THE MIChIGAN DAILY PAGE Wolverines Face Strong Penn Eleven in Renewal of classic Michigan Seeks Fourth Consecutive Win in Tilt Crisler Elevates Lund and Chubb to Starting fackfield to Replace Wiese and Nussbaumer By BILL MULLENDORE A 33-man Michigan football squad will leave Ann Arbor at 3 p.m. today, bound for Philadelphia and a clash with a youthful but strong Penn- sylvania eleven at Franklin Field in what promises to be one of the most hotly contested intersectional tilts of the 1944 grid season. The Wolverines will be seeking their 10th ,victory against seven de- feats and three ties in this 20th renewal of the Michigan-Penn series which began back in 1890, and their fourth straight triumph over the Quakers under Crisler. A victory will give the Maize and Blue gridders a rate Michigan a slight favorite by virtue of their smashing triumph over Purdue last week. Both squads are in good physical condition and both should be mentally "up" for the occasion in view of the extreme rivalry between the two schools. Crisler expects to adhere to the same lineup which started the Pur- due game with the exception of the fullback and wingback positions. Don Lund and Ralph Chubb will fill in at these two posts in place of the de- parted Bob Wiese and Bob Nuss- baumer. Tom Peterson has been elevated to the second-string full- back role, and Warren Bentz will understudy Chubb at wing. With these changes the first string backfield will present Joe Ponsetto at quarter, Eugene Derricotte at tail- back, Chubb at wing, and Lund at full. Derricotte, who holds the dis- tinction of being the first freshman ever to start in a Wolverine back- field, will probably carry the bulk of the Michigan offensive load. All men interested in trying out for the track team should meet at the Yost Field House on Monday, Nov. 6 at three o'clock. No experi- ence is necessary and all are urged to partieiate. season's record of six wins against one loss, while the Quakers will be gunning for their fourth triumph against one lone setback, last week's defeat at the hands of a power- packed Navy aggregation. Tenn Has Impressive Record Michigan has picked no soft touch Saturday as the youthful Pen houtfit, coached by George Munger, has set itself up as one of the powers of the Bast. The Quakers started off with one of the most startling upsets of the season by tripping a highly- touted Duke team and followed up this victory with wins over Dart- mouth and William and Mary. While they lost to Navy Saturday, they gave the Sailors quite a tussle and with a few breaks might have pulled off another surprise in their giant killer's role. Wolverine coach "Fritz" Crisler sounded the keynote for the Michi- gan squad by declaring vehemently that "we won't have an easy time." "Penn looks like a very fine team," he commented. "They are young, but so are we. Penn has a couple of excellent backs in Tony Minisi and Al Sica with a heavy line to go along with them. They will give up plenty of trouble." Michigan Rated as Favorites In spite of the acknowledged power of the Quaker eleven most experts, NUSS'S FAREWELL---Bob Nussbaumer, brilliant Wolverine scatback, scampers 61 yards to the Purdue 1 foot line. Michigan threw a monkey-wrench into the Boilermaker machine to the tune of 40-14. BRANCH'S BEHIND 'DEM BUMS': 7ait9 the C'unt AN OLD AND COLORFUL football rivalry, interrupted since 1940, will be resumed tomorrow when Michigan and Penn clash in one of the nation's feature grid attractions at Franklin Field in Philadelphia. Tomorrow's game marks the twentieth meeting between the two insti- tutions, with the Wolverines enjoying a nine to seven advantage for the overall series. Three of the games have ended in ties. Probably the most pertinent point in the minds of - the Michigan adherents is whether the Wolverines minus the services.of their "one-two" scoring punch, "Bob" Wiese, and "Bob" Nussbaumer, can still maintain their effectiveness. A quick glancv at the official tabulations reveal the value of these two men. This high-stepping twosome scored eleven touchdowns in six games and contributed 978 of- the 1620 yards that Michigan rushed in the, first half of the season. Captain Wiese's 41.2 yard punting averge was also of considerable assistance in respect to the defensive side of the picture. Coach "Fritz" Crisler has selected two excellent ball-players, Don Lund, and Ralph Ghubb to fill the existing vacancies. Lund is one of the remaining 5 lettermen from last year, while Chubb, an Ann Arbor product will be starting his first college game for the Wolverines. Lund has proved himself a capable performer, defensively speaking, but his offensive chores have been greatly curtailed because of Wiese's presence. In fact he has carried the ball on only 7 occasions this year. CHUBB, A NAVY TRAINEE began the season at fullback, because of his linebusting ability. However, in a move designed to build up added reserve strength, ,:hubb was shifted to the wing. Appearing infrequently Chubb, nevertheless has racked up 60 yards in 13 tries, giving him a formidable record of almost five yards per attempt. Remaining in the Maize and Blue backfield to carry out their offensive and defensive assignments, will be Eugene Derricotte, hard-hitting 172 pound Negro freshman from Defiance, Ohio, and Joe Ponsetto who has done such a splendid job at the quarterback post. Derricotte has averaged better than 5 yards per try in 59 attempts at rushing this season. The flashy Negro sensation has scored 3 touchdowns and in addition has accounted for 316 yards from scrim- mage in 6 games. OPPOSING this revamped Wolverine squad will be a youthful Penn eleven, which has three wins against one loss to its credit. The Red and Blue's lone setback was suffered last week at the hands of a power- laden Navy team, 26-0. The victories were chalked up against William and Mary, Dartmouth, and Duke, with the latter regarded as the most impressive of their triumphs. Despite the shellacking bty Navy, Michigan scout, Bill Barclay named Anthony Minizi, Penn freshman, as one of the finest backs he has watched all season. Minizi, a left-handed passer and an excellent open-field runner, starts from the wingback mosition. Rounding out the Quaker backfield is Al Sica, tailback, Ed Lawless, blocking back, and Harry Edenborn, the fullback. Jack Rosenthal, rated one of the East's best wingmen, and Walter Stickel, a tackle, are the main cogs in the Penn line. With both the prestige of the East and Big Ten at stake, tomor- row's crucial struggle should provide the fans with plenty of scoring thrills and excitement. Wally Weber, wrestling coach, urges that all men interested in trying out for the team this year report to the field house at 3:30 p.m. next Monday. He requests that candidates bring their own gym shoes. Orange Bowl Uses Secret Scout System MIAMI, Fla., Nov. 2.-(AP)-Don't look now; college football teams, but an Orange Bowl scout probably is watching you play. Maybe you recognize him-but not as a sort of unofficial representative of the committee which stages the annual New Year's Day gridiron show in Miami. He may be the coach of the oppos- ing team, a spectator, a sports writer, an athletic commissioner. No matter his. identity, he is a qualifiedobserver to whom chairman Charles F. (Jack) Baldwin and the members of the schedule committee can go for a frank, off-the-record appraisal of your play. i I Rickey Shows His Faith in Brooklyn Dodger Future By Buying Big Piece of Stocrk in Club By WHITNEY MARTIN NEW YORK, NOV. 2-(A)-Well, we always had the idea that one way to keep from losing your job is to own the business, and Branch Rick- ey seems to be headed in that direc- tion, in his "purchase of a sizeable hunk of stock in the Brooklyn Dodg- ers. Not that Mr. Rickey was in any particular danger of losing his job, as he's really a know-it-all when it comes to basebatl, and the men who hired him know it, even if some of the Dodger fans think he ran a ball club into a shoe string this year. The fans just can't get over the dismal season, and they put the finger on Mr. Rickey for his disposal of capable players and his failure to spend money lavishly for new tal- ent of acceptable ability. They just can't reconcile them- selves to the bunch of bobby-soxers, out there in Brooklyn uniforms toward the end of the season, with the accepted idea of the Rowdy- Dowdgers. Personally, we .have tremendous respect for Mr. Rickey's business His system always has been to pick ability when it comes to baseball them out of the pastures himself, and his far-sightedness. His record educate them in the classrooms of an in St. Louis shows he's a man who intricate farni system, and graduate builds on a solid foundation. It may them into the big show when ready. take a little more time than it would The soundness of this long-range take to set up a pre-fabricated af- program is demonstrated by the cur- a, butinshe longe runyou'vedgo rent St. Louis Cardinals. But, as so et in the long run you've got mentioned before, the Dodger fans are an impatient lot, and although Larry Macphail, Mr. Rickey's pre- Rickey probably can see batting decessor, virtually bought a contend- champions and leading pitchers a ing team and a pennant winner ready few years hence among the callow made, purchasing established players lads his scouts have been picking up and throwing them into the race. It here and there, the fans don't wear was effective, if expensive, and the the same bifocals. result was all the fans cared about. Anyway, the fans should take They didn't 'want results 10 years heart over the fact that Rickey has hence. They wanted them right now, bought into the organization. A man and MacPhail gave them what they with his own furniture in a house wanted. isn't going to set fire to the place, MacPhail's assembled machine was even if it is insured, unless he's beginning to wear thin and come slightly balmy, and Rickey isn't. apart at the seams when Rickey took over and, the man-power situation being as it was, it wasn't so easy to get good players by waving a check- book. Besides, that wasn't Rickey's way of doing business. All freshmen interested in bas- ketball please report to the Field House at three o'clock on Monday, Nov. 6. III r r T E t USED ALL STUDEL SUPPLIE S ill e L ;HE m - -- - - -- m