FRMDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1950 THE MICHIGAN D ATTV WARY +Ml"t.V "' ' 1E 1111 4 1ET 1 ?1111 17111Ed7U'_ ;YAhr!"i "1' ilGEE 5 n uries Irce Platoon Shifts for Wsconsin Tilt Key Men See Double Duty Against Badgers Tomorrow. * * * 4> Y Montreal Tops Rangers; Badgers To Arrive At Willow Run Today Coach Bennie Oosterbaan is stretching his talent to the utmost in an effort to field a strong of- fensive and defensive unit tomor- row" afternoon against the invad- ing Wisconsin Badgers. A lack of depth whch was ap- parent in the second half of the Army game may again prove costly with Leo Koceski confined to the sidelines Saturday. Oosterbaan is planning to use a number of his operatives on both offense and de- fense rather than go alorng with inexperienced men in the lineup. EXCEPT FOR KOCESKI, the injuries sustained last Saturday should not hinder Michigan in its bid to win its opening conference tussle. The cast on Dick McWil- liam's hand has been removed. so he will be ready to go Saturday. Iarry Allis, who had not en- gaged in workouts previously Y4 FOOTBALL FORECAST by JOE HARRIS this week because of an ailing hand, ran though the entire practice session yesterday after- noon. This means that Allis's starting against Wisconsin is a virtual certainty. Don Dufek, besides playing his usual offensive fullback game, will play one of the halfbacks on the defensive unit. What respite Du- fek does get on defense against Wisconsin will be provided by use of another first string offensive back, Frank Howell. HOWELL IS filling in at wing- back for Koceski, as he did last Saturday when the latter was in- jured. The ends will come in for their share of double duty along with Dufek and Howell. Although Al- lis and Ozzie Clark are schedul- ed to start on the offensive unit, both will be forced to play de- fensive roles at times so that Oosterbaan can also employ Lowell Perry and Fred Pickard on'offense. Perry will, also, be seen in his customary safety slot. This means that Chuck Ortmann and Bill Pu- tich must both be ready to fill in on the defensive unit should Perry need to be spelled. WAHL, who is used mainly at one of the offensive tackle slots, will also see considerable defen- sive duty on the line as well. To give Wahl some rest Roger Zat- koff, the Wolverine line-backer, will spell Wahl on offense. With this doubing up through- out the line and backfield Oos- terbaan hopes to put his strong- est combination on the field against the undefeated Badgers. Michigan ran through a vigor- ous workout yesterday afternoon for this late in the week. The de- fensive line got a thorough prac- tice in preparation for the Wis- consin running attack, and the of- fensive backfields worked consid- erably on their passing attack. Heat Wave J MONTREAL -(R)-- Montreal's league leading Canadians in-. creased their margin at the ex- pense of the New York Rangers last night as they shut out the New Yorkers, 4-0, in a National Hockey League contest played in the Forum. The Canadians are undefeated in league competition as they have shown early season leadership in the puck league. The Rangers were unable to compete with the Canadians as lack of scoring punch by the Blue- shirts coupled with an erratic de- fense allowed the Montealeans to score off Ranger ace goalie Chuck Raynor.. Idles Wings CHICAGO -- (M) - Chicago's record breaking autumn heat wave last night forced postpone- ment of a National Hockey League game. The Chicago Stadium reported it could not form a satisfactory ice service-for the first time in stadium history. THE CHICAGO Blackhawks were to have played the Detroit Red Wings. Thousands of tickets had been sold. The Blackhawks said the postponement because of heat is the first in 32 years in league history. The temperature in Chicago at 2 p.m. (CST) hit 79. DICK MCWILLIAMS ... at full strength AP FOOTBALL PICKS: Mustangs Favored in Game of .Week Special to The Daily MADISON, Wisconsin - Coach'. Ivan Williamson has named the forty man playing squad which' will leave Truax Field at 1:00 p.m. (CST) via a chartered airliner for its Saturday engagement with Michigan at Ann Arbor. The plane is scheduled to arrive at Willow Run airport at approxi- mately 3:30 (EST). Headquarters will be at the Dearborn Inn in Dearborn. After the game, the squad will bus to Willow Run and will leave at 5:00 p.m. (EST). The party is expected to arrive in Madison at 5:30 (CST). INCLUDED IN the party, be- sides Williamson, are assistant coaches Milt Bruhn, Bob Odell and Paul Shaw; Dr. John Bently, team physician, Walt Bakke, trainer; William Aspineall, Busi ness Manager; and student man- agers Herb Birk and Jack Taylor. The following is the squad named by Williamson: Ends - Hal Faverty,' Gene Felker, Tilden Meyers, Pat 0'- Donahue, Kent Peters, Ken Sacht- jen, and Bill Vanderhoof. TACKLES - Bill Asbright, Charles Berndt, John Drews, Capt. Ken Huxhold, Bob Leu, Jerry Smith, Dave Suminski, and Charles Yderstad. South Carolina Ties Clemson COLUMBIA, S. C.--P)--Clem- son's 12th ranked football team still was undefeated but left half- back Steve , Wadiak ran South Carolina to a 14-14 tie yesterday against the previously untied, un- scored-on seven-point favorite. Clemson was forced to come from behind twice to tie up the Southern Conference test, first on a deflected 55-yard scoring pass, later on a 70-yard drive. Guards -- Harry Gilbert, ta, Bob Petruska, and Don Schaf- George O'Brien, Bob Kennedy, fer. John Simcic, Dave Staiger, Halfbacks -- Roy Burks, George Stelnmetz, and Goerge Bill Hutchinson, Bill Lane, Bob Windrow. Mansfield, Tom Proctor, Jerry Centers-Dave Hansen, Jack Schaffer, Rollie Strehlow, Kelley, George Simkiwski. Deral Teteak, and Ed Withers. * y* Fullbacks -- James Hammond, QUARTERBA6)KS-John Coat-I Bob Radcliffe, and Bill Schleisner. By WILL GRIMSLEY ,, I -"IN HAYES HAS LEARNED A LOT OF NEW HOLDS SINCE HE STARTED USING VITALIS! You'll find gals easy to hold on to -if you use your head - and "Live-Action" Vitalis care. Tackle that mop of yours'with the famous "60-Second Workout." 50 seconds' scalp massage (feel the difference!)...10 seconds to comb (and will the gals see the difference).. .You'll look neat and natural. Bye-bye loose flaky dandruff and dryness, too. So get a hold on Vitalis -buy it at any drugustore or barber shop. SAT. OCTOBER 21, 1950 Score Winner Score MICHIGAN ..14 Army ........48 Ball St. Teach 27 California ....27 Central Mich. 20 Colgate.....20 Cornell ......34 Dartmouth ...27 Georgia Tech..20 Holy Cross ....20 Illinois......28 Iowa U. .... ..27 Kansas,.......14 Maryland .....27 Michigan State 27 Missouri,..20 Northwestern. .20 Notre Dame ..34 Ohio State ....14 Penn .........20 Princeton .....21 So. California 27 So. Methodist 21 Temple......20 Tennessee ....21 Texas Christian 20 Tulane ......21 Tulsa ........27 U.C.L.A. ......20 Villanova .....20 Western Mich. 27 Wmn. & Mary..27 Loser NEW YORK - (A) - Footballs bounce funny ways, and the repu- tations of amateur seers some- times bounce with them. Army's Bob Blaik stuck an in- step into a ball last Saturday. It soared 45 yards, rolled another 30, yanked the Cadets out of a ter- rible hole and set up Army's 27-6 victory over Michigan. * * * THERE WENT our upset spe- cial. But Oklahoma saved the day by beating Texas and our "sneak- er"-Colgate over Holy Cross- jelled. So to date it's 177 right, 55 wrong, 11 ties and a percentage of .763. Here's to better bounces this week: Southern Methodist over Rice: the nation's no. 3 team is in for its toughest fight so far this season and there's good chance of an up- set. ARMY OVER HARVARD: The East gets a look at some of Earl Blaik's bench strength, and here's hoping Cambridge provides a good man to count the touchdowns, which should number about eight. Tennessee over Alabama: For years this has been one of the best games in Dixie, with the winner often going on to a bowl. Mark this one up to Gen. Bob Neyland. Navy over Southern California: The Middies are a good team which just hasn't exploded yet. Bob Zastrow snaps them out of it this week against Trojan squad let down after California. ILLINOIS OVER Washington: The Illihi have one of the best defensive clubs in the country and the Huskies' Hugh McElhenny shouldn't make too big a dent in it. Michigan over Wisconsin: Chuck Ortmann leads the Wol- verines to the road back, wreck- ing the Badgers' perfect slate. Notre Dame over Indiana: No- body's scared of the Fighting Irish any more but they're still a tough football team with Bob Williams at the throttle. * * * CORNELL OVER YALE: Jeff Fleischmann ends the Eli winning streak and coach Herman Hick- man loses 20 of his 260 pounds. Georgia over Louisiana State: The unbeaten but twice tied Bulldogs have found their scor- ing punch. Virginia over VMI: Johnny Papit leads Art Guepe's forces to their fourth victory. ** * KANSAS OVER Oklahoma A. and M.: Ears Whitworth's boys not fully recovered from the SMU shellacking. UCLA over Stanford: The single-wing Uclans smash down one of the heavy Rose Bowl fa- vorites. Wisconsin .... 7 Harvard....... 08 Mich. Normal.. 6 Oregon State.. 7 DePauw....... 7 Bucknell .......7 Yale ........,.14 Lehigh........7 Auburn ....... 6 Syracuse ......14 Washington . .14 Purdue.......14 Okla. A.&M.... 7 No. Caro. St... 7 Marquette ....14 Iowa State ... 7 Pittsburgh .... 7 Indiana......7 Minnesota .... 7 Columbia .... 7 Brown ........14 Navy. ...... .20 Rice ......,..14 Wayne ........7 Alabama ...... 7 Texas A.&M...14 Mississippi .. .14 Detroit......14 Stanford ......14 Kentucky .....14 Washington ..13 Virg. Poly I...13 I JVITA IS " and the * PRODUCT OR"60-Second Workout" I DRISOL. YER Adf AM 1Ai4UhIcthj an soln i DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN NATIONAL PRO LEAGUE Chicago Cards. 31 Clev. Browns..24 L.A. Rams ....38 Phila. Eagles..31 S. F. '49ers ...24 Wash.Redskins 21 N.Y. Giants .. 7 Balt. Colts ...28 Pit. Steelers .. 7 Detroit Lions..21 MICHIGAN SMOKE SHOP Headquarters for all your smoking and leathe'r goods * Cigarettes * Wallets '* Dressing Kits * Tie Cases nCandy - Magazines Pipes Flasks PIPES REPAIRED 711 NORTH UNIVERSITY Near Hill Auditorium Publication in The Daily Official Bulletin is constructive notice to all members of the University. Notices for the Bulletin should be sent in typewritten form to the Office of the Assistant to the President, Room 2552 Administration Building, by 3:00 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11:00 a.m. Saturdays). FRIDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1950 VOL. LXI, No. 22 Notices Fraternities, sororities, coopera- tives or simliar groups may not build, buy, rent, lease property, or change the location of their house, make any material change in their house, purchase a lot on which it is proposed to build a house, immediately or in the fu- ture, without first securing the approval of the Committee on Student Affairs. When a n y change is contemplated, it is ne- cessary that a letter be addressed to the Committee on Student Af- fairs describing the proposed changes and the method of fi- nancing them. The Committee on Student Affairs has appointed a subcommittee on housing to study and make recommendations con- cerning petitions from student groups which relate to any of these projects. No commitments should be made until final ap- proval of the Committee on Stu- dent Affairs has been received. Aeronautical Engineering dents: There is available one Richard L. Perry Memorial lowship to students in Aeronauti- cal Engineering who are in need of financial assistance and who show definite promise in this field. In the selection of a candidate preference will be given to veteran- pilots. Applications should be in letter form, giving a statement of services in the armed forces, and addressed to Prof. 'A. M. Kuethe, 1501 E. Engineering Bldg. Appli- cations will be received up to Oct. 24. Open Houses for the Wisconsin game are authorized in officially organized student residences on Sat., Oct. 21 between 11:30 a.m and 1:30 p.m. for pre-game func- tions and between 5 p.m. and 7 p.m. for post-game functions. No registration of these functions is necessary provided they are con- fined to the hours indicated. --Office of Student Affairs Approved Student Sponsored So- cial, Events for the coming week- end: Stu- $500 Fel- October 20 -- Alpha Chi Sigma, Graduate Stu- dent Council, Inter-Cooperative Council, Kappa Nu, Palmer House, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Sigma Delta, Pi Lambda Phi, Sigma Alpha Mu, Triangle Fraternity, Zeta Beta Tau. October 21 -- Acacia, Alpha Delta Phi, Alpha Epsilon Pi, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Alpha Kappa Psi, Alpha Omega, Alpha Phi Alpha, Alpha Rho Chi, Alpha Sigma Phi, Beta Theta Pi, Chi Phi, Delta Chi, Delta Sigma Delta, Delta Sigma Pi, Delta Tau Delta, East Quadrangle, Kappa Al- pha Psi, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Lester Co-op House, Lloyd House; Michigan Christian Fellowship, Nu Sigma Nu, Phi Alpha Kappa, Phi Chi, Phi Delta Phi, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Kappa Tau, Phi Rho Sigma, Phi Sigma Delta, Phi Sigma Kappa, Psi Upsilon-Delta Upsilon, Psi Omega, Sigm'a Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Nu, Sigma Phi Ep- silon, Tau Delta Phi, Tau Epsilon Rho, Theta Delta Chi, Theta Xi, Triangle, Trigon, Zeta Beta Tau. (Continued on Page 4) BURBERRY eiqne] and ijolea C OATS J704cdo% I For Your Greater Pleasure...a COATS designed and tailored in London by Burberrys invariably set the standard throughout the world for correct fashion. 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