___________________THlE MICHIGAN DAILY thall (Cont'inued from Page 1) h~er Peterson nor Eldridge is ched to the tailback slot. NOTHER SOPHOMORE can- te - quarterback Bill Bill- - may be able to solve two Josterbaan's problems. Bennie needs a punter to replace ly Teninga and a signal caller pack up Bill Putich, the only rning letterman at quarter. Whines may find opportun- to play ahead of reserve ard winners Pete Palmer and ry Burns by virtue of his Mting prowess. ounding out the backfield is back, Don Dufek, leading scor- er for the Wolverines in 1949, who is certain to get the starting as- signment on the offensive squad. However, the loss of Dick Kemp- thorn, probably the greatest de- fensive fullback in modern foot- ball, will be hard-felt. * * * AS A REPLACEMENT, Ooster- baan will call on rugged Roger Zatkoff, 210-pound sophomore who was picked as the most im- proved player during spring prac- tice. Late in the drills, Zatkoff was working offensively as a cent- er, but will see action primarily as a linebacker next fall. Tony Momsen, Dick Farrar and Carl Kreager are returning letterwinners at center, but all are lacking in experience. At tackle, captain Al Wahl, Tom Johnson, Bill Ohlenroth and John Hess all return to action as do guards Al Jackson, Jack Pow- ers and Jim Wolters. Outstand- ing centerline prospects are Tom Kelsey, letter-winning end swit- ching to guard, and a pair of sophomores, Bob Timm and Dick Strezewski. Standout new ends are Lowell Perry, Bud Reeme and Merrit Green, all sophomores; and Dave Ray and Fred Pickard, reserve award winners last fall. Lettermen ends Harry Allis, Les Popp, and George Sutherland round out the list of prospects for Oosterbaan's 1950 grid aggregation. There you have it - the op- portunities are inspiring; but the schedule is brutal and material prospects are dimmed by the fact that needed depth must be pro- vided by an unpredictable squad of green reserves and untried sophomores. G$mnasics.. (Continued from Page 7) a strong bid to bring at least one of those cherished trophies here this coming season. The first year men, coupled with holdovers from last season's team, should make for the strongest outfit in the Confer- ence in 1951. To bolster the newcomers, Lo- ken will have returning Buchan- an, Barthell, Ettl, Jeff Knight, Wally Nieman, Fred Thompson, and Bob Wyllie. They should make the greatest gymnastics team ever! Wrestling.. (Continued from Page 4) regular season, and depending in what class Planck wrestles. * * * KEEN WILL probably wrestle Planck into the unlimited class permanently and will keep Po- wers, if available, at 165, thus leaving the 175 pound class to be filled by a new Sophomore, proba- bly Roger Zatkoff of gridiron fame, or Harold Holtz, as both showed well for Bob Betzig's freshman squad last season. In the lighter weights, Keen will probably move both Nelson and Space up one class, letting Space wrestle in the 145 pound division and Nelson in the 136 pound group. Replacing Nelson at 128 will probably be Jack Gallon, a sophomore from To- ledo, who showed great promise with the frosh team. The 121-pound clas is wide-open as Keen duly contemplates the lack of experienced featherweights, both in old varsity and new soph grapplers. Brad Stone who wrest- led a few dual meets at that weight last season is leading contender for that position but Keen re- gards Stone as far from satisfac- tory against experienced competi- tors and will try to develop a win- ning sophomore at that weight, al- though the new crop is meager. IN OVERALL team strength, Michigan should again have a well-balanced dual meet squad, such as the one which won all but one Conference dual meet last season and tied for the Big Ten dual meet title with Illinois. However, the 1951 team may again lack individual stars and thus will have a tough battle for top laurels in the Conference meet held in March, in which all schools participate in the battle for individual champion- ships and the team title won last year by Purdue. Michigan finished in a tie for third with Minnesota, as the Boil- ermakers ran away with the crown and OSU squeezed into second place one point ahead of the Go- phers and Wolverines. * * * ANOTHER FACTOR which may defeat Wolverine title hopes is the entrance of a perenielly strong Michigan State squad into Con- ference grappling competition for the first time. However, the "magician of the mats," as he is called by ad- miring colleagues looks to 1951 with hopeful eyes, knowing that the spirit anq knowledge which he musters into his wrestlers may lead them to great heights unexpected even by their men- tor. He has seen it happen be- fore with Michigan squads, which had less potential than the 1951 aggregation, but like the present one had the advan- tage of being taught by one of the best. As Keen himself puts it. "Give me a bunch of kids who are will- ing to work, learn the sport and put their heart into wrestling and they'll go places." Ulrich's Connections with 600 Schools and Bookstores Throughout the United States Have Stocked Our Store with TONS and TONS of USED and NEW TEX OOKS Chem., Lit., Ec., Hist., All Languages, Botany, Zoology, Engineering, Arch., Forestry, Law, Medicine, Math., etc. In Fact, For Every Course on the Michigan Campus i ULRICH'S WHOLESALE BUYING Enables us to give you great values in Student Supplies Zipper Notebooks Laundry Cases . . .. $1.95 and up . . . .. $1.95 up Fountain Pens - All Leading Makes NOTICE! ENGINEERS and ARCHITECTS ULRICH'S carry the largest stock in Michigan of Engineers' and Architect's Books and Supplies at Special Student Prices New and Used Drawing Instruments. . . . . $12.50 and up K&E and ietzgen Distributor Slide Rules . ..e .." ..e .$1up -We stock every make T-Squares, Boards, Triangles, etc. at Student Prices Complete Line of Artists Supplies Buy at Ulrich's and Save Ii . , '_ { 4 Michigan Seal Stationery Typewriters -All Makes ...39c up For Rent Michigan Pennants, Banners 5c to $10 Pencils, Ink, Paper, etc. All the latest books of Fiction, Biography, etc. -_ + , , ,., . ., . ,".. 6 You'll enjoy doing Business at Ulrich's. It's a one-stop store where you can get everything you need in BOOKS and SUPPLIES Give us a try '---- t _._ _--. I Ann Arbor's Busy Bookstore Opposite the Engineering Building