THE MICHIGANDAILY PAGE __. ,, Wolverine Hockey Team To Meet Michigan Tech Sofiak Takes Scoring Lead Mike Leads In Fouls Too; Mandler Next In Totals Tiny Mike Sofiak, sparkplug of the Wolverine basketball team, led his mates in three departments, both commendable and condemnable, af- ter the Varsity's first venture into the 1940-41 Big Ten campaign. Little Mike's 73 points in the sev- en games played to date paces the Michigan scorers, just 13 markers in front pf sophomore Jim Mandler, who has 60. Sofiak's average per game is 10.4 points. Not only does the diminutive Var- sity forward lead his cohorts in scor- ing, but he is also far out in front of his mates in the race for "bad man" honors, too. Mike has had no less than 17 personal fouls called against him to date. Mandler's record of nine personals nets him the reputation of "cleanest" regular on the squad. The complete figures follow: SCORING RECORDS I. COMN1 don wirtehafter's IDAILY DOUBLE , GP Sofiak ...... 7 Mandler.... 7 Brogan.... 7 Tiitzgerald .. 4 Ruehle .... 7 Herrmann .. 6 Cartmill . ... 7 Doyle....... 3 Glasser .... 4 Grissen .... 3 G F 25 23 26 8 13 8 9 2 9 1 4 6 5 3 6 0 20 0 2 T 73 60 34 20 ,19 14 13 12 4 2 PF 17 9 11 7 11 9 9 1 0 2 Totals .....7 99 53 251 76 In addition to his other two honors, Sofiak also has the best foul shooting average on the Wolverine squad. Mike has drawn 32 foul shots and has made good on 23 for an average of .719. FOUL SHOOTING AVERAGES FA FM Ave. Grissen ....b....2 2 1.000 Sofiak........32 23 .719 Herrmann .... 10 6 .600 Brogan .......19 8 .421 Mandler ......19 8 .421 Cartmiill.......9 3 .333 Ruehle ........4 1 .250 Fitzgerald ....10 2 .200 Westerman,.. 2 0 .000 Totals .... 107 53 .495 MEN, it's here our great Michaels Stern SU TS - O'COATS TOPCOATS all reduced. 25to3% Lowest Prices Now. Choice of our entire stock. Other Specials 1.00 Silk ties - 79c 35c Holeproof hose - 3 pair 89e 3.50 Bradley Sweaters - 2.95 3.95 Fur lined gloves - 2.85 1.50 Mufflers - 1.29 QISTINCTIV MNS WLM 116 EAST LIBERTY Business And Pleasure.. .. EDITOR'S NOTE: Ed Frutig, Michigan's All-American, All-Bowl, All-Star and All-Handsome gridiron end, takes over the Double today to present a first hand account of his journey to sunny California and the East-West game. By ED FRUTIG WEDNESDAY-Formal congregation of the East team in Chicago's Hotel Sherman . . . Everybody meets. everybody else. Coach Andy Kerr holds a short meeting and learns that of the nine backfield men on the squad, only Michigan Captain Evie is an experienced signal caller. His worries are mitigated, however, when a 230-pound tackle from one of the Southeast Conference schools drawls in a smooth and easy accent, "Ah called signals for mah team durin the season . . . The coach signaled from the bench and ah had the bes' eyes." A short workout after the meeting, an hour of posing for photogra- phers that clutter up the hotel lobby and make it look like a Hollywood first night, and the ill-fated squad boards a train for California. THURSDAY-The squad leaves the train and elbows its way through a crowd of football fans, all crying for a peek at the greatest halfback of all time (need I say more?). The Ace is finally rescued from the autograph seekers by a dozen cops and as many school officials and the team returns to the station and en- trains to continue its jaunt westward. FRIDAY-A repetition of Thursday except it's a big- ger town an more people. At night a streamer of private autos awaits the squad just outside of Reno, Nev. and be- shind screaming police sirens, the 22 members of the East team descend on the "Biggest Little City in the World." To us casual observers,Reno appeared to consist sole- ly of gambling joints, night clubs (mostly of the cheaper variety with the cigar smoke atmosphere) and, though we didn't seeany of them, the fafned divorce courts and their products. Ed Frutig The train is half an hour late leaving Reno, after be- ing forced to wait until the coaches visit each night club to ferret out the players who are enjoying themselves no end watching washed-out burlesque queens hold sway with bubble dances and plain ordinary strip-tease routines. The entire squad, including Forest Evashevski, was finally routed from places featuring this sort of entertainment and the engines again pulled us westward. SATURDAY-We arrive in sunny California and see it receiving a thor- ough bathing. The natives call it "liquid sunshine." The band greets us as we disembark after our three day journey, and the crowd looks for Harmon. The team is coralled into a waiting bus and taken to the Shriners' Hos- pital for Crippled Children, which is maintained by the proceeds of the East-West game'. The little kids make a clean steal of everyone's heart as on crutches, in casts, and confined to their beds, they give cheers and yells for the team, clamor for autographs and sing songs as though they were the happiest people in the world. And when the band of football players left, they weren't so sure that these little soldiers didn't have a lot of things that we who seem to be more fortunate, lack. When we left there, the banquets began, one night after the other, and needless to say, they surpassed for dryness anything the Sahara has to offer. MONDAY-The team begins the dull routine of two practice sessions a day. All of the fellows had just completed tough seasons, and few felt like giving their all in practice. A newspaper man, ever-alert for the sensational, visited one of the more lackadaisical sessions, noted that everyone dogged it, and scurried back to his typewriter to knock out a front page yarn of dissention in the East ranks because of the presence of one Tom Harmon. The story soon became grotesque in its inaccuracy and spread across the country where the more gullible of the news reading public ate it up. A bigger lie or grosser exaggeration-there ain't none. CHRISTMAS DAY-We're given the afternoon off, so I cornered the big tackle from the South to talk with him about football in his school. "You gotta get all ya can, and ah got mine before the season. Ah had 'em on the spot cause they needed tackles somethin' fierce," he told me when I asked about subsidization. We got to talking about ethics in football after awhile, andshe told about playing Tennessee. "Why, you know," he said in his slow drawl, "the week before the game, we found one of their scouts hiding in our stands taking movies of our .practices . . . They'd a caught our man too but he was smarter." NEW YEAR'S DAY-We'll skip this part of the trip, just men- tioning that the West had Paul Christman and a prayer. JANUARY 2-The nlane took us down to Los Angeles where we were to play a ch-arity game for British war relief. Ralph Fritz joined the'squad from Pittsburgh, and we met him after he had been on the plane for 17 hours. He was so tired, but felt up to a date with one of the Hollywood glamour gals, so joined the rest of the boys and a group of Hollywood extras in a quiet little party (?). Now take it from me these extras in Hollywood are every bit as lovely as the stars . . _. they just don't get a break. And this little dolly that I had (if you read this, honey, I'm only kidding) could have won a prize anywhere for sheei good looks. Of course, she couldn't keep a conversation sparkling if it concenimed anything but gossip about screen stars, and she said no to most of my questions, but what the Hell! The game finally fell through, so after a couple more parties . . . quiet ones, to be sure . . . Ralph Fritz and I took a Mainliner out of Hollywood Saturday, had motor trouble, were grounded, but finally managed to arrive back in Ann Arbor, all worn out and ready for three weeks of sleep, study and serious work. Northmen Will Rely On SpeedĀ± In Seeking Win Exciting Game Forecast As Huskies Challenge With Diminutive Squad; (Continued from Page 1) from the Upper Peninsula. The Houghton club doesn't boast many giants but the little boys are fast andj clever stickhandlers anti may prove to be one of the toughest teams the Wolverines have yet faced. Biggest man on the squad is bruis- ing defense man Arne Mars who is 5 feet 11 inches tall and weighs 195 pounds. Mars will be remembered by Michigan fans for his smashing body checks and fine defensive play in last year's contest. Going to the other extreme, the Huskies present tiny Bob Robillard, alternate left wing, who tips theM scales at a mere 130 pounds and stands 5 feet 3 inches in his stocking feet. Sophomore wingman Roy Brad- ley will break into the Michigan hockey lineup for the first time tonight teaming up with Bob Col- Baird Small But Husky ins and Fred Heddle on the third Working with Mars on the back- front line. line will be Fred Baird, a Port Huronf senior. Baird, the only Lower Pen-' insula boy on the squad, is not a big Good Heavyweight man, as defense men go, but he's husky and known as a very fine poke 'restler Lacking checker. Wearing the pads for the Iorth- As Season Opens erners will be Bob Larson, a senior from Houghton. Larson has held' the goalie's job for the last two years For the first time in many years, and turned in three shutouts against the Michigan wrestling team will be Michigan last season. In the other without a first-class heavyweight game of the series, Michigan was vic- grappler. torious by a 1T0 score. "Butch" Jordan did a very fine Capt. Bob Petaja, diminutive right job at that weight for the past three winger, is expected to spark the vis- b itors' attack, replacing the graduat- years, and upon his graduation last ed Villeneuve as the Tech offensive June Coach Cliff Keen expected to spearhead. have Jack Butler as a capable sub-' At the left wing spot will be Tony stiute for this year. But Butler, Phillipich, at six feet the tallest man along with another gridder, Al Wis- in the Huskies' starting lineup. Phil-.tent has had to spend all of his time lj'pich learned his hockey in his home .ti' hsadtspnalofisim town of Elcor, Minn. He is one of with his books. Another prospect, two men on the squad from outside Rudy Sengel, has had a recurrence the state. of a football knee injury. Sophomore At Center Yesterday Keen held matches be- Fill Make Debut T-Boe Martin Boasts Unique Success Story By WOODY BLOCK Personality and a pair of feet. That's one of the queerest success' formulas in the sporting world, but it has carried young Strother (T-Bone) Martin. Michigan's ace diver, to the top of the heap. T-Bone, by virtue of his accomp- lish'ments last year, is the third rank- ing diver in the country off the three- meter board. He was beaten in the Nationtal Collegiates by Ohio State's one-two combination of Earl Clark and the greatest of them all, Al Pat- nik. So far this season the unpredict- able Wolverine has taken a first place in the Pennsylvania meet and then turned in the surprise of the year with an upset victory over the same Earl Clark. "It was a fluke," Martin claims. "We only had to do three dives down at Ft. Lauderdale (where the upset took place) and he flattened out on one of them." But the fact remains that the beautifully built junior has been tak- ing backwash from no one with re- peated firsts in dual meets and his third place in the Collegiates. And it's mostly due to a personality and a pair of feet. T-Bone is an excellent diver, make no mistake about that.hBut it's as true as the day is long that he gains added points merely from his appear- ance and actions on the diving board. There's something in that short, chesty frame of his that captures swim audiences and judges every- where. Perhaps it's his poise or may- be the crisp, sure way he springs into the air for his plunge into the water. Whatever it is, this certain some- thing has a captivating influence.. It's the driving force behind the poise and confidence he shows on the board-the rhythm and grace when he's in the air.14 Those feet are the greatest natural asset young T-Bone owns. They have the spring of a kangar'ooand the control of a champion. They're actually sights to behold when T- Bone leads them sharply and crisply into the water. Other divers have gotten along with split-second timing, miraculous coordination or natural grace, but for Strother Martin, who possessesr those virtues too, it's personality and a pair of feet. onight Pigshin Moguls Legalize Ille gal Football Plays By MYRON DANN It appears that the recent meeting of the football moguls at Clementon, New Jersey proved to be little more than a ratification congress for a number of illegal plays the grid teams of the nation have been using for some time now. The rule forbidding a substitute player from talking until the ball has been put in play has been vio- lated so often that referees no long- er stand near the huddle when a new player enters the game. We have even been reading about some coaches who don't even bother to send in players for the purpose of transmitting messages but signal to the players on the field right from the bench. Old Rule Violated The rule allowing the ball to be handed forward at any point behind the scrimmage line should not cause the least bit of difference in the way the game is being played. Coach Yost in discussing this rule said: "I have seen football teams play- ing for a good many years now but I have never seen a team penalized for violating the old rule." It has been a pet play of some of the southern schools to have the plunging back tuck the ball be- hind the knees of a guard while his teammates faked a play over the center. The left end would then slip nonchalantly to the lineman who had the ball hid behind his knees, take it, and run for a touch- down if not detected by a wide- awake player. Michigan has used its fake buck lateral for years now without incur- ring a penalty. Touchback Eliminated The only rule which will effect the game at all is the elimination of- the touchback .on incomplete forward passes into the end zone on - the fpurth down. As the rule stands now if the fourth down pass falls incomplete over the goal. line, the defending team will take over at the point where the play had start- ed, instead of on the 20-yard line as before. Coach Yost points' out that, "this will cut down most of those, fourth-down passes hurled from around mid-field over the goal line." .Despite pressing demands, from rmany quarters to increase' the chances for scoring, the football ex- Iecutives refused to take any action. i J Jack Ruhl, 140-pound sophomore center, will team up with Petaja and Phillipich to complete the Tech start- ing lineup. If there are no changes, the start- ing team for the visitors will average 5 feet 9 inches in height and the av- erage weight per man will be 166 pounds. Eddie Lowery intends to start a Michigan team made up of Hank Loud in the goal, Capt. Charley Ross and Bert Stodden at defense, Johnny Gillis in the center spot and Gil Samuelson and Max Bahrych on the wings. tween six of his wrestlers to help de- termine who would compete at 136- pounds, 145-pounds, and in the un- limited division in the opening dual meet with the Dearborn AC, Satur- day night. Emil Lockwood and John Wilson grappled in the heavyweight divi- sion. Lockwood, at 174 pounds, spotted his larger opponent 30 pounds and barely squeezed out a 6-5 victory. In repeating his all- campus victory over Wilson, Lock- wood appears to have earned the right to wrestle in the unlimited divi- sion, Saturday. In the other two matches for var- sity berths, both winners had very close calls. Ray Deane won on points from Ed Wight, but the match re- quired two extra two minute periods. The score was 18-17. John Paup downed Marvin Becker in the other close match, 14-11. Michigan Loud Ross (c) Stodden Gillis Samuelson Bahrych THE LINEUPS Pos. N G D D C W Mich. Tech Larson Mars Baird ,Ruhl Petaja (c) Phillipich lF. .iii HEIPPY B. M. 0, C vt / HE got his Ensian before the price went to $4.50 w. _ J eS - I' { a Wagner's 93rd mid-winter cloth- ing sale now on. Suits, topcoats, overcoats, sport coats, and slacks at reduced prices. Now $4.00 Developing better apparatus of many kinds at lower cost is-a continuous process in the Bell System. It plays a major part in making your telephone service the finest and cheapest in the world. Here is one of many cases in point: 1 Above you see two telephone loading coils-one old, ona new. Such coils are spaced at regular intervals along tele- phone circuits. They reduce electrical losses... help to bring your voice through clearly, strongly over long 'distances. Through the years, engineers at Bell Telephone Labora. I K! r 1941i "No - - - Now - -" . 111111