ICHIGAN fDAILY Uichigan's First Big Ten Titlists To Return Saturday 'RESS Janke Returns As Team Drills Gophers Display Usual Power As Indiana Troubles Ohio State PASSES -By BUD BENJAMIN- Learning . . ICHIGAN'S football team is still in the embryonic stage, and trange as that may sound, it's an neouraging observation on the po- entialities of the outfit. You've got to look at this 1938 team with some sort of perspective to ade- luately appraise its worth. The whole iackground has been one of transi- ion and change. That is why today ou can accurately, compare this Michigan team to a snowball rolling town hill, gaining momentum and >roportion every inch of the way. iow big will it grow? How fast will t travel? When Coach Fritz Crisler is- sued his spring call this year he had a genuine problem at hand. There were sophomores to teach, and that often means starting from scratch. There were veter- ans to school, veterans whose di- verse background practically rele- gated them to the same scratch position. Linemen who had start- ed by following the dictums of Cappy Cappon only to be whipped into the groove that Hunk Ander- son demanded the following year. The situation 'applied to the team s a whole. With Crisler came new heory, new technique, new methods. ['he general type of football remained he same, but the specific detail was astly deviated. Thus, even today, the learning pro- tess continues. As Crisler himself ut it once: "We can't waste a minute this year. Every second is precious." He hasn't wasted many seconds hus far. And that is why this Mich- gan team is so unpredictably dan- etous this year. It is not a static ituation with a veteran team having absorbed practically all the coach has o offer. Here is a group which pe- uliarly combines sophomore and enor with both imbibing know- edge. For that very reason it will be in- eresting to watch the progress of his Michigan team. They are today very plastic and pliable bunch, and s Crisler moulds theh into his in- pired pattern they continue to ab- sob. That they have ample to learn s admitted. But everyone who saw heir splendid performance against State can't fail to realize that they e far beyond ,the scratch of last p.lng and : ontinually moving In th'e igh' direction. Their pace may sur- prise even the most optimistic. S PROMISED here's the Tuesday confession on Saturday's sins. Re- ,heckng the consensus of my junior olleagues, I find that they batted axactly .706 on their Saturday grid elections. Out of 34 games, they >icked 24 winners.- - Four ties-Auburn and Tulane, Boston U. and Lehigh, Chicago and Bradley Tech, and Wash- ington, Idaho-hurt the prognos- ticators no end. The defeats were Brown's upset of Harvard, Co- lumbia's dump of Yale, Oregon whipping U.C.L.A., Oklahoma t1p- ping Rice, Santa Clara spilling Stanford, and Penn S t a t e trouncing Maryland, 33 to 0. Any- way I had that last one figured, thanks 4to P.S. alum, Uncle Bill. MAbe the boys will listen to me hereafter. Junior Tom Phares led the pack with only seven misses for .794. Con- cldering the four ties, that isn't bad Captain Exercises Injury ; Avenging last year's surprise defeat told the tale. The work of two Buck- by Nebraska, Minnesota's powerful eye sophomore backs, Don Scott and Gedeon Also On Hand Gophers crushed the Cornhuskers 16- Jim Sexton, was outstanding. It was in a spirit of gaiety and 7 Saturday, and established them- The hapless Chicago Maroons, next opponents for Fritz Crisler's crew semi-frivolity that Michigan's victor- selves once more as the team to beat r ent forerit Cie cre were held to a scoreless tie by little ious gridders romped through a light- in the coming Big Ten race. Bradley Tech. The boys from the work-out yesterday afternoon at Ferry Coach Bernie Bierman was forced midway showed glaring line weak- Field. And added to the display of to use a remade backfield last week nesses, but Coach Clark Shaughnessy pep came the heartening appearance due to the absence of the injured has a quartet of classy backs led by of Capt. Fred Janke-in uniform. !Harold Van Every, but the junior the hard-going Solly Sherman, who Janke, who was carried off the field triple threat star will be back in may be troublesome to future oppon- in the final quarter of the 14-0 win plenty of time for the Michigan game, ents. over State Saturday, suffered a torn Oct. 15. Northwestern and Illinois were both lateral ligament in his leg but exam- Ohio State, perennially ranked with very impressive in their one-sided vic- ination proved the injury a minor one/ the Gophers as the class of the Con- tories over independent foes. The The big senior tackle did not go ference heap, was not quite so impres- Wildcats uncovered a successor to the through any workout but simply jog- sive in edging out a fighting Indiana great Don Heap in Jack Ryan, a ged around the field with little more team, 6-0. The mammoth Buckeye junior, as they bowled over Kansas than a slight limp and added his line was outcharged throughout by the State, 21-0. Illinois proved that the voice to a general enthusiasm which lighter Hoosier forwards, but Ohio's Ohio U.,loss was a mistake as they has been almost unknown in these superior backfield strength finally trounced DePaul, 44-7. parts since 1933. ~- Janke probably won't see action against Chicago this Saturday but will be ready, willing and able when the Wolverines invade Minneapolis a t ! week frem Saturday. Coach Fritz Crisier sent two teams through a signal drill while a com- CARL F. BAY bination of a second and third team scrimmaged against the hapless "meat grinders". Crisler intends no let-up High Grade against the heavier Chicago team. College and Watch and Jewelry More fundamentals and pass defense Fraternity JewelryRepairing-- Engraving will be stressed this week although I Michigan interceptions. of Spartan I Michigan's Big Ten Champions in 1898. First row: left to right, McDonald, Weeks, White, and France. Second row: Street, Barabee, Caley, Capt. Bennett, Steckle, Widman, and Tallcott. Third row: Potter, Mgr. Baker, McLean, Snow, Avery, Cunningham, and Coach Ferbert. *I * * *" *~ * * * * v_ By PHIL PACK An even 40 years ago, two thingsj happened to start the University of! Michigan football teams on their long victory trail and to earn them the sobriquet of "champions of the west." The first was Michigan's initial Big Ten football championship, won by a team that piled up a record of 10 wins and no losses and 205 points against 26 for all opponents combined. The second thing to happen, and probably the more significant in Wol- verine football history, was the birth Chicago Fans Receive Cubs Riotous Welcome Is Given To 'Team By 300,000 CHICAGO, Oct. 3-(AP)-A roaring reception by thousands of cheering Chicagoans keyed Manager Gabby Hartnett and his Cubs today for their World Series warfare against the New York Yankees opening Wed- nesday. Fresh from their amazing drive to National League championship, the team rode through the downtown dis- trict in a triumphant half-mile long parade. Some 300,000 citizens declared an impromptu holiday and turned out to greet the idols of the hour as they were borne through blizzards of con- fetti in open cars. Hartnett was, of course, the No. 1 hero to the cheering throng. A broad -smile spread over his tomato red face as he waved both hands to the people who shouted from the sidewalks and windows of sky- scrapers in crowded La Salle Street- at the City Hall entrance, scene of the official reception. The Yankees come to town tomor- row in their usual role of odds-on favorites to clout the Cubs into sub- mission in five games or less. Both teams will work out at Wrigley Field, the Cubs in the morning and the Yanks in the afternoon. FROSH SWIMMERS There will be a very important meeting for all freshman swim- ming candidates today at 5 p.m. at the Intramural Pool. Atten- dance is imperative. 4 Matt Mann. speculation, Thomas. Herb Lev was second with eight misses for .765. We'll be haunting you again this week-end. of "The Victors." famed Michigan fighting song and the march of every Michigan regiment since the Spanish War. To Honor Elbel In honor of that first champion- ship team and Louis Elbel, author of "The Victors," Michigan will set aside next Saturday (Oct. 8) as "1898 Day." The men who won the first title, most of whom now have white hair and who average nearly 70 years of age, will sit in a midfield box, decked with the Wolverine colors and, appropri- ately enough, watch Michigan battle with Chicago, the same team they de- feated by a 12-11 score so many years ago for the title. Their captain. J.W.F. Bennett, now of New York, will recall old days in a between-halves radio address. Mich- igan's 100-piece band will go through intricate maneuvers in their honor. "Louie"'Elbel will lead the band in a massed rendition of the song he wrote. There will be a luncheon in their hon- or at noon and a reunion dinner at night. It will be a busy day for the oldsters of '98. Widman's Great Run In the hectic Chicago-Michigan battle of 1898, Michigan was losing until the last few minutes of play. It was a bitter cold Thanksgiving day and Chicago fans were set for a cele- bration. But they( failed to take Charlie Widman, diminutive reserve quarterback into account and it was Widman, who in a sensational open- field run, won the game for the Wol- verines. So famous did Widman's run become that a Chicago newspaper had a large oil painting made of the play and presented it to the University. Widman today is a prominent indus- trialist in Detroit, a director and sales manager for the Murray Body Corp. Louis Elbel, who wrote "The Vic- tors" recalls that, as he marched down a street on Chicago's south side with a handful of other Michigan under- graduates, the words for his song seemed to come unbidden to his lips and by the time that miniature snake- dance was over, the air was born. "There was never a more enthusiastic Michigan student than I," said Elbel recently, "but that '98 team and that Chicago game pushed me way up in the clouds and all I had to do was fill in the notes and there was 'The Vic- tors'." No Band In '98 There were fewer than 5,000 peo- ple to watch the '98 Chicago-Michi- gan struggle. The Michigan stadium today accommodates nearly 20 times that number. There was no band (Continued onlPage 6) All-Campus Golf Meet To Be Held October 15 Golfers, take advantage of these last few days of Indian summer to cut those all-important few strokes off your game for on Saturday, Oct. 15 at 1 p. m. the entrants in the Annual All-Campus Golf Tournament will tee off at the University Golf course. The tournament consisting of 18 holes of medal play will be open to all uhdergraduataes who have not won varsity "M's" or varsity letters in golf at any other college or university. To the winner of the contest will go a gold medal and the semi-finalists will receive ribbons. The tournament will be played re- gardless of weather conditions and the regular greens fee of 50 cents will be charged. Entries may be made by signing on the list posted in the lobby of the I-M building and contestants will be notified concerning their op- ponents and the tee-off time. i passes at crucial moments last Satur- day nullified whatever advantages the 13 completed State aerials might have given them. Slightly ailing after Saturday's game were halfback Norm Purucker, fullback Wally Hook and end John Nicholson, but all were in uniform and apparently will be ready to go tomorrow. The Monday workout marked the return of Elmer Gedeon to his end post for the first time since Sept. 14, while Joe Savilla who had been out with a split cheek, returned to a sec- ond-string tackle post. :i .. School of Social Dancing Taught daily, 10 to 10. Terrace Garden Studio 2dFloor. uerth The- ater Bldg. Phone 9695. 'U ODD SUITING TROUSERS $5.50 $6.50 Exery trouser taken from SUITS This is a Spec- ial, Selling on these Trousers. 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