TUESDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Coach Kipke To Drill Football Brains' Into Squad This PAGE THREE Week wti-- To Concentrate ' , r On Group Of 15 LikelyStarters Regeczi, Jennings, Aug, And Sweet At Positions In First String Backfield The apparently weary task of pre- paring for the Georgia Tech game after two successive disastrous de- feats was begun yesterday for the Varsity gridders as Oach H'arry Kipke sent his squad through the longest kicking drill on record. However grim the situation ap- peared on the surface, the squad re- flected the attitude that "nothing is seriously wrong" as it carefully went about ironing out its many faults. The lack of spirit and organization which characterized the State game was not the defect in the Chicago game and Coach Kipke's statement to the squad yesterday that the chief fault was simply "a lack of football intelligence" indicated the grounds upon which the squad would proceed for at least the next week. Calling the squad together yester- day Kipke told them that "Michigan teams, however poor in other depart- ments, have always been 'smart' and smart teams get the breaks because 'smart' teams make their own breaks" "We haven't had the breaks," he said, "because we haven't made them." Backfield Problem Solved The program for at least the next week will be a concentration upon a squad of about 15 men in whom the necessary features of "football intel- ligence" as Kipke sees it will be drilled.. That squad will be composed of the team which started against Chicago last week, with the several immediate substitutes. Kipke yesterday indicated that he was almost certain as re- gards his first-string backfield, which has been the major problem in the Wolverine camp since the beginning of the season. The first string backfield as Kipke sees it at the moment would be com- posed of Ferris Jennings at quarter- back, John Regeczi and Vincent Aug at the halves and Cedric Sweet at fullback. Russ Oliver would be the first replacement, at quarterback in place of Jennings. Kipke was highly impressed with the showing of Whitey Aug in the Chicago game and concedes that the blond Cincinnati Sophomore has vir- tually clinched a starting berth. Has Faith In Jeniings Although Jennings failed to show to advantage as a defensive quarter- back, as did Regeczi who assumed that position when Jennings left the game, Kipke believes that the 140- pound Ann Arbor sophomore has the makings of a star and it is almost cer- tain that Jennings will remain at quarterback. That Kipke does not attempt to minimize the many mechanical faults of his squad, however, is indicated by the long kicking drill through which he sent his squad in an attempt to improve the work of his defensive safety men. With Regeczi, Oliver and Sweet kicking, Jennings, Triplehorn, Aug and Regeezi alternated onthe re- ceiving end of the punts. Poor han- dling of punts was one of the most noticeable features of the Chicago game, and it was in that department that yesterday's drills were concen- trated. Jennings appeared at a decided ad- vantage over the other safety men working on the punt receiving yester- CAMPUS CIGAR STORE Meeting Place For Sociable Fellows Full line of Pipes, Tobacco, Candy, and Soft Drinks. 521 EAST LIBERTY ST. STAR DUST By ART CARS-FENS i i' --- - Victory I n Defeat AFTER TWO of the most overwhelming defeats in history Michigan's football team is now definitely on the ;upgrade and the spirit among the student body is far better than it has been in the two preceding national championship years. That a lean year is definitely upon us can no longer be denied but I feel safe in saying that Coach Kipke's position is stronger right now than it was a year ago. People were taking cracks at Kipke then-probably because he had been so phenom3nally successful. They were calling him "Michigan's publicity man," saying that he left his team after the Illinois game to ride back to Ann Arbor with Ford officials in a special car, and that he didn't have backbone enough to bench two star players who had, allegedly, been seen drinking in a roadhouse. A losing team means a very definite financial loss to Kipke, because you can't sell magazine articles or radio broadcasts unless your team is at, or near the top. But Kip came onto the practice field last night smiling, and telling correspondents that Michigan would beat one of the "big boys" (Illinois, Ohio State, or Minnesota) before the season was over. Even the campaign among publicity-seeking organizations to be appointed head coach for the Georgia Tech game has strengthened Kipke's position with 99 per cent of the students. The situation is the same among the alumni, T. Hawley Tapping reports. Many of the grads realize, Tapping says, that a few defeats are going to improve the spirit behind the team, both on the campus and in Alumni organizations throughout the world. I can say with perfect confidence that Kipke could lose every game this year and not have one demand made for his head. I will say with equal confidence that Michigan won't lose every game this year. And when they win the first one there'll be real rejoicing among the student body. Phil Diamond and Art Van Duren, German instructors who have been around here for many football seasons were talking about the lean years last night. They told how a thoroughly disgusted student body watched the 1929 team lose three straight Conference games then went wild when the team took a hair-raising 14 to 12 victory from Harvard, beat Minnesota 7 to 6 and fought Iowa to a scoreless tie in the final game of the season. THEN Diamond went into the cobwebbed recesses of his mind to recall the 1919 season when Michigan won only one Conference game. The Wolverines took their two warm-up games easily, then lost to Ohio State. It looked like a rout when Northwestern ran up 13 points in short order in the fourth game. But Yost's boys came back to chalk up 16 points of their own and score one of the biggest upsets of the days when .upsets in football were rare. That one game was enough to satisfy the students and nobody cared much when they lost the next three. With Michigan playing markedly better ball last Saturday than they did a week before there is reason to believe they will win at least two, maybe three or four, before the curtain is finally rung down Nov. 24. t This is beside the point, but too good to be left untold: Tod Rockwell wrote a very learned critique of the Michigan-Chicago game for his Detroit paper yesterday, saying that Michigan lost because her backs were not meet- ing Berwanger and Bartlett at the crossroads - where good defensive backs are supposed to meet good offensive ball-carriers. Rockwell, it seems, should know all about the matter, since he failed to meet Red Grange at the cross- roads on four occasions when playing half for Michigan during the 1924 season. Grange scored four touchdowns around Tod and Illinois won, 39 to 14. Cappon Sees Strong Foe In Georgia Tech Southerners Reputed To Have Good Running And Passing Attacks According to Coach Frank Cappon, who scouted the Georgia Tech-Vand- erbilt game two weeks ago, and the Tech-Duke game last Saturday, Har- ry Kipke's Varsity will be opposed Saturday by an eleven armed with a passing attack as formidable as the one Michigan State presented in the season opener and with a runing at- tack that will recall the goalward jaunts of Berwanger, Bartlett and company last Saturday. Georgia Tech has played three games, downing Clemson 12-7, losing to Vanderbilt 27-12 and also to Duke 20-0. All four of Vanderbilt's touch- downs were scored via the pass route. The first two came when Tech play- Play At Chicago Wins Him Backfield Position Cappon Not On Saturday At Bench Chicago day, and while not so fast or flashy as Triplehorn, his relaxed form gave him a decided edge. Kipke will drill his squad lightly throughout the week, he said yester- day, adding that "the rough stuff was for last week." Renner In Uniform Bill Renner was in uniform yester- day for the first time since he suf- fered. his fractured ankle, but Kipke said there was "no chance" of the brilliant passer's getting into the Tech game. Renner, however, will be en- tirely fit for the Illinois game the following week, Kipke said. Mike Savage and Willard Hilde- brand were the only Wolverine grid- ders reporting major injuries after the Chicago game, but both will be in shape for the Georgia Contest. Savage reported on injured leg and Hildebrand bore a bad wound where he had been cut by cleats, but neither injury was serious enough to prevent either from playing Saturday. Bacliman In Quest Of Scoring Punch EAST LANSING, Oct. 15 -P)- Charley Bachman, of Michigan State, today started a quest for a better scoring punch in his eleven as prep- arations opened for the Manhattan game to be played at Ebbets Field in Brooklyn Saturday. Only three days of practice re- mained on the home field as Bach- man ordered a light workout for his first team and a scrimmage for the reserves. Scrimmages also will be in order Tuesday and Wednesday but Bachman indicated the punish- ment will not be so heavy for his first string. The Michigan State coach was not as strong in the praise of his team after its 13 to 0 victory over Carnegie Tech as he was the previous week after the Michigan victory. He ex- pected to spend a great deal of time the next three days on individual as- signments checking up on the mis- takes against Carnegie. The game with Manhattan will be the first of a group of long inter- sectional jaunts for the Spartans., BASKETBALL PRACTICE Basketball practice open to all men eligible for Varsity competi- tion will begin this evening at 7:30 at the Intramural Building. Candi- dates must bring their own equip- ment. Frisch Sig'ns Card Contract For Next Year ST. LOUIS, Oct. 15 -(I')- Frankie Frisch, who drove the madcap Card- inals to the National League pen- nant and a World Series triumph over Detroit's Tigers in his first full year as a manager, today quietly signed a contract to lead the club again in 1935. The signing, which followed brief conferences with President Sam Breadon and Vice President Branch Rickey, was a mere formality. Both Breadon and Rickey had said the old "Fordham Flash," still a spry second baseman after 16 years of National League campaigning, would be back next year. Terms of the contract, which will run for one year, were not announced and Frisch said they would not be dis- closed. One of the greatest infielders of modern baseball, Frisch jumped di- rectly from the Fordham campus to the New York Giants, and came to St. Louis in the winter of 1926-27 in a trade which sent Rogers Hornsby to New York. In the middle of the 1933 campaign he relieved Gabby Street as manager of the Cardinals. With the formality of signing Frisch out of the way, club officials planned, as usual to wait until about the first of the year before starting negotia- tions with the rest of the players. Negotiations with the pitching brothers Dean - Jerome Herman (Dizzy) and Paul (Daffy) -are, of course, expected to attract the major attention. It was erroneously stated in The Daily Sunday that Coach Frank- lin Cappon was on the Michigan bench Saturday when the Wolver- ines were defeated by Chicago, 27-0. Cappon, instead, was scouting the Georgia Tech-Duke game, and his "record" of not having seen Michigan lose since 1929 remains intact. ers batted passes into the hands of Vanderbilt men while trying to knock the passes to the ground. The next came on a pass interception and the last was scored on a long pass. A big rugged line and a fast hard driving backfield are Tech's main as- sets. Michigan's Jennings will have a rival Saturday for lightweight hon- ors in Roberts, Tech quarterback, who tips the scales at 138 pounds. Morton and Ferguson, regular half- backs of the Georgia aggregation, weigh 180 and 176 respectively while Phillips, the hard plunging fullback, weighs an even 200 pounds. Roberts, Phillips and Morton are all excellent passers while Phillips is one of the outstanding backs in the south. Added to his plunging ability is the fact that he is the best blocker in the backfield and one of the best in the southern conference. Williams, 210 pound lineman, also stands out as one of the south's best tackles. Tech uses a 6-2-2-1 defense and most of its offensive plays are of the spinner type, with reverses and fakes also playing a large part in their drives. Hockey Season To Open In Detroit November 8 DETROIT, Oct. 15. - Detroit's hockey season will open Nov. 8, when the Olympics meet the Windsor Bull- dogs, their old rivals, in an Interna- tional League battle at the Olympia. The game will precede by three days the game between the Red Wings and the Boston Bruins, which will open the National League season. Most of the Olympics home games this season will be played on Thurs- days, 12 games being scheduled for Thursday nights. Six home games will be played on Tuesdays, three on Sun- days and one on a Monday. John Ross Roach arrived in camp yesterday, but did not participate in1 the workout with the Olympics and Red Wings. He will get down to work today when the players hold their first drill on the ice and will start the season in the goal for the Wings, Manager Jack Adams indicated. 'Red' Phillips Marries Schoolday Sweetheart_ OKLAHOMA CITY, Oct. 15 -(P)- Clarence Lemuel (Red) Phillips, of Oklahoma, a six-foot, four-inch De- troit Tiger rookie, beat "Schoolboy" Rowe to the altar, he disclosed here today. "Red" announced he and Miss Viv- ian Cromwell, of Ada, Okla., a sweet- heart of Phillips' college days at East Central Oklahoma Teachers, were married here Oct. 5. Rowe married' Miss Edna Mary Skinner on Oct. 11. BOWLING PRICES CUT from 20c to15c a line up to 7:00 P.M. daily, all day Saturday and Sundays 20c per line, BIG TEN STANDINGS W L Pct. Illinois .............1 0 1.000 Chicago.............1 0 1.000 Iowa ................1 0 1.000 Ohio State ...........1 1 .500 MICHIGAN ..........0 1 .000 Indiana...........0 1 .000 Northwestern.. ....0 1 .000 Wisconsin..........0 0 .000 Purdue ..............0 0 .000 Minnesota ...........0 0 .000 Heekin, Ohio State Star, Tops Big Ten Scorers CHICAGO, Oct. 15. - (0P)- Dick Heekin, of Ohio State, with three touchdowns in two games, led the Big Ten individual scoring race today.; Heekin's 18 points was three points better than the total piled up by Jay Berwanger, of Chicago, who led the Maroons to their startling 27 to 0 vic-, tory over Michigan Saturday. The leaders: Vincent "Whitey" Aug appears to have gained a regular place in the Michigan backfield, following the disappointing Chicago game. Aug was the only Wolverine back who could gain either appreciably or con- sistently. He is from Cincinnati and is a sophomore, coming to Michigan after a year at Notre Dame. Ned Bartlett, Maroon halfback, was the only player in Saturday's game to gain more yards per attempt than Aug. "Whitey" is also a fair passer, but with Renner returning soon will probably get very little chance to demonstrate this ability. Heekin, h.b., O.S.U.. Berwanger, h.b., Chi.. Boucher, h.b., O.S.U.. Bartlett, h.b., Chi. ... Crayne, f.b., Iowa ... G TD PAT TP .2 3 0 18 .1 2 3 15 .2 2 0 12 .1 2 0 12) .1 2 0 12 Hillsdale On Top In M.L.A.A. Conference With only Albion and Kalamazoo meeting last week in an M.I.A.A. game little change was made in the standings of the association and Hills- dale remains the team to beat for the title. With the ruling that provides for a half game won and lost on ties the Dales are now the only team with a, Unbeaten Lions Oppose Boston Redskins Ne xt DETROIT, Oct. 15- The Boston Redskins, headed by Pug Rentner, Eriy Pinkert, Gyp Battles, Angel Brovelli, Harold McPhail, Doug Wy- coff, Steve Hokuf and Teti Wright, who make up the most powerful and versatile backfields in post-graduate football, will arrive here Tuesday af- ternoon. The Redskins will clash with the Detroit Lions, undefeated and un- scored upon to date, in the Lions' third home game of the National Football League season at the Univer- sity of Detroit Stadium Wednesday night at 8:15. The Redskins gave proof of their offensive strength Sunday when they rolled up 39 points against the Pitts- burgh Pirates, who until they en- countered the Warner-Kerr system as used by Lone Star Dietz, the Bo - ton mentor, had an excellent defensive record. Rival Best In Defense When the Lions prevented the Philadelphia Eagles from passing their 32-yard line, and finished a fourth game unscored upon, they were established as one of the League's finest defensive teams of any year. Wednesday night's battle is one be- tween the best offensive team in the National Football League, the Red- skins, and the best defensive club, the Lions. The odds favor the Red- skins because of their backfield. One of the great names in West- ern Conference football is Pug Rent- ner, Northwestern's former All-Am- erican back, now making his pro de- but. Rentner is a superb blocker, a fine defensive player, in addition to his ability to tote a ball. Erny Pinckert, captain of the Red- skins, is termed the spark-plug of the Boston team. A former Univer- sity of California star, Pinckert is rated beside Father Lumpkin, of the Lions, one of the best blocking backs in the League. Two 45-Yard Runs Sharing honors is Cliff (Gyp) Bat- tles, the unanimous choice of the National Football League for right halfback position in 1933, his first year of post-graduate football. Bat- ties is one of the fastest men in the League, shifty and elusive. Against the Pirates last Sunday Battles twice dashed 45 yards for touchdowns. Calling signals for Rentner, Pinck- ert and Battles will be Steve Hokuf, a red-headed giant from the Univer- sity of Nebraska. clean slate, although neither nor Hope have been beaten. Standings: Hillsdale .......... Alma ............ Hope ............. Kalamazoo ........ Albion ............ W . .1 . ..0 .. .0 L 0 1 0 1 T 0 1 00 0 Alma Pct. 1.000 .500 .500 .500 .000 II STUDENTS You will find that $taecb & J~ &e See t0 S rve gdet 309 SOUTH MAIN STREET carry the most complete line of Fall Merchandise in the city. It will be a pleasure to have you come in and visit our store. KIRSCHBAUM CLOTHING MALLORY HATS INTERWOVEN HOSIERY VAN HEUSEN SHIRTS CHENEY NECKWEAR 'l1. This week-end will find Albion needing a victory over Hope to stay in the race. The Wooden Shoes have not been beaten in or out of the M.I.A.A. Alma meets a stubborn Kalamazoo college team at Kalama- zoo in the Hornets homecoming and it looks like the last title prospect for the loser of this fray. Hillsdale plays Wayne University at Hillsdale and will have trouble. FROM COLLEGE TO MAJORS Four former Big Ten pitchers were signed by big league clubs last sum- mer. They are Wistert of Michigan, Wilshere of Indiana, and Harris and Lagger of Northwestern. Li j How Is Your Credit ? No matter whether it concerns a long term loan or just your grocery bill, your credit is the first thing considered. A saving habit is the first requisite for good credit. BUYING SHOE REPAIRING is like buying a railroad ticket. I I I U