I1 lAY NOVEMfR1 IY t15, 1940 TEMCIA AL PAGIE THR1; Eight Seniors To Face Northwestern In Final Home Game i don wirtehafter's DAILY DOUBLE' Flash Back,-. . It happened just two years ago. Northwestern and Michigan were trading gridiron punches in the Stad- ium. Neither squad had scored. It was the third quarter. The Wildcats had the ball on the Wolverine 37. Ollie Hahnenstein faded back and shot a pass to Bernie Jefferson, Northwestern's Michigan-bred half- back. The colored star, behind aI host of Purple blockers, galloped in- to the clear down the left sidelines. Only Tom Harmon was there to stop him, but the Wildcat inter- ference had plowed Harmon out of the path. With a tremendous burst of speed, however, the Hoosier Hurricane came from heaven knows where and smoth- ered Jefferson on the Michigan 11. First and ten on the 14. The press- ing Wolverines were offside on the very first play, and it was first and! five on the six. Then came one of, the most thrilling five minutes in Michigan gridiron his- tory. Battling to remain in the Big Ten race, the Wolverines unleashed all their fury., Heikkinen stopped Wildcat Jack Ryan's smash with no gain. Ryan cracked the line again and bolted to, the two where Harmon brought him Read The Daily, Classifieds * DISTINCTIVE e PERSONAL and * CHAPTER CARDS * * for CH R ISTMAS! r See * Ruth Ann Oakes e at BURR PATTERSON & AULD * 1209 South "'U."0 down. McGurn took the ball next and picked up the 18 inches. Just a yard left to score. McGurn plowed for two feet . stopped within a whisker of the goal line. Ryan cut back over tackle on the next play, but Wally Hook broke through to bury him under back on the two. Jefferson tried the other tackle on third down, and Ralph Fritz and Bill! Smith slapped hiim down.. no gain. Ie was the fourth down and still two to go. The; Wildcats uncorked a pass play. Ryan took the reverse from McGurn and shot the pigskin toward Capt. Cleo Diehl in the end zone. With split second timing, maacap Norm Purucker, Wolverine halfback, dove into the air and picked out the flying iootball. Northwestern had been stopped eight times within the shadow of the goal. The Wildcats got even later in the clash. Purucker, with just seconds left to play, stepped back to 'punt the Wolverines out of danger. Pur-1 ple forward chargers, however, broke through the Michigan front line, and all Norm could do was run around then He picked up steam and blockers and raced down the right sidelines. Purucker kept charging past mid- field . . . past the 40 . . . past the 30 . His path seemed clear. But through, the Wolverines blockers drifted Ryan and then McGurn. The fleet Mich- igan ball carier swerved desperately to avoid them, but it was of little use. Down he went on the 25. That's the way Michigan and Northwestern battled to a scoreless tie two years ago. Tomorrow they meet akain. Collier's magazine sent photogra- phers here yesterday to take shots of Harmon and Wistert. . . The pur- pose is Grantland Rice's forthcoming all-American selections . . . They tell us that. Harmoni is a cinch . .. Wis- tert a strong possibility. FROSH GRIDDERS All Freshmen football award winners report for squad picture today at 4:30 p.m. -- Wally Weber Sukup Forced To Watch Tilt From Stands Season Is Over For Milo; Slight Brain Concussion Will Need Time Cure When Michigan's gridmen trot off Ferry Field at the conclusion of a light drill this afternoon and head for their usual Friday night hideaway at Barton Hills Country Club, it will be the last time for eight Wolverine seniors who will be performing in their final game tomorrow against j I rthwestern. Last For Harmon And Evy Winding up their home grid ca- reers in the Stadium will be Capt. Forest Evashevski, Tom Harmon, Ed Frutig, Joe Rogers, Ed Czak Harry Kohl, Ralph Fritz, and Paul Kromer. Another senior veteran, husky Milo Sukup, will be forced to watch the Wildcat clash fromn the sidelines, for the slight brain concussion which he first received in the Illinois game and which kept him out of last week's Minnesota tilt, has cut short his in- tercollegiate football career, and he will be unable to play either in tomor- row's contest or against Ohio State next week. Drilling intensively on their aerial attack yesterday Fritz Crisler's crew worked out awhile in the vast Yost Field House, then romped outside to brave the cold blasts. Tom Harmon and Cliff Wise spent considerable time whipping passes around the field in preparation for the invading Wildcats. Capacity Crowd Probable A sellout tomorrow appeared a vir- tual certainty with 70,000 seats al- ready disposed of according to tick- et officials. The remaining 15,000 du- cats are expected to go fast providing weather conditions remain favorable. Setting up camp at Dearborn, Coach Lynn Waldorf will run his powerful Purple squad through a light practice there this afternoon, and then tuck his charges into bed early tonight. Presenting The Varsity and freshman track teams closed the tall outdoor season yesterday with cross-country runs around the University golf course. Bill Ackerman finished with the best time of any of the Varsity run- ners over the three and a half mile course, 18:57. Karl Wisner ant John- ny McKean, the other men who were not given handicaps, finished with the next best times. The runners who placed first, sec- ond, and third were all given handi- caps. These men were Jim O'Malley. Buck Dawson, and George Pusack. All of these trackmen received med- als. In the freshman division the race was shorter. two miles around the golf course. John Ingersoll won first place with the fine time of 10:05, barely nosing out Earnest Leonardi. Herb Collins garnered third place honors. The next three spots went to run- ners with handicaps, Roosevelt Steages, John McCarty, and Ken Brondyke. The Wildcats' Frain Trust O'Malley Tops Varsity Harriers When Coach Lynn Waldorf of Northwestern imparts his football wizardry to his captain and quarterback, Dick Richards, he knows the Purple offense will click with the same split-second precision and baffling deception as if he were calling the signals himself. Wally Weber Announces Names Of 53 Frosh Nuneral Winners Fifty-three frosh gridders will re- ceive numerals for the 1940 season, Wally Weber, yearling coach an- nounced yesterday. The award winners are: Ends: August J. Altese, Detroit; Fred J. Bryan, Melvindale; Harrison H. Caswell, Ann Arbor; George H. Earle, Hermansville; Walter B. Frie- hofer, Indianapolis, Ind.; Paul C. Johnson, Fremont; Albert Knuth, St,. Louis; Morris G. Lax, Detroit; John F. O'Brien, Dearborn; Jack E. Petos- key, Dearborn; John H. Richter, Lou- isville, Ky.; and Robert W. Shemky, Crystal Falls. Tackles: Peter M. Exner, Chicago, Ill.; Arnold M. Kargenian, Detroit; Gillis, Swimming Star, Switches From Water Sport To Hockey William E. Kuper, Newtonville, Mass.; Philip B. Marcellus, Rockford, Ill.; Thomas L. Miller, Dayton, Ohio; David P. Wood, Jr., LaGrange, Ill.; and Jules J. Zabrauskas, Chicago, Ill. Guards: Ralph H. Amstutz, Oak Park, Ill.; Clayton M. Foor, Detroit; Julius Franks, Jr., Hamtramck; Richiard Hubert, Kalamazoo.; Ches- ter F. Mitchell, Jr., Chicago, Ill.; Og- den R. Moe, St. Petersburg, Fla.; Ben- jamin Pearlman, Providence, R. I.; William R. Rohrbach, E. Aurora, N. Y.; and Angelo E. Trogan, Sagi- naw. Centers: John Thomas Bacon, Farmington; Paul M. Gardner, Tra- verse City; Robert L. McFaddin, De- troit; Mervin Pregulman, East Lan- sing; and William Pritula, Detroit. Quarterbacks: John J. Greene, Pittsburgh, Pa.: John F. Harrigan, Detroit; Charles J. Haslam, Duluth, Minn.; and Joseph Josephs, High- land Park, Ill.; Halfbacks: John G. Allerdice, No- blesville, Ind.; Byron C. Avgerinos, Evanston, Ill.; James J. Brown, St. Ignace; Donald P. Boor, Dearborn; Walter C. Derby, Grand Rapids, Charles J. Kennedy, Jr., Van Wert, Ohio; Don W. Robinson, Detroit; Reino J. Romo, Puritan, N. Y.; Sey- mour Roth, Chicago, Ill.; Robert P. Stenberg, Chicago, Ill.; and Paul G. White, River Rouge. Fullbacks: Tom G. Kuzma, Gary, Ind.; Austin S. Miller, Ann Arbor; and Winston Howard Vallade, River Rouge. 11 11 Headquarters for MANHATTAN SHIRTS $tatl & 1Lrn e Serve to eTveHMA 4iREt ~309 SOUTH 'MAI N STREET t+5}Y'' Iz ry . ., +: ti';, " i}}..y : }? I , ; :: .. r .. ,:::: '.....i:::: A ' By WOODY BLOCK John Gillis, relay star on Matt Mann's championship swimming team, traded his swimming suit for a pair of skates and a stick yesterday as he decided to give up treading wa- ter for his first love-hockey. The tall, powerful Hibbing, Minn. junior was on Michigan's 400-yard relay team that stroked their way through everything this country had to offer last year. But the glamour of being on a national championship outfit faded for the Wolverine giant. "Hockey is a lot more fun," he explained. "Be- sides, there wasn't much more for me in swimming anyway." The new addition to the Wolver- ine puckchasers will be a welcome one. With an undermanned squad, Lowrey can well use a lad who played on the same front line with such collegiate stars as Haydon Pickering and Frank St. Vincent, for- merly at Minnesota. There aren't any high school teams in the heart of the hockey country where he lives, John revealed. "Eve- ryone plays in the city recreational leagues. That's where I started." I 1 So it appears that what is Matt Mann's loss is Eddie Lowrey's gain. If Mann can find a capable replace- ment for Gillis on his tank squad, and he should be able to with the wealth of material on hand, then John Gillis' experiment will be a thing to watch. He might mean the difference be- tween a mediocre and a brilliant hockey season for Michigan. Time alone will tell. At any rate, the change from a sleek, smooth-strok- ing swimmer into a whiijling, hard- charging hockey player is one of the queerest switches in sports. A c What D'You Hear From The J Boys? Fine Overcoats 1 8 9.50 to 835-00 All styles, fine weave hair coats, fleeces and cam- el hair, coverts, and tweeds with zipper linings. SUITS The season's newest shades and models priced to give ;ou more for your money. The Wide-Spread Collar is Way Out in Front Young men who go for hefty, handsome knitted ties welcome the space the Manhattan wide-spread collar provides! There's continuous comfort, too, in the way it slopes gently down toward the front of the neck. MANHATTAN shirts with the wide-spread collar are the college hit of the year's upper, lower and middle classmen. Choose yours from the assortment of hand- some Manhattans at a nearby store today. $2 up. SIZE-FIXT Averagefabric shrinkage 1% or less MAN-FORMED shaped to masculine contours cOLLAR-PERFECT styled to stay set just-so Twilight Turns to TUXEDOS and TAILS See Them at the Smallest Markup Possible and Save MANHATTAN SHIRTS An I i -r..A .IM I nil 75 I I. I S ) j.50 to SAO-oo 1 I- { ~l -XY LA V LL e" L3, - -L- - - - -ia,.al G .