THE MICHIGAN DAILY Of Wolverine Lineup + Ticket Jumble' Gets Scalpers Best Selection Students Get Poor Seats As A Result Of Selling Ducats To Speculators (Continued from Page 1)w vocated that students no longer be privileged to buy the three extra seats. He further stated that Michigan was the only university in the country that followed such a procedure, but that its abuse was being carried too far., The Ann Arbor police force has been called in to alleviate the situa- tion. Yesterday two men not mem- hers of the student body, were arrest- ed at the ticket office, and on Satur- day plainclothesmen will be spread through the crowd for the purpose of picking up-scalpers. According to a Michigan state law, a $100 fine or 80 days in jail can be levied on any person caught illegally selling tick- ets, and Tillotson said that there is every intentioi of enforcing this law. Any student caught scalping will also lose his identification card until June, thus being leprived of admit- tance to all athletic events,.~as well as being referred for disciplinary action to the Dean's office. When the supply at the ticket office is exhausted, the only - place where tickets may be legally pur- chasel is the Union Ticket Exchange. Tickets may be bought o0 sold at the Union Student Offices every day un- til Friday between the hours of 3 and 5 p.m. They will also be on sale at the Ticket Resale Desk in the1 union between 9 a.m. .and 1 p.m.I Saturday. Ceithaml's Substitute Beiicheii With Severe Shoulder In jury By BUD HENDELI Fate dealt Michigan football hopes one from the bottom of the deck yes- terday when team physician Dr. George Hammond announced that Elmer Madar, second team quarter-{ back, would be unable to play in Sat-, urday's tilt with Minnesota and would probably be out for at least two ..! w . Hammond, he is suffering from an incomplete fracture of his right shoulder blade. The junior field general was first injured in the Iowa fray and he fur- ther aggravated the hurt in the Pitt contest. Since then he has done only light work, but the injury has failed to respond to treatment. As a result, varsity quarterback George Ceithaml will probably be called on for another 60' minute per- formance against the Norsemen. If any mishap should befall Ceithaml, Coach lritz Crisler will have to turn to two inexperienced sophomores, Charlie Haslam and Johnny Green, for the quarterbacking chores. Also jogging around in sweat suits at yesterday's practice session were Al Wistert, brilliant Wolverine tackle who played the entire game against the Wildcats, and second tea(n center Ted Kennedy. B6th men will be ready by Satur- day but at the present time Wistert is ailing with thigh muscle strains in- curred in the Evanston struggle, while Kennedy is trying to work out a charley-horse. Yesterday's drill was featured by an hour and a half scrimmage ses- sion against the Red Shirts. The lat- ter took the ball during the first part of the fcrimmage, executing Minne- sota plays and formations. Then the first team took over for anextensive P IT 4L * Student Pep Rally * Little BrownJug Byiy HAL WILSON Daiy Sports Editor A TED KENNEDY * * * * IT'S BEEN a standing joke for a long time now up here at The Daily to write editorials about school spirit or lack of it. According to most of the world- vise Daily editorial writers, who would prefer to solve the foreign situation or the labor problem or the national defense emergency every day, this matter of school spirit ranks right along with keep-off-the-grass campaigns. And therefote is to be disregarded as unimportant. And maybe they're right; I don't know. BUT WHEN TOM HARMON, probably Michigan's most publicized alum- nus, breaks out in public print in a Detroit newspaper with the flat declaration that the University students have virtually no spirit, no enthus- iasm for the football team, it's a regrettable matter. For Harmon is abso- lutely right-from past experiences. IF EVER A STUDENT BODY HAD CAUSE TO BECOME ENTHUS- IASTIC OVER THEIR FOOTBALL TEAM, IT'S THE PRESENT ONE ON THIS CAMPUS. And if there ever was a perfect psychological set- ting for a pep rally, this Friday is it. BIGGEST REASON, of course, is the number one grid attraction not only of the week but probably also of the season, to be played Saturday in the Stadium between Michigan and Minnesota. No student of football need be reminded of the seven consecutive lacings the Wolverines have taken from the Golden Gophers of the North, of the heart-breaking defeat Michigan's mud-shackled machine took at Minneapolis last year. At stake also, of course, will be the Little Brown Jug, one of foot- balls most traditional trophies emblematic of Gopher-Wolverine grid rivalry down through the year. It has roosted up in Gopherland almost as long as Roosevelt in the White Houwe. And as Fielding H. Yost de- clares: "That Little Brown Jug belongs at Ann Arbor. That's its home And if we get just one little finger in the handle Minnesota will have to cut off an arm to get the jug." ANOTHER VITAI REASON why the student body should not let the Wolverine team down is because the team has not let it down:. This Maize and Blue outfit started the season with only fair rating by outside experts. But it has fought and it has scrapped and it has refused to give up. And thus it goes into the Minnesota clash undefeated and ranked as the nation's number three combination. ! Most satisfying win, of course, was that turned in last week over Northwestern. An uphill struggle all the way, the game was tucked away in the last period only because an aggressive, alert Michigan team had an unquenchable desire to win. A team like this current Wolverine crew deserves support. NOW THE MEMBERS of the Varsity "M" Club and the Men's Union have put a lot of time and effort into formulating plans for a gigantic mass pe-P rally to be staged Friday nightNat Yost Field House. It entails a great deal of policing detail on the part of the "M" Club. And it takes a lot of organization and responsibility for possible property damage on the part of the Union. The Daily is behind the affair whole-heartedly. The Varsity Band will perform. Coach Fritz Crisler will give a pre-game lgwdown of Saturday's crucial clash. It's possible that either Ted Husing or Bill Stern, ace rBS and NBC sportscasters, will air the rally over a coast-to- coast hookup. IN SHORT, EVERYTHING IS ASSURED but student support. That's up to you. more weeks because of a severe shoul- der injury. It was hoped that Madar, who had been kept out of last week's North- western game for , the same reason; would be ably to see action against the Gopherg: But according to Dr: ootball Map FREE and see a complete line if ALBERT RICHARD SPORTSWEAR ,at 1891 322-324 South Main BOB FLORA... ... Reliable Replacement offense drill, using old and new plays both on the ground and "in the air. Press photographers had a field' day as they snapped the Wolverines before the contact work started. With Saturday's game bringing together two of the nation's major undefeated, untied teams in a battle which may decide the Western Conference title as well as being the top gridiron spec- tacle of the season, pigskin interest is at fever pitch in Ann Arbor. To add to the reams of publicity being turned out about toe forth- coming Michigan-Gopher tilt, Bill Stern and Ted Husing, the ace sports- casters of the country, will be broad- casting the game from the Stadium, booths. Tom Harmon, Harry Wis- mer and Larry Gentile will also air the fray for their respective net- works. x TRACK MANAGERS All sophomores interested in trying out for positions as track managers please report after 4 p.m. this week on the Ferry Field track. Chuck Boynton, Manager 1941 Tom Harmon Out Of Sunday's Clash NEW YORK, Oct. 21. -(IP)- Bill Cox, president of the' New York Americans of the American Pro Foot- ball League, said tonight Tom Har- mon, Michigan's All-America half- back of 1940, would not play with the professional club Sunday. Cox said pressure of Harmon's radio duties in Detroit made it im- possible for the halfback to p'ractice with the Americans and in fairness to both the public and the player, Har- mon would not participate in the game with the Buffalo Tigers. All letter winners are to report at 7:30 p.m., Friday, at the Field House. You are supposed to wear your sweaters. Numeral winners are to wear their sweaters also. Bahrych Takes Physical Max Bahyrch, junior hockey player, was suddenly called to his home in Syracuse, N. Y., Monday night to take a physical for the Army, it was learned at ithe Daily last night. Bahyrch earned his letter last year on Eddie Lowery's puck squad. pR. GRABOW PIPES for sale at mw I" UNIVERSITY D)UG STORE 1225 S. University M1 r Don't walk out on the rest of te fellows when they make their "Home- coming plans Help them by telling them of the bar- gains to be had at Schlenker's Hardware We carry 9i necessities. WOMEN WHO WALK & 1 .: . . A "I'm a war-service worker. 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