,kI' AT, NOMMM ~16, 1945 TIE MICHIGAN DAILY 60,000 To Watch Decisive Ba t le with -, _, * * * z'~: 4* 4' *~ * Quintet Plays First Tilt Today; Four Cindermen U -l "i Boilermakers In Top Shape For Big Battle Wolverines' Lineup Hit Hard by Injuries (Continued from Page 1) Yerges not yet up to par. Yerges ag- gravated a twisted ankle just before the Navy game by falling on the cement in front of Yost Field House and was not able to do much block- ing or passing against the Middies. Injured or not, he will start against the Boilermakers because he is the only experienced signal-caller in the ranks, now that Capt. Joe Ponsetto has been sidelined for the season. Dan Dworsky, a fullback on offense, will probably take over Yerges' de- fensive line-backing chores. Otherwise, Michigan appeared in top shape for the fray, but Wolver- ine followers are wondering whether weaknesses at those three spots may' not prove fatal against the speed and power of the Purdue attack. Purdue in Good Shape The Boilermakers, on the other hand, appeared to be in excellent! physical condition, with every reg- ular a certainty for a starting assign- ment. That means Isbell will have his pony backfield of Bob DeMoss, Bill Canfield, Dave Shaw, and Ed Cody ready to go at top speed tomorrow with the same offensive that has piled up 1,240 yards in four Conference engagements. It means also that the Boilermaker line, averaging 195 pounds from end to end, will-be out in force against the Wolverines. The Purdue forwards are led by a pair of 220-pound behe- moths at tackle in Patrick O'Brien and Tom Hughes, who have spelled plenty of trouble for opposing backs this fall. Dressen Leads Overseas Show" NEW YORK, Nov. 15-('P)-A squad of National League Baseball players, led by Coach Chuck Dressen of the Brooklyn Dodgers, will leave late this month on a tour of the Pa- cific to play ball and provide other entertainment for Military and Naval personnel, it was announced today by USO-Camp Shows. The tour, beginning about Nov. 26, is expected to take the players to the Philippines, Guam, and Japan.' In addition to playing games against service teams wherever opposition can be found, the players will visit hospitals and put on indoor pro- grams. SPOUTS NEWS + VIEWS+ +COMMENT By BILL MULLENDORE, Sports Editor FOLKS who have been wondering at the reasons behind Billy South- worth's shift from the second place St. Louis Cardinals to the Boston Braves, who haven't finished in the first division since 1934, might find the answer in the figures. Southworth, it is reported on good authority, will receive $35,000 dollars per annum by his new three-year contract, which is a lot of hay for a baseball manager. The Cards, never known for munificence to the hired help, were paying Southworth $20,000. So, it is no surprise that Southworth, who probably has as much use as the next man for an extra $15,000, made the shift. Just why the Cardinals, who had him under contract for another year, let the man responsible for three pennants and a world's championship go is still an open question. Good ends come in pairs this season. Navy's duo of Leon Bram- lett and Dick Duden nrobably is the best around, but you can't forget that Indiana team of Bob Ravensburg and Ed Kluszewski. Michigan has good reason to remember both sets. The Hoosier twosome were the main flies in the ointment of the Wolverines' early-season 13-7 defeat by Bo McMillin's boys. And Duden and Bramlett were very much in evidence a week ago as Navy poured a 33-7 defeat on Fritz Crisler's lads. These -two, incidentally, both look like mighty good bets for All-American honors. * * *' * Football coaches are doing funny things inese days. The general idea seems to be that the farther the coach gets away from his team, the better the team will do. Cecil Isbell, who will bring his Purdue squad to Ann Arbor tomorrow, does his coaching during the game from the press box. Telephone in hand, he pours instructions down to assistants on the bench as he spots weak- nesses on the field. Claims he can see better from up there. Gus Dorais, of the Detroit pro football Lions, does the same thing. Then 'there's'the case of Indiana coach Bo McMillin, who decided he would, rather scout. Minnesota when the Gophers were here two weeks ago than be on hand for his own game with Cornell College. It must have worked, if Indiana's 49-0 triumph over Minnesota the next week is any criterion. Central Michi ani 1IHost In Cage Season Opener Veteran- Dave Stradk Will ]Vake _U~otarn, Debut; Seven Players Bailing for Start in Positions By HANK KEISER A * * *' Sixteen cagers will make the trip to Mt. Pleasant today where the Wol- verine basketball team is slated to make its debut in the season's opener against Central Michigan. Heading the roster are the seven men from which Coach Bill Barclay announced he would select the start- ;; ing quintet. As yet the varsity squad hasn't been chosen, but Barclay states that these men still hold top , priority. Marty Feinberg, rangy naval stu- dent, is the leading contender for the center slot. Close on his heels is Bob Harrison, the only first-year man on the squad. Harrison has been switched to one of the guard berths and will probably handle that assign- ment in today's clash, but he's cap- able of stepping in at center if the 5 need arises. 'Thinclads To Vie for Honors in N.C.A.A. Cross Country Meet Coach Ken Doherty announced yesterday afternoon that Michigan has entered four men in the Na- tional Collegiate Cross Country Meet to be held in East Lansing on Satur- day, November 24th. The track mentor emphasized that the men have entered as individuals in the race to be held over a four mile 'course on the Michigan State Campus. Five men constitute a team, whereas Michigan has only named Sixty Wresters Varsity Roster With more than 60 men out for positions on the 1946 varsity wres- tling team, conditioning and tech- nique is still of the utmost impor- tance in the mind of Coach Cliff Keen. Coach Keen is greatly enthused over the great interest shown to date by his charges. Roadwork and the "learn how" of basic wrestling holds and tricks are the order of the day. The first competition of the year will be an all- University wrestling tournament in which any student registered in school this semester is eligible to participate. The date for these matches will probably be in the' third week in December. This tournament, in which there will be eight weight divisions, will help shed some light on who will compose this year's squad. These matches will be held in conjunction with the Intra-Mural Sports program. There will also be a tournament in the spring in which teams may enter contingents representing fraternities, residence halls, and independent men. t l COLISEUM FASHION NOTE! Hockey Team To Sport New Uniforms in Season's Opener By DES HOWARTH Color is the keynote of the 1945-46 Wolverine hockey squad, for not only will Michigan have a team composed of former Canadian Junior stars, Coach Vic Heyliger's crew will take the ice resplendent in flashy new uni- forms when they meet the Windsor Spitfires at the Coliseum December 1. The new uniforms will be maize in color with the exception of shoulder markings and stockings. Instead of the usual blue jersey. and yellow markings, this year's jerseys will be maize with blue numerals and a Wol- verine insignia on the front. Shoul- ders will be blue and white striped while the stockings will be striped with the traditional Michigan colors. While the Wolverines have been sharpening their shooting eyes and scrimmaging for the most part, to- morrow's practice session will be de- voted exclusively to power plays. "We still need practice in this type of scoring play," Coach Vic Heyliger ad- mitted. "The power play," Heyliger explained, "is hockey's most danger- ous scoring play. When the opposi- tion is short handed because of a penalty, a power play is in order. That means we put four or five men inside their blue line in an effort to keep the puck in the opposition's zone, and we keep passing until one of our play- ers has a clear shot on goal. The chief danger of this, however, is that an opponent may intercept the puck and break away down ice." In yesterday's scrimmage the Wol- verines were almost dealt a severe blow when bigBob Marshall, defense- man and forward Gordon MacMillian collided with freight-train impact. MacMillian had the puck and not see- ing Marshall roared into the North Bay husky at the blue line, Marshall dropped like a stone, and MacMillian reeled from the impact. Both had to leaveathe ice,but afterwards said they felt all right when in the dressing room. Two Lettermen Back Walt Kell and John Mullaney, the only returning lettermen to be named in the "first seven" bracket, are also being considered for guard positions. Mullaney started in the practice game against Romulus last week, staying in the lineup long enough to aid the Wolverines in piling up an eight-point halftime lead. Leading candidates for forward posts are Glen Selbo, Bill Walton, and Dave Strack. Both Selbo and Walton have had previous collegiate varsity experience. Selbo was on Western Michigan's first five last season, while Walton held down a starting position for DePauw of In- diana.I Strack Returns The appearance of Dave Strack in the lineup provides an interesting sidelight for today's game. Strack starred for the Wolverine basketball squad from 1942 to 1944 and, in his last year, was named honorary team captain. He served in the Marines until last summer, when he returned to the University. All eyes will be focused on the ex-serviceman when he makes his first appearance, in over a year, tonight. The balance of the travelling squad is composed of Bill Gregor and Keith Harder, '45 lettermen; Ray Louthen, star hurler of Michigan's Conference championship baseball combo; Bob Baker, Bill Dietrich, Wally Muelder, Don Phillips, Gordon Rosencrans, and Harold Westerman. Wolverines Favored Sports dopesters give the Wolver- ines the edge in this initial tilt of the Empire State Track Season SetsRecords NEW YORK, Nov. 15--(M)-New York's wild-betting 154-day racing season wound up today with a set of fabulous records that should take this report of it out of the sports section ad drop it either into the financial page or among the kiddies' fairy tales. Piling up a collection of all-time money marks that a few years ago would have qualified their forecaster for a private room in the booby hatch, the campaign locked its doors with a total of $450,663,190 bet for the sea- son, with all precincts not yet re- ported. Finishing up with the same high- flying flare at the mutuels that has made every day of this season look like free sample day at the mint, a crowd of 28,665 turned out at Ja- maica for the getaway and made the iron men hum for the last time with $3,424,035. STARTER?--Walt Kell, one of the "seven" Coach Barclay named as possible starters in opening fray. '45-'46 season. Coach Barclay con- curs with this view, saying. "We'll do alright and ought to win without too much trouble." The team will leave for Mt. Pleas- ant, stamping grounds of the Chippe- was, at 1:00 p.m: today, by bus, and will return to Ann Arbor immediately after the game. Isbew II todpilr maker Grid 'Mentor, IYouingest C'oach in Conference By RUTH ELCONIN Giving up an attractive profes- sional football contract to become coach at a Big Ten school made Cecil Isbell, Purdue's 31 year old head grid mentor, the youngest in the major college circuit. During the summer of 1943, Isbell was confronted with the $64.00 ques- tion; whether to accept a $10,000 offer from the Green Bay Packers, or a position as assistant coach at Pur- due, his Alma Mater, for a third of that amount. He cast his vote with the Boilermakers and last spring, after Elmer Burnham resigned, Is- bell was placed at the helm of the Purdue gridde's. Was Pro Star Before stepping into the top spot at Purdue, he had a reputation as one of the country's outstanding college and professional football players. Throughout the grid campaigns of 1935-38, he was the aerial artist of the Boilermaker squads. The high- light of his collegiate career came in his senior year when he passed the collegians to a 28-16 victory over the Washington Redskins in the annual All-Star game at Soldier Field in Chi- cago. Isbell then spent five years with the Packers, and brought his pro expe- rience to an end with a .500 passing average to make him one of the lead- ing passers of his time. Since then ------ -" Sammy Baugh and Sid Luckman have erased most of his National Football League records, but Isbell's mark for throwing touchdown passes in 23 straight games still stands. He became famous for his bullet- like throws, but his ability to hit his target has never been impaired even though he has always played under a severe handicap which prevented him from lifting his left arm above his shoulder. BULLETIN LAFAYETITE, Ind., Nov. 15--lI)- Purdue's once-beaten football squad left for Chicago today enroute to Ann Arbor for its game with Michigan Saturday. o 94 FLYING ./,"ft qOtte ? tu'e. NOW IS THE TIME TO LEARN- AT THE YPSILANTI AIRPORT NEW LOW RATES FOR FLYING ARE: $8.00 PER HOUR DUAL INSTRUCTION $5.00 PER HOUR SOLO Transportation to the airport will be arranged at your convenience. Phone Ypsi 1384-J3 or Write Box 55 Daily Office rE ARROW SHIRTS FEA TURED WHEN AVAILABLE Yankee Post Goes To George Weiss NEW YORK, Nov. 15-(I)-The Yankees held a stemwinder of a press conference in their plush new offices today at which it was announced that George Weiss was assuming charge of all baseball player opera- tions within the Yankee organization, and hinted that the All-America Football Conference would have a club in Yankee Stadium next season unless the New York Football Giants changed their tune. S T A T E I. for complete comfort... GABARDINE JACKET' .. ..." - :'a Completely lined with leather for added warmth.' Bi-Swing Back and Slash Pockets. Wind and water repellant. -I 11 C4t fI ( mm SM I Business and Secretarialr Taining DAY & EVENING CLASSES Employers will be choosers in the peacetime future. The young man or young woman who is thoroughly trained for a business career will always be in demand. ACTION is the need of the hour. Get a head start by enrolling now. 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