THE MICHIGAN DAILY PRESS PASSES -y BUD BENJAMIN - Crisler Displeased*... FdRITZ wCISLER wore a grim Mon- day look at yesterday's practice. It presaged a very rough week for your varsity football team with plenty of raw noses and a thorough grind- stone rub. There is little elation among the Michigan coaching clique today over Saturday's Yale victory. Crisler and Co. prefer decisive triumphs, and1 the Eli win was anything but that. Crisler is not a little irked over the Wolverine performance at New Ha- ven, and he made no bones about it yesterday. "There was nothing swell about that victory," he commented sharply as a bunch of the Field House gang tendered their con- gratulations. "We looked pretty bad at times." He had a minute to spare, and I had a couple of hours. It seemed a likely time to pose some questions. 1. How about our leaky pass de- fense? "First," he replied, "you must give\Hiumphreys a world of credit. He's a great passer, and he was especially good Saturday." "X A C9lt " " AA 4m7ie iff. Amid Flying Footballs And Mud Intra-Union Feud Flares Anew Sian Kelley Hurdles Rival: Players And Puddles For Last Minute Scores By MASON GOULD Flash!BThe Union Cafeteria boys, football rivals, the Union Waiters, eight strong, in a driving rain and a sea of mud. This was the second meeting of the two "star-studded" clubs this sea- son, the Waiters having routed the Caf Boys, 38-6, the Sunday before. It took plenty of courage for these 14 hardy men to get themselves up at eight o'clock of a Sunday morning with the rain beating down in all its fury. As to the missing members of each team-well, you know, it was the "morning after the night before." Both clubs are eager to renew rela- tions next Sunday, each claiming, "If it hadn't been for the mud, we'd have slaughtered 'em!" Nichols Swims To Score As to the game itself, it looked as though the waiters' superior manpow- er would decide the battle, for they waded into an early 12 to 0 lead. Ned1 Pingel Replacement Sought By Bachman E Morrow, ineligible football player. faded back andtthrew a long pass, 1 mud and all, to Don Nichols, of wrestling fame, who swam 50 yards to a score to send the Waiters into a 6 to 0 lead. A few minutes later, after the Wait- ers had brought the ball deep into the Cafs' territory, Bill Coombs, another wrestler, shot a pass to Harold Nich- ols, Don's brother in the grunt-and- groan sport, who caught the ball in the end zone for the waiters' second tally. Not To Be Denied But the Caf boys were not to be de- nied. With their backs to the wall, rain beating in their faces, and a slippery turf beneath their feet, they fought to tie the scorer Bill Watson versatile track star, heaved a long pass to Star Kelley, who does plenty of hurdling for Charlie Hoyt, and Kelley galloped to f a touchdown, showering mud in the faces of his desperate pursuers. Then, when it appeared that the Waiters had the game in the pockets of their pure white jackets, the fleet Kelley intercepted a Waiters' pass deep in his own territory,. dodged several opponents and a hosts of pud-) dles, and raced almost the entire length of the field to give his mates a well-earned tie. The lineup for the Cafeteria boys was Sid Wiener, Larry Tutak, "Al Pet- erson, Bill Watson, Stan Kelley and1 Herb Pendall. The Union waiters who managed to make the nine o'clock call were Don Nichols, Paul Cameron, Jim Gallis, Jim .Patterson,1 Harold Nichols, Bill Coombs, Al Chad-I wick and Ned Morrow.I Crisler Spii1n's Defense, Sets Team Passing' Luther's Aerials Hit Mark As Wolverines Sharpen Offense For Illinois Pass defense-Michigan's glaring weakness, increasingly apparent with each contest, was not the practice menu for yesterday. 'In fact, Coach Fritz Crisler did not spend a single minute of the after- noon working to correct what every- body but- said Mr- Crisler claims to be wrong with the 1938 edition of Wolverine gridders. Luther Hits Mark In fact, Mr. Crisler did just the' opposite. He sent his charges through an extended offensive passing drill with Tom Harmon, Dave Strong, Fred Trosko and Bill Luther on the thrdw- ing end. Of the group, Luther, the sophomore back hailing from Toledo, was by far the most accurate heaver. Time and again, his bullet passes hit their mark, a la Newman, Baugh and Co. Surprise number two of the work- out was a punting exhibition by one never thought of as a kicker. Vince Valek, the junior end who has shown up so well this year that against Yale he played the full sixty minutes, was the booter. No Serious Injuries With the reserve line attempting to break through the second string var- sity and block the kicks, Valek shot long looping spirals some 50 and 60 yards down the field. During the half hour or so which he practiced, the Holly, Mich., lad had but one or two under that distance. A slight tail wind was an advantage but even so the exhibition was a pleasant sight to the coaches. Coach Crisler watched a signal drill by his first and second elevens, with no change in the lineup that started against the inspired Eli last Satur- day and then sent them in. The squad came out of the Yale contest without a serious injury re- sulting.*The usual cuts and bruises were evident but everyone except Joe Savilla, the burly tackle, is in good shape. Savilla put in an appearance, but his right foot was in a cast neces- sitating travel by bicycle. Galento To Meet Thomas PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 24--(R)- Promoter Herman Taylor announced tonight he had signed "'Two-Ton" Tony Galento, of Orange, N. J., lead- ing contender for the heavyweight title, to a 12-round bout with Harry Thomas, of Chicago,'here on Nov. 14. ,, 1- It's easier to be better looking ..;.^: .,, '' a '7" . . t ' i 14 i i , , . ICI, I I , .-acVIm-- ne nt inuI i 5, y EAST LANSING, Oct. 24-{)P.-- once did Yale pass to an un- Coach Charley Bachman gave his covered man. On ever other suc- Michigan State College football cessful pass we had the receiver charges no rest today as hoedrove covered. That includes 'both them through a stiff practice session touchdown plays. Our men were in, preparation for their "big" mid- so near Moody they could have seasongamewith Santa Clara Satur- touched him without moving. But day. if you, can tell me how to over- Bachman shifted the emphasis come mental lapses and a flat- from aerial defense, stressed in ad- footed pass defense I wish you vance of earlier contests, to the rugged would. It was a case of men being type of playhe, b es will be neces- in the- right place but not doing sary to stop the Westerners' bone- the right thing." 'rcrushing power plays. 2. What happened to our vaunted State's third and fourth teams ground game? scrimmaged today as Bachman con- tinued to seek. capable replacements "No running game will work if for Johnny Pingel, his triple-threat men do not 'block. We used the star, at left halfback. Pingel played same plays against Yale 'that we through most of the Syracuse game used against Minnesota, but the as a result of the injury that benched blocking wasn't there. And conm- his regular understudy, Gene Ciolek, bined with some glaring over- for the remainder of- the season. sights, it ruined our attack. In reviewing the Spartan victory; "You newspaper men had the over Syracuse, 'Bachman expressed boys believing they were unbeat- particular. gratification over the line able. The great Michigan team play of George IIandler, 240-pound that had scored a- moral victory sophomore tackle, and Lyle Rocken- over Minnesota.. Sure fire win- bach. junior guard., ners. The best team in the Con- ference. The team read that' stuff, and their friends told them Brewer Returns To Illipi the same thing. They believed it.+ Yale did not." CHAMPAIGN-(R)-Mel .I IStaff's' Guessers Compile .714 Mark The Junior Staff made a stirring comeback after last week's rather miserable showing and compiled the magnificent average of .714 in pick- ing Saturday's winners. . The grand old man of the East, Mel Fineberg, paced this week's selec- tors with his .750 average, picking 21 of the 28 games up for consideration. Herb Lev and Tom Phares were dead- locked for second, each one gdme away from Expert Fineberg. The Princeton-Navy and Baylor- Texas A. & M. ties caused even the most careful calculations to go astray and there were several other upsets which even Eddie Dooley and John Kieran failed to foresee, all 'of which served to hold the general average down. Smart Striped Madras Sh able in regular, tab, or rou collars. Oxford Shirting in white, and patterns. $2.65, 3 3. They seemed to lose their cocki- ness in the/ second half. Is that a permanent loss? "I should believe so. It took 13 points to wake them up. We are forgetting Minnesota, and every- thing else that has passed. We are thinking of Illinois this week -no one else" 4. Did the intensity with which Yale scouted Michigan hurt? (Six scouts at Minnesota, four at Chicago andone at Michigan State). "No. We knew dust as much about their plays as they did about our's. The trick is in know- ing what's coming next." 5. What about Saturday? Did you ever hear of an Illinois team that was a soft touch?. "I never did. I don't think there has ever been one. The team we meet Saturday definitely is not." 6. Any special commendations for Saturday performances? "Heikkinen and Janke. Both played great games." MAN ABOUT TOWN-The Varsity returned to New York after the game, saw the Broadway show "You Can't Have Everything," spent Sun- day touring the town, and left that night on the sleeper . . . The best rushing of the trip was not done against Yale but against Vassar .. . 40 of the gals were on the train and needed plenty of interference to get off at Poughkeepsie.. Seen at New Haven in the press box: Tuure Tenander, the Flying Finn, back from Europe and seek- ing American employment . . Yale's attitude toward the press is amusing... The Eli moguls act as if they were doing the boys a favor by allowing them to watch their football game-.... How naive... They might com- pare football crowds with lacrosse attendance and remember who made it possible. Random memoirs: Those amazingly attractive femmes aboard the New York to New Haven train Satidee morn ... Yale men apparently do all right for themselves . . . Broadway at night with enough light to read a paper . . . Princeton men at the Famous Door and The Onyx Club, lively 52nd Street dens . . . They all look the same in their tweed coats, flannel slacks, white button down shirts .and black ties Risiav shorw tregular Illinois quarterback this sea- son until a knee injury forced him out of action, returned to the lineup Mon- day as a guard when numerous in- juries forced Coach Bob 'Zuppke to' Tuggle' his lineup. Brewer played guard as a sophomore last season. Four Illini guards---George Berhardt, Wes Martin, Ralph Hathaway and Jim Hodges-are nursing injuries which may keep them- out of the game with Michigan Saturday. Buckeyes Prep For NYU COLUMBUS--()---Coach Francis A. Schmidt sent his Ohio State Uni- versity varsity squad through a work- out Monday that included every phase of football. The Bucks humbled Chi- cago 42 to 7 in a Big Ten game here Saturday, and travel to New York to take on New York University this week. Frank Medico PIPES may be purchased at SWIFT'S DRUG STORE - - - -, a~'i :v± IPa m -to]. 1 ji . IT'S NOT THE TOBACCO-IT'S THE FILTER I wig t nrlR A t t A l w _ ,. _ NEW SHAPES & FINISHES MEDICO has only pat'd. filter combining cellophane exterior and 66. baffle absorbent screen interior. Traps saliva and juices in filter, preventing wet heel. Hence it improved. taste and aroma of any tobacco. -$1L At, Your FINGERTIPS THE "CAMPUS COAT" - the "H I-HO" -the "SHORT EE" - Each style is a 'different version of the short Campus utility coat. The fabrics - all cravenetted - are gab- Now Demi-bosom Shirt: bosom and cuffs of ardine and corduroy. See all styles in our complete stock, at $11.75 to $1 5.00. 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