THE MICHIGAN IAILY PAGIt Michigan Pucksters Trounce Spitfires, 10- 7i To day 's Contests End Topsy-tu rvyCampaign Spotlight on Southeastern Conference as Four Teams Struggle for Share of Title Sextet Triumphs in Wild Scoring Fray Bill Jacobson Scores Three Goals As MacMillan Leads Point-Getters Cadets in Final Fling Against Navy in Philly By The Associated Press NEW YORK, Nov. 29--For all practical purposes, a college foot- ball season that has endured more upsets than a one-legged man on a high-wheel bicycle reaches its spectacular conclusion tomorrow with Army and Notre Dame still crowding each other for the mythi- ,cal national championship. Beyond tomorrow's tussles, all that remains of a campaign that has often been a headache but never a bor- are a handful of De- cember contests, some of them taking western teams to Hawaii, and the mushrooming collection of New Year's Day bowl games. Army, Navy Collide Army and Navy collide at Phila- delphia tomorrow in the annual Spartans Try For .500 Slate EAST LANSING, Nov. 29--(/P)-- Michigan State College will close its second worst football season under the 13-year reigfi of Head Coach Charley Bachman here Saturday when it meets Wash- ington State. The Spartans will be trying to finish the season with a .500 per- centage, having won four of their first nine contests. The Cougars will be seeking their second vic- tory. State's worst season under Bachman was in 1940, when the Spartans won three, lost four and tied one. State won four, lost four and tied one the year before that. Freshman fullback Jim Blenk- horn of Saginaw will be the only starter for MSC who didn't start last week's game with Maryland. Blenkhorn will replace Waters, whonsuffered a shoulder injury last week. The Flint touchdown twins, George Guerre and Lynn Chandnois, are expected to handle the running chores while Guerre and Gene Glick of Saginaw will do the passing. RIDE R'S4 STUDENT SUPPLIES 302 South State Street service classic while Notre Dame winds up at home against a South- ern California team that came within a whisker of knocking UCLA out of the Rose Bowl and the undisputed championship of the Pacific Coast. If the Cadets and the Irish both turn in dec4sive triumphs as an- ticipated, they probably will be recognized as the college co-cham- pions of 194~6 although Georgia and UCLA can finish without so much as a tie, the lone blot which Army and Notre Dame inflicted on each other. Georgia Meets Georgia Tech A large portion of the action among the remaining major teams will be concentrated tomorrow in the Southeastern Conference, where four teams are struggling for a share of the championship and one or two of the more profit- able bowl assignments. All-victorious Georgia and once- beaten Georgia Tech get together at Athens, with a Sugar Bowl bid almost certain to go to the winner. Tennessee, already in the Orange Bowl, will be at Vanderbilt, Tu- lane at Louisiana State, Mississippi State at Alabama and Auburn at Florida for other Southeastern Conference bouts. Tennessee Can Take Title If Tennessee wins, it can do no worse than tie for the title and Georgia must turn back Georgia Tech to share the bunting with the Vols. Defeats for Georgia and Tennes- see, however, would elevate Geor- gia Tech to the top spot, with Louisiana State cutting in for half of the title if it triumphs over Tulane. North Carolina State entertains Maryland in an attempt to tie Wil- liamand Mary for second place in the Southern Conference, while North Carolina, the Southern champ, invades Virginia for a non- league engagement. Baylor will be at Rice and Texas Christian at Southern Methodist in the Southwest Conference wind- up, with Rice, Tennessee's oppon- ent for the Orange Bowl, needing By CHUCK LEWIS Scoring eight goals in the first two periods, the Michigan hockey team opened its regular season by defeating the, Windsor §pitfires, 10-7 in a wild scoring game last night at the Coliseum. Bill Jacobson, converted to cen- ter from a wing position this year, performed admirably, pulling the hat trick and also adding an as- ist for a total of four points. Gor- don MacMillan, center on the number one line, led the team in total scoring, though, by racking up two markers and assisting on three other occasions. Lyle Phil- lips, freshman winger, also count- ered four points The Wolverines showed much of their scoring punch in the first two periods but let up somewhat in the last stanza as the Spitfires cane within two goals of tying it up, only to have Jacobson "put the game on ice" with his third goal at 19:17 on a pass from Phillips in front of the net. During the first frame the Wol- verines set a new team record by scoring three times within. 68 seconds. Phillips, Ted Greer, and Jacobson were th'e goal getters in the record breaking flurry into the Windsor net. Coach Vic Heyliger used 14 men in the conquest of the visitors from Canada. Al Renfrew played only the first period, though, but assisted on three tallies. Then Heyliger used Herb Upton on the number two line and George An- derson became the left wing on the third with George Peugeot and Sam Steadman. During the final period, Coach Heyliger shuffled his lines con- siderably even to the extent of moving Captain Connie Hill, a stalwart on defense all evening, up to center for a brief time. Center Harry Marchand, winger Bill Boyce, and defense- man Mike Russ led the visitors' attack, each garnering three points with Russ the only Spit- fire to push the pack past goalie Jack MacDonald twice. Both of these markers came in the last period when Windsor scored five times to Michigan's two. MacMillan started off the, scor- ing at 1:18 of the first period af- ter taking a pass from Hill and went in all alone. The three fast goals followed after Boyce count- ered for the Spitfires. Jacobson scored for the Maize and Blue and Al Campeau for Windsor before the initial period ended. Coach Heyliger commented that the team still is not at its peak condition, and that the squad has much work in store for them before they meet the powerful Toronto U team next Friday. By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 29-Ar- my's careening Cadets throw a farewell party in Municipal Stad- ium tomorrow, and practically everyone except Navy's well-wal- loped Middies figure it will be a fancy final fling for the Black Knights of the Hudson. This will be the 47th collision between the Army and the Navy, and will mark the end of the football road for nine of the 11 starting Cadets who have rolled up the greatest gridiron record of a generation, headed by "the monster and his playmate," Line- busting Doc Blanchard and Gal- loping Glenn Davis. It figures to be quite a party, too, what with fair and cold-45 degree temperature-promised by old man weather for the 12:30 p.m. > P"j c ^Af ti F k s.. ; ,A K ( Z! s #4. } ., # I AR a O R 3 A' F WE ST 7 7 YFAT. 8 f 0 Weekdays 30c to 5 P.M. Light Lunches SOUPS ...SALADS .. *SANDWICHES COKES 8:00 A.M.-10:30 P.M. Weekdays '8:00 A.M.-12:30 P.M. Friday-Saturday C7ark's Tea Room 217 Observatory Gentlemen Beware! 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