E T MBEil 25 25 NT , , Set in a carpet of velvety Scott Turf, DEEDS CARILLON is an inspiring sight along the great Miami River at Dayton, Ohio. To visitors who remark about the thick, weedfree grass the answer is-Scotts Seed and Turf Builder grass food. Jnterfcrcnca \'flth forwnrd pass. (If irnnnlty on orrense. \\hen lnlerfcr­ {'twe occu rs beyond line or sc·rim­ maie, 15 )'artls and loss er down. ) PHILIP MORRIS' SUPERIORITY RECOGNIZED BY EMINENT MEDICAL AUTHORITIES! This finer-tasting cigarette is also far more considerate of your nose and throat ... scientifically proved far less irritating to the smoker's nose and throat! So...;. PHILIP MORRIS America's FINEST Cigarette o. SCOTT and SONS COMPANY La«m Seed ad, 7wi/ ~~ MARYSVILLE , OD I ft IOWA SEA HAWKS OHIO STATE 5939 James L. Renick, Editor Anne Puc.hit, Ad~ertisin_g Man:ge:r William Guthrie, Cuculauon Ma ag Big Ten Football in 1943___ n3 SEPT. 25, 1943 Contents ---- ----- ------- -- ----- 7 Don Faurot -- ----------· -------- 5 Down to See in Aisle Seats_________ L0-26 Football Rules ------ ------------ 7 Harvey Harman -------H----d - -- - ·---- 31 1 -==~- 87 Here's How Ohio State e pe --- • Iowa Pre-Flight Staff ----~::-::::=~==------24~ • L. W. St. John -· -- ·---------- _ __ _ ---_1}·~ DEAD k;~:'t~~~ r5~;;~;;;~; -0Ti=;;;;;-i;-;i_1 - --- _ _ 4 Ohio's Serv,ce Record __ -- - - - 11-13-25-302 Ohio Players -- - --- ---:._-_-____ __ -- ·------14 Ohio Roster ---- -- -- ___ 16 28 Ohio Playing Numbers ---------- ------- 6 ~:~I J~wto;;d -F.;-;,b;ii-------------~=====-----==2f Sea Hawk Playing Numbers - ------ 2 Sea Hawk Roster -:_:-:====-_____ _ __ 2 MISSING 4 Tribute to Frank Cru~mtt __ -- -- - -- - _-__ 3._2__ 2339 The McGuffy of Ei:igmeers - --- The Campus in Warume - 31 32 When and Why to Play National Adver1ising Representative THE DON SPENCER co., J~CYork City PRISONER 271 Madison Ave. The official watch for checking th'c electric timer is Longincs, the. world s most honored watch. ( 2 ) ( 3 ) DOWN TO SEE IN AISLE 1Jn ilrmoriam SEATS By Harrold C. Eckert, '25 The Buckeye Battle Cry. T heatre Editor, T he Ohio State J ournal Words and Music by FRANK Camorrr. HIS pillar again undertakes the task of tragic story of Hider-ordered persecution casts being counsellor to our game-day visitors Lukas as :m anti-Nazi G erman who devotes him­ T and the hometowners in the matter of self to the "underground" fight against the op· what to do and where to go for post-game enter­ p ressors of his people. Miss Davis, as his Ameri­ tainment. Now to the grandstand-quarterback­ can wife, has the role created by Mady Chris­ ing of the downtown showshops, and what tians. Lucille Watson, Geraldine Fitzgerald, they' re running in late cinema George Coulouris, D o n a 1 d releases: Woods, Eric Roberts and Beu­ The peripatetic Maisie Ra­ lah Bondi are commended in vier, cleverly sketched by the the support set. This impas­ brassy Ann Sothern, is starring sioned drama is provocative su­ at LOEW'S O HIO in the MG­ perior "theater." Made "Swing Shift Maisie." Based on the novel by Dor­ This latest of the indefatigible othy B. Hughes, RKO -Radio's Maisie series has our rowdy, "The Fallen Sparrow" comes golden-hearted heroine setting off an imaginative melodrama. straight the romance of James The intriguing spy thriller is Craig's swashbuckling warplane current for the RKO PALACE. plant test pilot. Jean Rogers The house's No. 2 feature is a hares a romantic lead with Miss little something labelled "Camp­ Sothern, but loses out when us Rhythm." Director Richard Craig finally realizes Maizie is Wallace's treatment of "The The McCoy and that the in­ F alien Sparrow" builds to an genue is just another fickle filly. exciting climax, with suspense Columbuson Wilson Collison skillfully sustained ~hroughout. created the Maizie character, Harrold C. Eckert, '25 Square-jawed, hard-nitting John with Mary C. McCall, jr., and Garfield leads as Kit, a veteran Robert Halff scrambling up this scenario for of the Spanish Civil War. Garfield has three Director Norman Z. McLeod. The Ohio's cur­ leading ladies - redhaired Maureen O'Hara, rent dual is completed with exhibition of Ed­ blonde, song-selling Martha O'Driscoll and mund Lowe and Evelyn Keyes in "The Case of Patricia Morison, as the socialite Barby. This the Dangerous Blondes." creepy entertainment may be said to have the A prize play, Lillian Hellman's distinguished 'Alfred Hitchcock touch," which is not to be "Watch On The Rhine," has been admirably confused with the urbane "Lubitsch touch" of and thoughtfully translated to the screen with glossy naughtiness. Paul Lukas still portraying his celebrated casting At composition-time, LOEW'S BROAD was of Kurt Muller. Bette Davis is costarring as his sky, 0 - bi - o field will bear again The Buckeye Bat-tie Cry .. ... heralding "Hi, Diddle, Diddle" and "Submarine wife. This taut and dramatic hit is being shown Base" as its twins for the time when 0ur Buckeye at the RKO GRAND, with the homey "Swing football boys would be entering upon their Your Partner" sub-billed. The latter features sec­ ond wartime season. WLW's Lulubelle and Scotty, ready radio rus­ However, the Broad may be tics, and Vera Vague, the Frank Buck-like man­ housing the holdover of MGM's "Salute to hunter of Bob Hope's wireless comedies. the Marines" with Wallace Beery its burly war­ "Watch On The Rhine," its message of topi­ rior, and "Footlight Glamor." . Andrew L. cal importance intact and still potent, was di­ Stone {he directed "Stormy Weather") mount­ rected for Warner Brothers by Herman Shum­ ed and paced "Hi, Diddle, Diddle," a fast and lin. He staged and produced the drama when wacky fillup to star patrician Martha Scott op- it was done first in Broadway. This absorbing, ( Continued on Page 26) ( 4 ) ( 5 ) q.o.,i <:/lie SEAHAWKS LT. COMDR, HARVEY HARMAN Athletic Director L. W. ST. JOHN Athletic Director q.Oli OHIO STATE LT. DON FAUROT Head Coach PAUL E. BROWN Head Coach ( 7 ) ( 6 ) THE Seaiiawh,d, AND FOOTBALL The United States Navy Pre-Flight School at possessed of a fighting spirit that will make for Iowa City, Ia., in fielding a varsity football team keen, heads up play and tough, battling opposi­ for the second year in succession, will unveil grid­ tion. Officers are on this squad, as last year but iron squads before the public which, in many re­ formation of teams and starting lineups is based spects, will be interesting. The current Sea­ on cadets and the officers will see little action so hawk season has as a precedent one which was long as the cadets hold their own against their marked by outstanding success and national at­ ten 194 2 foes. tention because of an impressive record of vic­ tories and a galaxy of football greats in collegiate In short, varsity football this year at the Iowa and professional football. This year, the Sea­ Navy Pre-Flight School will be in the nature of a hawk picture will be considerably different, at demonstration of the training program given least as far as the nature of its football squads is cadets at the school. Football is no extracurri­ concerned. cular, ,ecreational sport at Iowa Navy Pre­ Flight. It is one of several sports included Principal point of similarity between the 1942 in the physical conditioning curriculum at the and 194 3 Seahawks is superb coaching. Last school. These sports are divided into three di­ year the Navymen were piloted by Lt. Col. visions-instructional, intra-mural and varsity. Bernie Bierman, famed Minnesota mentor be­ As in the other games, football is taught cadets fore the war; this year the Seahawk football in the instructional phase; competition is pro­ destinies are in the hands of Lt. Don Faurot, vided in the intra-mural phase; and the results of who, as coach at Missouri for several years, training and the crowning point of the program manuevered his Tigers into the top brackets are realized in the varsity phase. Thus the Sea­ Teamwork wins battles, too! of the country's leading teams. hawks, though meeting intersectional foes of top caliber, are as much a part of the naval aviation But for Faurot there is no goldmine of rank­ physical training machinery as are the cadet ANKS, planes, paratroopers, infantry-it you invest in vVar Bonds regularly every pay ing players waiting to be tapped at the Pre­ squadron teams that meet on the local training takes all, working day-not Flight School. The titans of 194 3 who bowled fields daily. T in perfect coordination, the least, but the most you can­ over seven of their ten opponents have all gone to win battles today. Just as on the football that is teamwork. on to other naval stations and other naval duties. Many cadets on the Seahawk squad derived field, it's teamwork that counts. Only one member of last year's regular squad their football training and experience entirely Remember our boys over there are counting is on the present Seahawk roster-Bus Mertes, at the Pre-Flight Sd1ool itself. Seahawk foot­ There is one big difference. In football, you on you to do your part. Remember, too, your star fullback, and an enlisted man. A thing of ball thus becomes this year a sort of inventory of leave the winning to others. In war, you are as War Bonds work two ways. They help win the the past, too, is the experimental and immature results achieved in the daily workaday routine much a part of the teamwork needed for Vic­ phase of the naval aviation program, in which at the Pre-Flight School.
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