SATURDAY, OCT. 10, 1942 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wolverine Gridmen Face Seahawks In Day's Both Teams Unbeaten, Have Hopes ForMythicaiNationalChampionship !. Mid-West Grid Angles: BENCUCOMBEBR Leahy Ordered To Mayo Clinic, Misses Irish -Stanford Contest Four Ex-Michigan Men Will Return As Members Of Iowa Pre-Flight Roster; Bierman Seeks Ninth Straight Triumph Over Maize And Blne (Continued from Page 1) ing post. He needs no introdvt'tion, having captained the 1940 Wolver- ine eleven and holding down the quarterback position for. three years here. Fraumann was the regular left end last season for the Maize and Blue, while Flora and Jordan both filled the role of reserve tackles during their undergraduate career. In the Seahawk backfield, Bier- man will be without the services of Jim Langhurst, fleet, pile-driving halfback from Ohio State. Langhurst was badly bruised in- last week's Minnesota fray, and he is expected to see limited service at best. An- other who will be held out is Bob Swisher, 163-pound scatterback half- back from Northwestern who has been recuperating from an injured ankle. Cadets' Backs Powerful Nevertheless, the Wolverines will face a backfield replete with power and dangerous throughthe air as well as along the .ground. Besides Evashevski, Bierman will start Bill Schatzer and Bus Mertes at the halves and George Benson at full- back. Schatzer played for}North Central College, earned Little All- American honors and is, to date, the leading Cadet ground gainer per average try. Mertes was a familiar figure as an Iowa halfback while Benson was a standout for North- western. In reserve, - the Seahawks have Dick Fisher, formerly of Ohio State, who statistically speaking, is the second best halfback in the na- tion. He's gained 425 yards by rush- ing and passing this year, second only to Paul Governali of Columbia. This Seahawk backfield has dew. parted from traditional Bierman tac- tics, taking to the air almost as much as they have .to. the ground., Today they'll meet their match in. .this department for the Wolverines have completed 16 out of 39 passes; Anyone interested in entering the Trueblood Golf Tournament 'should sign up at the' Unlvwrsity Course this week-end. Any schol- astically eligible undergraduate may tr" out. Ray Courtright Golf Coach and sport a shifty, deceptive attack. As a result, the contest looks to be different than other Bierman-Cris- ler battles, with the emphasis on trickery rather than sheer power. Kolens Gone From Line The departure of Sam Kolens, reg- ular left tackle, has moved John Kulbitski, former Minnesota star, into the regular Cadet line, with the remainder of the forward wall re- maining intact. That means Matt Bolger at left end, Gene Flick at left guard, John Haman at center; Fred Gage at right guard, Charles Schultz at right tackle and Judd Ringer at right end. Flick, Schultz and Ringer are all familiar with Bierman's meth- I end, Al Wistert at left tackle, Bob Kolesar at left guard, Merv Pregul- man at center, Julie Franks at right guard, Bill Pritula at right tackle and Elemer Madar at right end. Thus far, this line has held Wolverine op- ponents to a total gain of 73 yards by rushing. Ceithaml At Quarter In the backfield Capt. George Ceit- haml will take his regular quarter- back spot and Don Robinson will be at left half. But who will start at right half and fullback is doubtful. It will be either Paul White or soph- omore Frank Wardley at the wing- back, with Bob Wiese, Don Boor and Don Lund all eligible for the line- bucking chores. Tom Kuzma, stellar Wolverine halfback who was being boomed for All-American honors before he in jured his knee prior to the Great Lakes clash, will probably sit this one out. He hasn't seen any action yet, and both Crisler and Dr. A. W. Coxon, team physician, claimrhe isn't in shape for game service. There is a chance, however, that Kuzma will play if the Wolverines get in a tight spot and need his off-tackle smashing power. The Se.hawks spent the night in Jackson xnd will arrive in Ann Ar- bor this norning, while the Wolver- ines were quartered overnight at Barton Hills Country Club. * * *P. PROBABLE STARTING LINE'UPS _ _ By BUD HENDEL , Daily Sports Editor * * * * DRIFTWOOD AND SPLINTERS: It was a sight worth seeing, that final Michigan practice yesterday . . . the scene hadn't been enacted since the day before last year's Michigan-Minnesota battle . . . the first team1 had the ball ... they were running signal plays, and the rest of the squad was lined up in front of them, cheering with all they had on every play ... from the lowest scrub up, they cheered while the regulars came down the field . . . they're fired up, these Wolverines, and the Seahawks will feel the flame of that fire today, win or lose ... and win or lose, this Michigan team will be fighting all the way . .. and that's a big part of what makes a great team. Football notables from all parts of the nation have filtered into Ann Arbor for today's clash . . . Radiocasters Bill Stern and Ted Husing as well as the dean of all sportswriters, Grantland Rice, among them . . incidentally, Stern will have Coach Fritz Crisler on his radio program tonight ... it will be broadcast from Morris Hall. Grantland Rice states that this should be the greatest football season in the history of the sport .., yet, the North Carolina-Rice battle scheduled for next Saturday has been called off because of transpor- tation difficulties ... and this may happen more often as the season grows older ... no more special trains or chartered buses are allowed by order of the ODT, which makes it tough for even the teams to travel, let alone the fans. Clark Shaughnessy, the coach who made the T formation famous at Stanford, is putting Maryland on the gridiron map .. . his team is unde- feated in two games and boasts a hard-running backfield replete with deadly passers and good kickers. Jay Schafner, ex-Michigan wrestler, was just appointed mat coach at Harvard . . . looks like Michigan is moving in on the Big Three, what with Ted We-man head football mentor at Princeton . . . Pro Boim, colorful Wol- verine pitcher, is cornering everybody he sees these days to let him know that he just passed his Naval V-7 exam. . . Dick Wakefield, the lad who led Michigan to a Conference baseball crown two yeats ago and who is now the property of the Detroit Tigers, eniolled in school last Thursday . . . word has it that Dizzy Trout, Tiger pitcher, is all hepped up over Wakefield's pros- pects. Added afterthought .. . who's going to win all the ,money in the golf circuit now that Ben Hogan is enlisting? The football selections listed below are those of Ann Arbor's best Monday morning quarterbacks ... read these other four guys, and then laugh politely. BUD LOW, SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR SOUTH BEND, Ind., Oct. 9.-(AP)- Notre Dame and Stanford - both geared to the T formation-clash here tomorrow with each seeking its first victory of the season, but Frank Leahy, the Irish head coach, will not be present. Leahy was ordered today to go to the Mayo Clinic at Rochester, Minn., for treatment of various ailments that have kept him inactive much of the season. Assistant coaches will be in charge. Notre Dame's record shows a tie with Wisconsin and a loss with Geor- gia Tech, while Stanford has lost to Washington State and Santa Clara. With three linemen left from its 1940 Rose Bowl championship outfit, Stanford has one of the strongest forward walls in the nation. It held Santa Clara to 50 yards by rushing. * * * Minnesota-Iloinois CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Oct. 9.- (AP)-. Coach Ray Eliot's honeymoon with his first Illinois eleven-undefeated IOWA CADETS Bolger Kublitski Flick Haman' Gage Schultz Ringer Evashevski Schatzer Mertes Benson LE LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH RH FB MICHIGAN Sharpe Wistert Kolesar Pregulman Franks Pritula Madar Ceithaml Robinson White Wiese STOP WORRYING about keeping cash' "oi hand." A CHECKING ACCOUNT can be made to serve as a complete household bookkeeping system, with every, penny of income and outlay accourted for. Every cancelled check becomes a' legal 'receipt for the money paid. And payment by check saves steps, saves money, saves time! DON BOOR ods, having played for Minnesota. Bolger hails }'from Notre Dame, Ha- man' from -Northwestern and Gage front Wisconsin. Michigan will stick to the same line 'which set back Great Lakes and Michigan State, Phil Sharpe at left Board Of Experts' Best Bets For GAMES Mich. vs. Iowa Nav. Cadets Notre Dame'vs. Stanford.. Minnesota vs. Illinois..... Indiana vs. Nebraska..... Northwestern vs. Purdue.. O.S.U. vs. Southern Calif.. Wisconsin vs. Missouri.... Marquette vs. Iowa State . . Navy vs. Princeton....... Pennsylvania vs. Yale ..... Great Lakes vs. Pittsburgh. Army vs. Cornell......... Boston College vs. Clemson Colgate vs. Dartmouth.... Will. & Mary vs. Harvard. Rice vs. Tulane ........... Texas A&M vs. Duke..... Texas vs. Oklahoma...... California vs. Santa Clara. Oregon State vs. U.C.L.A:.. Bud Hendel Paul Chandler Sports Editor Mich. Notre Dame Minn. Indiana Northwest'n O.S.U. Wisconsin Marquette Princeton Penn. Grt. Lakes Cornell Bos. Col. Colgate Wm.&Mary Tulane Tex. A&M Texas Santa Clara Ore. State A.P. Mich.. Notre Dame' Illinois Indiana Northwest'n O.S.U. Wisconsin Marquette Navy Penn. Grt. Lakes Army Bos. Col. Colgate Wm.&Mary Rice Tex. A&M Texas Calif. Ore. State Dick Simon U.P. Mich. Notre Dame Minn. Indiana Northwest'n O.S.U. Wisconsin Marquette Princeton Penn. - Pitt. Army Bos. Col. Colgate Wm.&Mary Rice Tex. A&M Texas Santa Clara, Ore. State Today's Games Fred Delano Mike Dann Pub. Dir. Detroit Times Mich. Mich. Notre Dame Notre Dame Minn. Minn. Indiana Indiana Northwest'n Northwest'n O.S.U. O.S.U. Wisconsin Wisconsin Marquette Marquette Navy Navy Penn. Yale Grt. Lakes Grt. Lakes Army Army Bos. Col. Bos. Col. Colgate Colgate Wm.&Mary Harvard Rice Rice Tex. A&M Tex. A&M Texas Texas Calif. Santa Clara Ore. State Ore. State Concensus Mich. Notre Dame Minn. Indiana Northwest'n O.S.U. Wisconsin Marquette Navy Penn. Grt. Lakes Army Bos. Col. Colgate Wm.&Mary Rice Tex. A&M Texas Santa Clara Ore. State STOP !! \. ... "- ti ^ Ie,. -.4 " . I still ISN'T TOO LATE for that GARGOYLE Subscription Great Lakes,_Pitt Clash Today CLEVELAND, Oct. 9.- (A)-Pitt's contest, 21 to 13, and as both teams de-emphasized but tough Panthers have most of the key men of last year and the Bluejackets from the Great back again a similar swapping of Lakes (Ill.) Naval Training Station touchdowns is not unlikely. Prior to battle tomorrow in the first of three the defeat last year, Nebraska had big-time gridiron clashes transplant- won three games. Two others ended ed here to take advantage of the 80,- in ties. 000-seat Cleveland Stadium. Missouri-Wisconsin The Sailors who smashed Iowa MADISON, Wis., Oct. 9.-(P)-Un- last week after dropping their opener defeated Missouri and rapidly-im- to Michigan, will depend on a smat- proving Wisconsin meet for the first tering of professionals and such erst- time tomorrow in one of the Nation's while college aces as Bruce Smith, top line intersectional football con- last year's All-America at Minnesota. tests. Pitt, with half of its squad made up Guessing on the outcome is about of sophomores, was walloped by Min- evenly divided, but Wisconsin is in nesota but came back to defeat tip-top physical shape while the Tig- Southern Methodist. ers report the loss of four veterans- Indiana-Nebraskadtwo in the line and two in the back- Indiaa-Nebaskafield. LINCOLN, Neb., Oct. 9.-(;P)-Indi- The battle may resolve itself into a ana and Nebraska hold their seventh test between Missouri's powerful "T" Block and Tackle Festival here to- formation running attack and Wis- morrOw with the invading Hoosiers consin's touchdown-producing aerial the favorite. Indiana took last year's game. j. I I ,. l Cold Weather s Ahead!. Take Advantage of our. Nationally Advertised Brands! "P ""TOCAT "Pargora TOPCOATS by Fashion Park "' $44.50,<; .'. Alder Rochester Topcoats FASHION PARK SUITS' rb:... $39.50 - $54.50 4 "'. " ALDER ROCHESTER SUITS STETSON HATS "Playboy"... "Medalist".. . "Three w" $5.00 - $8.50 i 11 1 1