THE MICHIGAN -DAILY Yankees Take Third Straight Series Game New York Hits Four Homers Off Thompson Keller Leads Powerhouse With Two Circuit Clouts; Victory Goes To Hadley CROSLEY FIELD, Cincinnati, Oct. 7.-( P)-The New York Yankees' pow- erhouse, after travelling in low gear before masterful pitching for two days, broke loose its home run light- wing today to smash the Cincinnati Reds, 7 to 3, for the third straight victory in the 1939 World Faries. With tne pitching giving way to the attack on both sides for the first time in this series, the bombing squad from the Bronx blasted four home runs-two by Rookie Charley Keller-and gave a strongly partisan crowd of 32,723 home-club rooters a display of the dynamite which has made it famous in its last three straight world championship tri- umphs Yanks Get Five Hits In near mid-summer weather that had every one of the jam-packed stands a mass of shirt-sleeves, the Yankees made only five hits to ten for the National League kings-but they didn't waste a one, as Rookie Junior Thompson served his "boom boom"l ball to them in just the right spots in the first five innings. Keller clouted his first four-bag- ,ger after Frankie Crosetti had walked in the' opening inning. ThEn clouting Charley drew a pass with two out in the third, and Joe Di Maggio snapped out of his series hit- ting doldrums with a towering smash that soared high over the 383-foot mark on the center-field fence and into the street beyond. Rolfe Singles Red Rolfe singled with one away in the fifth, and was promptly brought around by Keller's sec6nd four-bagger, a hard-hit drive that landed about 10 rows back in the right field bleachers. DiMaggio only managed an infield fly in this frame, but catcher Bill Dickey, up right be- hind him, crashed a homer deep into the bleachers, some 37 feet away. That was the end of¢ Junior, the 22-year-old right-hander, who didn't have anything even closely resemb- ling the stuff shown by his pitching mates, Paul Derringer and Bucky Walters, who lost the first two games in New York, despite heroic hurling. That, too, was the end of the Yankees' assault, for Lefty Lee Gris- som and Young Lloyd (Whitey) Moore handcuffed them completely all the way through the last four innings. Not a Yankee reached base in that time, and only three of them managed to hit balls out of the in- field. Three In A Row IN THIS CORNER College Grid Scores EAST ~By MIEL Fl/VELWR I New Difficulties. .. Games cometh and games goeth but a coach's troubles abideth forever. The State game yesterday indicated that reserve line troubles are almost a thing of the past. Reuben Kelto Bill Melzow, Bob Ingalls and Joe Rog- ers played a lot of football. For this the coaches are thankful. But now the staff' starts worrying about the second 'team backfield. On offense they were 'distinctly 'uncolossal. Dave Strong, after two brilliant weeks in practice, had a bad case of fumble- itis. Dave Nelson showed a lot of stuff, Walt IKitti blocked nicely but as atbackfield they didn't function smoothly Fred Trosko's return will be great- ly appreciated by all concerned. The Wolverines were a badly bruised lot after the game. John Nicholson, who was carried off the field on a stretcher after col- liding with Bill Kennedy of State, was limping with a groin injury.' A hurried examination revealed tha nothing serious would re- suit although he was taken 'to the hospital for a more thorough exam and will stay there over- night. Paul Kromer and Forest Evashev- ski playdd through the entire game with injuries about which the coaches knew nothing. On the first punt tht Kromer caught he injured his'knee. "I couldn't rin at more than half speed for the rest of the game," he said. When asked if he'd be' out of any games, Kromer replied, "Hell no. I don't practice four weeks to sit on the bench the rest of my life." It is feared, however, that a ligament may be torn in his knee and x-rays will be taken today.' Evie was hurt on the first kick-off. "I couldn't breath when' I stood up straight," said Eie, wihb; inicidentally, was the last man out of the dressing room after the game. The One-Man- Gang didn't appear to be injured on the field. He was all over the place on defense; he made three successive tackles, two of which were on the othei 'side of the line. And besides, he1 caught passes for two touchdowns. Aside to Forest Evashevski: Is there any truth to this story? Did you know Michigan scored that second touchdown 'hen Hfarmon went off tackle? One official said there was no touchdown and asa result did you call a rushing play to "try to score? 'How surprised were you when you found the rest of the team go back for the next kick-off? Please let us know. We wait on your answer, Eli ScoutingCorps.. . Seated in the Press Box as Yale scouts were Clint Frank, all-Ameri- can back from Yale two years ago and Jerry Ford, one of Michigan's great centers Frank, who hasn't been in New Haven for six months, said he "had no idea how Yale is this year." But he did have definite ideas about Michigan. "It's a better team than they had last year-and what an of- fense!" When asked what he thought of Harmon, he responded, "what do we all think of Harmon. He's great!" Ford had more to say about the Michigan offense and Evashevski. He too thought it was a better team than last year and thought that the signal calling of Evie in the first half was one of the best he'd ever seen. (So did Fi'hk)'""Yale;" he said, "will ba about the same as last year. We'll have a good line and a poor back- field. We miss Dick Humphreys who did 'so well against Michigan last year and Anderson who is in- eligible. He" was our whole of- fense. You play HarvArd next year, don't you? Well, they're going to be tough then. They came up with a great freshman team last year and now have seven sophomores playing with them." Both of them went a little haywire when the half time score of the Yale- Columbia game was announced yes- terday. And both were 'pointing fingers when State completed that ;ouchdown pass over Harmon's head. You can look for a lot of teams preaching "get behind Harmon on passes. Incidentally, that touchdown pass 'might 'not have been Har- mon's fault. He took the first man that came into his territory but Davis, the second man, broke fast and took it past the Gary Ace'. Charley Bachman, State mentor had nothing but praise for Michigan, "Better than last year," he said, "but reserves are weak. That Harmon gave us the most trouble. And Eva- shevski. Why, he's great, great." * * * * ..... Without taking any credit away from Bob Westfall, who turned in a whale of a game and showed that he belonged in the "charm" backfield, one of the reasons he ran so well was that State was over-shifting to the strong side to prevent those end runs by Harmon or Kromer. They were more worried about the Touchdown Twins than they were about Wolver- ine fullbacks. They learned when Westfall burst through the short-side to set up the first touchdown. The same thing was true of the pass from Kromer to Harmon in the flat that figured in the first score. State had over-shifted and as a result was out of position. for the weak-side attack. One of the impressive things about this Michigan backfield is, in spite of the individual brilliance of its com- ponent parts, the way it acts as a Army 9, Centre 6 Harvard 20, Bates 0 Dartmouth 34, Rampden-Sydneyf Navy 14, Virginia 12 Pittsburgh 20, West Virginia 0 Maine 24, Rhode Island 0 Georgetown 25, Roanoke 0 New York U. 43, Penn Military Alabama" 7, Fordhamn 6 Cornell 19, Syracuse 6 f 6 0 Boston U. 13, Franklin and Marshall 7 Army 9, Center 6 Louisiana State 26, Holy Cross 7 Yale 10, Columbia 7 Brown 20, Amherst 14 Manhattan 6, St Bonaventure 0 New York City College 19, Buffalo 0 Rutgers 20, Wooster {Ohio ) 0 Penn State 13, Bucknell 3 Princeton 26, Williams 6 New Hampshire 15, Northeastern 6 Penn 6, Lafayette 0 SOUTH Tulane 12, Auburn 0 Tennessee 40, Sewanee 0 Kentucky 21, Vanderbilt 13 Mississippi 41, S.W.~ Tennessee 0 W. Kentucky Teachers 20, La. Tech 7 N. Carolina 13, Virginia Tech 6 Duke 37, Colgate 0 Clemson 25, 'N. Carolina State 6 Richmond 7, Washington and Lee 0 Virgina Military Inst. '2, Davidson 0 MIDWEST Notre Dame 17, Georgia Tech 14 Iowa 32, Indiana 29 Nebraska 6, Minnesota 0 Oklahoma 23, Northwestern 0 Texas 17, Wisconsin 7 Ohio State 19, Missouri 0 Michigan 26, Michigan State 13 Chicago 12, Wabash 2 Butler 34, Indiana State 0 Ohio Wesleyan 33, Depauw 6 Kansas" 14, Iowa State 0 Carnegie Tech 6, Temple 0 Ohio U. 14, Western Reserve 0 I: C C I: Butler 34, 'Indiana State 0 Ohio State 19, Missouri 0 Oberlin 12, Rochester 0 Bowling Green 9, Wayne 0 Ohio Wesleyan 33, DePauw 6 Virginia Military 2, Davidson 0 Toledo 20, St. Mary's (Texas) Akron 13, Illinois Wesleyan 6 West. State Teachers (Mich)I Miami (Ohio) 0 Alma' 35, 'Olivet 6 12 6, init., Everybody blocks for every body else. It's a team back-field. Ed Frutig, who confounded exper by playing much better defensive than offensively, took out three me on one play when State tried to tur his end. Two were of the State inte ference and the third was Frutig him self. He also tripped the ball-carrie hr ______ AJ PLANE unouncig a W and Better I V.EL SERvIcE -BUS New York (A.L. AB Crosetti, ss ...........4 Rolfe, 3b .. .........4 Keller, rf...........3 DiMaggio, cf........4 Dickey, c...........3. Selkirk, lf.........2 Gordon, 2b.. ......4 Dahlgren, lb........4 Gomez, p...........1 Hadley, p...........3 Totals ...........32 Cincinnati (N.L.) AB Werber, 3b ...........4 Frey, 2b .............4 Goodman, rf ........5 McCormick, lb .......5 Lombardi, c.........3 ZZ' Bordagaray .......0 Rershberger, c.......0 Craft, cf.............4 Berger, If ............4 Myers, ss...........3 Thompson, p........1 Grissom, p ..........0 Z Bongiovanni .......1 Moore, p............1 R H 10 1 1 3 2 1 1 0'0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PQ 2 0 2 2 5 3 3 9 0 1 A 2 2 0 0 1 0 0 ii Tickets - Information - Reservations On all bus and airplane lines in United States, Canada, Mexico and South America UNION TRAVEL BUREAU In Lobby of the Michigan Union ys e ly rn r- er i. 2. MOTH-,PROOFED and INSURED against any Moth Damage for six whole months RE-TEXTURED n exclusive process that restores that balanced combination of natural dressings so often re- moved in ordinary drycleaning. MIRACL EAN I I cleaned at GOLDMAN'S they are I I 7 5 27 13 RH PO A 1 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 3 2 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 3 2. 2 9 5 0 1 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 2 Hrs. 10 - 5 daily Phone 2-4431 (eve.3245) _ h, I I ii All garments are cleaned in our patented MIRA- CLEAN process... . the safest, most thorough cleaning known to science. Yes, Goldntan's cie"Wnin tcludes all three S and at no additional charge! Dial any on 42113- 4214-s 4215- 2-1313- 2-1251 Totals .........36 3 10 27 10 Z Batted for Grissom in 6th. ZZ Ran for Lombardi in 7th. N.Y., (AL. )...202030000 Cin. (N.L.).......1 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Penn Takes Early Lead To Defeat Lafayette, 6-0 PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 7.-(IP- Pennsylvania capitalized on a quick kick to shove over a first period touchdown and open its football sea- son today with a 6 to 0 victory over Lafayette before 30,000 at Franklin Field. Frank Reagan's boot caught the Maroon secondary up close . and shoved the visitors back on their own five. Sam Moyer's return punt car- ried to the Lafayette 41 whence the THE HOME OF FINE TAILORING 619 E.William St. A Arbor, Mich. I We cater to the dignified gentleman who wishes his wardrobe to be exclusive as well as outstanding. ii II II