was in early last week, with only a should- er bruise to shake off to be ready for action. Crisler stated that his quarterback "ought to be ready, but I don't know for how long." That the shoulder will require surgery af- ter the season is over is doubful. The Michigan captain was even more optimistic than his coach. He said that he expected the shoulder to be "100 pe cent" healed by Sat-' urday. He hasn't been doing any blocking since the Penn game, and Crisler stated he wasn't able to say when Evashevski would be allowed to take part in scrimmage. He has been limited to conditioning exer- cisesduring the last week's prac- tice sessions, and the shoulder must be "completely healed" before he can do contact work. Another Wolverine regular, guard l Milo Sukup, was put on the hos- pital list Sunday night. Sukup is on a special diet at the University Hos- pital in an attempt to shake persis- tent symptoms of a brain concussion received in the Illinois game. A report issued early last evening said there had been no improvement as yet. If the symptoms have not disap- peared by the end of the week, Sukup will not be in the lineup against Minn- esota. Dr. Hammond declared that there is a possibility that his trouble may clear up at any time, and the diet is an attempt to hurry his recovery. By GERRY SCHAFLANDER In various and sundry superlative forms, reams of publicity have been dished out concerning the doings and members of the Wolverine front wall. Nevertheless, one man has been con- tinually ignored or just passed up as ordinary copy. He is Reuben Kelto, soft spoken, large proportioned tackle from Bessemer. Kelto played high school football at Bessemer under Bob Reihsem. While at Minnesota, Reihsem played guard on the same line with Clarence Munn, Wolverine line coach. To complete this amazing sequence of events, the Coach of that Minnesota team was Fritz Crisler. So. indirect- ly our fine Finnish friend had a head start, in the understanding of the kind of football the Michigan coaches expect and demand from their varsity players. Kelto is a quiet, likeable sort of fellow who plays a brand of football quite different from that which his personality would lead you to ex- pect. He has a fast charge and is very hard to move from his territory. He is not liable to be sucked in or mouse-trapped as he instinctively plays a conservative game. Neverthe- less, he varies his play to the extent that an opponent can't label him, or stereotype him as a certain type of offensive or defensive tackle. Line Coach Clarence Munn, who is closer to, and knows more about the Rube than anyone else, has this to say: "Kelto is one of the hardest working lineman on the whole squad. He's invariably one of the first men out to practice every night, and I can always count on him 100 per Gent." Kelto only played a short while during the Penn game because of a slight, but bdthersome shoulder in- jury. Yet when he was in there he was really on the ball. It was Kelto who recovered Dutcher's fumble on the Penn 6 yard line that directly led to Michigan's first touchdown. This big tackle will be playing plenty of ball against Minnesota, Northwestern and Ohio State. r M I x For haven't they done enough al- ready? No school could possibly.make such a fool of itself. Last week the Bucks stuck their necks out by charging that Cornell coach Snavely had wig- wagged a cylinder from the Red bench to aid his quarterback. Ath- letic Director St. John made the state- ment, which made the matter even worse. They should have kept their mouths closed after the Charley Maag situation in the Purdue game. Of course, you all remember how Schmidt injected his veteran tackle into the lineup to place kick the winning points after Maag had been taken out earlier in the same quarter. After that and the Cornell charge, we'd really hate to see the Buckeyes starting trouble again by calling Har- mon ineligible. They can't possibly be that bad. * * * We are proud to announce that the winner of the football guessing game contest Saturday was none other than the Daily Double. That inimi- table sports editor who is the author I w Io I ; N Y : , . - _ L _____________________________ - ____ ' L MONEY in Shoes There's plenty of economical wear in those old shoes. r Re- NEW them by our factory methods at low cost. FREE CALL FOR and DELIVERY SERVICE MIDWAY SHOE REPAIR TRADITION ....DIGNITY In The Laundry Business TRADITION -in value and in a sincere and successful attempt to do the job well. 1 s 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Cornell Minnesota Michigan Texas A. & M. Tennessee Stanford Notre Dame Boston College Georgetown Northwestern (119) (18) (14) (11) (3) (2) 1,560 1,420 1,258 1,185 929 906 769 527 347 316 322 E. Liberty Phone 6520 DIGNITY - in prompt and courteous service in all customer I I relationships. Cm Forgotten Something? ^ ....... 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