SATURDAY, OCTOBER 26, 1948 TilE MICIGAN7 DILY PAGE THREE ________________________________________________________________________________________ I I Loss Would Kill Nation's Grid Giants Face Illini Title Hopes Strong Opposition Today ArmyMeets Improved Dke& Eleven; Iowa To Test Notre Dame's Power Eliot To Field Stars A-plenty (Continued from Page 1) * * *.*. carry. Young, who has been the target of all five of Illinois' oppon- ents, is second with 217 yards gained on 50 runs for a 4.3 mark. Eddleman, who confines most of his activity to defensive play, has averaged 7.6 yards on 10 trips with the leather. However, Coach Ray Eliot prefers to save the high jumper for kicking and pass defense. As a punter Eddleman has made 18 boots good for a 41.6 average to rank ninth in the nation in punting. Illini Air Force Strong To supplement his runningsattack Eliot has passer erry Moss who also calls the signals. A transfer from Tulsa, Moss has been a key man in the Illini version of the. T. He does most of the flinging and boasts 16 completions on 44 tosses for a total yardage of 175. Rykovich blossomed out as a passer against Wisconsin last week and it is not impossible that he will share the burden with Moss today. Up front the Illini have a veteran- powered array of 200-pounders to throw into the fray. Anchoring El- iot's forward wall will be two of the lightest men on the line, Capt. Mac Wenskunas and Alex Agase. Wens- kunas, who tips the scales at 182, is rated as one of the Big Nine's best defensive centers. Injured in the Purdue game, Wenskunas will be ready to go against Michigan. Agase Twice All-American Agase is well-known here. Twice an All-American at guard in 1942 and 1943, he hasatwice performed the dream of every lineman, to score a touchdown. Back in '42 against Minnesota he stole the ball from Bill Daley and raced 35 yards for one sore and covered a Gopher fumble in the end zone for another to lead the Illini to an upset win over Minnesota. He wasn't so for- tunate against Michigan but Wolver- ine fans remember him for his ag- gressive play. The Illini will have a couple of veterans at the tackles in Lou Agase and Bill Franks. Agase, a letter- man from 1945, weighs in at 190, while his teammate scales a hefty 219 pounds. 231-pound tackle Mike Kasap is out with injuries. Illinois will have another "midget" at the other guard slot in the person of Bob Prymuski who carries 226 pounds on his jaunts into enemy territory. Owens Top Flanker One of the Illini't bright lights is Ike Owens, a 26-year-old senior, who operates at the right end spot. Never regarded as better than re- serve mateial when he played in 1941, the tall rangy 181-pounder has come up for a great year. Owens was the Illini spark against Notre Dame and in the Purdue game he took one of Moss' heaves for a 44- yard touchdown jaunt. Teaming with Owens at the left end spot will be Sam Zatkoff, the Illini's number one pass catcher. Zatkoff has snagged five passes for a total of 60 yards in the Illini's five games. Eliot's squad is well- fortified at end with such proven re- serves as Jim Valek, Joe Buscemi, Bill Huber, Bill Heiss and Ray Cis- zek, all lettermen. Coach Fritz Crisler will undoubt- edly counter Illinois' fast array of backs with a flood of linemen and backs. The Champaign lads took a terrific pounding from Wisconsin NEW YORK, Oct. 25 -(A)- To- day the three top candidates for national football honors - Army, Notre Dame and Texas - all slam into opposition calculated to tell them, and the fans, a great deal about their pretensions. Is Army the invincible, all-pow- erful team its supporters believe it to be? Are the Irish of Notre Dame a gridiron scourge, prepar- ing to flay and destroy everything they meet? Are the Longhorns the greatest thing the Southwest ever produced? Maybe we'll find out this afternoon. \ Army, seeking its 24th straight victory, almost certainly meets one of its most formidable opponents of the season in the Duke Blue Devils, who are coming into thePoloGrounds along with 8,000 yelling North Caro- linians fully determined to check Davis, Blanchard & Co. Notre Dame, the bogey of the Mid-West, figures to get a real testing from Iowa's flawkeyes, who bounced Indiana around, 13 to 0, a week ago. The game is be- ing played at Iowa City, where the Irish never have won. If Coach Frank Leahy has a climax runner hidden among his horde of Notre Dame ball carriers, it is possible he will have to pull him out for this one. Texas, which has been running more or less wild up to now, meets a Rice Institute team that was high- ly touted even before the race began, and which is said byTexas operat- ives to be thoroughly capable of halting the speedy Longhorns. If Texas wins this one at Houston, they say it's all over and Coach Dana Bible can begin receiving con- gratulations on a Conference title. PLAY DIRECTOR - Perry Moss, the passpitching ex-Tulsa quarter- back will call the signals and han- dle the quarterbacking chores for Ray Eliot's Illini. last week and Crisler has plenty of LEADING MAN - Buddy Young, Illinois' great halfback who broke out of a scoring slump last week against Wisconsin with a 34-yard touchdown romp. The little speedster can be expected to cause plenty of trouble this afternoon when the Illini go all out to retain a chance for the Conference title. FRAT-RICIDE: S.A.E., Phi Delts Stage Annual Mud Bo w*l Grid Chassic Today, Touch football will come into its own at 10 a.m. today when the men of Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Alpha Epsilon clash in their annual Home- coming battle in the SAE Mud Bowl. True to tradition rain yesterday transformed the Bowl into more or less of a quagmire for the contest. Vowing vengeance for two defeats in a row at the hands of the Phi Delts, the SAEs promised to bury their oppon- ents in the mud. But the Phi Delts, who confidently expect to retain possession of the "Very Little Brown Jug" for another year, kept a strict silence evidently be- lieving that "actions speak louder than words." There'll be another hot rivalry " r - SUPPORTING STAR - Art Duf- elmeier, one of the Illini's most consistent backs this season, will probably get one of the starting assignments this afternoon. COLLEGE Oklahoma A. & M. 7, TCU 6 Detroit 33, Drake 6 Boston College 14, Villanova 12 Bowling Green 13, Canisius 7 Miami 33, Chattanooga 13 CHIIELSEA I Send her for HOMECOMING WEEK-END good reserve against them. The probable ILLINOIS Zatkoff L. Agase Prymuski Wenskunas A. Agase Franks Owens Moss Dufelmeier Young Steger material to throw starting lineups: LE L T L G. t; RG R T R E Q B LH RH FB MICHIGAN Ford Hilkene Tomasi J. T. White Kraeger Pritula Madar Yerges Derricotte P. White Wiese z'1Uwep sLO p HIGH SCHOOL It F t MSC Favored EAST LANSING, Oct. 25 -)- Michigan State College was prepared for its second dose of T-formation football today as the University of Cincinnati invaded Macklin Field Stadium with over 20,000 fans ex- pected to be on hand. State, on the basis of its 19-6 up- set victory over Penn. State last week, was rated a slight favorite. The Bearcats rolled over Ohio Uni- versity last Saturday, 19-0. Weight in both the backfield and line favored the Ohioans. Cincin- nati's line averaged 208 pounds to State's 200 while the Bearcat back- field shaded the Spartans', 194 to 185. The Spartans were expected to answer the opening whistle with sev- en lineup changes from the eleven which started the last home game against Mississippi State here two weeks ago. DETROIT, Oct. 25-(P)-Jamming across three touchdowns within four minutes in the last half, University of Detroit whipped Drake 33 to 6 here tonight for its fifth football triumph in six starts-five in inter- sectional games. 10 I-M PORTVOLIO Into the touch football spotlight of the I-M program step Williams and Lloyd Houses, who battle for the championship of the West Quad at 4:15, Monday on Ferry Field. Responsible for Williams House's advancement to the finals are back- field man Fancett and lineman Hanzlik. Besides directing the plays of the squad from the quarterback slot, Fancett has carried the ball over for a couple of touchdowns and then4 kicked the extra points. Since anyone is eligible to receive the pigskin in touch, Hanzlik, a powerful guard, has managed to snare two passes which were good 'for alditional Wil- liams House points. The all-campus tennis tourney field has narrowed down from 60 hopeful aspirants to four quarter- finalists, two semi-final contestants and one definite final entry, Ben Durfee. A student in the law school, Durfee proved that his abilitz rests not only in a court of law, but also on the tennis courts where he has survived the grueling elimination process. In his semi- final round Durfee dropped John Hancock, 6-3, 6-3, and earned the right to meet the winner of the Bob Skau and Bud Herron match. While touch football and the ten- nis tournament are reaching their closing stages, plans are now under way for the handball, volleyball and I aMW i PENNANTS r A Im A T m w , 11 iNXIO7 1YIGLUGIGLIG V V11Gay 1../11 VUVVl VI LYlUZIU ( Fag