THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4,1I950 Gridiron a n ageI'IVs Job Vital * a * * * * * * Corps of Thirteen Works at Practices f4 .I Innumerable times during the course of the football season, the clarion call "Manager!" rings out over the Michigan practice field. And it is inevitably followed by furious activity on the part of the "unknowns" of the grid world, the student managers. ALTHOUGH the managing and equipping of a football team is not the sole key to success, the work of student managers and of Harry Hatch's Ferry Field equip- ment department makes life a lot easier for the varsity and fresh- man squads. Hatch has a general supervi- sory control over the Wolverine managerial corps, and close co- operation between them and his equipment department is imper- ative if the grid machine is to run smoothly. The good-natured Hank, who is something of an 'institution at Michigan-he's been here 26 years -andles 300 complete sets of foot- ball equipment in his athletic storehouse on the second floor of Yost Fieldhouse. LIFT THAT BALE-It's all work and not too much play for student managers Chuck Lyman, Lee Stock, and Bob Fremlin (left to right). Carrying out the dummies from the shed at the west end of Ferry Field is not a job that customarily falls to the managers, but the unsung corps has to be ready for anything. YPSILANTI NEXT: New Cities Included in Blood Typing Program, Michigan's blood typing pro- gram has moved into the advanced embryonic stages with the an- nouncement that Ypsilanti, Bir- mingham and Alma will be the next "guinea pigs" for observation. the cities make up part of the preliminairies to a state-wide plan to blood-type every citizen in Michigan. They will follow the pro- cedure set up in the Jackson "pilot operation" which began 1 a s t month. DR. Otto T. Mallery, Jr., chief of the clinical laboratories at Uni- versity Hospital, viewed mass blood-typing of the general popu- lation as a method df saving lives' in the event of an atomic disaster. "The major problem in an atomic crisis is the speed in Bus Planned For Ohio State The Wolverine Club will sponsor a student bus trip to the Ohio State football game, according to George Benisek, '52, publicity chairman of the club. Special buses are being charter- ed which will leave Ann Arbor ear- ly Saturday morning, Nov. 25. On the return trib, one bus will leave Columbus shortly after the game, \vith a second bus leaving at 10 a.m. Nov. 26. Round-trip fare for both groups is $8 50 and reservation can be made starting Monday at the Stu- dent Affairs window in the lobby of the Bus Ad bldg., Benisek said. arrangements can be made un- til Nov. 17, However, no game tic- kets are available with transpor- tation reservations, he added. Read DailyClassifieds which the right type of blood donors are secured," Dr. Mallery said. He pointed out that mass blood typing would facilitate se- curing the correct types, espe- cially the universal type, "0-Rh negative." Dr Mallery explained that there are basically four blood types: O, A, B and ,AB, each containing ei- ther a positive or negative "Rh" faetor.Te veO-hngtv But her waist, she said, is now down to a mere 22 inches, which, when compared to the upper portions, is regarded by experts as phenomenal. "Before," she said, "I was too big. I was busting out of every- thing. Most of your American dresses, you know, are made for flatchested women.! In France, the women are more plump, more feminine, ,more pep- py. Here everybody watches their diet and measures their dimen- sions." Vive la France, la dimensions- but don't stare. Was htenaw Polio Cha pter $5,000 in .Debt l 4* *y I 1IThe Washtenaw county chapter can be given safely to individuals- who have any other type without of the National Foundation for In- causing the undesirable reactions fantile Paralysis is currently $4,- that result when the other types 491 in the red, according to Mrs. are mixed together. A. Eugene Harer, chapter publicity "In case of a disaster there chairman. would be an acute heed for blood," Mrs. Harer reported that the he claimed. "For example, in a chapter has spent $31,325 since city of 60,000 which received an iOctober on hospital patients. More atomic blast, there would be an than 30 patients are in hospitals, immediate need for 45,000 pints and another 31 are being supported of blood. Over a four to six week at the Farmington convalescent period, the demand might run to ndo.n a quarter of million pints," he as- National Foundation for In- serted. fantile Paralysis headquarters * . . shas already given the county BILL SEARLE ' . chief manager - A DAILY PHOTO FEATURE He's assisted in the equipment cage by Beryl Walker, a long time veteran of the business, and Chuck Olsen, the junior partner in the firm of Hatch and Co. * * " THE STUDENT managers, who are an indispensable part of prac- tice sessions and important factors in the running of the team on the field of the Michigan stadium, compose 13 undergraduate men, who are selected for their posts on the basis of interest, ability, and personality. The head of the organization this season is senior manager Bill Searle, '51, from Winnetka, Illinois. Under Searle are four junior managers and. eight sophomores. The latter were chosen from a group of some fifteen tryuts who vied for the position in spring practice last year. Insofar as hard work is con- cerned, a manager's lot is not a particularly happy one. Practice routine entails a number of varied tasks, and the managers on duty must be constantly on their toes. One junior manager is in charge of each practice session, with three sophomores working under him. To the sophomores goes the job of taking care of the multifarious tasks necessary to make the Wol- verine practipe run smoothly. * * * FIRST IN the routine comes the checking of the most necessary piece of grid equipment-footballs. The managers must see that all the balls are present and account- ed for. They also check to see that the pigskins are properly inflated. After checking out the foot- balls, the managers roll out the carts which hold helmets, hoods, and other practice equipment. They are also charged with tak- ing attendance; checking passes of the various newspapermen who cover the Michigan practice session,s and running errantIs for coaches and players. Practice duty doesn't end the veek's work for the managers, any- more than it does for the football team Saturday games at home entail a good deal of preparation. The equipment for each player dress- ing fr the game is taken from the 'House of Hatch' and placed in the individual lockers, so the var- sity man need only worry about getting it on. * * * ON SATURDAYS, the managers are assigned to various types of, "bench duty." Two or more managers keep track of the number of minutes each gridder plays, to ascertain eligibility for varsity and JV let- ters. This process is made all the more difficult with the pre- sent multi-platoon system, in which the football field turns into a morass of participants. Two of the managers are also employed in charting the game for future reference by the coaching staff and players. In past years, they've also been used as spotters by radio announcers and news- papermen. An unusual but necessary task on Saturday afternoons entails catching the points after touch- down, to keep overambitious fans from "swallowing" the expensive pigskins. THE MANAGERS also help trainer Jim Hunt and his staff to keep the players in sharpe be- fore and during games. This in- cludes helping injured players off the field and caring for the miles of adhesive tape employed t steady strained muscles. Even after the final whistle has sounded, the day's work is not complete. Mud-clogged cleats must be cleaned, and the equipment put in order, so that it may be cleaned for next week's battle. * * * FOR MOST of the men who serve on the crew which handles the routine of football; it's been a long pull, and a hard one. But thle satisfaction which they derive from a well-executed job and from associating with a big college grid squad from the inside provides t h e incentive which makes an otherwise thankless job a worthwhile one, they all agree. When Wally Weber told a De- troit Quarterback Club meeting that Michigan had "an offensive platoon, -a defensive platoon, and DR. MALLERY believed that present methods being used in Michigan were very reliable. The latest three-city test run of blood typing is designed to cover a representative cross sec- tion of Michigan towns. Bir- mingham will typify the plan in residential suburban communi- ties; Ypsilanti, the metropolitan area industrial cities and Alma,, the small out state communities. In Jackson 10,000 blood typings have already been completed at the rate of 800 to 1,000 a day, A. B. Howell, deputy State Civil Defense director reported. On advice of the State Civil De- fense Council, Jackson is shifting from volunteer workers to paid employes to insure full crews at all times. chapter $10,000 this year, Mrs. Harer said, and another $5,000 has been requested. .+ "We are trying to make people realize how much in debt our chap- ter is and have them help out more on their bills," she explained. More than $17,000 has been spent in the Ypsilanti area, ac- cording to Mrs. Harer. This sec- tion has been particularly hard hit in the current county epidemic, whidh has already reached record, numbers. The state has spent $160,000 on polio this year. Washtenaw polio officials have termed this "a tremendously large amount." Meanwhile, a benefit turkey din- ner for the local polio chapter has been planned. It will be held at 5:30 p.m. Thursday at the Graf O'Hara post of the Veterans of" Foreign Wars. Story GEORGE by FLINT HEADS UP-As far as helmets are concerned, the student managers must be especially sharp, since one of their numerous jobs invovles lining up the varsity's headgear in the proper order according to position. Here Bob Grew, Walt Bailey, Mort Kantor (left to right, rear), and Chuck 'Weygand (foreground) check for a possible error in the alignment. Photos by CARLYLE MARSHALL grEt4 2 PM N 9-12 P.M. November 4 f EYES FRONT-The managing staff for the 1950 Michigan football team comes to attention for the camera. The full organization numbers 13 members, including one senior manager, four juniors, and eight sophomores. In the front row are Lee -Stock and Jim 1 1111 E I