~fSDAY, OMTBtR 14, 1949. TITE 1M ICH IGAN DAILY PAGE. flRXFE lunior Varsity Gridders Face Wildcat's 'B' Squad Saturday 4 d} Michigan's junior varsity willI tage its opening game of the sea- on at 10 a.m. this Saturday on the ridiron at Ferry Field against orthwestern's "B" squad. Michigan's gridders will be Sandicapped offensively, as they ave had little time to practice nd perfect their plays. Although bhe team has been out for prac- ice since early in September, it aas been used to run the plays of SPORTS MERLE LEVIN, Night Editor the varsity's opponents and thus had very little time to develop a smooth-running offense. AS HAS BEEN evidenced by scrimmages against the freshmen and fourth-string varsity gridders, this week, the jayvees have even forgotten some of the fundament- als of Michigan's plays. Playing under game conditions will give the "B" team's new men- tor, Coach Don Robinson, a chance to get a better idea of the abilities and capabilities of his men. The jayvees will play four games this season. After this game, a home-and-home series against Michigan State, and then a jour- ney down to Columbus to battle Ohio State's B's will round out the year's play. .... . TWO FEATURE ARROW SPORT SHIRTS for Fall Cotton Gabardine in deep tones . ....... Turtle Neck T Shirts ............... . State Street lINC= 1a4, ..n .. $4.00 .. $4.00 ot Liberty FASHIONED FOR FALL TALKING SHOP with Bud Weidenthal Associate Sports Eior An open letter to Walter W. Ruch,. Special Writer for the NEW YORK TIMES DEAR WALT: We've been following your attempts at journalistic endeavor for several years now; sometimes with a grin; occasionally with a frown but at times with downright amazement. Now, we members of the fourth estate supposedly are all aware of the prime requisites of good reporting, namely accuracy and straightforwardness. No, we don't claim that any of us is completely freie of prejudice or bias, that would be asking too much-all writers lean one way or the other-none of us are. one hundred per cent pue. That's why when following the Minnesota deblacle of last year when you gleefully announced to your nationwide audience the "myth of Michigan has burst" we took it with a grain of salt knowing full well that you would have to eat those words before the season was over ... You ate 'em all right and we were content that you had learned your lesson . . . you had overstepped the bounds of straight news- writing -all year, we thought, and had resorted to pure prejudice and editorializing . . . but after the Rose Bowl, it was all settled-the Wolverines were great, there was no denying that. Now this year it has started all over again. And by God, we think you're going to have an awful mouthful again ... WHEN YOU PRAISED State to the hilt for their "moral" victory over our Wolverines, that was O.K., you may have been right, they looked awful good-and when you shouted to the rooftops about a guy named Van Brocklin and completely ignored two guys named Ortmann and Lentz we didn't like it, but it was still your prerogative as an experienced sportswriter .. . But hold on fella, this week's article was just too much to stom- ach .,. Let me quote some examples to you .-- "Michigan operated mostly from a fake T, with the quarterback switching to the single wing. It was confusing, but easy to scout, and no doubt future rivals will be ready for it." Now, to be perfectly frank, we're confused - if you mean by the "fake T" that play where the ball is snapped just as the quarterback begins his shift, then how can you use the adverb "mostly" .. they only used it twice all day. Or if you mean the play where the whole backfield lines up in the T and then shifts to the single wing, the boys in Maize and Blue have been using that type of formation for two years now and the best scouts in the country have not been able to figure out a way to stop it. Let's take another example- "Here Teninga pitched a bullet pass which Rifenburg muffed on the 2. The ball was recovered in the end zone by Koceski for a touchback." THIS IS PURE BUNK. In the first place, Rifenburg made a beautiful catch of Wally's aerial and ran 10 yards before he was tackled viciously at which point he then fumbled . . . the ball did go into the end zone, granted, but Koceski was on our side, remember, and it was Purdue which recovered the fumble for the touchback. If he had recovered it would have been a Michigan touchdown. And to top it all off you call the final quarter of this contest "a comedy of errors." We can't quite bring ourselves to appreciate your sense of humor. It didn't seem to us that the beautiful aerial exhibition put on by Lentz and Wisniewski, or the fine running of Wally Ten- inga was much of an hysterical affair. To us it looked like good championship football. Let's face it, Walt, the boys are good and well scouted or not we don't believe they're going to be stopped ... Your story, as we have pointed out, was full of inaccuracies and prejudices that give the reading public a misconception of our team ... we can't ask you to change your prejudices - all we ask is that you take careful notice of the proceedings in our stadium this Saturday afternoon. We think you're going to change your line, like it or not. ALL-AMERICAN NEXT? Daily Names Rifenburg Linem an-of-them- Week By B. S. BROWN There's a strongsmell of roses emanating from California again this year and it's got the nostrils of Bob Voigts and his Big Nine upstarts quivering with expecta- tion. Up until a week ago, Purdue, Minnesota and Michigan were given the best chance of copping the Big Nine title, with the first two battling it out on the turf to see who would make the trip to the Tournament of Roses January 1, 1949. * * * BUT VOIGTS, in his second year at Northwestern, showed his boys from Evanston are going to try to secure that trip to Californ- ia. Bennie Oosterbaan, freshman coach of the Michigan varsity, has something to live up to, however, and you can bet that a win over the Wildcats would make hi& task easier. * * * BENNIE INHERITED a team which had gone through the 1947 season undefeated; he took the reigns of a squad that received. unofficial recognition as the finest gridiron aggregation in the na- tion; and he was entrusted with the job of extending a 15-game Wolverine winning streak. So Bennie, after piloting his charges through three triumphs, doesn't want the Michigan tra- dition ruptured. This North- western tussle means a lot. The winning streak is on the line; Michigan's national rating is at stake;. and all eyes are on Bennie's reputation as a compe- tent mentor. * * * THERE'S QUITE A BIT of prestige awaiting the winner of Saturday's battle. Both teams have their share of injuries. Michigan's Gene Derricotte and Ed McNeil are slated to sit this one out, while Northwestern's Ed Tunnicliff, Steve Sawle and Dick Flowers are doubtful starters. In addition, Joe Zuraleff, who broke his arm two weeks ago, will be watching from the stands. As things stand now, the game is a toss-up. There are exponents of both teams insisting on res- pective victories. One of them, a sports writer, picked Michigan by 14 points, saying, "Roses fade in October." BUT WHETHER they do or not is up for question. Bennie refuses to base his attack on the suscep- tibility of roses to the fall air, nor does he base his defense on what happened at Lafayette last week. He had the Michigan gridders hard at work yesterday, empha- sizing the ground attack. Ralph Straffon and Don Dufek, sub- stitute fullbacks, were the standouts as they continually broke away for long gains in scrimmage. Dick Rifenburg handed the coaching staff a brief scare when he was knocked out, but he re- covered quickly and suffered no after-effects.4 ARROW J 1 Wildcats Seek Evasive Roses Sports, Features Organizations NCN Northwestern Lineman Cited 'Best of Week' NEW YORK - (AP)-Alex Sar- kisian, a 60-minute center in Northwestern's 19-16 victory over Minnesota, today was voted foot- ball lineman-of-the-week in the first of a series of weekly Asso- ciated Press polls. Captain of the Northwestern team that faces the Michigan powerhouse at Ann Arbor Satur- day, Sarkisian was one of 29 line- men who drew votes for outstand- ing work. The 215-pound senior played a major role in Northwestern's tri- umph over the previously unbeat- en, untied Gophers. The Wild- cats now have won three in a row ED McNEILL ...on injured list * * * . boys the way and right now they're on top, clamoring at the door that leads West. With the Boilermakers and the Golden Gophers reeling in con- fusion after Conference losses, the 'Cats have been given the nod as the team to succeed Michigan's 49-0 West Coast heritage. In the game that has been billed as the "contest of the year," the Arrow sports shirts are 100% virgin wool and give the wearer the ultimate in comfort and styling plus warmth without bulkiness. Both are washable, too! All Arrow sports shirts are made with the same know- how that goes into your favorite shirts ... the best! A RROW CAMPUS FA VORITES S- X SHIRTS SHIRTS 395 Here are the "smart" shirts col- lege men like to wear. They're neatly proportioned to fit com- fortably; styled in the height of campus tradition. You'll wear them '"cUi( laude" in classroom and for extracurricular use. In a wide range of your favorite college styles. 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' : : ' g ": f r'..: >.! ,.. . 5:: : . d ...>:s J y :: ": , j7" i'> r h j> _, w : i::i:7j ?: i:< j }iii}7 : rriL:" , . ..Fi: ': ' ' %'k ' r " " ", " " 'p}{,. l.'.i:::: "'' {":'ti; : is : : :< :' "iii:iGi}}:: ,. .. . r : :: :"::::::: f '"" s , . y }: ;.i: iii . '3!i.. f ;. :; }:iii;:;}: 'i }: f 7C^ {': iY- :Si? {}: ii::': is ii; ?: i:':{":4iii' :iii-'' ti l.' "r.": ,. r. , r J :;.5.,: . y fem. .r.i . S90d I By BOB VOKAC Playing his fourth season of Varsity football for the Maize and Blue, Dick Rifenburg is on the brink of his greatest year. Rifenburg's play in last Satur- day's game was a big factor in the Boilermakers' defeat. He snagged four passes, one of them, for a touchdown, and this, coupled with .4is otherwise fine play, earned him the distinction of being nam- ed Daily lineman-of-the-week. To date, the nimble-fingered giant from Saginaw has caught nine passes, three of them for scores. Rifenburg has already sur- passed his 1947 record, and is ap- proaching the season marks set by Bump Elliott and Bob Mann last year. * * * PERHAPS RIFE'S ability is partially due to his admiration of a former Michigan end, Bennie Oosterbaan, All American from 1925 through 1927. Long the idol of the big end, Oosterbaan is now his coach. As a high school star five years E3 ago, Rifenburg was named All- State football end and basketball center. He also garnered state championships in the shot-put and high-jump attractions. The 1944 Michigan-Iowa Sea- hawk tilt saw Rifenburg in his first collegiate game and incident- ally, the first college gridiron duel he ever witnessed. He lived up to his notices by snaring the two touchdown passes that enabled the Wolverines to trounce the fli- ers, 12-7. * ** SPENDING AN uneventful sea- son mostly on the bench in 1946 after his return from sub service, Rifenburg came into his own last season holding down a first string berth. This season, his last, should be the culmination of his blazing journey. Bent on capitalizing additional Rifenburg talent, the Wolverine cagemen will be eagerly awaiting the final football gun as they plan to transplant bodily the 193 pound 6 foot 2/2 inch powerhouse into a basketball man. Camet rws i Gus (cnn Tailors-Furishings VAN BOVEN SHOES Phone 9520 1119 S. University Ave. i -l 17 Nickels Arcade ****-.... :::i:} vi ::i'r:.i i:= : :':. :: : :: ' ".. . KEEP That Warm Smile When Cold Weather Comes with a TOPCOAT $37.50 to $55.00 1 'C" , 1 Suiting Color Effects that are Extremely Desirable This Season are Solid and Pattern Effects in BLUES and BROWNS We are showing a most attractive collection of these Color Effects in a large assortment of fine Domestic and Imported fabrics for your approval. I DANCE PROGRAMS Let us help you with yoii" party theme and program se- lection. We have years of experience, and hundreds of ideas and designs. L. G. BALFOU R CO. 1319 S. Univ. 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