PAGE SIX I THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16. 1951 I THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 16. 1951 G Wolverine, RID ROUNDUP: Unbeaten Marks at Stakej In Three Saturday Tilts Wildcat IV Squa ds To Battle o da NEW YORK -(R)-Saturday's principal football explosions-four of them-will occur at Palo Alto, Calif.; Columbus, Ohio; Austin, Texas, and Oxford, Miss. All four are guaranteed to be loud and laden with flying bodies. * *? * POSSIBLY outstanding is the clash at Palo Alto between Stan- ford's all-victorious Indians and Oregon State's fast-coming young Beavers, with the West Coast's Rose Bowl bid at stake. The In- dians, winners over Southern Cali- fornia in one of last week's most thrilling duels, can clinch the prize by posting their ninth straight triumph. At Columbus, one of the na- tion's true hotbeds of football, Johnny Karras and his unbeaten Illinois teammates tie into Ohio State's Buckeyes in an annual Midwest classic. If the Illini racks up its eighth in.a row it will automatically, become the challenging team in the Rose Bowl. Down in Austin the surprising Texas Christian Horned Frogs, winners of three straight South- west Conference games, bang into the Texas Longhorns, who got their lumps last week from Baylor. AT OXFORD, deep in the Old South, Mississippi's hot-and-cold warriors are preparing what they hope will prove a painful ambush for the all-conquering volunteers of Tennessee. Old Miss capped an otherwise ordinary record by battering a tough Auburn team, 39-14, last week. Those are the top four, the games which will have the most bearing on the make-up of the New Year's Day contests, but there are plenty of others of high sectional voltage as the 1951 season nears its close. For instance, vying for the in- terest of Southern fans is the an- nual struggle between Georgia Tech and Alabama at Birming- Due to lack of entries the All- Campus handball doubles tour- nament has.been postponed un- til' Tuesday, November 20th. E n t r i e s will be accepted through Monday at the I-M of- fice. -Bud Turner ham. Unbeaten, once-tied Tech already has accepted a bid to the Orange Bowl at Miami. In the Crimson Tide it faces- a rebound- ing team which has won its last three. IN THE EAST the day's big noise will emanate from the 74th annual meeting between the sup- ercharged Princeton Tigers and Yale's somewhat bedraggled Bull- dogs at Princeton. Varsity Grid Squad Ends Ucav Drlls Coach Bennie Oosterbaan hopes he has his Wolverine grid charges ready to rebound against North- western's Wildcats tomorrow as he completed the week's heavy duty practice sessions with yesterday's drills. The Maize and Blue squad will have to be up for this contest be- cause they will be meeting a North- western team that has dropped three games in a row, and will be even more eager to regain their winning ways. FRESH IN THE minds of the Michigan men is last week's defeat at the hands of an equally victory hungry and fired up Cornell team that had two consecutive defeats behind them. Of great concern to the Wild- cats is that their three losses have all been in Conference play in which they have a 1-3 record. This is the exact reverse of the Wolverines' Big Ten record but oddly enough the teams have identical 3-4 overall won and lost results. The Wildcats have attempted an average of 27 passes per game this season but even though they have completed only a third of these at- tempts the Wolverines have been made pass conscious and aware of the talents of quarterback . Bob Burson throughout the week's drills that as usual emphasized pass defense. ON THE offensive side, Frank Howell is expected to see quite a bit of action tomorrow as he re- turns to the righthalf post he held before his ankle injury. The diminutive Wes Brad- ford will probably start at that position but will undoubtedly re- linquish much of his duties to Howell from whom he inherited the job after the latter was side- lined. In general the team is some- what patched up but there should be no significant injuries still evi- dent by gametime. Lowell Perry will be back in action and Merritt Green and Roger Zatkoff will be ready though not in the best of shape. The Wildcats are expected to ar- rive from Evanston today aid stay in Dearborn overnight. Michigan Eleven to Attempt To Finish Above.500 Mark 'M' Gridders Passing Attack Bolstered By Addition of Kress, Eaddy in Backfield Michigan Harriers Travel To Chicago for Big Ten Run Wisconsin, Spartans Co-Favorites; Wolverines Minus McEwen, Gordon A *. By HERB NEIL Michigan's Junior Varsity will be out to make its first season in three years a winning one when it meets Northwestern's Jayvees at 3:00 this afternoon on Ferry Field. Winners in two of its four games to date the Wolverines can finish above the .500 mark with a victory over the Wildcats. Michi- gan has won its alternate games, beating Marquette in the opener, Robinson plans to start Kress at the left halfback position, while Eaddy will fill in where he is needed in the backfield. With both Kress and Eaddy available the Michigan passing attack should be quite potent, with quarterback Mark Scarr and fullback Dick Balzhiser sup- plementing them in the aerial department. Coach Robinson will also have additional line power with tackle Art Walker, who has appeared in a number of varsity games, sched- uled to play with the Jayvees. With guards Jim Wagner and Ron Williams and tackle Bob Milligan set for Northwestrn the middle of the Junior Varsity line pr6mis- es to make things tough for any Wildcat thrusts through the cen- ter. U U A STICKLER: Unexpected guests-nothing to drink in the house-what to do? A Su gestion: Drive to and through- The Northwestern Junior Var- sity comes to town with a passing attack to match the Wolverines'. Don Rondou, who has been used quite extensively in a number of Northwestern's varsity games, is expected to play with the Wild- cat Jayvees this afternoon. He has completed five passes for 50 yards in his varsity appearances. Northwestern's ground attack is led by halfbacks Nick Chandler JOHN WAGNER r and Dick Ranicke and fullback --sturdy freshman guard Mike Skemp. *F * :* STARTING LINEUPS 26-21, and Michigan State, in its Northwestern Pos. Michigan third game, 7-6, while losing to the Chochron .......LE............Topp Spartans, its second opponent, 20- Middeton .......LG....... Williams 7, and Miami of Ohio, 21-13, in its McDonald ........C..........Bowers last game. Kachaturoff ....RG......... Wagner DeLavel ........RT........ Milligan THE JAYVEES will have added askin.........RE.......... Dutter strength this afternoon with the Vanek .......,...QB...........scarr Chandler ........LH-........... Kress appearance of Ted Kress and Don Ranicke.........RH.......... Hickey Eaddy in the lineup. Coach Don skemp ..........FB........ Balzhiser ATO Staves Of f Phi Gam Bid In Final Minutes To Win, 13-6 By ERIC VETTER A desperate goal line stand in the final minutes of play by ATO yesterday stopped a determined Phi Gamma Delta scoring bid and brought the ATO's a 13-6 win and the right to meet Sigma Chi next week for the fraternity championship. Faced with stopping the Phi Gam's, who had a first down on the one yard line, the ATO 2-5 defense broke up three short passes by Joe Middleton and then stopped Middleton on a left end sweep on the one to take the ball over with thirty five seconds remaining. * * * * THE GAME, A REMATCH for the team who played to a scoreless tie last week in a blizzard, started fast. Howard Maturen, the big gun in the ATO attack, threw two successful passes after the opening kick- off to move the ball to the Phi Gam ten. On second down, Maturen pitched to John McIntyre for a score and then ran the ball over for the extra point. A third down pass by Middleton from the eleven to Chuck Murray, who went high in the end zone to nab it, brought the Phi Gam's their acore. Shortly latter Middleton was stopped on the one after running the ball from the ATO fifteen on forth down. Don Weir took a fifteen yard pass from Maturen for the ATO second score after Bud Richner set it up on a 30 yard pass from Maturen. DON McEWEN . . . unable to defend title MacDougald, Mays Chosen Best Rookies NEW YORK -(P)- Gil Mac- Dougald of the New York Yankees and Willie Mays of the New York' Giants today were named Ameri- can and National League "Rookies of the Year" by a 24-man commit- tee of the Baseball Writers Associ- ation of America. MacDougald's selection over Or- estes (Minnie) Minoso of the Chi- cago White.Sox, 13-11, was some- what of a surprise. Minoso out- hit the Yankee second baseman- third baseman .326 to .306 and led the league with 14 triples and 31 stolen bases. Centerfielder Mays of the pen- nant-winning Giants drew the ex- pected overwhelming vote despite his late season slump. The 20- year-old from Birmingham, Ala., had 18 votes. Chet Nichols, Bos- ton's flashy southpaw pitcher, had four votes and Clem Labine, Brooklyn righthander, had two. With MacDougald and Mays as top rookies and Yankee Yogi Ber- ra and Brooklyn's Roy Campan- ella most valuable, the three New York teams swept all -the honors. MacDougald's feat of being the only member of the World Cham- pion Yanks to hit over .300 at- tracted much attention to the 22- year-old freshman. By DICK LEWIS The Wolverines cross-country squad shoots for its first Big Ten Championship since 1922 today, but chances of coming out on top in the Western Conference meet in Chicago appear slim for the Michigan seven. Clear skies and temperatures ranging from forty to fifty-de- grees are predicted for the 37th annual renewal to be held at Washington Park this morning at 11 a.m. * *~ * WISCONSIN, WHO has won the event 15 times and the last three years in succession, and Michigan State, who finished a close second to the Badgers in the 1950 compe- t4tion, loom as co-favorites. Both Michigan and Indiana are accord- ed outside chances of emerging on the long end of the score. Individual honors shape up as a duel between Purdue'sFin- ish flyer, Dennis Johannsen, and Walter Deike of Wisconsin, who finished t h i r d behind Michigan's Don McEwen last year. Seven harriers, among them three freshmen, will be attempting to better Michigan's -fourth place showing in last year's four-mile marathon. THE BIG GUNS of the Maize and Blue figure to be juniors Bob Guise and Delance Hyde. These two finished 16th and 17th re- spectively in the 1950 renewal. Sophomore speedster John Ross is also given a good chance of fin- ishing among the top ten. Michigan's title dreams are seriously clouded, however, by the loss of veterans McEwen and Aaron Gordon, both of whom. placed in the 1950 endurance test. McEwen, currently hobbled by a foot injury, won the event by 200 yards last year for the secony time in a row. He turned in the world's four-mile record time of 19:34.1, an effort which chopped off a full ten seconds from his 1949 winning time. GORDON PLACED fifth on the Wolverine unit last year, but has dropped all cross-country activity for the remainder of the cam- paign. Bill Hickman, 26th in the 1950 meet, and the three freshmen, John Moule, Geoffrey Dooley and Alan Lubina round out the seven man aggregation which will bear the Michigan colors today. These yearly hill-and-dale fes- tivities date back to 1908 in Chi- cago when Nebraska garnered the team championship and the indi- vidual winner was Walt Comstock of the University of Chicago, in the slow time of 28:12. THE MAIZE AND Blue's sole title laurels were achieved in 1922 at Lafayette, Indiana, when the Wolverine harriers scored a low point total of 41. E. R. Isbell of Michigan won the race in 26:33.2. Purdue holds the team record of 26 points which was turned in at Washington Park in 1943, and the record for a course oth- er than the Chicago route is held by G-man Fred Wilt of In- diana. In 1941, Wilt toured the course at West Lafayette in 21:01.5. Although old man injury has curtailed McEwen's chances for gaining championship h o n o r s three years in a row, the Michigan great may console himself with the fact that only one other Midwestern distance runner ever captured the race for three suc- cessive years. This Trojan was one F. O. Wat- son of Minnesota who took the title from 1913-15. Intramural Scores FOOTBALL Sigma Phi 13, Delta Tau Delta 7 Chi Psi 12, Phi Sigma Delta 0 Rumpats 16, Roger Williams 13 MCF defeated Royals (forfeit) VOLLEYBALL Winchell 4, Tyler 2 Adams 6, Kelsey 0 Hayden 6, Huber 0 Green 6, Anderson 0 Allen Rumsey 3, Taylor 3 Chicago 4, Gomberg 2 Strauss 5, Fletcher 1 Hinsdale 6, Michigan 0 Williams 5, Prescott 1 Delta Sigma Phi 5, Delta Chi 1 MCF 6, Michigan Co-op 0 Hawaiian A 6, ASPA 0 LATE HOCKEY SCORE Detroit 3, Chicago 1 s { OJ 1t * BEER * WINE # MIXER 114 E. Williamsl Phone 7191 Open daily 10 to 10, Sunday 12 to 7 'M' FARM SYSTEM? Heyliger Directs Junior Hockey Loop k I By JIM PARKER Vic Heyliger, a man who has been very busy in recent years coaching Michigan hockey teams to national honors, is spreading his talents to the younger set now. The genial Wolverine mentor is heading a group of interested per- sons in the formation of a junior hockey league in Ann Arbor to be composed of boys in the 15-year- old and under age groups. THE FIRST STEPS in the or- ganization of the new league will be undertaken this evening at the Michigan Ice Rink at 7:30. Hey- liger is hoping that all boys inter- ested in the program along with their parents attend the meeting so that a thorough discussion of the plan can be made with them. A short scrimmage between members of the Michigan var- sity team is planned as a feature of general interest for the young DA V IDS ON N 5 U.S. PAT. No. Ss2550334 A WONDERFUL - EWIDEA McCoy Heads West To Scout Stanford for Big Ten Teams By PAUL GREENBERG Ernie McCoy, head of the Mich- igan scouting staff has embarked on a trip to Palo Alto California to scout Stanford for this year's Rose Bowl contest. The information that McCoy is seeking will be of no direct value to Michigan since no matter what happens in the rest of this season, the Wolverines are ineligible for participation in the New Years Day spectacle. The theory is that McCoy's trip was authorized by the Big Ten headquarters in Chi- cago. McCOY, ONE of the leading scouts in the Western Conference and the nation was the logical choice for gathering important information for the big intersec- tional game, especially since he has already observed Stanford a regular season opponent of Mich- igan. Involved in the scouting trip is an unusual tale of turn about. Last year Coach Oosterbaan was forced to rely on Illinois scouts for his information about Cali- fornia since the 'M' brain trust didn't think our conference chances were bright enough to warrant a scouting expedition. If the Big Ten standings remain as they are now at the time of this writing McCoy will have the op- portunity to return the favor to the Illini and perhaps aid them to defeat Stanford at Pasadena.. The whole situation gives a wonderful picture of brotherly love in the Big Ten. The only thing that mars the scene is the prob- lem asking whether or not the Michigan basketball team, now in its fifth week of practice will suf- fer as much as the Illinois foot- ball team will benefit from\ Mc- Coy's western trip. ice enthusiasts and their par- ents. After the varsity workout, Hey- liger intends to discuss the age re- quirements, the matter of equip- ment for the junior-sized players, the times the hockey rink will be available for use, and the general objectives and advantages of the program. * * * THE WAY PLANS are now laid out the league will be divided into three groups arranged according to age. Boys in the 13 to 15 year- old group will play in the "Mid- get" division, eleven to 13 year- olds in the "Pee Wee" class and those eleven and under will com- pete in the "Bantam" division. The youngsters will be assured of first-class coaching. Ex-Wolver- ine stars such as former goalies Jack McDonald and Jack MacIn- nes, last year's lineman Al Bassey along with Dan Quirk, a Michigan great back in the early twenties and now mayor of Ypsilanti, will all be on hand to teach the game to the boys. Practice sessions will be held at the Coliseum during its inactive hours or on outside rinks when the weather permits. I GOT A DATE? 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