THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THUML Tom Harmon Chosen Most Outstanding Athlete Of 1940 Gridiron Star Takes, Title By Wide Margin Greenberg, Tiger Outfielder, Is Named Runner-Up In Sports Experts' Poll NEW YORK, Dec. 9.-(A)-Named to the All-America football team two years in succession an voted winner of the Heisman Trophy as this year's No. 1 football player, Tommy Harmon of Michigan reaped fresh honors to- day as he was chosen the outstanding male athlete of 1940 in the annual Associated Press poll. Seventy-eight of the nation's sports experts, asked to give first, second and third choices, named men from 10 sports, with nine each from football and baseball. But for top choice it was strictly no contest. Thirty-two of the 78 ballots put the Wolverine halfback at the head of the list, and there were enough supplementary nominations - to give him a staggering total of 147 points, almost three times that polled by runner-up Hank Greenberg of the American League champion Detroit Tigers. Harmon, who finished his collegi- ate grid career by breaking Red Grange's three-year Western Confer-: ence scoring record, kept football at the head of the list for the second straight year. Nile Kinnick of Iowa won in 1939, but by a mere eight- point margin over Joe DiMaggio of the New York Yankees. Besides Harmon and Greenberg,: named first by 11 experts and given _^ 57 points on a 3-2-1 basis, the onlyf others who got , more than a single first-place vote were pitcher Bucky Walters of the world champion Cin- cinnati Reds, third with six and 40< points; Bobby Feller of the Cleveland Indians, fourth with seven and 31; veteran Jimmy Wilson, fifth on nine {'' and 27, and fullback John Kimbrough of the Texas Aggies, sixth with four and 18. Of the other sports represented the leading candidates were:. ::}s:n. Golf: Open champion Lawson Little, one first-place vote and 12 pit;boxing: heavyweight chain pion Joe Louis, no first-place votes" and 12 points; track: Chuck Fenske, Wisconsin miler, one first-place vote and 10 points; badminton: Dave Free- v---' man of Pasadena, Calif., three-way TOM HARMON national champion, seven points; u billiards: Willie Hoppe, New York, first-place vote for three points; auto five points; tennis: national singles racing: Ab Jenkins; Salt Lake City, champion Don McNeill, Oklahoma one point . City, three points; handball: nation- Goodfellows - Monday al champion Joe Platak, Chicago, one Mermen Face Quaker Team ThisSaturday Dual Meets With Wayne Added To Tank Card; Southern Trip Looms Fresh from an exhibition trip to Cleveland, Michigan's swimming team got down to work yesterday in pre- paration for their dual meet with the University of Pennsylvania on Satur- day of this week. The Wolverines were a sorely dis- appointed crew when they returned home to find themselves with but two Big Ten meets on the schedule for the coming season. Iowa and Purdue are the only Conference foes on the docket. However, Wayne University was added yesterday to the Wolverine card, joining Iowa State as non-conference opponents. The Tartars are to be met on a home and home basis, the first meet in Detroit March 15 and the second here on a later date. There is a possibility for a swing through the East to meet the Penn- sylvania A.C. and the New York A.C. teams around the middle of January, Harvey Muller, assistant coach re- vealed. But nothing can be done about adding some more Big Ten teams to the list. They simply re- fuse to swim against Michigan. So the first and only dual meet of the semester will be held Satur- day in Buffalo, N.Y., with Penn's mermen. Coached by Bill Merriam and captained by Joe Tyson, a jun- ior backstroker, the Quakers are re- ported to be pretty strong in every division but the distances and div- ing. The Wolverines leave Dec. 20 for Ft. Lauderdale, Fla., and the land of sunshine on their annual Christmas training trip. Matt Mann has a crowd of almost 60 signed up for the jaunt including swimmers, reporters and photographers. don wirtehafter's I. DA D.D.'s Double Surprise... THE MICHIGAN basketball team and the Chicago Bears, surprised us all this past weekend. As for the Wolverines, their 42-14 walloping of the Michigan State quin- tet came as an unexpected pleasure for the Double. We hardly expected this year's gang to hang up the worst shellacking in the history of Spartan- Wolverine cage games. Frankly, it's difficult to tell at this point whether Michigan's excellent showing was due to their own ability or State's lack of it. The Spartans, without their injured star, Chet Au- buchon, didn't present much of a team. They didn't know how to pass, lost the ball several times on steps and broken dribbles, and were ner- vous, pressing and outclassed throughout the match. Michigan, on the other hand, was an impressive looking outfit. The Wolverines worked calhly, smoothly and deliberately. They had a superiority complex such as few Michigan cage teams have had during the past few years. The veterans, Brogan, "Hey Pete" Fitzgerald, Sofiak, Ruehle, Cartmill Herrmann and Grissen all played an improved brand of ball while Jim Mandler, the sophomore center, proved that he has what it takes. This Girl Can Take Care Of Herself Excellent Time Trials Increase Interclass Track Meet Rivalry By HOLBROOKE SELTZER During the time trials down at Yost Field House last Saturday the sophomores and seniors were eyeing one another's performances with no little interest as a possible tip-off to the outcome of the inter-class track meet which is to be held this Satur- day and which is billed to be prac- tically a duel between '43 and '41. with '42 just going along for the ride. And while they were thus busily engaged, a lowly junior surprised and surpassed them all by turning in the best performance of the day. Bill Ackerman by name, he ran the mile a full three seconds faster than he ever had before, in the remarkable early-season time of 4:20.7, thus serving distinct notice that he is the peer of this year's Wolverine distance men. Closely pushing Ackerman for top honors of the day was the.sparkling work done by Bob Ufer in the 440- yard dash. witll a mark of :50.7. Now: ordinarily it is n t)hing unusual for Ufer to turn in eye-popping times. but in this case it was. for Bob is handicapped by the effects of a re- cent nasal operation and professes still to feel "sluggish". Other commend able results ini the tra k events were 'he :51.3 quarter mile run by Bobby Barnard. and the INDOOR TRACK SCHEDULE Feb. 15, Illinois Relays. Champaign Feb. 21. Pittsburgh at Michigan Feb. 25, lieligan. Michiagan State ! and Mcw' Normal at MSC March 1. Ohio State at Michigan March 7-8. Conference Meet at Purdue. March 15. Butler Relays at Indianapolis. I1 It's Varsity footballer Bob Ingalls on the sports page again . . " but this time in a little different role. Bob is one of those sexy chorus "girls" in the Oriental chorus of Mimes' Union Opera which opens at 8:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre in the League. Said Ingalls, "I'm used to having my picture taken half-dressed in football shoulder pads.. . but this!." Mr. Ingalls grimaced after the picture was taken. "You won't print that will you?" Pacific Coast, Big enenreak Appears Near DEL MONTE, Calif., Dec. 9.-,(A")- A widening athletic breach between the Pacific Coast Conference, in an- nual meeting here, and the Big Ten Conference appeared forming today, although delegates declined to make official commitments. Reports, unverified but heard, in- dicated some of the coast representa- tives were prepared to oppose renew- al of the annual track and field meet bringingtogether picked stars of the two. conferences. It stemmed out of re-affirmation by Big Ten representatives last week of their policy of prohibiting mem- bers from engaging in post-season football games. The Coast confer- ence had been seeking an annual tie- up with the Midwest group in which the two championship elevens would meet in the Pasadena Rose Bowl, New Year's Day. Lacking official action on the con- vention floor, delegates would not permit their names to be used. One was quoted, however, as follows: "If the Big Ten does not want to play us in football why should we engage them in track and field?" The two organizations have met in four track meets on a home and home basis. Another representative in high quarters, also requesting to be un- identified, was indignant over the Big Ten's refusal to relax its post-season football policy. Goodfellows - Monday The Pennsylvania Railroad's special student train will leave the Ann Arbor R. R. Station at 5 p.m. Friday, Dec. 20 in. i f lIY DOUBLE 1:58.6 half mile won by Dave Matthews with Jack Dobsln a step behind. By way of rounding out what was a very heart-wvrming day for the coaches, the frosh tracksters came through with "very satisfactory" time trials, of vhicuh the performances of the distance men were especially pleasing. p .....Goodfellows - M onday 'Tom Hlarmoni Gets__rophy Heis man Award Is Given To Michigan Flash NEW YORK, Dec. 9.-0P)--Tommy Harmon, Michigan's All-America halfback, tonight received the Heis- man Trophy, given annually by the Downtown A.C. to the football player who is voted the most valuable in the country by a committee of sports writers. The presentation was made by Walter B. Holcombe, president of the Downtown A.C. at a dinner attended by gridiron notables of the past and present. Harmon was praised by his coach, Fritz Crisler, and by Fielding Yost, Michigan Athletic Director, who hailed him as "about the best all- around halfback who ever pulled on a cleated shoe," and other speakers. In his reply Harmon said he was "about the luckiest individual alive" and that he would "try to live up to the high standards set by mypre- decessors." ® 0 * CHRISTMAS " SHOPPING PLEASURE *0 0 Burr, Patterson & Auld * 1209 SoutI University 40RiT ANN (AIis . Zeta Beta Tau Annexes Volleyball Championship Zeta Beta Tau annexed the Fra- ternity volleyball championship by defeating Sigma Alpha Mu two out of three sets, 16-14, 12-15, 18-15, at the Sports Building last Saturday. The play of Jack Kessel, a mem- ber of last year's All-Star squad, and Art Schoenberg, a member of the wrestlingsquad, greatly aided the vic- tors, while the work of Merv Pregul- man, one of the outstanding frosh gridders, stood out for the losers. FOR THE QUEEN OF YOUR HEART... ju ge Lancdis Sure Of Job Commissioner Of Baseball Slated For Reelection CHICAGO, Dec. 9. -(P)- Base- ball Commissioner Kenesaw Moun- tain Landis, whose term of office has another year to run, is slated for re- election by the major leagues this week as a gesture of co'nfidence. The fact that a formal resolution to this effect had been prepared for submission to the major league mag- nates was disclosed, today by Presi- dent William H. Harridge of the American League. He said his organization would sub- mit to the joint session with the Na- tional League on Wednesday or Thursday the following motion: "Resolved, that Commissioner Ken- esaw Mountain Landis is hereby re- elected Commissioner of Baseball to serve at his present salary ($50,000) from the expiration of his present contract to the date of the termina- tion of the major league agreement, to wit, Jan. 12, 1946." Only a majority vote is needed from the 16 big league clubs, but there apparently was no question that the vote would be unanimous. The baby-faced Chicago lad still lacks experience; but one shot in particular Saturday, the one in which he com- pletely faked Hindman to his left from the pivot position, and then gracefully swerved beneath him and dropped the ball over his right shoul- der into the basket, proved that Mandler can be counted on for big things in the future. Be it State's weakness or not, it still was a pleasure. As for the Chicago Bears, frankly, the Double thinks the Redskins must have been doped, every last one of them. As one writer put it, it was the worst beating Washington has taken since "the British sacked the city more than 100 years ago." DOUBLE DRIBBLES: Michigan's avoided swimmers received the good news yesterday that they will have two meets with Wayne University's young upstarts this year . one here and one in Detroit . The Tartars, who defeated Ohio State and scared the daylights out of Yale last winter, were also snubbed by the other natatorial powers this year ... Yale is coming to Columbus for a meet . . . but can't make Ann Arbor . Michigan could beat an all-star Conference team made up of the best men from all the other nine schools . . . without any trouble . . . Ohio's free style ace, Johnny Patton, left school .. . Mark Follensbee, the crack ineligible Princeton backstroker last year, who flunked out of the Eastern school, has enrolled at Ohio ... Maybe Johnny Gillis wasn't so dumb after all... He goes to Colo- rado this weekend . .. and. where are the swimmers? The scheduled Purdue swim meet will have to be canceled or changed . .. It comes during the week of finals. MATT MANN has more troubles ... Another of his seniors is heading altar way this weekend . . . Bill Holmes will marry Dorothy Wagner of Detroit . . . He's the third senior to get hitched this year . . . "It's catching, like the measles," comments Matt. Tommy Quinn, Ypsi distance ace, and Al Tolmich, former Wayne hurd- ling star, are working out in the Field House these days along with Ralph Swarzkopf in preparation for the approaching Sugar Bowl meet. stead of 5; an ad in a.m. as was stated in Sunday's paper. i - I m A ew be a in Teal7raih eice f LIN II STUDENT'S SPECIAL TRAIN *0 , 17 JEWELS Air-Conditioned Deluxe, Reclining Seat Coaches Coaches will operate through from Ann Arbor to the stations shown below - no change of cars or trains. I J-HOP Lea cbnq Jocia/ O/14e ear FEBRUARY 14, 1941 Juniors be sure to apply for your tickets Wednesday or Thursday from 11:30 to 5 P.M. at the League or the Union. You must have your own identification card and a self Alluringly Lovely. With graceful matching bracelet.I17 jewels. $39.75 NEW YORK Say it with an Elgin "'De Luxe" this Christmas! A gift to be treasured... styled to remain foreverbeautiful. Un- believably accurate. Priced from $37.50. Come in and see our complete display. GIFTS of traditional quality, I _ - . - -1 L"-f -- -1 -- - NEWARK.........$19.45 I WASHINGTON ..... $16.65 PHILADELPHIA .....17.90 BALTIMORE ....... 16.65 PITTSBURGH ........ 9.50 4 HARRISBURG .......15.30 Fares subject to parties of 15 or more. Proportionally low fares to all cities. LEAVE ANN ARBOR 5:00 P.M. I I , ,.-- . ::r: O