n .. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1951 THE IVITCHTfTAN DAILY t AI V,.% 1ltvlrlf vlft W ED NESD Y, N O VE BER 14, 1951T11\, 11~.. V 1-11 j ._ .? .3.J.L. .1 PAGE THREE Woveries e Come backAgistNorthwe stern E M TALKING... - MM /1 J'Ah Jenk THE WEATHER, scourge of this lovely little southern Michigan town, is playing havoc with the finals of intramural touch football. For the last two weeks each game has had all the markings of another Michigan-Ohio State match. The barren ground of South Ferry Field turns into a veritable sea of mud on the slightest provocation, making -lay hazardous and uncertain at best. All four divisions are still in the various stages of playoff competition. Weather permitting, the finals in the independent and residence hall leagues will be held tonight under the lights of Wines Field. At 7:15 the Foresters will meet Wesleyan for the independent crown, and an hour later Wenley and Hayden will take to the gridiron for residence hall honors. The fraternity division is still in the semi-final stage because of inclement weather. This afternoon the Sig Eps face Sigma Chi, while the other tilt between ATO and the Phi Gams will be played Thurs- day. In the professional fraternity league yesterday's winners, Delta Sigma Delta and Law Club A, will clash to decide who will take title laurels. * * * * Indoor Sports Time Again AS FOOTBALL approaches its final days the indoor sports begin to move into high gear. Volleyball is in its last week of league play, swimming began last night, and handball starts next week. Earl Riskey informs us that play should run pretty smoothly in these sports regardless of weather conditions unless the Sports Building develops a few leaks in its roof. An eight team intramural hockey league has been formed to accommodate the amateur pucksters on the campus. Four games 's will be played every Monday night in the Coliseum starting on November 26. Wolverine hockey players John Matchefts and John McKennell will do the police work to make sure a certain amount of order prevails on the ice. Attention all you lovely co-eds. Earl Riskey announces that due to the success of past co-recreation nights the program has been expanded to include bowling and golf. Added to volleyball, badminton ~ and swimming, this makes for a versatile program for interested parties. Friday night is the time alloted for these festivities. Too Much Volleyball? IF YOU THINK that your instructor is a creep, saunter down to the Sports Building before drawing any hasty conclusions. Chances are he is an enthusiastic participant on one of the 16 faculty depart- ment teams. These faculty boys do just about everything in the way of intramural sports. Right now they are deeply involved in a vol- leyball tournament, and pretty soon handball will be on the agenda. Speaking of handball, there's a last call out for all handball and paddleball doubles entrants. The schedules are due to be arranged the last of the week, according to High Commissioner Earl Riskey, and late-comers further complicate the scheduling process. { Quarterback, Bob Burson Pass Threat Alert Aerial Def ense Stressed in Practice A couple of strong incentives to whip invading thrice-beaten Northwestern Saturday spurred Michigan's Wolverines as they sloshed -around rain-soaked Ferry Field in a long workout yesterday. The Wolverines are eyeing a convincing comeback from suc- cessive setbacks at the hands of Illinois and Cornell, and if they are successful, they will also have taken a big stride toward saving the Maize and Blue from a ques- tionable season. . , MICHIGAN still has a chance to at least share the Big Ten title, providing it beats the Wildcats and Ohio State, while either North- western or the Buckeyes beat Illi- nois. Ohio plays host to Illinois this weekend, and observers figure the Buckeyes are due for a good performance. Last year the same seemingly hopeless situation prevailed -- Michigan needed two wins and an Illinois loss for a champion- ship - but Northwestern upset the Champaign team and the Wolverines grabbed the title by beating OSU in the last game of the season. The pressure is on Michigan, though, for Northwestern will come to. Ann Arbor- strictly as a spoiler underdog, having already been knocked out of the league race with three defeats in its last three games with Purdue, Ohio State, and Wisconsin. The Wild- cats manager to whip Minnesota for their only Conference victory. THE BIG consideration in stop- ping the Wildcats appears to be quarterback Bob Burson. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan respects Bur- son's passing prowess and the catching talents of ends Norm Kragseth and Bill Kuehl. Yesterday's drill devoted much time to pass defense, with Dave Tinkham, Don Oldham, and Bill Putich in their familiar role as defenders. Offensively, the Michigan coach- + es worked with backs and ends for + some time to prevent a repetition I of the four pass interceptions by < Cornell last week. t {it[ [; .f Scribes Pick Tim Green Top M' Player of Week I --Daily-Jack Bergstrom, ALERT DEFENSE-The Wolverines may have picked ups some valuable defen-ive pointers from the sound defense it ran into last week at Cornell, which they will be trying to imitate in this Saturday's tilt With Northwestern. Above, Reg Marchant is shown returning one of Bill Putich's intercepted pass- es from the Michigan 20-,yard line to the one early in the last quarter to set up' the last Big Red touchdown. By HERB COHEN Cornell's 20-7 win over Michigan last Saturday was certainly not encouraging, but one bright spot in the Wolverine picture was the continued brilliance of Merritt Green. The. Michigan junior and Cor- nell's Jackie Jaeckel were selected by the sportswriters who choose the "player of the week" for this newspaper. GREEN WAS named for his out- standing defensive play on the Wolverine line. He was one of the few Michi- gan players who performed at their accustomed level. When he recovered a Cornell fumble on the Big Red 43-yard line, he gave only more evidence of his tremendous team spirit and al laround drive. Green, known as "Tim" to al- most all his friends, won the Mey- er W. Morton trophy last sharing as the most improved player on the Michigan squad. His superior tackling ability and his knack for doping out opponent's p l a y s brought on many favorable words from the Wolverine coaching staff. JAECKEL, SUBBING for Rocco Calvo, quarterbacked the Big Red extremely well. Calvo, Cornell's regular field ,general, and one of the leading passers in the nation, was forced to sit out most of the game be- cause of an arm injury. Jaeckel more than stepped in and filled This shoes. He ran the Cornell team with a steady, non- erring, and at times even master. ful hand. THROUGHOUT THE first half, hen Cornell seemed to be im- pressed with the '"Wolverine press notices, Jaeckel applied a firm and conservative plan to his signal calling. But when the Big Red finally discovered that Michigan was not as powerful as their press advances, Jaeckel decided to get a little more daring. in his play calling. With strategic pass plays click- ing for regular gains Cornell grad-" ually pulled even and then ahead of the ragged playing Wolverines. All in all Jaeckel evenly bal- anced the Big Red attack and completed nine out of 16 attempt- ed passes for 133 yards. The Ivy Leaguers gained an almost identi- cal total of 135 yards on the. ground. Lff Yolleyball SAE 6, Kappa Alpha Psi 0 ZBT 5, Sigma Pi 1 SAM 6, Alpha Delta Phi 0 , Phi Delta Theta 6, Chi Psi 0 DU 6, Tau Delta. Phi 0 Kappa Sigma 6, Omega Psi Phi 0 Pi Lambda Phi 6, Trigon 0 Delta Chi 5, Psi Upsilon 1 Beta Theta Pi 6, Phi Kappa Sigma 0 Alpha Sigma Phi 6, DKE 0 Sigma Chi 5, Phi Kappa Psi I Delta Sigma Pi 4, Chi Phi 2 PRO FRATERNITY :FINALIST'S: Delta 1 Sigs Score EN'Victories Bob Carry passed for twenty i Sigma Delta, 13-6 victors over Psi Dora Dodds and Hal Hansen to points in a 26-0 rout of Alpha Omega, in the finals. tie Delta Chi, 13-13, at the end Kappa Kappa yesterday to pilot x of the regulation 40 minutes. the Law Club A' team into the THE LAW CLUB aerial artist! George Owens had held on to final round of the first place pro- threw touchdown tosses to Gran- two 30-yard heaves from Bob fessional fraternity playoffs. ger Cook, Dave Dowd and Del' Hastings for the Delta Chi The Lawyers will meet Delta Reamon, while completing 12 of markers. -- ---- _ _, 20 attempts. He also hit Cook in i In the four' overtime thrusts at the end zone for the two extra McCall, George ? points. Dick Elliott intercepted the line Delta Tau Delta wound up with a minus one yard net, and an Alpha Kappa Kappa pass and Delta Chi failed with a minus Linemen .o f Week scampered 30 yards for the other l seven. score; _ I A Read and Ilse Daily Classifieds JOIN THE FUN OF WINTER SPORTS WITH NEW YORK (A) - A Pacific, coast giant and a stalwart from the South-a pair of young men to gladden the heart of a college coach and cause a professional coach to reach for his fountain pen - were named yesterday as the Associated Press linemen of the week. They're big Bill McColl, Stan- ford's unstoppable end, and tackle Bill George of the. Wake Forest Deacons, who looked more like a demon to Duke last Saturday. Mc- Coll's pass-catching in the Coast's game of the day won him the best offensive player ranking while George was named tops defensive. I Ed Garrison ran a kickoff back 50 yards to move the Delta Sigs into the final clash. Garrison's dash came seconds after Psi Omega's Roger Wall had knotted the count at 6-all by gath- ering in a 35-yard pass from Bob Reed. A five-yard Joe Ponsetto to Harvey Schields throw accounted { for Delta Sig's first tally. Hal ' Steele added the extra point. DELTA TAU DELTA and Sigma Phi moved into the final round of the second place fraternity play- offs by virtue of close triumphs in the Ferry Field rain and mud. Bill Matthews threw pay dirt passes of 30 and five yards to SIGMA PIII scored its three touchdowns in three different ways I while defeating SAE, 21-12. Don I Johnson counted with the first on a 20-yard throw from Jack White, Bruce Bradshaw churned 15 yards over tackle for the second touch- down, and Chuck Van Deusen ran { 30 yards with an intercepted pass ' for the third six-pointer. Chi Psi slipped into the finals of the third place fraternity playoffs by eking out a 2-0 win over Kappa Sigma. With the Kappa Sigs deep in their own territory Don Mitchell took a 'pass from center in the, end zone and fell into the goo for the safety. coc. M. BALANCED SKATES r. a soft touch in washable sport shirts i . G-E engineers developed this portable steering unit which enables Navy ships to be steered from any of several widely separatFd strategic positionj. AA e s1195 up FIGURE OUTFITS HOCKEY OUTFITS $1095 up Aloe fl ort H PROLD S. TRICK' .48]alA ii V button clown, Winsocki, button down in Vauffeusell Oxfords REG. T. M. ... and it's away you go looking casual. . . feeling comfortable in your new Van Heusen button-down Oxford. Soft, long-wearing fabric .. . freedom tailoring .. , tradi- tional college -smartness- Only Van Heusen Oxfords give you all these! ±4.50 Ideas from college graduates at General Electric are helping U. S. mobilization ,r Fine cotton with a touch of rayon, gives Bifleclub the soft feel of fine French flannel. But because it's Sanforized and vat-dyed it's a washable whiz--won't shrink, won't fade. The sparkling colors in plaids, checks, and stripes are in for keeps. Add to the above the nuclear-powered aircraft engine that General Electric is developing for the Air Force ... turbosuperchargers ... guided missiles ... radar .. . the plutonium-producing reactors which the Company operates at Hanford, Washington for the Atomic Energy Commission. Ihto vital national projects like these are going the efforts of hundreds of scientists, engineers, chemists, physicists and other colleze graduates who are makinL, asked to contribute to so many of these projects. The Company has prided itself on building an outstanding engineering, technical and business organization, one that can take the toughest problems and master them, one that can be a steady source of new ideas. Young people from American colleges and universi- ties, their skills and talents further developed through G-E training courses and rotational job programs, are fnrmintr the rare of that nronn;tiar;,,., aria - A-