OCT 3, 1936 T HE MICHIGAN DAILY Stepping Stones To ANew Fooball Renaissance IVEUMANNV /1C T VVL.GGRASW! P/VGEL ZLEV'NY4,eLT U/DI-EY Wolverines Battle Spartans In TraditionalGrid Opener Today State To Try For Third Win Over Michigan Sophomores On Spot As Wolverines Get First Test Of Season 50,000 Are Expected Patanelli Shifted To Right End With Loiko Taking OppositeFlank (Continued from Page 1) as the outstanding freshman on the squad. In the backfield, besides Levine, Kipke will start Cooper and Smithers at the halves and Sweet at full back. Both Smithers and Sweet are show- ing more form than they did a year ago with Sweet especially registering great improvement. He and Cooper will handle the punting for Michigan with Cooper probably throwing most of the passes. Linemen Headed For Trouble With Neumann, Agett, Sebo and Brandstatter handling State's back- field duties Michigan's linemen are without a doubt in for a trouble- some afternoon. "Agony Al" Agett is the triple threat back of the Bach- man team, doing the punting and passing as well as being a hard runner. His parallel in the Wolver- ine backfield is the untried Cooper who has starred in practice and gives prdmise of being just as good under fire. .Brandstatter will give the inside of Michigan's line a pounding if State follows the same plan they did a year ago. This powerful fullback, with his own linemen and backs ripping op- posing lines apart, has built up a reputation as a great ground gainer and it will be up to Marzonie and Brennan to stop his assault. For the past two seasons Michigan has suffered considerably in grid wars, winning only five games in the last 16 starts. Although eight hard games are facing them in the present campaign, hopes for a winning eleven are high, due mainly to the presence of what is supposedly great sopho- more strength. Depends On Sophomores p These men making their first start for Michigan today will definitely be on the spot as a result, and a victory will probably do more good for their morale than anything Kipke and his coaching staff might do in a month of practice. On the other hand, a win for State may have as disastrous an effect as a Michigan win would have good, for if the team's morale dropst to a point where they have no confi- dence, opponents may find the Wol-t verines offering little opposition this year. The Wolverines tapered off for their State rivals yesterday by goingt through a light drill consisting main- ly of polishing off the rough spots in the running and passing attack. The team left for Plymouth last night where they will remain until game time. Cubs Again Bow To Chisox, 11 To 3 CHICAGO, Oct. 2.-(P)-Chicago's White Sox mixed solid base hits witht walks' and Cub misplays today to coast to an easy 11 to 3 victory, their second straight in the city champion-f ship series, before 13,990 spectators at Comiskey Park. The Cubs started their right hand- ed ace, Lonnie Warneke, figuring toT square up for yesterday's 5 to 1t White Sox truimph at Wrigley Field, but the American Leaguers belted him for three runs in the first inning, and drove him from the mound dur- ing a rollicking eight run drive in the sixth. Roy Henshaw, Clay Bry- ant, and Charlie Root shared the rest of the Cub pitching. 'The PRESS ANGLE By GEORGE J. ANDROS All Tied Up Experience vs. Spirit "Will experience pay dividends?" That is the question Coach Charlie Bachmanof Michigan State has been quoted as asking hinself this week, and it can very well be one that is in Coach Harry Kipke's mind this morning. Coach Bachman can, and probably will, start a team that includes nine men who have had two years of var- sity experience. Michigan, on the other hand, will have six players in the starting line- up who never have played collegiate football. "Will experience pay dividends," or will the victor come out of the spirit, willingness and love of the game Michigan's sophomores have shown in ousting veteran lettermen for their positions? I pick the Michigan Varsity. To The Varsity To the men who will represent Michigan this afternoon: Up at Lansing when a high school football player airs the possibility of his attending the University, he is met on every side by: "What! And have your team beat- en by State every year?" What are you going to do about it? * * * About 'Agony Al' If "Agony Al" Agett (he hates the nickname) proves a real star for State this afternoon, it is going to be the height of something or other. Agett very much wanted toeiter the University' Medical School this fall, but finally was persuaded to stay at East Lansing another year and be the shining light in Coach Bachman's football sky. Incidentally a large number of for- mer State students, at present fresh- men in the several University grad- uate schools, are having considerable trouble in deciding for whom to cheer this afternoon. I have my own ideas on the subject, but would not express them here. A Contribution "Rumor has it that Michigan Trueblood Golf Trophy Play Begins Today Play got under way yesterday af- ternoon in the first of what is to be an annual tournament in quest of the trophy donated by Prof. Thomas Trueblood, Coach-Emeritus of the Varsity golf team. The tournament will be conducted on a 72-hole basis, and is open to any; undergraduate student meeting the scholastic eligibility requirements. 'M' men in golf will be barred from competition in this tournament. The 72 holes of play will be spread out over four days,-today, tomor- row, and next Saturday and Sunday. It is recommended that persons wish- ing to take part in the tourney should report at the University course club house soon after eight a.m. on the days of play in order that 18 holes may be finished before noon on these, the rush days of the week. The aim of the competition is to help in the development of players for the freshman and the Varsity squads, and is another of the num- erous manifestations of Professor Trueblood's genuine interest in Michigan golf. Grange organizers invaded the Col- lege Field locker-room at Michigan State this week and excited enthu- siasm to such a pitch that Aggies (nee Spartans) joined hands and formed the B.U.A.A. to encourage ag- rarian interests of the state., The full name of the organization is Bachman's Upstate Agricultural As- sociation, and the possibility is that it will get plenty of opportunity to plow the green fields Saturday." * * * Bear Story According to reports in the Mich- igan State News Gordon Dahlgren, M.S.C. guard, has been "counted out" by the doctors until Oct. 17th due to a knee injury. This brings to our mind a bear story concerning Kurt Warmbein, State's speedy triple- threat back last year, who was also reported incapacitated. Warmbein, however, made himself not only pres- ent but very much so. This Dahlgren report sounds like another bear story. I confidently be- lieve that he will be in there today. Freshman Divers Show Promise In Early Swim Meet By RAYMOND GOODMAN Despite the presence of Ben Grady, twice an All-American diver, and Addy Ferstenfeld, the most reliable reserve that ever sat for two years on a Michigan bench, the Wolverine diving team is in a transition year. "And still they come," Mann said of his divers when Frank Fehsenfeld replaced Dick Degener as National Intercollegiate champ. The remark was still in order when Der Johnson took the Collegiate low-board title last year and Fehsenfeld repeated off the high-board. The Orientation Week swimming meet which Assistant Coach Charles McCaffree conducted T h u rs d a y proved that they're still coming. This year there is a trio-Jack Wolin of Cleveland, Hal Benham of Indiana- polis, and Billy Brink of Detroit. Wolin, winner of the orientation competition in which he scored 79 points to defeat Brink with 74.75, dived for Cleveland Heights H.S. for three years under the tutelage of Larry Peterson, the National In- terscholastic meet and he carries along with him numerous Ohio State titles. Wolin has met Pope, the present National Junior A.A.U. title- holder, twice, winning one encounter and losing the other. Benham is well known to the Mich- igan swimming circle. Not only has he won the National Junior diving championship; but last year as a member of the Indianapolis A.C. team, of which Fehsenfeld is an alumnus, he chased Jack Kasley to a new world's 100-yard breast-stroke record. Brink, a graduate of Northwestern H.S. has held the Detroit city cham- pionship for two years and boasts an impressive scholastic record. New York (A.L.) Crosetti, ss..... Rolfe, 3b....... Dimaggio, cf. Gehrig, lb..... Dickey; c ....... Selkirk, rf...... Powell, lf ....... Lazzeri, 2b..... Gomez, p ........ AB R H O A 5430 1 5 123 6 0 5 1 1 2 0 3223 0 ....51 1 0 0 ....41 18 17 27 4I Totals ....... New York (N.L.) AB Moore, if............5 Bartell, ss .......... 3 Terry, lb ........... 5 Leiber, cf ........... 4 Ott, rf ............. 4 Mancuso, c ..........2 Whitehead, 2b .......4 Jackson, 3b ......... 4 Schumacher, p....... 0 Smith, p ........... 0 Coff man ,p..........0 Davis, z ............ 1 Gabler, p...........0 Danning, zz........1. Gumbert, p .......... 0 Totals ..........33 Score by innings: R 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 H 0 1 2 0 0 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 2 6 7 4 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 .0 Al 0 2I 1 1 0 2 1 21 0! 0 1 0 0 0 0 Yanks Swamp Giants To Even Series,_18 To 4 Five Pitchers Bombarded As Americans Establish New Run Record NEW YORK, Oct. 2.-(AP)-World I Series skies cleared today in Newf York's baseball civil war but there was another deluge just the same at the Polo Grounds. Instead of the rainfall it took the form of a Yankee windfall. On the diamond that was swept by showers for two previous days, the American League champions turned on a downpour of base hits that swamped the Giants by the record-smashing score of 18 to 4. Yanks Batter Gumbert Clubbing their way back to even terms at one-all in the subway scramble for baseball's biggest mon- ey honors, the Yankees knocked Hal Schumacher from the box in the midst of a seven-run outburst in the third inning and continued a desul- tory attack that was climaxed in the ninth by a six-run drive off Harry Gumbert, the luckless fifth flinger for the home team. Gallant Tony Lazzeri; the veteran second sacker who was supposed to be near the end of the playing trail, contributed the biggest wallop by belting a home run with the bases full in the third inning, off the relief flinging of right-handed Dick Coff- man. Lazzeri Breaks Mark Besides duplicating an achievement recorded only once before in series annals, by Elmer Smith of Cleveland against Brooklyn in 1920, Lazzeri drove home a fifth run with a long fly, in the seventh inning, thereby wiping out a mark for runs-batted-in that he had shared himself with Babe Ruth and six other world series batsmen. Not even this record stood alone for' long,. however. Catcher Bill Dickey came through with a ninth- inning homer, with two men on, that tied him with Lazzeri for the new record of five-runs-batted-in during a single series game. ~ - - --'- Ann Arbor Peace Disturbed By Gathering Football Crowd By FRED BUESSER Today Ann Arbor ceases to be a town and becomes a rendezvousafor 60,000 partisan football fans, gath- ered here to celebrate, to root and to celebrate. Only on football Saturdays could as complete a change be effected in any spot on earth. Sedate old State Street becomes "a channel of stream- ing, honking traffic while sidewalks that ordinarily feel only the mundane tread of students feet, re-echo to the tread of legion after legion of foot- ball fans as they tramp down to the Stadium. In place of dull gray and sickly green text books there are wild colored blankets and streaming pennants. The atmosphere is charged witb an electric tension as king football steps forward to rule over Ann Arbor 4 6 27 10 AT TENTION Your Attention is called to the fact that odr RENTAL LIBRARY RATES are 10c for the first three days - 5c per day thereafter. OPEN EVENINGS CALL FOR and DELIVERY SERVICE ADRIAN JAFFE RENTAL LIBRARY 1309 Wilmot St. Phone 2-1631 New York (AM) ...207 001 206-18 New York (Nat) . .010 300 000- 4 Error-Jackson. Runs batted in- Gehrig 3, Dickey 5, Lazzeri 5, Bar- tell, Terry 2, Dimaggio 2, Gomez 2, Rolfe. Two base hits-Dimaggio, Mancuso, Bartell. Home runs- Lazzeri, Dickey. Stolen base- Powell. Sacrifice-Dimaggio. Double plays-Leiber, Jackson, Bartell. Bases on balls-Schumacher 4; Smith 1; Gomez 7; Gabler 3; Gumbert 1. Strikeouts-Gomez 8, Schumacher 1, Coff man 1. Losing pitcher -Schu- macher. Umpires-Geisel, Mager- kurth, Sommers and Pfirman. Time of game 2:49. Ypsi Normal Beats Northern State, 12-0 YPSILANTI, Oct. 2. - Michigan Normal's gridders gained their second victory of the season this afternoon, defeating2Northern State Teachers College, 12 to 0. Augie Defroscia, Normal halfback, scored the first touchdown on the first play in the second quarter. Tex Walker; Dearborn junior, snared a 27 yard pass for the final marker. Today's Games Vanderbilt vs. Chicago Washington University vs. Illinois Centre vs. Indiana Northwestern vs. Iowa N.Y.U. vs. Ohio State Carnegie vs. Notre Dame West Virginia vs. Pittsburgh Maine vs. Columbia South Dakota State vs. Wisconsin Oregon vs. Southern California Stanford vs. Washington State Idaho vs. Washington Iowa State vs. Nebraska Washington & Lee vs. Army Davidson vs. Navy Cornell vs. Yale liI i 1111 ORATORICAL Lecture Course 1936-;1937 Oct. 29 - Cornelia Otis Skinner Original Dramatic Sketches Nov. 12 - Father Hubbard "A New Voyage in- to the Ice Inferno" with Motion Pictures Nov. 24 - Bertrand Russell (Lord Russell) "Education and Free- dom" Dec. 9 - H. V. Kalt- enborn "Kaltenborn Edits the News" MAI LLER S Dairy Fo rm Stores OIGINAL NOTE THE LOW SEASON TICKET PRICES made with REAL ICE CREAM Jan. 14 - Bruce Bliven "The Press-Truth, News or Propagan- Jan. 21 - Edward Tomlinson "Haitian Adventure" with Color Motion Pictures loc coll1ege §ewetry Now is the Season to Wear Distinctive jewelry with a Michigan Seal, including Visit the NEW RINGS PINS LOCKETS BRACELETS COMPACTS CIGARETTE CASES MILLERS STORE Liberty, opposite Michigan Theatre 620 East Liberty 533 South Main 1 Feb. 25 - Captain John Craig {.. "Diving Among Sea i>3+Killers" with Motion . ; Pictures Mar. 16-The Mart- " in Johnsons "Wild Animals of 'Borneo" with Mo- tion Pictures SEASON TICKETS: $3.50, $3.00, $2.75 Mail Orders to: Oratorical Association 3211 Angell Hall, Ann Arbor h , - --- $1.00 and up --- -- . STROH'S PABST BLUE RIBBON FRIAR'S ALE At All Dealers J. J. O'KANE, Dist. Dial 3500 ARCADE JEWELRY SHOP CARL F. BAY Jewelers in the Arcade Since 1916 I 1219 S. University III! I _ 4 1*e A 1. 1 1. A n r rne i I (rI I n, i" H e - NLE-U*-UEU U . U A N lb 1 AUAU L_ \- . -E ;1 ® .......U!eUa-ssu t . i Lma, 1111