Trl-up. MA'17, NC Vl I,;, THE MICHIGAN DAILY Facts On Ohio State Tilt As part of The Daily's service to its readers, the facts and figures con- cerning the coming Ohio State-Michi- gan battle are presented here: Place: Columbus, Ohio. Time: Saturday, Nov. 21, at 2:30 p.m. Probable Attendance: Between 75,- 000 and 80,000. To Secure Tickets: There ain't none. It's a sell-out. Records of Both Teams This Year: Ohio State has won seven out of eight games. Michigan has dropped two while winning six. "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 Last Year's Result: A 20-20 tie, Past Records of Ohio State-Michi- gan Games: In 38 contests the Wol- verines have won 25 and lost 10. Three tilts ended in ties. Team Coaches: Paul Brown of Ohio State and Fritz Crisler of Michigan. Team Captains: Both are quarter- backs, George Ceithaml of the Maize and Blue and George Lynn of the Scarlet and Gray. Backfield Men to Watch: Paul Sar- ringhaus, Gene Fekete and Les Hor- vath of State. Tom Kuzma, Bob Wiese, Paul White and Don Robinson of Michigan. Broadcasts of the Game: Two net- works and nine stations. Ted Husing and Bill Stern are handling it for CBS and NBC, respectively. Prebable Winner: Pick it yourself, bud. You can guess as well as we can. Paul White to Face Brother in Buckeye Tilt Michigan's Chances for Big Ten Crown Hinge on a Victory Saturday The Cracker Barrel B-- Mike ilann -U'm -- _ . _ ELE-CTRIC HEAT By ED ZALENSKIr Brother will be pitted against bro- ther Saturday afternoon at Columbus,{ O., when Michigan tangles with Ohiol State in what may turn out to be the most crucial battle in the Conferencet this fall. The eyes of nation's grid fans willY be turned to the Midwest to see if the conquerors of Notre Dame can add the title-bound Buckeyes to their list of victims, for victory may mean the Big Ten crown for the Wolverines. Of secondary interest will be the battle of Michigan's high-stepping halfback, Paul White, and brother John White, rangy Buckeye end. And1 fans are already1 wondering if this brotherly duel will affect the perfor- mance of either player. Paul, the young- er of the two, tops the six foot mark and weighs about 185 pounds. John is heavier by 10 White pounds and mea- sures 6 ft. 3 in. Paul was lured to Michigan, leaving brother John to his choice, which turned out to be Ohio State. John stayed out to work and didn't enroll until last fall. At River Rouge High School, John held down the pivot post for three years. Paul started out as an end, but wound up in a backfield slot after proving to coaches he possessed the speed, dexterity and all-around abili- ty of a ball carrier. Paul carried on as a halfback at Michigan, but John's height and speed proved more valuable on the flank. An able pass receiver, John has yet to start a game, but Coach Paul Brown may give him that chance this week. "I'll Wish Him Luck" And what does a brother think about in a case like this? "I hope John goes well against us-not too well- because we've got to win that game." In other words, brother John will be just a guy named White for 60 min- utes Saturday. Yesterday afternoon, the Red Shirts became the Buckeyes and reeled off a string of plays that the Wolverines may see Saturday. Coach Fritz Crisler had his ends and backs running down under passes until they were blue in the face, and again stressed pass defense. Offen- sive and defensive work against the dummies was stressed too. Crisler is well aware that Ohio State is the highest scoring team to face his boys this season. Michigan's No. One Fan The following letter was received by the University of Michigan football team from a sixth grade student in Pittsburgh, Pa. He is perhaps one of , the Woverines' staunchest fans. The letter is re- printed below: Dear Team Members, "First, congratulations on your fine victory over Notre Dame last week. It was a swell job. I am writing you in behalf of a group of us sixth graders. We have been cheering for Michigan this year. But we want to write you to tell you to fight hard this coming Sat- urday against Ohio State. We have rooted for you hard but the other kids and grown-ups tell us that Ohio State has too much fight for our team. But we don't believe it. Please win for us Saturday. We will be listening in. Please don't lose because then we would be laughed at because we tell people that Michigan has about the best team in the country and they will say, yes, next to Ohio State. Don't forget to fight hard." Dale Jackson Calling All-Americans ... THE TALK of this year's All-Ameri- cans is beginning to fill the fra- ternities, dormitories and rooming houses around the campus. In about three weeks the various news services will pick what are supposed to be the nation's greatest players on their mythical teams. We think there are two factors in making of an All-American: the ability of an individual and the proper publicity given to the indi- vidual.. In other words we think one half of an All-American is made in the press box. If that is true, Michigan will probably have more than its share of All-Americans when the season is over. So far this year the Wolverines have already played in what scribes call four major games: Great Lakes, Iowa Seahawks, Minnesota and Notre, Dame. In all of these games sports writ- ers from around the nation have filled the various press boxes to overflowing. The Wolverines have already had a chance to display their All - American talent four times while most other schools have had to content themselves with one or two of such opportunities. As if this wasn't enough for Michi- gan as far as big games are concerned, the Wolverines will play a fifth "game of the day" contest against the Buck- eyes of Ohio State Saturday. The Publicity department of Ohio State has just announced that no more tickets for the press box can be procured because in the stadium all the tickets have been taken. Even radio stations cannot get facilities this week unless previously arranged for. Eleven separate sta- tions are carrying the contest as well as both Ted Husing of CBS and Bill Stern of NBC. This will mark the third time on Michigan games for each of these famous announ- cers. Together, Stern and Husing broad- cast 22 games a year. They pick from 200 teams playing every Saturday, yet the Wolverines will play before them in six of the 22 times they cover football games. No school in the coun- try is getting near this amount of publicity. We don't say for one minute that certain members of the Wolverine backfield are not entitled to a position on the various All-American teams, but we say, if they don't get this honor it's not because of obscurity. IF THERE is one player on the Wol- verine squad that has been slight- ed as far as proper recognition is con- cerned it's Elmer Madar. Laboring against terrific odds, Madar has be- come a great football player. For two years the curly haired senior was on the sidelines with in- juries. At the beginning of this sea- son Madar re- .ported to Coach Fritz Crisler as a quarterback but was shifted to an end position. He had to start learning things all over again; he had C to break a lot of old habits. And what's more he Shad to learn to live up to the stan- Madar dards of one of the best lines in the country. With the season three quarters over, we feel Madar has done all that can be expected of a veteran Big Ten end, let alone the work of a first year man. According to Coach Bennie Oos- terbaan,, "Elmer is the best damn end in the country weighing less than 180 pounds." We don't know exactly what has made Madar the player that he is, but as one fan puts it, "If guts makes a great end, Elmer leads them all." * * * COACH FIELDING YOST was up to The Daily office yesterday with an interesting bit about Bill Smith, who was a tackle for Michigan in 38, 39, 40. Yost had received a letter from Bill's father and some clippings telling of some real heroism on the part of the ex-Wolverine star. Piloting a lone Flying Fortress, Bill battled six Japanese Zero fighters for 30 minutes over Rabaul early last month and claimed the possible de- struction of two. Smith senior, a colonel in the U.S. Air Force and a star gridder for the Wolverines in 1909 himself, told Yost in the letter, "I saw the poy take off that day and I got the same feeling when he used to run out on the football field, a whole team gets into those bombers and you want to yell, 'go get 'em.'" * * * ACCORDING to reliable reports Coach Frank Leahy took the Notre Dame .squad to Knute Rockne's grave before last Saturday's game with Michigan and gave a short speech. He told them to do it for Rockne. Stadel& Walker First National Bldg. - Downtown I i p 6$ ~&, 9 Are you a one-style-tie man? Do you swear by stripes? Are solids your stand-by? Now's the time to break that habit! See the new Arrow Ties. They come in patterns, stripes and solids, and you'll find examples in all three types that you like. All Arrows are cut on the bias with a special lining to resist wrinkles. They make perfect knots every time! $1.00 up. Topcoa ts Michigan Frosh Enter OSU Tilt as Underdogs i I If Wally Weber's boys have the spirit in Columbus tomorrow that they have displayed all week in prac- tice, the highly favored Buckeyes may have a real fight on their hands. Definitely the underdogs, the Wol- verines have shown a great deal of improvement during the past few days, and are raring to go against Ohio State. They've been running harder, blocking harder, and employ- ing more vicious tackles than they have displayed thus far this season. Buckeyes Have Stars But the team has no reason in the world why it should be overconfident for the game tomorrow. The Buck- eyes have a squad that is running over with stars. When Paul Brown, the Ohio State varsity coach, admits that the freshman team is wonderful, then it must be plenty good. The game is scheduled for 3 p.m. tomorrow, and will probably be play- ed in the Stadium unless weather conditions are such that play will ruin the field for the varsity fray on Saturday. The team will leave in a caravan of automobiles about 7 o'clock tomor- row morning, and will arrive in Col- umbus in time for a short workout before the game. Today's workout, will consist only of polishing up on plays, and getting a good look at the Ohio State shift so the team will know just what to expect. Weber Names Squad Coach Weber announced last night that the following boys would make the trip: Ends-Art Renner, Lehman Beardsley, Varskin Baydarian, and Fred Klinka; Tackles-Bill Pratt, Jack Emerick, Elmer Phillips, and Jim Dallavo; Guards-George Krea- ger, Henry Mantho, Kurt Kampe, and Jerry Hofferle; Centers-Frank Kern, and either Harold Fulk or John Cran- dall; Quarterbacks-Ervin Derda and Hugh Mack; Halfbacks-Dick Wal- terhouse, Bob Nussbaumer, Bill Cull- igan, and Bill Maskill; Fullbacks- Ralph Chubb and George Guerre. practical for your A small bathroom heater does a good job for short periods of time-an hour or two. It's fine if used in a small space. Why isn't the idea practical for heating a whole house? Or why can't electric heat be used throughout the house as a means of raising the temperature from 65 to 70 degrees? There are two reasons. First, to achieve the cleanliness and convenience of electric heat, you sacrifice 80 per cent of the coal used to make electricity. Only ONE TON OUT OF FIVE is actually delivered to your home in the form of useful heat. This represents a loss-especi- ally when you can burn coal in your own furnace at 50 to 60 per cent efficiency. Even using electric heat to raise your house temperature 5 degrees is not recommended today. Second, electricity must be made the instant it is being used and on cold days each home would require about 80 times as much as it uses normally. The extra power plant equipment to produce enough electricity to heat houses on a cold day would be partly idle on a warmer day; and it would be completely idle all summer. But the expense would continue the year round, and to cover this all-year expense, the cost of electricity would be high. All the above pertains to house heating. Elec- tricity is, of course, highly economical for steadier i. -v Il L" .ti i, Spec i JiI IN A VERY SPECIAL GIFT LINE... / ,. _ ----------...r Av p 14 14 SINCE 1$$.. STATE STREET AT L I B R T Y ,~ k e(tie shortage"? No need to! We've just gotten a large shipment of about the neatest, best-wearing ties made . . . Arrows! They in- clude stripes, patterns and solids. Arrows have II 11 11 4.