________________ EMICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE ~B' Squad Faces MarquetteTeam Hilltoppers To Play At Ferry Field Today Coach Wally Weber's "Busy" B's will seek their second straight win of the still young football season at 10:30 a.m. at Ferry Field, today against a strong Marquette reserve squad. - Last week the Wolverines romped to an easy 39-0 victory over Grand Rapids Junior College. The stubborn Grand Rapids eleven held Weber's team to a lone touchdown in the first half but Michigan rolled up five touchdowns in the second half as the Junior College boys wilted under the extreme heat. While Marquette is expected to be stronger than-the Grand Rapids elev- en, Michigan still rates a slightifa- vorite. The Hilltoppers lost Cliff Kero and Johnny Alcock, a pair of halfbacks, to the Varsity this week, and Wolverine end Irv Wisniewski moved to Crisler's squad. Stranahan Tops Ft. Worth Open FORT WORTH, Tex., Oct. 4-(3)- Young Frank Stranahan, the mus- cular Toledo, O., amateur, left a field of crack professionals behind him today as he posted a five-under- par 66 to take the lead at the half- way ma'rk in the $10,000 Fort Worth Open Golf Tournament with 132. Going out in a four-under par 33 and coming in with a one-under 33, and playing a half-dozen holes dur- ing thunder showers, the 24-year- old Ohioan led his nearest rivals- professionals Bob Hamilton of Chi- cago, George. Fazio of Los Angeles and Jim Ferrier of Chicago-by four strokes. The first day leader, Ellsworth Vines of Los Angeles, found the wea- ther and his shots both stormy and wound up with a seven-over par 78 on the 6,350-yard Glen Garden course. Added to his initial 65, the ex-tennis star was well below the leaders with a 36-hole total of 143. Michigan Bids for Second Conference Win (Continued from Page 1) post for Iowa will be another speed merchant, Bob Smith, who has moved 124 yards in his 23 trips with the ball for a 5.4 average. Lou King, who saw action with the Iowa Seahawks during the war, will direct the Iowa team from his quaterback post. An- other back who'll probably see plenty of action is Bob Sullivan, a left half- back who boasts a five-yard ball-car- rying average for the season. Up front the Hawkeyes will out- weigh their Maize and Blue oppon- ents by about 15 pounds per man. With the exception of ends Tony Guzowski, at 195, and Bob Phillips, at 180, the Iowans' starting for- wards will all hit 200 pounds or better. Tackle Bill Kay is the heaviest at 220 pounds. Lest someone get the idea that Iowa is strictly ark offensive outfit, a few figures will easily dispell the notion. The Hawkeye line has checked its two opponents with a net yardage of 128 on the ground. That amounts to 1.7 yards per carry which is all right in any league. And the fast-charging Hawkeye line has covered six oppos- ing fumbles to date. Spearheading Doc Anderson's de- fense will be ends Phillips and Gu- zowski, tackles Jim Cozad and Kay, guards Russ Benda and Dave Day and center Dick Laster. Laster will replace Dick Woodard, regular Hawk- eye pivot man who is sidelined with injurise. From tackle to tackel the Iowa line will average almost 208 pounds per man. With prospects good for another warm afternoon, Coach Fritz Cris- ler will probably repeat his per- formance of last week by using plenty of substitutes in an effort to wear the Hawkeyes down. Again the starting Wolverine line-up will depend upon whether Michigan gets to receive or kick off. Gene Derricotte who has a broken nose will probably see some action but unless the battle is unexpectedly close, Bob Chappuis, Bumps Elliott, Bill Culligan and Alan Traugott will see most of the action at tailback. Aside from Derricotte the Maize and Blue will be in top condition for the game. At the ends Crisler will have Ed McNeill, Lennie Ford, Bob Mann, Dick Riefenburg, Capt. Art Renner, Elmer Madar, Don Hershberger and Ed Bahlow. Ready to operate at the tackles will be Bruce Hilkene, Bob Derleth, Fenwick Crane, Frank Hon- igsbaum, Bill Pritula, Jack Carpenter, Dick Brown and Bob Ballou. Strength at the guards will be provided by Dom Tomasi, George Burg, Walt Freihofer, Lloyd Hene- veld, George Kraeger, Stu Wil- kins, Quent Sickels and Johnny Lintol. Anchoring the Maize and Blue forward wall will be centers J. T. White, Bob Callahan, Harry Watts, Walt Keeler and Jim Brie- ske. Brieske will again be Michi- gan's extra-point kicker. At quarter Crisler has Howie Yer- ges, Pete Elliott, Bob Vernier and Don Robinson. Robinson, however, is not expected to see action today. There'll be a quartet of right halfbacks avail- able: Paul White, Hank Fonde, Ralph Chubb and Bumps Elliott, while the Wolverine fullbacks will be Jack Weisenburger, Danny Dworsky, Bob Weise and Mike Yedinak. The probable starting lineups: MICHIGAN McNeill or Ford LE Hilkene LT Tomasi LG White or Watts C Sickels or Kraeger RG Pritula RT Renner RE Yerges or Weise QB Derricotte or Chappuis LH White RH Weisenburger FB IOWA Phillips Kay Benda Laster Day Cozad Guzowski King' Tunnell Smith Hoerner BEST SERIES BET! Cardinals Promise To Forego Special Ted Williams Shift' LOU KING-Iowa quarterback Robinson To Meet Bell in Title Fight NEW YORK, Oct. 4 - (P) - The Welterweight title mixup began to unscramble itself today with the signing of Sugar Ray Robinson and Tommy Bell for a bout to decide a new champion. Promoter Mike Jacobs announced the match between the Harlem stringbean, known around and about as "The Uncrowned Champion," and the Youngstown, Ohio, thumper, who has been mowing them down in the Midwest, for December 20 in Madi- son Square Garden over the 15-round derby route. And immediately both the National Boxing Association and the New York State Athletic Commis- sion gave it their blessing for the championship. SPORTS BUILDING HOURS The Sports Building will be open until noon today and every Saturday. The building is open daily until 6:30 p.m. In addition the Friday evening sports program for Veterans and their wives has been resumed and takes place from 7 to 9:30. PRACTICE SPEEDBALL Tuesday's Scores Theta Chi 6, Phi Delts 3 Delta Tau Delta 6, ZBT 5 Phi Sigma Delta 4, SAM 2 Wednesday's Scores Delta Upsilon 8, Sig Ep 3 Acacia 7, Kappa Sig 3 Beta 5, Phi Kappa Psi 3 Lambda Chi Alpha 3, Theta Xi 0 Zeta Psi 5, Theta Delta Chi 5 Williams Sale Denied by Joe Rumor Cronin . ST. LOUIS, Oct. 4-(AP)-Manager Joe Cronin of the Boston Red Sox arrived in town today on the same train with the St. Louis Cardinals and vigorously denied a Boston col- umnist's report that slugger Ted Wil- liams was for sale. "There's nothing to it," said Cron- in, and added with a grin, "it sounds to me like a National League plot." DES SIEZ Post-War Sports Reach Peak Football Card Features Toss-Ups By DES' HOWARTH, Associate Sports Editor THIS WEEKEND should mark the peak of America's first post-war year in sports, for never before in our memory has so much been going on at once. The World Series, marking the climax of baseball's most successful ful season in history, finds itself vieing for headlines with a score of grid- iron clashes, any one of which might be called the game of the day. Take, for instance, the Oklahoma A. & M.-Texas tilt. Last year the Aggies went to the Sugar Bowl and Bob Fenimore & Co. seemed bowl-bound again until surprised last Saturday by Arkansas. The Aggies gained a 21-all tie in that one. Texas, meanwhile, has rolled up 118 points in swamping Missouri and Colorado. This should be "the" game of the day. In the Midwest there are a few more promising battles. Try and pick the winner of the Wisconsin-Northwestern or Minnesota-Indiana games. Both the Badgers and the Wildcats are making their first Conference ap- pearances. The Madison crew whipped Marquette and California, while Northwestern laced Iowa State, 41-9. Indiana, twice defeated, journeys to Minneapolis to meet Bernie Bierman's unbeaten Golden Gophers. Another good game should be the Illinois-Purdue contest. The Illini are overwhelming favorites, but the Boilermakers may show a reversal of last week's form and make things close. In an intersectional tussle, Ohio State will attempt to uphold the Big Nine's honor against Southern California. Pacific Coast writers are promising big things for the Trojans this fall. T HE DARTMOUTH-SYRACUSE set-to will be close. Biggy Munn got off to an auspicious start with a 41-6 win over Boston University. The Indians edged Holy Cross by a field goal. From there on Michigan State probably rates a slight edge over Boston College, and Holy Cross should down Detroit. Notre Dame will have no trouble with a mediocre Pitt eleven. West Point can be ex- pected to meet Michigan next week still unbeaten. Navy will have the edge over Columbia, but the game may serve to test just how powerful the Middies are. After last Saturday's scare, Ala- bama may really pour it on South Carolina, and Temple can expect the same treatment from Georgia. The Texas Christian-Arkansas fracas is another toss-up. So is the outcome of the California-Oregon game. Up at Seattle a strong UCLA outfit will probably serve notice that it is the team to beat in the Pacific Coast Conference when the Bruins engage a strong Washington squad. ./ ST. LOUIS, Oct. 4-(0P)-The sur- est thing about the World Series that finally will start here Sunday is that the St. Louis Cardinals will em- ploy no freak defense formation a- gainst Terrible Ted Williams of the Boston Red Sox. The second biggest cinch is that the Redbirds, now a cocky crew af- ter their decisive triumph over Brooklyn in the National League play-off, will not stand in the slight- est awe of Williams and his play- mates. They expect to win the thing. "As far as we are concerned, Wil- liams is just a good left-handed hit- ter," said Manager Eddie Dyer to- day as his victorious crewmen came back home for the big series. "Our outfielders will shift over a little for him, of course, but I can assure you our infielders will be where they be- long." Dyer, very calm about winning his first Big League Pennant, gave the impression that he didn't, con- sider it quite dignified to scramble up a defense to try to stop a single batter-or even very smart. "Our rightfieldfence is pretty short, anyhow," he pointed out. "If Williams gets hold of one in our park it'll go out of sight anyhow, no matter how manysoutfielders we have out there." The Card pitching staff came out of the Brooklyn series in excellent shape, thanks to the fact that Lefty Howie Pollet went the route in win- ning the first game, and that Harry (The Cat) Brecheen had to work II Thinclads End Initial Week OfI Training Coach Ken Doherty's distance run- ners have completed their first full week of cross-country jogging, and the season's initial aches and pains are gradually wearing away. An excellent early turn-out of eighty men have regularly been tak- ing the route over the University Golf Course path, the Wolverine coach re- ported. Veteran Runners Report Among the veteran cinder-men present are Chuck Birdsall, past Con- ference two-mile king, Herb Barten, last year's frosh ace who took the in- door half-mile title, Hugh Short, famed quarter-miler and 600-yard record holder, Ross Willard, two- miler from the 1945 team, Dave Wil- liams, formerly one of Georgetown's best distance men, Jim McFadden, half-miler last indoor season, Rog Kessler and Chuck Low, both dis- tance men last year, and Dick For- restel and George Shepherd, two ace quarter-milers from 1944-45. Weight Department Strengthened Doherty also revealed that Michi- gan's weight department has re- ceived a tremendous boost. Pete Dendrinos, highly-touted also as a football stand-out, heaved the shot put 46 ft. on the first day he re- ported for practice. Charley Fonville, frosh sensation last spring, also is rounding into top form, tossing the shot 48 ft. 2 in. in a recent practice session. only part of an inning in rescuing Murry Dickson yesterday. "It'll be Pollet in the first game, if his side is not sore, and Brecheen in the second," Dyer said. "Pollet said he was in some pain during Tuesday's game but he had all his stuff in the last inning, and I think he'll be ready." YESTERDAY'S SCORES North Carolina 21, Miami 0 Wake Forest 19, Georgetown 6 Missouri 19, St. Louis 14 Richmond 37, Maryland 7 Hope 13, Michigan Normal 0 BOWLERS There will be a meeting of all men who signed up for the bowl- ing league in the Union Bowling Alleys at 6:00 p.m.,on Wednesday, October 9, 1946. DANCING' Every Saturday Night at 9:00 P.M. BOB HUVAERE and his Orchestra BLUE LANTERN o ISLAND LAKE -2 Miles East of Brighton on U.S. 16 --O c-yc-o-yg-O<--"U O > Y or --Y<)--< -- O G oG.-- O ..- . DOROTHY MAYNOR I N E X T R A C O N C E R T MONDAY, OCT. 28 -8:30 4} :i .......................I HILL AUD ITIORIUM Tickets: $1.50 - $1.00 - 80 ( 20% tax included), _. De (Justibm~s Non Disbutandum* There's no law against go- ing around dressed in seven Arrow oxford stripe neck- ties ... and you really have to admire this fellow's in- dividuality. You can display your good taste by buying just one or two of these eye-catching striped ties in authentic col, lege colors. Only $1 at your FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw W. P. Lemon, D:D., James Van Pernis, Ministers Ruth Kirk, Church Worker Frieda Op't Holt Vogan, Director of Music Ruth Kirk, Church Worker 9:30 A.M.: Church School classes beginning with the Fifth Grade up through the Adult Department. 10:30 A.M.: Nursery, Beginner, Primary and Junior Departments. 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship. Sermon Topic: "Sensing God" by Dr. Lemon. 5:00 P.M.: Westminster Guild address by Dr. Frederick H. Olert of the First Presbyterian Church of Detroit on "Foundations for Re- construction." Supper follows. 5:00 P.M.: High School Group meets in the Vance Parlor with supper at 6 o'clock. FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Streets Minister : Rev. Leonard A. Parr, D.D. 9:30 A.M.: Church School-Junior and Inter- mediate. 10:45 A.M.: Primary and Kindergarten School. 10:45 A.M.: The World Wide Communion Ser- vice. Subject of Dr. Parr's sermon "What I Think About the Church." 5:30 P.M.: Ariston League (High School Group) Supper and program. 6:00 P.M.: Student Guild. Cost supper and dramatic presentation of the work of the Guild. UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL AND STUDENT CENTER 1511 Washtenaw Avenue Rev. Alfred Scheips, Pastor (Missouri Synod) Saturday, 4:30-6:00: Open House after the game. Sunday, 11:00 A.M.: Service, with celebration of Holy Communion. The pastor will preach on the subject, "God's Household." Sunday, 5:15 P.M.: Supper 'Social of Gamma Delta, Luthern Student. Club. Wednesday, 7:30 P.M.: Bible Study Hour. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 East Huron C. H. Loucks, Minister 10:00 A.M.: Student Class meets in the Guild House. 11:00 A.M.: Morning Worship. World-Wide Communion Service. 6:00 P.M.: Roger Williams Guild supper and fellowship hour, "An Interpretation of the Apostle John," by Miss Frances Goodfellow. ST. ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 120 South State Ministers : JamesBrett Kenna, Robert H. Jongeward Music: Hardin Van Deursen, director Student Activities; Kathleen Davis, director 8:00 and 10:40 A.M.: World-Wide Communion. Two services.. Dr. Kenna's communion medi- tation is "He Took a Towel." 5:30 P.M.: Wesleyan Guild. The topic "World Students" will be presented by studnts of various countries. Supper and social hour. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 409 South Division Street 10:30 A.M.: Sunday Lesson, Sermon. Subject Oct. 6 Unreality. 10:45 A.M.: Sunday School. 8:00 P.M.: Wednesday evening testimonial meeting. This church maintains a free Reading Room at 706 Wolverine Building, Washington at 4th, which is open daily except Sundays and holidays from 11:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Here the Bible and Christian Science literature includingrall the works of Mary Baker Eddy may be read, borrowed or purchased. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Edward H Redman. Minister 10:00 A.M.: Unitarian-Friends' Church School. 10:00 A.M.: Adult Study "Group. 11:00 A.M.: Service of Worship. Rev. Edward H. Redman preachig on: "Call to Action," a sub- ject of the greatest importance to every Uni- tarian. 6:00 P.M.: Unitarian Student Group -Buffet supper followed by Prof. Roy W. Sellars dis- cussing "Democracy in To-day's World." BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED CHURCH T. R. Schmale, Pastor. C. R. Loew, Assistant Pastor. Kathryn Karch, Organist Sunday, October 6, 1946 10:45 A.M.: Morning Worship. Holy Communion will be celebrated in observance of World- Wide Communion Sunday. 5:00 P.M.: Student Guild. Supper, singing, and a review of "Foundations of Reconstruction," a recent book written by Elton Trueblood. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH State and Huron Streets Harold J. DeVries, pastor 10:00 A.M.: University Bible Class. Edward Groesbeck, leader. 11:00 A.M.: and 7:30 P.M. Rev. Calvin C. Beu- kema, Youth Evangelist. LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION 1304 Hill Street - Henry 0. Yoder, Pastor Arrow dealer. A Might as well get a match- ing handkerchief while you're at it. Then your get. up will be indisputably O.K. Division at Catherine 8:00 A.M.: Holy Communion. 9:45 A.M.: Confirmation Class, Page Hall. 11:00 A.M.: Junior Church. 11:00 A.M.: Holy Communion. Sermon by Dr. Tewis. I I Il I i II