:. THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1947 Wolverines Hit Road for Vital Big Nine Contest wit h badgers t Hockey Squad Prepares for Wing Contest 'Dream Game To Settle Conference Title Clains Offensive Battle Looms as Badger Runners HopeTo Match Speed of Mih igan Backs Mann Sees Successful Year As Many Tank Stars Return lapse bef ncc.ante: ridiron. ng the dash on tice field fore the Wolverines again r the Badgers on the At 9:30 Saturday morn- two Jayvee teams will the Camp Randall prac- .. 1 Injuries to members of a team is the biggest problem facing any coach, and Vic Heyliger, hockey mentor, has begun to have his worries before the opening game of the 1947-48 season. Hill Injured Connie Hill, captain of the Wol- verine sextet for the third con- secutive year, was injured in practice this week and will prob- ably be out of action for at least , A 4 J The Badger "B" team possesses a 2-3 record. They have defeated Gogebic Junior College 24-0 and Northwestei'n 26-6. Their three losses were heartbreakers. They were defeated by Illinois 7-6, Pur- due 7-6, and Northwestern 6-0. Michigan's Jayvees boast a .5001 average. They defeated Grand Rapids Junior College 13-0, and Michigan State 13-6. They lcst hard fought battles 13-0 to Michi- gan State and 20-6 to Northwes- tern. Main Event There is barely time to grab a lunch before the main event of the marathcn gets under way. Harry Stuhldreher's Cinderella team, in second place in the con- ference with a three won and one tied record, play host to the highly touted Wolverine varsity at 1:30 before a sellout "Dad's Day" crowd at Camp Randall Stadium. When the final gun barks end- ing the Saturday afternoon clash 180 grueling minutes of football will have been played between the two schools in less than twenty- four hours. These facts bring to mind only one question. Just how much foot- ball can you take in one day? It would be safe to say that Madison- ites will have had their fill of the sport by the time they sit down to Saturday night supper. ten days. It has not been deter- mined whether he will be in shape to play against the Red Wings when the Detroiters journey to Ann Arbor at the end of the month. Hill is suffering from some very painful chest bruises, though ita has been definitely establishedI that there are no cracked ribs. Shaping Up The puck squad continued to scrimmage this week and accord- ing to Heyliger, "They are coming around to playing form slowly." The hockey coach continued to shuffle his forward lines in an at- tempt to find the smoothest work- ing combination, while Jack Mac- Innes and Jack MacDonald both presented different obstacles to the scoring-minded offenrsemEi. Gordie MacMillan, Al Renfrew, and Wally Gacek played on one line during most of the scrim- mages, and followers of last year's team indicate that these three will make up Michigan's first and best line. The game that has materialized out of thin air as iar as pre-season forecasts were concerned will be played this Saturday at Madison, Wisconsin, when Coach "Fritz" I Crisler's Wolverines tangle with a once-defeated Badger eleven. To most Conference followers who had tagged Michigan, Illinois, and Ohio State as the teams to beat in this year's Big Nine com- petition, the mid-November ap- pearance of Wisconsin as a threat to Michigan's march to its first undisputed championship in 15 years is nothing short of a mir- acle. The game with the Badgers was looked at as a welcome breather for Michigan before it played host to Ohio State in what might well have been the title deciding contest. In fact, after Michigan won from Illi- nois the race was supposed to be over except for the neces- sity of playing out the schedule. The one factor that most ex- perts chose to ignore in making their selections for Conference honors has proven to be the de- ciding one in Wisconsin's rise from a bottom finish last year to their present position as the num- ber one obstacle in front of the title-minded Wolverines. This factor is the team spirit which has manifested itself in victories over Purdue, Iowa, Northwestern, Yale and Mar- quette. Perhaps the best ex- ample of the Badger's high mor- ale is to 1e found in the team's quick recovery from a stunningj 48-7 setback at the hands of California which enabled it to hand a previously unbeaten Yale eleven its first defeat.! Coach Harry Stuhldreher's squad has continued to ride high after that conquest and reached its peak last week when Iowa was routed 46 to 14. Wisconsin is ready for Mich- igan and will be out to stop all that Coach Crisler and the Wol- verines can throw against them. It is doubtful whether the Bad- ger's hopes for a victory over Michigan have ever been higher than they are at present. Not since the Wisconsin team arrived in' Ann Arbor in 1944 seeking to win that year's game for the memory of one of their players, Allan Sha- fer, who suffered a fatal injury in a game with Iowa, have the Badgers pointed so much for a Michigan eleven. Coach "Fritz" Crisler and the entire Michigan team are aware of the excellent performances of the Wisconsin eleven and are taking no chances of allowing the Badgers to win on spirit alone. Today, as well as all of the practice sessions this week the squad has kept the threat of Coach Stuhldreher's well- balanced team uppermost in their minds and have shone enthusiasm in practice not equalled since this year's game with Illinois. The team once again worked on scoring plays that might see action against Wisconsin this weekend. Coach Crisler and his assistants also worked on defense in anticipation of stopping a Bad- ger attack that has enabled the Badgers from Madison to score from any position on the field. By MURRAY GRANT Wolverine swimming coach. Matt Mann, appears headed for another successful season if the past performances of the array of stars on this year's squad can be held for anything. Mann is working out his talent- laden charges daily at the I-M pool and already many of the tanksters are rounding into top shape. Led by Captain Harry Holi- day, the, Michigan mermen have a double incentive this season. Primarily they're out to avenge last 'year's loss to Ohio State and bring the Conference crown back to Ann Arbor. But equally important and in the backs of all their minds is the possible invitations to be a member of the United States Olympic Swimming squad that will be chosen next Spring. Back for another record-break- ing year is the medley relay team, composed of Holiday, Bob Sohl and Dick Weinberg. This trio holds three of the four possible world's records in this event, and holds the American mark in the other distance. The Wolverine squad appears well-fixed in every event, hav- ing lost only Alex Canja and Wally Stewart from last sea- son's aggregation. Diving again seems to be the weak point of the team, but with All-American Gil Evans, Ralph Triiborn and Tommy O'Neil returning there is a definite possibility of ser- iously challenging Ohio State's domination of this event. Among the freestylers Coach Mann seems to be well fortified. In addition to Weinberg, he'll have such stars as Matt Mann III, Gus Stager, Bill Kogen, Tom Coates, Johnny McCarthy and Charley Moss for duty in any of the meets. In the breaststroke Mann will have Sohl, one of the best in the country, and Bill Upthegrove back from last year, and Moss, who has shown brilliantly in Hawaii and in meets in the East. The backstroke department is ably handled by Holiday and be- hind him are the Johnsons, Art and Ralph, both members of last year's squad. EARL MAVES . . . . Wisconsin fullback Batdgesyet For 'M' Tilt MADISON, Wis., Nov. 13-(A)- Michigan's football team may be the "Monsters of the Midwest" and the "Wily Wolverines" to a lot of experts, but to a Wisconsin squad readying for Saturday's bat- tle for the Big Nine Title the su- perlatives don't mean a thing. "We'll concede 'em nothing," halfback Clarence Self, the Badg- ers' leading ground gainer, de- clared today. "This is one we want to win and we think we can." Self spoke for the entire Badger ball club, which is waiting for the Western Conference's showdown game before a full house of 45,000 without the slightest trace of awe. 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See your favorite Arrow dealer for Arrow sports shirts P. S. Send for your FREE copy of "The What, Men's Clothing" today-a handy guide for men who and well. Address: College Dept., Cluett, Peabody York 16, N. Y. When & Wear of like to dress wisely & Co.. Inc., New (Continued from Page 4) 2:45-2:55 p.m., WKAR (870 Kc.), Research in Physics, E. F. Barker. 4-4:15 p.m., WPAG (1050 Kc.), Jean Forquharson, Pianist. Lydia Mendelssohn: Art Cinema League presents Josette Day as THE BARGE-KEEPER'S DAUGH- TER with Louis Jouvet. French Dialogue, English titles. Fri., and Sat., 8:30 p.m. Sigma Chapter, Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity: Business meeting 8 p.m., Rm. 302, Michigan Union. German Coffee Hour: 3-4:30 p.m., Michigan League Coke Bar. All interested students and faculty members are invited. SR A Coffee Hour: LaneIlall, 4:30 p.m. Everyone is cordially in- vited. Delta Epsilon Pi, Orthodox so- ciety: Picture for the Michigan 'Ensian will be taken tonight at 7 p.m., Upper Room, Lane Hall. Uo r' Williams Guilt: Hayride, 8:30 p.m. Coffee at the Guild lou.se later. Singing and dancing. (omning Events Graduate Outing Club meet for ice-skating at 2:30 p.m., Sun., Nov. 16, Northwest entrance, Rackham Bldg. Sign up at Rackham check desk before noon Saturday. All graduate students welcome. The Acolytes: Douglas Morgan, Instructor of Philosophy, will lec- ture on the subject, "Representa- tion in Art," Mon., Nov. 17, 7:30 p.m., West Conference Room, Rackham Bldg. Open to the pub- lic. Le Cercle Francais: Tues., Nov. 18, 8 p.m., Rm. 305, Michigan Un- ion. Mr. Jacques Duchamp, a Read and Use Daily Classifed Ads French student recently arrived here, will speak informally on: "La vie des 6tudiants a Lyon pen- dant la guerre." Group singing and social games. New members accepted. We print 'em all No job too large or small. Programs - Tickets Stationery - Announcements ROACH PRINTING 209 E. 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