PAE Th1R Michigan Must Beat Buckeyes To Stay In Big Ten Race Spartans Play WestFi rginia EAST LANSING, Nov. 16.- ()- Michigan State College will have its hands full Saturday againsttthe two-1 team combination of Western Vir- ginia's tough Mountaineers. Scout Karl Schlademan brought back word to Coach Charley Bachman that the Southern squad has two teams which can change the pace on its opposition at will. One unit, Schlademan said, is run by two tricky backs, Dick McElwee and Allen Martin, and pounds out a ground attack. A second team, gin- gered up with a passing attack by Dick Leonard,a190-hound freshman fullback, can take over anytime. West Virginia has victories over Washington and Lee, South Carolina, Waynesburg, Penn State and- Ken- tucky, and has lost only to Boston College and Fordham. Ohio Offense, Is Strongest in Conference, Wolverines at Full Strength for Game; Tommy James, Ohio Star Back, Is Out By ED ZALENSKI Faced with the prospect of at least a tie for Big Ten grid honors by beating both Ohio State and Iowa, Michigan can be expected to explode its full power against the Buckeyes Saturday at Columbus. In playing Ohio State Michigan will face the strongest offensive team in the Conference on the basis of games played through Nov. 7. The Bucks gained an average of 362.5 yards per game by rushing and pass- ing in Big Ten competition as against an average of 249.6 yards for the Wolverines. Saturday the Bucks rolled up 400 yards against Illinois while Michigan was piling up 362 yards against Notre Dame. Buckeyes Ranked Second Ohio State is ranked second de- fensively as compared to Michigan's seventh-place ranking. Big Ten foes have piled up an average of 238.2 yards against the Wolverines, and only 192 yards per game rushing and passing against Ohio. Saturday Illi- nois rolled up 215 against the Bucks, while the Irish gained 248 on the ground and in the air against the Wolverines. Pacing this high-powered offense from Columbus are Gene Fekete, sophomore fullback, and the brilliant halfback, Paul Sarringhaus. Fekete has averaged 110 yards in Conference games, while Sarringhaus has gained an average of 77.7 yards per gamer To match these two great ground- gain ers, Michigan has Tom Kuzma, who is rated as one of the Wolver- Ines' greatest all-around ball players by Ohio scouts, plus the great back- field combination of Paul White, Don. Robinson, Bob Wiese, Bob Chappuis', Don Boor and Don Lund. 'I WANT A TOUCHDON': In jury to Rogers Gave Sharpe Chance To Grab Full-Time Job ,N EPIC OF " Here is the mightystory of the ; dauntless heroes, those dare. devil f yers, who fight our "~battle in hotly contested skies 5 ' Sover the Burmna Road. - By BART JENKS Nearly two years as a second stringer, a chance capitalized upon, and a regular job as one end of the famed 'Oak Post' line is the story of Phil Sharpe. For not until the Minnesota game on a crisp, cold Saturday last year did the dark-haired Wolverine flank- man get his chance. Startvng that day, Sharpe established himself as the top man -at his post, and he has held that position ever since. Exclud- ing the.Harvard, game this year when Coach Fritz Crisler substituted freely, Sharpe has averaged over fifty min- utes per game, including a sixty-min- ute stint in the Notre Dame thriller. Injury Gave. Him -Break 'Before the Gopher game it had ap- peared that Phil would have to con- tinue in the role of understudy for' the rest of the season. However, in the first period of that game he got his big break when Joe Rogers, regu- lar right. end, received an injury which ended his playing career. That was all Sharpe needed! The following week-end against Illinois Sharpe played all but five minutes and distinguished himself both on offense and on defense. In the Columbia game he went even further to become a starter for the first time. Needless to say, Phil has been present for the opening kickoff in every game since. Rise Is Suecess Story Sharpe's rise to his present position is a success story of the first rank. In school he played his last football when he was in the tenthigrade. At the time he weighed only 130 pounds, a striking comparison to his-present 190 pounds. He spent his last two years before coming to Michigan in an English school where he played the closest Eiglish equivalent to our football, rugby. shil entered Michigan in the days when HannonEvashevski, Frutig and company were at their prime. His assets were a love of the hard corn-' petitive sport, a rugged physique, and an ability to learn. On the lia- bility side were his inexperience and his introduction to college football standards at this late stage. Among coaches Sharpe is rated as one, of the best defensive ends in the Conference. Crisler switches him from right end on defense uo iei eri on offense. With the Irish game behind and two more tough games coming up - - , - - - - - PHIL SHARPE ... A member of the famed "Seven Oak Posts" averaging better than fifty minutes per game has yet to' score his first touchdown. Sharpe has two ambitions. The first is to beat Ohio State and Iowa. The second, which he came within one yard of achieving against Notre Dame, is to score his first touchdown. With the Wolverines riding high and with Sharpe living up to the standards set by the 'Oak Post' line, there is a good chance that both of his ambi- tions will be realized. BENCHRCOMBER By BUD HENDEL Daily Sports Editor SOME PEOPLE may disagree, as some people have the nasty habit of doing, but for our selection as the most thrill-packed game ever played by a Michigan team, we'll take the Wolverine-Notre Dame fracas of last Saturday afternoon. We say this with a full awareness that our lone reader will rise up in his wheel-chair and cry out, "My Gawd, is that crazy guy forgetting the Michigan-Ohio State game of 1939?" NO, MY FRIEND, we are not forget- ting. We are just remembering the tussle we had the deepest pleasure of witnessing in football crazy South Bend this past Saturday. It had ev- erything. It had hard football, power football, trick football, and not one moment of inaction. It lived up to the old motto your grandfather taught you about going through life, "Never a dull moment, son, and you'll die young but happy." During that third quarter Satur- day afternoon, you couldnt have heard a cannon shot inside buff- brick Notre Dame Stadium. And when the fray was over, the entire crowd sat in their respective seats, limp and gasping. Not until a fight broke out in one corner of the huge bowl, did the. suspense-crammed mob make a move for the exits. Even the hardened veterans of the press box, fellows who have been covering football games for so long that they can't eat pork at home because it reminds them of a pig- skin, were awed by the mighty dis- play that each and every one felt privileged to witness.. O SINGLE OUT any man in the Michigan lineup for extra praise wouldbe foolhardy. They were all great. But if anybody can be praised atb.ve all the rest, we'll nominate Al Wistert, thank you. The "Ox," as most people call him, was the ornriest Irish-hater in the world during the epic struggle. It was behind the blocking of Wistert that the Michi- gan backs marched during the lucra- tive third period. He opened up holes ini that Rambler forward wall huge enough to trap Hitler's whole army. If he isn't named an All-American this season, you can be sure that those mythical honor squads are no- thing but what the name implies, myths. At the end of the game, the Michigan team made one mass move for the big tackle. They lifted 'him to their shoulders and gave him the glory ride to the dressing room. They wanted him to know how much they appreciated his great work, the greatest he's ever turned in on a gridiron. ND YOU, TOO, the Michigan fan, must be praised along with the team. Coach Fritz Crisler said he has never received such a thrill as he did Saturday night when you gave the coaching staff and the players the reception they so richly deserved at Michigan Central Station. You made them feel that there's a lot more to playing football than just hitting somebody before he hits them, and they asked this department to express their appreciation. By AL STEINMAN Innate love of football has earned for Bob Kolesar, Michigan right guard, the title of Michigan athlete of athletes. Bob first came into the limelight as a sophomore when he replaced the injured Milo Sukup on the first elev- en. After the fourth game of the sea- son, he started every Saturday prov- ing himself one of the outstanding men in the Michigan forward wall. Last year Kolesar was one good reason why Fritz Crisler's team lost only one game. He didn't receive too much glory, but many was the time that Bob bottled up the opponents on offense, and he was often found at the bottom of the'pile on defense. The season ended and the experts remarked what a wonderful line the -- WAR BONDS Continuous from i p.m. NOW PLAYING! -ISSUED HERE o.~ae , rv.r MI m Wolverines would have this year. Then, when Spring rolled around, iu- mors began to be spread about the campus saying that Kolesar planred to enter medical school in the fall and consequently would not be able to play football. This fall when practice began Bob ;Kolesar did not appear at 3:30 p1.m. with the rest of the players, but he did show up at 5:30 to train for an hour and fifteen minutes every day. The reason that Bob appears l#tte to practice is that he followed the rumors in part by entering 'medical school. But he, didn't quit football ! YesBob Kolesar has what it takes to make a real player. He has courage, spirit galore, and a love of football that is great enough to make :h.m undergo great hardships in order to play his favorite game. I's Kolesar Is Proof Medical School, Gridiron Sport Can Be Combined EnFeaturing 7 of todays hottest song hits ' Produced and Directed by TiM WHELAWi Otiginot Screen Ploy by William Bowers, Ralph Spence, and Curtis Kenyon & Kenneth Earl 1 I II So You Want to Give Up Smoking 1 Also Right Timing WORLD NEWS i-- 1 r I I Coming Thursday! "CAREFUL. SOFT SHOULDER" I And of the women who wait, knowing that thoe they love ( nay never return from the war-torn skies. m s ' BOHN WAYNE JOHN ANNA? CARROL[ r tEL : James Lost to State . State's hopes suffered a setback when Coach Paul Brown -announced, that halfback Tommy James, his. newly-discovered climax runner, suf- fered a shoulder separation against. Illinois and would not play Saturday. James was injured after scoring, touchdowns on flashy runs of 76 and 33 yards. George Slusser, an ace passer but slower runner, will alter- nate both with Sarringhaus at right: half and Les Horvath at left half. Coach Fritz Crisler saw his Wol-' verines come through the scoring spree at South Bend without an in- jury. With his squad at full strength' Crisler is now faced with his greatest task-to bring the Woverines back, to the emotional pitch of last Satur- day. If he succeeds, Michigan may take the Conference title, providing Minnesota defeats once-beaten Wis- consin. Varsity Hears Lecture Crisler had a long session yesterday morning with Ernie MVcCoy, his scout5 at the OSU-Illinois game, and in the,' afternoon he lectured to his gridders on weaknesses in the Buckeye of- fense and defense. The-squad donnedt uniforms and went through a light workout under perfect Indian sum- mer weather conditions. BUCKS HAVE ANOTHER BRIESKE: Ohio State Freshman Squad Develops Star Place-Kicker II I I Also MICH. vs. -.NOTRE-DAME Color Cartoon Great place-kickers are about as rare an article as can be found in -gridiron, circles. True it is that there have been a few immortals in the masterful art such as Jack Man-, des and Glenn Presnell, but such men are difficult to find. t-Ohio State this year, a school -which .is not only cleaning up in var- sity football but also in freshmaI competition, a.seemingly great place- kicler has appeared. BAkeye Fresh Is Star His. name is Lou Groza, a tackle, and the Berea; Ohio, sensation has mae the experts of the nation stop and take notice. All summer long Lou practiced his kicking in order that he might make the Ohio fresh- man-squad. Well, Lou not only made the freshman team, but he has the. coaching staff 'crying -and bemoaning the fact that the boy is ineligible for varsity competition due to the Con- ference rules on freshmen.. Just to let you know how good Groza is, two weeks ago in a game with the frosh from Pittsburgh, he very calmly dropped back and kicked a 38-yard field- goal. That means about a 48-yard kick because the At second semester freshmen and. first ;semester sophomores in- terested -in trying out for hockey nanagcr are asked: to eal Gil Oambs, '43, at 2-2565. Managers receive numerals and are excused from PRM. i:Gambs, oekey Manager distance is only counted from the line of scrimmage. Wants To Be Good Groza's ambition is to become' a really great kicker, and he's willing' to make personal sacrifices to try' and fulfill his desire. You see, Lou is also considered an excellent basket- ball player, but instead of going out for basketball this winter, he will practice place-kicking four days a week. Michigan fans will have an oppor- tunity to see Groza in action this Friday if they happen to take the' jaunt to Columbus, because on that day the Wolverine frosh team will square . off against the Buckeye frosh. It will be interesting to. see= whether or not Coach Webers boys.- will be able to stop the sharpshooting Groza. BIG TEN STANDINGS Ohio State ..... Wisconsin ...... MICHIGAN .... Illinois ......... Iowa ......... Minnesota ...... Indiana ........ Purdue ......... Northwestern .. . W L 4 1 3 1 2 1 3 2 3 2 3 2 2 2 1 3 0 6 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Pts. OP 129 64- 50 32. 76 46 80 99' 47 59 75 55 41 46 14 58 61 114' "Keep A-Head of Your Hair" We specialize in scalp treatments- facials-personality styles-crew cuts. Have you tried them? The DASCOLA BARBERS Between State and Mich. Theatre I 1 I i GAMES SATURDAY Michigan at Ohio State Minnesota at Wisconsin Indiana at Purdue Northwestern at Notre Dame Great Lakes at Illinois di A CAUTION TO MEMBERS OF ROTC N ROTC ENLISTED RESERVE .. . ,ash is a dangerous companion. It tempts thieves or it may bt lost. It is both wise and inexpensive to turn this cash into AMERICAN EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES. Then if these Cheques are misplacednor stolen (before you have affrad your identification signature) their value is re- funded to you. Ur- iiielIM& 11 0