THE MICHIGAN DA lY PRESS Two Backfields Shine In Wolverine Grid Practic -- u B Bon BENJAMIN - The Campus Wits.. .. TENSENESS and emotional buoy- ancy has hit this campus that utterly surpasses anything this chron- icer has seen in three years of foot- ball anticipation. Ever since the air; became crisp early in September, and the O'Reilly kids began tossing a foot-1 ball instead of a baseball in the back- yard, I have heard little more than, "Oct. 1-the big game-who'll take it.-How do we look?" Yes, Saturday is a big afternoon inj more ways than one. First, the eyes of the nation will be focused on this wee community, for the game is THE big affair on the day. With 87,000 souls scheduled to, pile into the Stad- ium, the gate should surpass any; other game on the calendar by at least 20,000. Secondly, the calibre of football is top-notch. You can rave about Ohio State and Indiana's ball game, of Santa Clara and Stanford, Minnesota and Nebraska, Yle and Columbia, and Tulane and Auburn encounters, but this tussle of ours doesn't take a back seat by any mat- ter or means. The Spartans could quite hand- ily hold their own in our confer- ence. In this book, they have a better club than Illinois, Iowa, Chicago, and you might be able to add to that list after this week- end., Thirdly, you have no conception of how the presence of Fritz Crisler has heightened national appeal. The whole nation knows of Fritz, they're vitally interested in his progress here, and many thousands will be in the stands simply to see what Crisler's influence has meant to Michigan. Lastly, the rivalry is unsurpassed. Not so long ago, it was Michigan State Aggies and their weak and bu-. colic eleven that invaded the den of Michigan's unconquerables. Today the tide has turned. The Spartans revel in it;. the Michigans chafe under the yoke. Saturday will find the old mas- ters seeking to regain their domin- ancy. And an anxious campus-typi- cal of a breathless State of Michigan -.ust can't wait to know the answer. * * * THIS CORNER has been plagued by requests asking why in all h--- the powers-that-be should 'choose a team like Michigan State as an open- ing day opponent. The reason is obvi- ous-and it's not Wolverine choice. ' rom Oct. 1 on, Michigan is booked solidly for eight weeks. There are five Conference games and three others with non-Con- ference teams. These contests have been scheduled as much as five years in advance and the committments are irrevocable. Conference rulings state that no institution "shall play intercollegiate football on more than eight days in any year." Therefore, unless we drop a mid-season game, the Spartans will continue to be our first opponent and not Grosse Pointe High School as some woujd wish. ** * THAT EAST LANSING tackle story was pure bear. You remember Bachman's wail of yesterday in which he insisted that he was not sure of his tackle strength. This was a re- iteration of the cry which the papers have been carrying for weeks. After watching the State tackles against Wayne, I became firmly con- vinced that these lads were no novices as they would have you believe. True enough, Wayne is Wayne-11 nice boys who play football for the love of the game or some such trivia-and there will be a difference in interpre- tation this week. Yet Spartan tackles Alex Ketzko, 209 pounds and five feet ten, and Ernie Bremer, 197 pounds and six feet two and one-half, handled themselves with an assurance, poise,. and deadly finesse that convinced me that they knew their ropes. Wonder if someone isn't hoping we aim for those tackles? Silly business, eh. P ICKUPS :-Ex-coach Harry Kipke, who will do the commentating in the Saturday broadcast, is scheduled for five minute speeches during half time and after the game . ... He dic- tates his stuff to a stenographer as ad libbing makes him nervous . You can get 2 to 1 or points on the big game at East Lansing. .Watch out Pirates! . .. Them Cubs are acom- in', Dizzy and all . . . It's Klinger vs. Bryant for today. The scalpers brigade will be in town soon-. Baseball captain Walt Peckinpaugh had a 71 on a Cleveland golf course this summer . . . If Hankus Pankus Greenberg doesn't do it this year he probably never will after they deaden .that ball this winter . . Here's A Tale Of Too Many Good Centers By HERB LEV When football practice opened last spring, Fritz Crisler, taking over the Michigan coaching reins for the first time, announced that the 11 best foot- ball players on the squad would represent the Wolverines in the fall.t When football practice opened this fall, two young men named Archie Kodros. and Forest Evashevski were E trying for the same position, center. It didn't take cagey Fritz long to decide that something had to be done. As centers there was little to choosef between the boys. 'Evie' had the edge in speed, Archie was slightly the bet- ter passer. In backing up the line they were about equal, which is just an- other way of saying they were both 'tops.' J The only alternative left to Crisler1 was to shift one of the boys and Eva- ;hevski was elected. Kodros' experi- Paul Kromer's Passing Leads VarsityAttack Purucker, Hook, Harmon, Evashevski And Trosko Star In Scrimmage As his first two elevens snapped through a vigorous offensive drill yes- terday afternoon, Coach Fritz Crisler saw a sight which has not greeted the eyes of Michigan football followers since the Wolverines' hey-days in the early '30's-two strong backfields, equally fast, equally impressive and each boasting a pair of flashy half- backs. "They're beginning to come along," admitted the silent Crisler as he left a half dozen newspapermen to throw up their hands after an attempt to figure out what four backs will take the field against Michigan State Sats urday afternoon. Backfield Number One The first backfield yesterday, if it means anything, included Forest Evashevski back at quarter after a siege with a cold, Freddie Trosko and sophomore Paul Kromer at the halves, and the veteran Wally Hook at full- back. Evashevski called the signals, blocked and hauled in Kromer's ac- curate passes. Trosko ran a' reserve eleven ragged as he teamed up with the ' flashy Kromer who completed pass after pass and also tore off some long gains himself, while Wally Hook handled his end of the running as- signments with a display o the once potential, now kinetic ability he showed as a one-game sophomore sensation two years ago. And Number Two Taking the field immediately after this first combination, a so-called second backfield proceeded to equal if not surpass the performance of their teammates. Sophomore Jack Meyer took care of the quarterback's blocking assign- ments with an excellence that drew praise from his teammates. Half- backs Tom Harmon and Norm Pu- rucker ran wild, breaking into the open time and again as they twisted through a hard-trying but helpless reserve defense. Ed Christy showed that a fullback can do something other than pile-drive into the cen- ter of a line. Blocking Is Good To make the afternoon even more satisfying, the Wolverines staged an exhibition of blocking that was per- haps the best of the fall drills and gave the ball-carriers a chance to show their stuff. Paul Kromer met with a minor mis- fortune near the conclusion of the drill when he turned his ankle but trainers reported that he will be fit to go again by tomorrow. Crislers apparent choice of a first-string line remained intact ex- cept for the ends where he juggled Nicholson, Smick, Valek and Frutig. Janke and Smith remained at the tackles, Brennan and Heikkinen at the guards and Kodros at center. It's still impossible to do more than guess at a starting line-up for Satur- day however as the juggling still goes on. TRACK MANAGERS All sophomores interested'in try- ing out for Track Manager report to Yost Field House Thursday, Sept. 29, at 4:00 p. m. Jack Green, Manager Michigan Must stop This Boy Saturday Dizzy Dean Beats Pirates 2-1; GreenbergHits 57th And 58th CICAGO, Sept. 27-/P)-Ol' Dizzy aseman of the l etroit Tigers, poled Dean pitched his great heart out and two tremendous drives to center for the Chicago Cubs smacked into the his 57th and 58th home runs of the season today as Detroit swept a double thick of the NationgI League Pennant header with the St. Louis Browns, 5 to battle today, 4 and 10 to 2. With little else on the ball but its With five games left to play, Green- cover, Dean hurled the Cubs to a berg put himself within striking dis- thrill-packed, 2 to 1 victory over the tance of Babe Ruth's 1927 major league leading Pittsburgh Pirates for league record of 60 homers in a single a triumph which left the Cubs trailing season the Bucs by only half a game, with Today's two homers, hit off pitcher two more games between the clubs Bill Cox in the first and third innings scheduled for tomorrow and Thurs- of the nightcap, marked the eleventh day. . time this season Greenberg has hit Diz wasn't in there at the finish. two or more circuit blows in a single Big Bill Lee, taking the mound with game, thus bettering Hank's own big two out in the ninth, retired the final league record for that feat. Pittsburgh batsman as Diz trudged Greenberg's first home run was a slowly to the showers. But it was 440-foot liner inside the park, and Dean's victory all the way, a victory Hank had to slide home to beat the he called "the greatest of my life" relay in from center. Mark Chaistman, and one which won him the acclaim of Detroit third baseman, had a home the 42,238 hysterical fans who run inside the park in the first game, jammed Wrigley Field. and Dixie Walker and Charlie Gehr- inger hit regulation homers in the DETROIT, Sept. 27 - () - Hank double bill, Gehringer's his 20th of Greenberg, distance-clouting first the season. The name, Johnny Pingel, has been poison to Michigan State oppon- ents for the last two years. His triple threat capabilities have made him a marked man in every Spartan game but he continues to run wild. I Free Show At Michigan For Lucky Grid Players For all practical purposes the goal line in the Michigan State game this Saturday might well be the ticket taker at the Michigan Theatre be- cause every Michigan man who scores a touchdown against State this Sat- urday will be presented with a pass to the Michigan Theatre for the dur- ation of 1938. When Jerry Hoag, manager of the theatre; presented the idea to Head Coach Fritz Crisler, the coach thought it an excellent idea. But ramifications soon arose. Line Coach Munn and Backfield Coach Martineau thought it unfair to those stalwart men who make up Michigan's front line. Those linemen do not have the opportunity to shine and rise to glory as do their publicized backfield mates, the two coaches believe. For these excellent reasons passes will be given to linemen who play well. The things for which the com- plimentary ducats will be given are as yet unknown. It might be for ster- ling defensive work, for an outstand- ing tackle, for good sportsmanship, or for fine blocking. According to Mr. Hoag, there will be three or four of these passes given. The selections will be mader: Mr. Hoag, assisted by Crisler, his assistants and the Daily Sports Staff .and the results will be published in the Daily. DID YOU KNOW THA T THE HAUNTED TAV'1 ER is the ONLY privately-owned eating place i Ann Arbor mentioned in Duncan Hines Adventures in Good ating" - a list' o America's finest? LUNCHEONS DINNERS , SUNDAYS :1:30 - 1:30 5:30 - 7:30 12:30 - 7:30 40c to 85c 60c to $1.25 75c to $1.25 If you come once, you will come again 417 East Huron St. On U.S.-23 Phone I7 ' f :r 11 FOREST EVAHEVSKI .. he's a quarterback now. ence stood him in good stead, but more important, throughout his ath- letic career,. Evashevski has been known as a fellow who'll give a good account of himself wherever he plays.- Graduating from Northwestern High in Detroit, where he alternated at tackle and fullback, at the age of 16, Evie decided to postpone his col- lege career until he was a bit more matured. Two years at tackle and cen- ter on Jack Heston's Ford V-8 eleven followed. Then Michigan. Last fall freshman coaches decided that Eyie belonged at center, now he's a quarterback, so that he and Kodros can back up the line togeth- er. The position is a new one to For- est but he's glad about the shift. "Now I can get some more blockin' in" the big fellow puts it. Evie may not be in the starting line- up Saturday. Confined to the Health Service with a case of bronchitis last week, he lost some valuable ground to his two foremost rivals, Jack Mey- er and Louie Levine. But the 'One Man Gang' will get his fling. There are none who delight in mowing 'em" down more than Evie, and there are few who can do it better. Michigan State? "I've been looking forward to meeting those guys for a long time,'j was Forest's reply. And we venture that Saturday evening "those guys" will know they've met Mr. Eva- shevski., FOOTBALL MANAGERS All sophomores interested in try- ing out for football manager report to Yost Field House at 3:00 Wed- nesday afternoon. Phil Woodworth, Manager 781 U U U FRED T. McOMBER , PARKER PRODUCTS sold by 0. D. MORRILL 314 SOUTH STATE I TH15 FREE BOtK r N~~AS THE ANSWERS HOW MANY CAN YOU ANSWER?1 This book has theAnswerstothese and scores of other Questions: 1. Ohio has 24 electoral votes._ (True or Fatse?) . . * * * - - _. 2. The area of Kansas is twice that of Kentucky. (True or False?) 3. President McKinley was as- wt sassinated in 1902.{ ar Wth purchase of a bottle of False?) is the Capital of Parker Quink at 15c or 25c China. 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