THE MICHIGAN DAILY rumY, , Varsity Holds L 4~, SPIORTFOLIO S+ Barbara's Scrap Book 0 A Letter From Lev, By HAL WILSON Daily Sports Editor x a Heavy Practice Before Gopher Battle wolverines Work On Passing; DaleyMay Not Start Contest . HAVE SOME SPORTS HASH FOR BREAKFAST THIS MORNING: Michigan's number one football fan? . . . Barbara Coxon, daughter of Dr. A. W. Coxon, has staked out her claim for the title . .. young Barbara, an enthusiastic Wolverine booster for years, rarely misses a practice session, knows most of the gridmen by name, knows the plays and formations even better than that . . . she devotedly keeps a scrapbook filled with clippings copcerning the Wolverines from papers all over the country. t For last year's scrapbook Barbara was offered a sizeable bit of money by a national magazine, but turned it down . . . she had her busiest pasting spree last Sunda when she loaded 18 pages with stories and pictures of the Northwestern game . . . how about tomorrow's Minnesota game? . . "Why, Michigan will win, of course," Barb declares. ' INEWS from the scalping front is scarce. . . police report that many people are coming down from Minnesota without tickets . . . and wanting them badly . . last night only 27 student coupons of the more than 10,000 issued had not been turned in . . . one scalper complained last night that his business hadn't been so good the last couple days . . . "The ticket office put some more on. sale," he said, "and we can't compete with them at their prices" . . . the ticket office had a small supply of tickets left over after some students ha~d failed to take up their option on the three additional ducats on each coupon . . . but they were snapped up within a half hour's time.F The influx of the nation's top-notch sports writers and announcers began yesterday . . . heading the vanguard were Bill Stern, NBC's ace sportscaster and Bill Boni, crack Associated Press man . . . with . Stern is Irving Kahn, head publicity man with Twentieth-Century Fox Studios . . . he's in Ann Arbor to arrange for a publicity appearance on . the Michigan campus by movie acgtress Linda Darnell . . . with the Hollywood star touring the campus as a promotion stunt to get spreads in national magazines. * * * NORMAN SPER, who visited the campus last spring and took motion pictures of the gridmen in spring drill, is now being featured in a series of movie shorts flashed thro'ughout the nation each week he picks the football winners, showing some of he feature plays of competing teams in the day's biggest games . . . tomorrow he picks Minnesota . last week he picked Northwestern. Which reminds of the loyal young fellow on the Pitt News, student newspaper, who picked Pittsburgh over Michigan . . . and although the Panthers were crushed,"40-0, he came back the next week with the fearless prediction that the Panthers would upset Minnesota . . . he was wrong by 39 points. PITT'S COACH, Charley Bowser, who should know, says that Minnesota looked stronger to him . . . but the majority of his team disagrees . . . they maintain Michigan's line is better than the Vikings . . . and that the Wolverines skould win. * * * Out of the Army's Pine Camp, N.Y., comes a letter from Herb Lev, former assistant Daily Sports 'Editor, who has a few interesting observa- tions on Tom Harmons professional debut in New York last Sunday Herb, who was in the stands, has this to say among other things: HAD TO PINCH MYSELF at regular intervals to make myself believe that the guy wearing number 98 on his red, white and blue jersey, who seemed to spend his time alternately slapping teammate John Kimbrough on the back and getting pushed around by the Bulls . . . was the same Gary Ghost . . . Tom just didn't have it yesterday.. To be sure he had no Evashevski to pave the way but there was no getting around the fact that he was rusty in every phase of the game. . . Running mate Kimbrough, or should I say side-show-attraction, was only slightly more effective. Per- haps this was due to the fact that he had four days practice for the game to Tom's one. "I only hope that the thousands of customers who kept blaring "We Want Hutch" throughout the second half and who -hooted and booed Tom as he left the game realize that the Wolverine is only human and that no man canhhope to accomplish in one day of practice what others do in two months." "I'm betting even money on the Minnesota game and the team had better not fail me as money doesn't come so easy these days in,the Army. So long and good luck. Herb Lev (number one Harmon rooter of my day.)" * * * TONIGHT IS PEP RALLY NIGHT . . . my landlady, who lives on South State Street and doesn't like to be called landlady, is worried about her hedge, which students, bound for Yost Field House, will almost certainly trample . . . I'm worried about Minnesota. By BUD HENDEL It was dark down at Ferry Field around 6 p.m. yesterday. But it wasn't until 15minutes later that a swarm of Gopher-hungry, de- termined gridders called it a day and trotted inrto the Field House locker room. The Michigan 'football team had just completed their last day of heavy work before their all-impor- tant battle with Minnesota's Golden Gophers in the Stadium tomorrow. Today Coach Fritz Crisler will send his Western Conference and national title contenders through a light sig- nal drill. Immediately after he blows the final whistle the squad will leave for the Barton Hills Country Club where they will remain in seclusion until it is time to go down to the Stadium for the clash with Bernie Bierman's Norsemen. Crisler has been stressing the pass- ing attack all week and yesterday's drill was no exception. The Wol- verines, with tailbacks Tom Kuzma, Davey Nelson, and Don Robinson doing the pitching, polished up their aerial maneuvers for the better part of the day's lengthy session. Michi- -. Abe Simon In Hospital With Appendicitis' NEW YORK, Oct. 23.-P-Abe champion Joe Louis, had felt pains Simon, the 250-pound boxer who wast before his bout with Franklin and beaten by Lem Franklin in Cleveland that a diagnosis of appendicitis was Monday night, was taken to Memorial made late today. Hospital tonight for an appendicitis This will probaly write finis to the operation. colorful career of the big heavyweight Manager Jimmy Johnston said the who, in his rise to the championship mammoth fighter,. who last March bout with Louis. fought with some went 13 rounds against heavyweight of the best fighters in boxing. h BASKETBALL MANAGERS- Numerals and letter sweaters arerawarded to basketball man- agers. AlU eligible sophomores andi second semester freshmen inter- ested in trying out for basketball managers, report at 7:15 p.m. any Monday, 'Vednesday or Thursday at the Sports Building. B~ob Wallace, Senior NCgr. FOR EACH TOUCHDOWN ire the Michigan-Minnesota gamie WARREN PLUNKETT makes tomorrow's fray the outstand- ing football contest of the year. Four of the outstanding tackles in the nation will be glaring into each other's eyes when Michigan's Al Wis- tert and Rube Kelto, and Minnesota's Urban Odson and Dick Wildung crouch down at the line of scrim- mage. Both Wistert and Odson have been prominently mentioned by grid experts as All-American choices, while Kelto and Wildung are ranked only a step behind. The power-packed Maize and Blue guard quartet, Bob Kolesar, Merv Pregulman, Julie Franks, and Bill Melzow, are considered to be the finest array of guards in the Mid- west. They will be facing their se- -verest test of the, season in Butch Levy and Helge Pukema, who man the guard slots for the Gophers. And two of the best backfields in the country will be on opposite sides of the field when the opening gun is fired. Minnesota, with Bruce Smith, Sweiger, Daley, Frickey, War- ren Plunkett, Bill Garnaas, and Bob Higgins can hold its head high in the company of any backs. The Wol- verines, too, need not pay homage in this respect. They have Westfall, Kuzma, George Ceithaml, Tippy Lock- ard, and Nelson, five boys who can ably match the Gopher ball-toters in running, passing, kicking and blocking. It's going to be the two classiest teams in the Midwest, some say in the country, battling each other in the Stadium tomorrow with a galaxy of gridiron aces, a tradition-steeped rivalry, and a furious will to win. Williams Winehell W in Section Titles Winchell House and Williams Hopse scored smashing victories yesterday at South Ferry Field to win in their sections of the Intramural dormitory touch football league. Winchell showed great alertness in rolling over a game Adams House team, 38-0. George Fischler was Win- chell's high scorer with 12 points. Bob Ideson and John Piepenbrink made two touchdowns apiece as they led a hard-blocking Williams House team to a 27-0 victory over Allen- Rumsey. Other games saw Chicago House, with Ed Morley in the starring role, win impressively over Lloyd House, 20-0, and Wenley House nosing out Michigan, 6-0, on Jack Gettle- son's touchdown. Only two speedball games were played. Theta Delta Chi continued unbeaten, defeating Psi Upsilon 16-6. Paul Barker, Bud Low, and Bob Getts scored 14 of Theta Delta Chi's 16 points. In the other game, Sigma Phi Epsilon led by John Mikulich, whose accurate toe booted home six points, easily defeated Delta Upsilon 11-1. VAN BOVIEN wi/I preient 0 to thec t/ 1/i eCuen p JcortnqC i~aerJ ,learn one of the j/oulovinq:, FIRST TOUCHDOWN - A jug of SEAFORTH Shaving Talcum Lotion SECOND A jug TOUCHDOWN of SEAFORTH THI RD TOUCHDOWN - A jug of SEAFORTH FOURTH A jug TOUCHDOWN - of SEA FOR TH Cologne Shaving Soap TIPPY LOCKARD gan struck through the air against Northwestern, and the Golden Goph- ers may get a taste of the same touch- down formula. The Minnesota outfit boarded a train for the Wolverine state last night. Beirman's charges will arrive in Jackson at 9:30 a.m. today, go through a light workout this after- noon, and make their Ann Arbor appearance at 11:15 a.m. tomorrow. There was considerable wvorry in the Gopher camp over the condition of fullback Bill Daley, who was ex- pected to furnish Michigan's Bobby Westfall with a real yard-eating duel. The big Minnesota plunger has been bothered all week with a combination of a toe injury and charley-horse, and unless the hurt shows some rapid improvement he won't be in there at the 'opening kickoff. If Daley doesn't start, his position will be filled by right half Bob Swei- ger. In that case sophomore Herman Fric/key will be called on to take Sweiger's spot. When the two tearhs face each other in the huge bowl tomorrow they will be bringing together the greatest assortment of pigskin stars to be seen at one time on any collegiate gridiron during the season. That, plus the fact that they will be fighting for Big Ten and national supremacy as well as the famed Little Brown Jug, and other Seaforth products NICKELS ARCADE STATE STFEEt i p7 "EXPERIENCE*... always- counts Dont Sateon Thin Ice! Many a doubting Thomas has "A GO9D BE E R I 1887" /had to learn by EXPERIENCE that you ean' tJudge the strength of iceby its shimmer- I lng surface. I:- k l Worsted ,N Certainly good im- pressions count! We don't have to tell you that! But "we can be helpful by suggesting a Tiffany worsted - a suc- cessful suit with a successful look. They'ri tailored in Rochester by Mich- aels Stern. $35 and $40 Other fine Makes from >25 'Big Mike' Turns Writer Forest Evashevski, famed as the first movie star to read "his lines off the back of a football, is more suc- cessful as a literary ,genius'"judging from the reception of his recent ar- ticle in a national monthly. In all fairness to the interests of art, how- ever, it must be said that the glam- orous Betty Petty, and not Evashev- ski, is still the number one attraction of the magazine. 'M' CLUB NOTICE All letter winners are to report at 7:30 p.m. today at the Field House wearing letter-sweaters. Numeral winners please wear sweaters also. Gus Sharemet, President :See . 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