AT, NOVEMBER 10, 1044 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PACE T: ~LY, NOVEMDETL V~, 194f~ PAGE t~J 10 Badgers Menace Michigan's Title Hopes Today OLE OAK POST: Pritula in Wolverine LineF After Three Year Absence ? By CHUCK STRIC1KLAND Bill' Pritula is a good tackle by anybody's standards, but more than any laurels he has received for his football prowess, he appreciate most his membership in TLETGITVA. TLETGITVA, Exclusive Club TLETGITVA is a very exclusive society of which the full name is "Those Lucky Enough to Get in the Veterans Apartments." All vets who hope to be members themselves will be glad to know that Bill is loud in his praise of the apartments in Uni- versity Terrace. Says Bill, "A fellow is three-hun- dred per cent better off here than he is any other place in town." The only drawback in Bill's opinion is that his even six foot frame touches both the head and the foot of the bed without any stretching on his part. In Army Engineers One of the reasons Bill has been getting through the heavier lines that the Wolverines have been facing almost every Saturday this season is that he is wel accustomed to handl- ing heavy equipment. The greater, part of his three years in the Army was spent with the heavy equipment branch of the Army engineers. Before pulling on his Army boots Bill played two seasons of varsity football. The last of these was in 1942, the year of the famed "Seven Oak Posts." In that year when sub- stitution sometimes numbered four instead of forty-four as they do this season, Bill played an average of fifty-seven minutes a game. On three week-ends he "went the route" with sixty minutes of grueling action. Pritula Switches To Tackle . That record is all the more re- markable because the season before Bill was a center and had the mis- fortune to play behind burly Bob In- galls and Ted Kennedy. Four of the five leading 1941 tackles, including Rube Kelto, the team's most val- uable player, graduated before the next season; so Crisler gave Pritula a chance at the birth. His selection on the 1942 all-Conference team shows how well he did. When you speak to Bill about the "thrill" of his athletic career he'll tell of the Notre Dame game of 1942 which the Wolverines won, 32 to 20. Though no one play or player of that game stands out in Bill's mind, he says it was just a case of the whole team being "on." In Bill's words, "Everybody was just sharp." If the conference eligibility rules tighten up soon as expected this will be Bill's last season. His ab- sence next fall will take Crisler right back to the fall of 1942 and the prob- lem of replacing a great tackle. MEETS OLD MATES-Paul White was captain of the 1943 Wolverines which had eight men who will appear against Michigan today. Also on the Maize and ,Blue squad were Hal Watts, Captain Art Renner and Bob Wiese. Five-Confeence-- T~s .Aim For Rose Bowl Bid Wally Weber Expounds on B Team Tilt Little Wolverines Face Badger Jayvees Today Conversation with Coach Wally Weber: "What do you think of that Wis- consin B" Team which is going to face the Wolverine Jayvees at 10:30 a.m. today on Ferry Field?" A.-'They've lost two games this year, so they will be mad, unques- tionably fighting mad for this game." Q.-"Do you think this fighting spirit will give them a victory to- day?" ' A.-"We are unalterably opposed to any such scheme." Q.-"Is the Wolverine team ready for the game?" A.-"We have worked diligently this week. I come down to practice in a Ford and go home in a frenzy." Q.-"Would you deign to predict the outcome of said struggle?" (The con- versation is catching.) A.-"I will naturally be most satis- fied with a 2-0 victory." (A safety,, in monosyllabic words.") Q.-"Are there any changes in the line-up of the Maize and Blue?" A.-"At the present moment, you may say that the same reliables will engage the Badgers at the outset of the contest." Thus in the language of the "B" team coach, here is the starting line- up for the Maize and Blue: At the ends, we have those stellar defenders of the flanks, a pair of pass-catching demons, Irv Wisniew- ski and Frank Keiser. A couple of bone-crushing behe- moths, Pete LaBenda and Johnny Eizones (the six feet-two inch, 230- pound midget) will handle the tackle assignments. The guard position will be pro- tected by Hal Raymond and Elmer Phillips, two pint-size masters of the art of rock-em-and-sock-em. At the pivot post, Walt Keeler will hold forth in his usual gracious and inimitable style. In the backfield, a quartet of gal- loping gazelles, peerless passers, and bloodthirsty blockers, will cavort. They are Chuck Lentz at left half- back, Jim Holgate at right half, Johnny Ghindia at the quarterback slot, and Mike Yedinak at fullback. (Continued from Page 1) only after a thriller which saw the Wisconsin lads win out, 24-20. Last Saturday Iowa thumped Stuhldrey- er's charges, 21-7. Maves Stars in Backfiield Powered by ex-Michgian back, Earl Maves, the Badgers backfield corps has rolled along the ground for a better than four-yards per rush- ing attempt this fall. Maves is the leading ground-gainer with 437 yards on 70 carries for a 6.24 average per trip. The ex-Wolverine will probably draw the nod at fullback for Stuhl- dreye's men. Supplementing Maves will be two other backs who played for Crisler's Wolverines of 1943, Jack Wink and Wally Dreyer. Wink calls signals for the Badgers and also does some of the passing. He has completed 'three of 14 tosses, one for a touchdown. Dreyer, who is slated to stbrt at left half, is the Cardinals' third leading ground-gainer with 231 yards for 68 tries and a 3.39 mark per try. Self Starts at Half The right-halfback starting spot will probably go to Clarence Self who alternates with Don Kindt at that position. Also scheduled to see plenty of action against Michigan is Ben Bendrick, 198-pound understudy for Maves at the fullback post. Ben- drick is the second leading ground gainer for Stuhldreyer's crew with 272 yards on 54 attempts for an average of 5.04 yards per carry. Up front the Badgers will probably start a trio of ex-Wolverine linemen, center Fred Negus, guard Johnny Gallagher and end Farnham John- son. In 1942 Negus was chosen as all-Conference center for the Cardi- nals. All three men played on Michi- gan's Big Nine championship squad of 1943. There'll also be another pair of ex-Michiganders with Wisconsin in ends Hank Olshanski' and Bob Rennebohm. Wolverine Line Outweighed Again the Wolverine forward wall will be outweighed. Averaging about 195 pounds per man the Badgers will take the field with around an eight- pound advantage up front. However, the right side of the Wisconsin line with Gallagher, 180, at guard, Clar- ence. Esser, 174, at tackle, and Dale Bowers 190 at end will concede some three pounds to the Maize and Blue Wisconsin Boasts Eight Ex- Wolverine Gridders 65,000 Expected To Witness 20th Renewal Of Big Nine Grid Rivalry in Home Finale f orwards. The probable WISCONSIN Johnson Loeffe Davis Negus Gallagher Esser Bowers Wink Dreyer Self Maves starting lineups: MICHIGAN LE McNeill LT Hilkene LG Tomasi C J.T. White RG Sickels RT Pritula RE Madar QB Yerges LII Chappuis Ru Elliott, C. FB Wiese DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) U. S. Civil Service Announcements have been received for: Forest Ecologist. Range Ecologist. Forest Pathologist: (a) Silviculturist, (b) Forest Soils Technologist, (c) Forest Products Technologist, (d) Forester (Forest Management). Sal- aries: $3,397 to $7,102, closing date Dec. 10. Junior Professional Assist- ant, Optional Fields: (a) Archives, (b) Mathematics, (c) Chemistry, (d) Metallurgy, (e) Economics, (f) Physics, (g) Geography, (h) Statis- tics, (i) Textile Technology. Salary: $2,644, closing date Dec. 3. Examiner Trainee, Salary, $2,644, closing date Dec. 3. Field Examiner, Salary, $3,397 to $5,905, closing date Dec. 3. For further information, call at the Bu- Read and Use The Daily Classifieds e+. .i . y..e *. -.\ ; i svr } %: reau of Hall. Appointments, 201 Mason Lectures University Lecture: William H. Chamberlin, 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; auspiceshof the Department of His- tory. The public is cordially invited. Phi Delta Epsilon Lecture. Dr. Roy D. McClure, Chief Surgeon, Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, will speak on the subject, "The Historical Devel- opment of the Treatment of Burns," at 8:00 p.m., Wed., Nov. 20, in the Main Amphitheatre, University Hos- pital; auspices of Phi Delta Epsilon medical fraternity. The public is cordially invited. Academic Notices English 32, Section 14: Assignment for Wednesday, Nov. 20, will be Act I, A Doll House, not Hedda Gabler. R. G. Shedd Inorganic Chemistry Seminar will meet at 5:00 p.m., Tues., Nov. 19, in Rm. 303 Chemistry Bldg. Mr. S. Lewin will speak on "Some applica- tions of the concepts of deformation and polarization of ions in inorganic chemistry." All interested are in- vited. Mathematics 300: The Orientation seminar will meet at 7:00 p.m. Mon., Nov. 18, in Rm. 3001 Angell Hall. Mr. T. W. Hildebrandt will discuss the Period of a Repeating Decimal. Mathematics Seminar on Dynami- cal Systems will meet at 3:00 p.m., (Continued on Page 4) By The Asseeiated Press CHICAGO, Nov. 15-Under Rose Bowl pressure, the Big Nine's foot- ball forces swing into semi-fial competition tomorrow with the Champaign, Ill., skirmish between first-place Illinois and third-place Ohio State occupying the spotlight. Wisconsin's invasion of Michigan and Iowa's visit to Minnesota also have title significance, but the Illini- Buckeye brawl before an expected 62,000 apparently holds the key to the scrambled conference race. Northwestern travels to South Bend for its 26th clash with un- beaten but once-tied Notre Dame in the Midwest's top non-league contest. Purdue and Indiana have open dates, marking time for their Old Oaken Bucket clash a week hence. Formal announcement at Cham- paigh. Thursday by Prof. Frank Richart of the Big Nine faculty committee that the conference had voted for a Rose Bowl tie-up fanned interest in the wide-open title chase to white-hot heat. Not only Illinois, Ohio State and Michigan, but also Iowa and Indiana, tied for fourth, have championship chances since the winner this year will be determined on a percentage basis with ties figuring a half a vic- tory and half a defeat. For instance, a Rose Bowl selec- tion well may rest between Iowa and Indiana as co-titlists, IF Ill- inois lost to Ohio State and North- western; Ohio State defeated Illi- nois but lost to Michigan; Michi- gan succumbed to Wisconsin and defeated Ohio State; and Indiana and Iowa won their one remaining game. In that case, Iowa and Indiana would have identical percentages of .667, followed by Michigan with .643; Ohio State with .583; and Illinois with .571. The Champaign tilt finds hale and hearty Illinois, in its best physical shape of the season, slightly favored over Ohio State although the Buck- eyes won their last two conference starts with 39-point attacks. The Bucks lost some prestige last Saturday when they had to turn on the pressure to salvage a 20-13 decision over Pittsburgh which earlier this season was vic- timized by Illinois, 33-7. Besides, Ohio has lost halfback Jerry Krall, offensive hero of run-away tri- urnphs over Minnesota and North- western. Illini partisans are hopeful Buddy Young, long overdue in fulfilling pre- season press notices, will cut loose against the Buckeyes. A two week rest--Illinois had an open date last Saturday - may have given the speedy Negro back enough time to shake off leg miseries which have harrassed him all season. Unless Wisconsin shows a start- ling reversal of form, potent Michi- gan should be able to call its shots against the Badgers. While Wiscon- sin took a 21-7 lacing from. 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