p SATURDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1951 TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Quintet Opposes chippewas on ig ht t- 'M' Seeks Fifth Straight Over Central Michigan (Continued from Page 1) the. Chippewas, which dates back to 1927. That year the Maize and Blue won 42-20, then between 1943 and 1945 Michigan captured 51- 28, 39-27, and 68-45 decisions. THE WOLVERINES are hopeful of a running start in their attempt to improve on its basement finish in the conference last year. The Wolverines won only three confer- ence games out of 14 for the poor- JIM DOYLE . . . chippewa chieftain - * est season in 33 years. The Wol- verines won seven of 22 games for the worst season since 1918 when they lost all ten conference games and won six of 18 games overall. Michigan Central is led by Captain and forward Jim Doyle, who is the highest scorer in the school's history. Doyle has col- lected 708 points in three years to average 265 tallies each cam- paign. Teaming with Doyle at forward will be Harry Moore, a 6'1" senior from Wyandotte. * * *. THE CENTER will be either freshman Jerry Knoll, who col- lected 23 points against Alma Tuesday night, or senior Bill Webb, who played the pivot position dur- ing the last half of the 1950-51 season. The back court will be covered by Dick Parfitt and Duane Gra- ham. Graham is the team's long- shot artist. Dedication ceremonies at to- night's game will climax more than two years of planning and construction of the Chippewas' new $1,200,000 physical education building. The college president, Dr. C. L. Anspach, will speak at halftime. Michigan is idle after the Cen- tral Michigan game until Decem- ber 17 when the Wolverines open their home season against Butler University. Michigan opens its 14- game Big Ten campaign Jan. 5 against Indiana at Bloomington, Ind. This year Michigan's home games will begin at 8:00 p.m., one- half hour later than last season. BASKETBALL SCHEDULE DECEMBER- 1-Sat., Central Michigan, there 17-Monday BUTLER, HERE 20-Thur., PENNSYLVANIA, HERE 22-Saturday, COLORADO, HERE 27-Thursday, Penn State, there 28-Friday, Pittsburgh, there JANUARY- 1-Tuesday, PRINCETON, HERE ** 5-Saturday, Indiana, there ** 7-Monday, IOWA, HERE **12-Saturday, ILLINOIS, HERE **14-Monday, Minnesota, there **19-Saturday, MSC, HERE **21-Mon., NORTHWEST'RN, HERE FEBRUARY- ** 2-Saturday, Marquette, there ** 9-Saturday, Northwestern, there **11-Monday, Iowa, there **16-Saturday, MINNESOTA, HERE **18--Monday, WISCONSIN, HERE **23--Saturday, Ohio State, there **25-Monday, Wisconsin, there MARCH- ** 1-Sat., Michigan State, there ** 3-Monday, PURDUE, HERE **Denotes Big Ten conference games. Bartell To Get TigerContract DETROIT-(P)-General man- ager Charles Gehringer said yes- terday that Dick Bartell will be tendered a contract as a coach for the Detroit Tigers for the 11 season. Thus was ended rumors that the fiery Bartell would be fired. Bartell has been third base coach for three years for the Ti- gers. He is 44. Rumors had persisted in base- ball circles here for weeks that Charley Keller, who retired as an active player at the end of the 1951 season, or Joyner (Jo-Jo) White, former Tiger outfielder, would succeed Bartell. There were rumors of player dissatisfaction with Bartell. Gehringer said: "I have always felt that it was a manager's privi- lege to name his own coaching staff." ORPHEUM Phone 5651 ONE WEEK STARTING MONDAY * Tales of Hoffman *. .. telor by TECHNICOO ~M9rrnMOIA IAR All Seats Reserved Matinees at 2:30 Eves, at 8 P.M. Seats 1.20-1.80-2.40 STUDENTS $1.00 Tickets On Sale Now Teams Vie For Vacant BowlSpots NEW YORK-(AP)-College foot- ball has its last big fling of a troubled season today with two major bowl berths up for grabs and enough traditional games to keep the fans happy. The colorful Army-Navy spec- tacle in Philadelphia and the Notre Dame-Southern California clash at Los Angeles will offer an unprecedented football feast to television viewers from coast to coast. * * * ARMY AND NAVY start bump- ing heads at 12:30 p.m. (CST), and at 4 p.m. (CST) the fighting Irish and the far western Trojans will pick up the ball. Both of these expected thrill- ers and the pre-game pomp and pageantry will be flashed across the nation by NBC. Housewives around the country are going to find it difficult to move their hubbies out of the living room. It's in the Southwest, however, where the bowls are going to be filled. The wacky Southwest con- ference race goes down to the wire with two key games. Southern Methodist vs. Texas Christian at Ft. Worth and Baylor vs. Rice at Houston. TO THE CHAMPION will go the lucrative Cotton Bowl position against Kentucky at Dallas. The runner-up may get a shot at un- defeated Georgia Tech in the Orange Bowl at Miami. TCU is favored by 6/2 points. A crowd of 33,000 is anticipated. Baylor, ninth-ranked nationally, is favored by 6/ points for the Houston clash which will lure some 55,000 customers. * * * DESPITE THE dismal records of Army (2-6) and Navy (1-1-6), more than 100,000 spectators will jam their way into mammoth Municipal stadium for the 52nd game between the service schools. Navy is favored by eight points. Southern California (7-3) is a 7-point choice to down Notre Dame (6-2-1). Some 50,000 fans wil pay their way into the coliseum for the 23rd meeting of these per- ennial grid powers. THERE ARE a flock of other traditional tilts on the national menu and you can look for some upsets from the bunch. These include Tennessee-Vanderbilt, Georgia-Georgia Tech, Oklahoma- Oklahoma A & M, Missouri-Kan- sas, Alabama-Auburn, Tulane- Louisiana State and Mississippi- Mississippi State. Tennessee, the nation's no. 1 team which meets Maryland in the Sugar Bowl, is a 26-point choice over Vanderbilt. Georgia Tech, ranked sixth na- tionally, is only a 7/2-point choice over Georgia for their Atlanta meeting. Don Hurst Named Head Cheerleader Don Hurst ('53E) of Marquette was elected head cheerleader and Duncan Erley ('52E) of Chicago assistant cheerleader for 1952-53 at a meeting of cheerleaders yes- terday. Both are gymnasts. Formal installation will take place at a December 10 banquet. PHILADELPHIA - (P) - Those glamorized "orphans" of the 1951 football season, Army and Navy, clash in vast municipal stadium today with only the President of the United States missing from the pageantry that marks this 52- year-old service spectacle. President Truman declined to cut short a Florida vacation to watch these bitter antagonists of the military and naval academies, each beaten six times, wrangle for the year's consolation honors. * * * NEVERTHELESS, a crowd of 101,000, including many other gov- ernment dignitaries and ranking officers of the armed forces, will jam into the giant horseshoe for the great autumn show. Millions of others will view the conflict on a coast-to-coast television network (NBC), start- ing at 11:15 a.m. (CST) so as to catch the colorful pre-game parade of cadets and middies. Kickoff time is 12:30 P.M. (CST). Navy, fielding the bulk of the team that stunned one of Army's mightiest elevens a year ago, en- ters the fray an 8-point favorite, but tradition has taught that this is a game that frequently defies odds. * * * SINCE 1950, Army's once-pow- erful legions have been wrecked by an exam-cribbing scandal that caused the dismissal of 90 cadets, including virtually the entire foot- ball squad. Coach Earl (Red) TRADITIONAL CONTESTS: Army-Navy, Irish-Trojans Clash Today_ i i Blaik has been forced to try to rebuild the structure with inex- periended plebes and B-squad members. "Navy is better than we are at every position," Blaik said today, shortly before sending his light squad through warmup paces at the stadium. He indi- cated the Cadets would try to hold their own through flaming spirit and the element of sur- prise. Navy is a lumbering giant of a ball club that only once this sea- son has measured up to its poten- Applicants are needed to fill positions as junior and sopho- more hockey managers. Those interested report to the Coli- seum at 3:00 p.m. Monday. -Chuck Hyman tial. That was in its last game, a 21-7 victory over Columbia and the only triumph in eight starts. ARMY ALSO beat Columbia, 14- 9, and there are two other games that are a basis for comparisons. Northwestern whipped Army, 20- 14, and defeated Navy, 16-7. Penn throttled Navy, 14-0, while just squeezing past Army, 7-6. Army's only other victory this season was over The Citadel, 27-6, while Navy tied Yale, 7-7, in the opening game. "Army has come along fast and I was surprised the way it stopped Penn's r u n n i n g attack," said M~att Mann Chosen as Coach, Of Olympic Swimming Team a GR R OSOR S(O.C Navy's coach Eddie Erdelatz. "We know we are in for a tough game." Navy's 42-man squad arrived at Municipal Stadium shortly before noon and went through a light workout. It was quartered over- night at a golf club in Clementon, N.J. The Cadets, who came by bus and train, were quartered in sub- urban Oreland. LOS ANGELES-Those famous old rivals in college football, Notre Dame and Southern California, both yearning for the power and the glory they once knew, hook up for the 23rd time today in a game that features more tradition than talent. If tradition is to be served, the struggle will produce its tin- gling moments, just as did most of the other contests spanning a quarter of a century. * * * ' AND WHILE the old timers to- day harked back to the thrills of the epic 16-14 win by USC in 1931, and the fact that seven of the 22 engagements have been decided by one or two slim points, present day supporters of the Irish and the Trojans, and doubtless the Irish and Trojans themselves, have an immediate objective. Briefly, that is to climax 'heir so-so 1951 season with a final triumph. Notre Dame, with a young squad that lists 15 freshmen and a dozen sophomores, has done as well as Coach Frank Leahy expected. They have lost but two games and tied one. ** * THE MORE seasoned Trojans, after a roaring start, have drop- ped their last two games. They are 7-point favorites tomorrow. In any event, some 50,000 people -which would be the smallest turnout ever to witness the Notre Dame-USC game here since 55.000 appeared for the 1934 contest- are expected to assemble in Me- morial Coliseum. Baylor Coach Denies Charge Of I ___lPlay DALLAS -(P)-- The Southern Methodist University campus newspaper charged yesterday that Baylor played "dirty football" against SMU last Saturday, but Baylor coach George Sauer said "there was no intention of any Baylor or SMU player to deliber- ately injure another." Sauer declared emphatically that "it was not a dirty football game. There might have been some late tackling or blocking be- cause of the slow whistles. "You can't play a game this late in the race when tempers are frayed by the long hard campaign and the championship is being de- cided, without getting riled up oc- casionally," he said. Weekdays 44c to 5 P.M. Sun. & Eves. 65c (incl. Tax) Continuous from 1 P.M, CLASSIFIFDS I FOR RENT MICH IGAN DAILY ROOMS & SUITES for men for those Phone 23-24-1 who'll appreciate congenial landlady. HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. On campus. Call before 4 p.m. 2-0542. )liF CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING )lilNEy'ERV _CE RATES BUSINESS SERVICES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS TYPEWRITERS and Fountain Pens -- 2 .54 1.21 1.76 Sales, rentals, and service. Mrril's, 3 .63 1.60 2.65 314 S. State St. )3B 4 .81 2.02 3.53 TYPEWRITER Repair Service and Rent- Figure 5 average words to a line. als at Office Equipment Co. 215 E. Classified deadline daily except Liberty. )4B Saturday is 3 P.M. Saturdays, 11:30 A.M. for Sunday Issue. EXPERT TYPING. Reasonable rates. 329 S. Main. Phone 3-4133 or 29092 eves LOST AND FOUND ings. )8B L_____A___FUND WASHING--Finished work, and hand FOUND-Glasses. E Univ. opposite high ironing. Ruf dry and wet washing. school. Glen Omans, 210 Tyler E.Q. Also ironing separately. Free pick-up )62L and delivery. Phone 2-9020. )5B FOR SALE PERSONAL TWO FORMALS-One white, one yellow. MODERN Beauty Shop - Special on Size 10, worn once. Call 5617 after 4 creme oil permanents-machine, ma- o'clock. )81 chineless or cold wave, $5.00, shampoo - and set with cream rinse $1.00.fHair- 149 CROSLEY-Good condition. Will cut $1.00. Phone 8100. )13P finance at about $15 per month. First payment in January, call 2-5628. STOP SNOW - SAVE DOUGH after 6 p.m. call Dexter 4558. )84 I have a supply of Nationally Adver- tised $65 Gabardine Storm Coats - BABY PARAKEETS or budgies, canaries. Student price only $44. Displayed at bird supplies and cages. Open 1 to 7 721 N. "U" or call 3-8302. )23P p.m. 562 S. Seventh St. Phone 5330. ___ )4_HELP WANTED STUDENTS! An organization that cov- GROUP WORKER - Some secretarial ers five states presents diamond rings ability, interesting work with student at prices designed for you. Let me group. Hillel Foundation. Ph. 3-4129. show you how to save up to 50% on )33H the BEST QUALITY STONES. Phone_______________ 2-1809 evenings. L. E. Anger. )5P RECEPTIONIST-Typing and bookkeep- ing necessary. State Street location. A-2 FLIGHT JACKET-Genuine horse- Apply Box No. 1, Michigan Daily. )38H hide front quarter, knit cuffs, zipper- front, leather epaulettes, $22.50. Sam's WANTED-Four undergraduate students Store, 122 E. Wash. Open Mon. 'til 9 to work for meals in fraternity. Call p.n. )3 Kim 2-5696 after 5. )37H MEN'S SUIT and sport jacket, size 36, POSITION OPEN for private secretary like new, and GE electric roaster. to president. Experience necessary, 2-9259. )87 good starting wage, 5 day week, vaca- - tion and sick leaves. Call Mr. Larson, 3 CAMERAS-Unifiex f:5.6; Voightlander Airlines Terminal Corp., Ypsi 3220. Brilliants f:4.5 and f:7.7. Ph. 5700 )88 )40H ROOMS FOR RENT THE ANN ARBOR Model Railroad Club needs members. For information call STUDENT to share apartment with 2-0930 or 2-6226 after 6:00 p.m. )39H Grad. students. Modern kitchen, gas heat, continuous hot water. Student MISCELLANEOUS landlord. Call 3-1791 before 10:30 a.m. 27R WANTED BOARDERS-Lunch and din- _________________- - ners-Rates $1.75 a day. P. 8301, CAMPUS TOURIST HOME-Rooms by 82 Tappan. )12M day or week. Bath, shower, television 518 E. William St. Phone 3-8454. )2R Any Day Now METAMORPHOSIS with APARTMENT for men. Two rooms, fur- Dana Elcar, Pat Newhall, Bette Ellis nished, modern kitchen, utilities in- )1 cluded, $75.00. Call 2-9410 or 2-7108. )12R TRANSPORTATION LARGE SINGLE ROOM for a quiet man WANTED-Rider to Oklahoma or West student at 1021 Hill Street. Phone Texas for Xmas vacation. Ph .2-9927 2-7133. )30R after 6 p.m. )12T SUITE-Single or double-Workingman or student. Near campus and Union. Shower, hot water, $5.50 each. 509 S. Division, near Jefferson. )1R LARGE unfurnished five or three room apartments. Attractive large rooms. Near campus and University Hospital. Laundry facilities available. Children READ and pets welcomed. Immediate occu- pancy. Also two very large room rented either as singles or doubles. Near campus and University Hospital. Hot plate provided for snacks. Laundry facili- ties available. $30 for single roam. Immediate occupancy. Phone 3-1465 USE after 4 p.m. )31L COMFORTABLE large room for 2 men. Phone 2-0906 during the day, or 2-37811AILY after 5:30 p.m. or Sat. and Sun. )lR FOR RENT ROOMS & SUITES FOR MEN-For those Who'll appreciate congenial landlady. On campus. Call before 4 p.m. 2-0542. )11F ATTRACTIVE four-room suite for 3-5 men. 1402 HMi. Call after 5:30 p.m. )1 "Who do I see about a nickel?" 112. Matt Mann II, for twenty-six years Michigan swimming coach, was named head coach of the 1952 Men's Olympic Swimming team last night by the National Ama- teur Athletic Union at their meet- ing in Daytona Beach, Florida.- This is merely another highlight in the career of the famous Wol- verine mentor, whose teams have won 16 Western Conference titles and 13 NCAA championships since he came here in 1925. * * * MANN BEGAN his swimming career at the advanced age of 11 in Yorkshire, England, where he was born. He won the British Empire free style crown at sixteen, and swept to the national YMCA titles in the 100 and 200-yard free styles upon coming to this coun- try in 1904. Mann began his coaching ca- reer in 1909 at the Buffalo Ath- letic Club, teaching the then h ighly controversial crawl stroke. When the first municipal pool in this country was constructed, at Brookline, Mass., Mann was ap- pointed coach. He stayed there for five years. IN ADDITION to his duties at' the Municipal Pool, Mann coached Harvard and Navy on the side, neither team losing while he was at the helm. The New York Athletic Club appointed him head coach in 1916. Again, the present Wol- verine mentor, found that one team was not sufficient work, so he coached Yale to an unbeaten season as a sideline, Mann moved on to the Duluth, Minn., Boat Club in 1918 and the next year became head of the De- troit Athletic Club. There he de- veloped a world's champion, the first of many great swimmers who came under his tutelage, Ted Cann, who won the 220-yard free style title for the DAC. IT WAS upon coming to Michi- gan in 1925 that Mann really hit his stride. Besides the phenome- nal record in Big Ten and NCAA championships which his teams have made far surpasses the rec- ord for any other coach or school. It would, in fact, be difficult to surpass this record, since his teams have won more than half of titles. Dr. Paul Samson was Mann's first Olympic swimmer at Michi- gan in 1928, and he coached Jim Christy, a competitor in both the 1932 and 1936 Olympics. DICK DEGNER was coached by Mann to the 1936 Olympic fancy diving championship. A few of the other great swim- mers Michigan has had under his tutelage are Taylor Drysdale who also swam in the 1936 Olympics, former world record holder in the 150-yard medley, and Jack Kalsey, present world's champion in the breastroke. Mann's last championship team, the 1947 Michigan Varsity, won both the Big Ten and NCAA crowns, edging Ohio State both times by its fine balance. TODAY Regular Prices 44c until 5 P.M. LATE SHOW TONIGHT Last Show 11 P.M. A i CINIMA GUILD and Hillel present Jean Vigo' s Two Masterpieces LUATALANTE ,"A. strne and lonelyilm, infnitely moning."--Daily Sketch and Final Extra Performance Tonight The Knight of the Burning Pestle ARTS THEATER CLUB Ann Arbor's Professional Theater Opening December 7-through December 22 YES IS FOR A VERY YOUNG MAN I i I I opegnCINEMA TODAY and SUNDAY THE PRIZE WINNING An Intimate Theatre Bringing Cinema Triumphs From All Nations P7iAuL4 .. _ Din>- 1) The champagne bubbles of a picture! A merry musical mixup of girls and their guys in the theatre and cabaret life I 0 NOINOWNY - I I I I ME 11[ '. A, A l"' P "1T.1p(grarIKE "ThlAT ATE UWE