8, 1946 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA( ...... . . . ... Wolverines Meet MSC In Tomorrow's Battle c - Spartan Hopes Fade As' Injuries Cripple Stars Capacity Crowd Expected for 39th Game With Odds Heavily Favoring Maize and Blue By JACK MARTIN East Lansing officials may be in a dither over the possibilities or im- possibilities of a gridiron meeting between Michigan and Michigan State next year, but it's tomorrow's encounter that Fritz Crisler and his Wolverines are concentrating on just now. Odds Favor Michigan With the thought that this 39th engagement between the two state rivals may be the last for a while, a capacity crowd of 85,782 is expected to jam into Michigan Stadium by game time at 2:00 p.m. The Maize and Blue, for the first time this year, head into a game with the betting odds definitely and heavily in their favor. This situation is intensified by the latest pro- nouncements from the Spartan city, which declare that Coach Charlie Bachman has on hand the most crippled team in his State career. Half the State regular starting Football Special CHUMLEE'S will start serving at 4 o'clock on Sat., Nov. 9 (Football Days only). Your favorite sandwiches and bever- ages. Phone 2-6429 for Prompt Free Delivery CHUMLEE'S backfield is on the hospital list. Russ Reader, the Spartans' highly-touted offensive howitzer well-known in Ann Arbor circles, will be absent with a knee injury, and fullback Steve Sieradzki had a couple of bruised ribs that put him on the doubtful side. The line, too, has a first string vacancy. Guard Ed Bagdon sustained a shoulder injury in last Saturday's rough clash with Kentucky which trainers say will sideline him for the rest of the 1946 season. Bachman has three possibilities for replacements to fill Reader's left half spot.. Don Waldron, a 170- pounder, is currently heading the candidates, but both George Guerre, or Horace Smith have a good chance to get the starting nod. Frank Wat- ers is scheduled to take over at full- back for Sieradzki. Wolverines in Good Condition To fill the guard hole, the Spartan coach has a wartime letter-winner from Muskegon, Don Arnson. Amn- son has understudied Bagdon all year and should be able to carry on with little pain or trouble. The situation is a little more cheery in the Wolverine encamp- ment. Coach Crisler has practically 100 per cent healthy squad to throw against the Lansing invaders. Only John Lintol, a guard who suffered a bruised back in the battle with the Gophers last week-end, will be out of action. With MURRAY GRANT THOUGH THE TRADITIONAL meetings between the Wolverines of Michigan and the Spartans of Michigan State have become rather one- sided during the past eight years, this bitter rivalry between the two schools is still regarded by Michigan sports enthusiasts as one of the most colorful games of the season. Gone are the ceremonies of the traditional battles between fresh- men for the honor of wresting a maize and blue or a green and white "beanie" from the head of an unsuspecting foe and gone, too, are the midnight invasions of the opponent's campus. But still the yearly Michigan-Michigan State battle maintains the feeling of "do or die" for both schools. It hasn't always been a bed of roses for the Wolverines as for four con- secutive years a decade ago the Spartans rose up and crushed the Maize and Blue. In 1934 State finally entered the win column after a drought of 19 years. They had succeeded in tying the Wolverines twice during this period, but in 1934 they finally won by a 16-0 score. And for the next three years Michigan began to wonder what a win over the Spartans was like. Michigan State smothered Michigan from 1935 through 1938 by, scores of 25-6, 21-7 and 19-14. The series started 'way back in 1898 when football was still in its swadling clothes. Michigan took the first contest by a 39-0 count and then after a lapse of three years the Spartans tried again only to be tram- pled upon by one of Yost's greatest "point-a-minute" teams. This time the score was almost two points a minute as the Wolverines scored a 119-0 victory. IT WAS PRETTY discouraging to the Spartans, but in 1908 they gained a moral victory by holding the mighty Michigan eleven to a 0-0 tie. And finally, in 1913, State broke into the win column with a 12-7 victory. They repeated again in 1915 as they scored a 24-0 triumph over the Wolverines and the famous Johnny Maulbetsch. Last year in the resumption of rivalries, Michigan's powerful gridders crushed the Spartans, 40-0. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN Aigler Declares MSC Grid Date Still Unsettled Commenting on a report from East Lansing that he had replied nega- tively to a Michigan State proposal agreeing to play Michigan on the early September date next year pro- viding a later date would be set in future years, Prof. Ralph Aigler, Wolverine Western Conference fac- ulty representative, declared last night that his reply indicated no final official position. Dean Lloyd C. Emmons, chairman of the MSC Athletic Advisory Coun- cil, met with Prof. Aigler here yes- terday. "Dean Emmons called on me," Prof. Aigler stated, "under 'he im- pression that I was still in the offi- cial capacity of Chairman of the Board of Athletics, which I am not." Dean Emmons told the Associated Press in East Lansing yesterday, "Aigler told me that it would be dif- ficult, if not impossible, to give MSC that assurance. He said that Michi- gan had committments with Pitt and Stanford and that neither of these schools wanted to play at Ann Ar- bor, in the season's opener, and I told him that neither did Michigan State. "That's as far as we got," he con- tinued, "except that Aigler said that the matter will have to be presented to the Athletic Board. "We've got the makings of a well- balanced track squad with good quality," Coach Ken Doherty said yesterday as the track squad moved indoors to continue practice. Up until this week Coach Doherty and his assistant Don Canham had been putting the track aspirants through their paces over the cross- country course and on the outdoor track at Ferry Field. This year's squad boasts 20 thin- clad letter-winners headed by such Western Conference champions as Herb Barton, who last year won the indoor 880 and Chuck Birdsall, who took last year's indoor two-mile run and who in 1045 won the outdoor two-mile at Champaign, and Jack Martin, 220-low hurdle king of 1944. Squad Weak in Sprinters Coach Doherty stated though that the squad is weak in sprinters, broad-jumpers, and hurdlers and all any men interested in trying for these positions are urged to come out. The team will continue to work out daily at Yost Field House, and the first time trials are scheduled for November 30. Also returning to this year's squad are Chuck Fonville, who smashed Hold 'Those Bonds ! Track Squad Shows Quality: Track Squad Shows Quality; William Watson's freshman shot put record last year, and Dick Forrestal, outstanding 440-yard dash man and Captain-elect of the 1945 squad. Missing from the roster will be such names as Ross andBob Hume, the "dead heat" twins, Bob Thoma- son, middle distance star, and Archie Parsons, sensational half miler and miler of the past two seasons. Kappa Si's Start New Grid Classic There'll be a "Little Michigan- Michigan State" game tomorrow when the Kappa Sigma fraternities of the two campuses meet each other on the gridiron. This first meeting is hoped to pro- vide an incentive to make this yearly function between the two chapters, and house presidents Bob Schulze of Michigan and Dave Broderick of State are working out plans for the .game and the presentation of a tro- phy at a party the same evening. The miniature Spartans of Kappa Sig will enter the game as favorites on the strength of advance notices, but the Wolverine team will be aim- ing to start this series off on the right foot with a win for Michigan. I All those interested in the po- sition of student manager for the Michigan basketball team should report to Coach Ozzie Cowles at the Yost Field House. Classified Directory Read and Use the i r 1 t1 / F k::, (.:'.: :: ......a LIKE WALKING ON AIR... mars uims &4~jMote Ilase Iat Adi~e SpaIs Sports anklets . . . woven of cotton for wear.. .with an inside cushion of wool for comfort. They're perfect for tennis, golf, or any active sport. Publication in The Daily Official Bul- letin is constructive notice to all mem- bers of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the office of the Assistant to the President, Room 1021 Angell Hall, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1946 VOL. LVII, No. 40 Notices Deadline for Veteran Book and Supply Orders: Dec. 20 has been set as the final date for the ac- ceptance of veteran book and supply orders at the bookstores. All faculty members are requested to anticipate material needed through the end of the semester and2authorize same on or before Dec. 20. All back-orders for material not in stock at the book- stores will be canceled as of Dec. 20. All student identification pictures re-taken after registration are now ready and the cards should be picked up this week in Room 2, University Hall. Office of the Dean of Students Choral Union members whose at- tendance records are clear will please call for their courtesy passes for the Cleveland Orchestra concert Friday, between the hours of 9:30 and 11:30, and 1 and 4. The concert will take place Sunday, at 7 o'clock sharp. Charles A. Sink, President Willow Run Village West Court Community Bldg.: Fri., Nov. 8, 8:00 p. in., Classical Recordings. Sat., Nov. 9, 8:00 to 11:30 p.m., Dance, Refreshments, Bridge. Applications are desired for the po- sition of teacher-director of the Na- val Academy Kindergarten and Nur- iery School. Applicants must have a )achelor's degree in education, must :e qualified kindergarten teachers with recent experience, and must be .apable of organizing 'and directing he activities of the school. A mas- er's degree is desirable but not man- latory. The starting salary for this posi- tion is $225 per month with quarters provided in the school building, or $250 monthly without quarters. Immediate applications are desired and should be addressed to Associate Professor R. M. Johnston, Depart- ment of Marine Engineering, U. S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Mary- land. Applications should be com- plete in detail of age, education, ex- perience, marital status, and should include a list of references. For further information please call at the Bureau of Appointments and Occupational Information, 201 Ma- son Hall. Students who are registering with the Bureau of Appointments are re- minded that their Job Registration material is due a week from the day on which they secured it. The date it is due is stamped on the envelope. Students returning their material late must pay a late registration fee at the Cashier's ocice. University Bureau of Aptmnts & Occupational Information Lectures University Lecture: William H. Chamberlain, author and foreign correspondent of The New Leader, will speak on the subject, "British Foreign Policy under the Labor Gov- ernment," at 4:15 p.m., Mon., Nov. 18, in the Rackham Amphitheatre; auspices of the Department of His- tory. The public is cordially invited. The Mayo Lecture: Dr. John M. Waugh of the Mayo Clinic will give the annual Mayo Lecture Nov. 13, in the main amphitheater of University Hospital at 8:00 p.m. His subject (Continued on Page 4) . .. I ' i ' c is s;:>::> :: ? fi': '.ti : .':':". ':'.} ;.;': :} x:11 I I FOOT IBAL L MICHIGAN vs. MICHIGAN STATE PLAY-BY-PLAY BROADCAST BY BOB UFER SATURDAY- 1:50 P.M. Listen to Bob Ufer's Sports Review Daily- 12:30 P.M. "HERE COMES HARMON" Saturday-11:35 P.M. TOM HARMON brings you his forecast about games throughout the country and interviews with sports celebrities immediately preceding the Michigan-Michigan State game III for the tall ones JUST RECEIVED! A few suits in long sizes. 100% all-wool. 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