E MICHIGAN DAILY - o atch Favored Wolverines F 4.. ~ity hITop ipe For Eli's rst Invasion gs Boast Powerful ing Attack Behind ig Forward Wall ntinued from Page 1) Cornell And Ohio State Will Hold Nation's Grid Spot IN THIS i ly MEL Fl Ii --1 Back For More.. . portion oft tle action. 3ob Johnson d Bob,Bro6 line, take c hile Capt. g product, gi the Wolveri isser reat will be P red Burr t best' throw :entrated mu k. They bi the Well, it's a round, round world. He' First stocks start to rise, then indus- .ks, try booms and right along in the resame vet~n, our PP (percentage of Bill prognostication) clirabs the samel ves .trai.l Last week, we hit 18 of 22 for ine .818. That brings us up to .654 for the season. Michigan-Yale: Here's one that hey will never lower our average. Yale ers. has some nice boys on its team but, uch it shouldn't play out of its class. The wild Ivy League is all right but when the and Elis climb over the fence out of their to own backyard to the Big Ten then ne. papa'll spank. And Michigan will hey play papa. Harmon will throw pass- ing es to Frutig; Harmon will run like sses mad. If Kromer's leg holds up,,Yale, tive like Chicago, may start thinking of on deemphasizing football. If Michigan the wins by less than three touchdowns ion, we'll be surprised.' ake Ohio State-Cornell: Everytime we r a hear of Cornell travelling we think awn of the time in 1873 when the Big Me- Red was considering braving the leads ing o ice, t: p hurl e consectil and then xth, from 1 format try to sh z clear fo touchdo Jim well asI at half t nest receivf CORNER INEBERG_ roads to play in Ann Arbor. Ah, we rememher as if it were only yesterday. President White said he'd never send his boys to "agitate a bag of wind." Evidently a deemphasizer. He'd turn over in his interrments if he were to see his boys going to that den of 'emphasis," Columbus. Oh well, his descendants will shudder after the game anyhow. Ohio "State. Illinois-Northwestern: We used to hear the old bear story everytime Chicago met the Illini. "Stagg fears Zuppke" would resound again and again. Northwestern may be in the Chicago area but Lynn Waldorf is no Stagg. Illinis will play Stags at Bay and Northwestern will play foot- ball. Purdue-Santa Clara: There's some- thing nice about intersectional games. It brings a homely atmosphere. It makes us feel as though we're all one, big happy family. Purdue won't feel that way before the game and Santa Clara won't feel that way afterwards. Poo, Poo Purdue. Iowa-Wisconsin: Harmon likes Iowa because he scored 27 points against them. We like Iowa because they have a nice team. Notre Dame-Carnegie Tech: They at Carnegie still brood about Referee John Getchell's decision last year about a fourth down that was and wasn't. While they brood Notre Dame's egg will hatch. The Irish again. Pittsburgh-Fordham: We have a chauvinistic roommate who,. before Tulane and Alabama came north to do battle, used to get up in the morn- ing chanting a little hymn. It went something like this: "Eshmont, Blu- menstock, Principe and Fortunate. Sing their praises heavily, not lega- to." Okay, roomie. It's Fordham. Dartmouth-Harvard: This is one that the Ivy League will win. -Har- vard by a broad A. Georgia-N.Y.U.: Our super-upset of the day. Hail, Dixie. Georgia. And then, on from there, we'll take " Penn over North Carolina, Princeton over Brown, Syracuse over Penn State, Arkansas over Villanova Oklahoma over Oklahoma A.M., Ne- braska over Kansas State, Clemson over Navy, Mississippi over Tulane Miss. State over Alabama, Georgia Tech over Auburn, Texas A&M over Baylor, U.S.C. over California, Ore- gon over U.C.L.A. and head ovei shoulders. Carnegie Tech Seeks Victory Over The Irish Fordham And Pitt Clash In East's Biggest Tilt; Wildcats Meet Illinois NEW YORK, Oct. 27.-UP)-The college football campaign, which each week has managed to produce onel game of overshadowing importance,J turns up another "natural" tomor- row in the meeting at Columbus be- tween the unbeaten and untied forces of Ohio State and Cornell. It brings together two crack rep- resentatives of their sections-Ohio State, a team with better morale and better balance than in recent years, and ranked with Michigan as Big Ten co-favorite; and Cornell, best team the East has produced so far and strong choice to retain the cham- pionship in the Ivy League. Sellout Crowd To See Irish Carnegie Tech's Tartans, once more the "underdog" in pre-gam cal lations of a battle with Notre Dane, were primed tonight to battle the Irish before sellout crowd of 65,- 000 or more at Tech's stadium. Heavy showers fell during the day and tonight but the playing field was covered. Showers also were predict- ed for tomorrow. Coach Bill Kern of the Tartans announced he will start the same lineup as, faced New York University Saturday except that the more experienced Karl Striegel will be back at left end in place of Robert Church. Pitt Has Edge Over Rams - . The emphasis will be on the offen- sive again tomorrowwhen the foot- ball elevens of Fordham and Pitts- burgh meet before some 50,000 fans at the Polo Grounds., The Panthers won 24-13 last yea following three straight years of scoreless ties. Fordham, back to the gridiron wars after a two-week rest following set backs by Alabama and Tulane, ha: built its attack around two spee merchants, sophomore Jim Blumen stock and junior Len Eshmont. Pitts burgh relied on trickery rather than its customary powerhouse to turn back Washington, West Virginia an Duke before bowing to Duquesne las week. Northwestern Favored r At Evanston, Northwestern and II linois, football feudists for nearly hal ; , s S, S f t e .i t Charley Hoyt Has Homecoming, But It's In A Straiige New Garb By HERM EPSTEIN are still his boys. And, as they came It didn't look as though anything in one at a time, or maybe two to- had changed as Charley Hoyt stood gether, there was something in his in the dressing room and the mem- voice as he said "Hello" to Capt. bers of the Michigan track team Ralph Schwarzkopf, Warren Breid- trooped in yelling, "Hi, coach!" But, enbach, Phil Balyeat, and all the things have changed, and yesterday others. Missing were Bill Watson, the former Wolverine track coach captain of his last great team, Elmer came back to Ann Arbor in the train Gedeon, Hod Davidson, and the other of the Eli invaders. ers who had run so well for this It was only five months ago that great coach. 1Michigan track fans were singing 1 "How's the leg, Phil? You look in Michgantrak fns eresiningsweUl shape, Ralph." These and a the praises of their great coach who host of other questions and state- had just led his team to the thir-htonteromuesis and srte : teenth Conference title in eighteen ments came from his lips and from tries under his coaching. But it the memory of days gone by. was Charley's last appearance, \ for Talks Of Next Meeting he left Michigan then and accepted The quiet talking in the room was a post at Yale as head trainer and pierced by a shout for Charley tc track coach. come out on the Stadium field where Coach' Reminisces his new boys were. As he left, he As he finished with the last of the said, "Wait around if you can. I'l. Bulldogs who remained in the room, be back in a while. And, if you-can'l he straightened up, and with his stay, and I don't see you, good luck quiet characteristic smile began boys. Maybe I'll see you when swapping tales with a group of Michi- come out here during Christmas gan boys who came out of nowhere vacation to-visit all my friends." to fill the room. We hope so, Charley. You're al- Yale boys? No, they weren't stiff ways a most welcome guest, to a and cold as so many people (except Michigan that will never forget you Michigan coeds) thought. They were- just like his boys here at Michigan. And how they scrapped! "You'll see a great bunch of fighters out there tomorrow, yes sir!" His track team? He'd been too busy with the football team to get his men out, buti he'd had a couple meetings with them, and was really surprised at the interest shown. He'd have a squad of probably seventy- five to a hundred men. A fter.tb( Greeted By Track Men But, enough of Yale, it was home- coming for him too, and he wanted to know how the team was. They Hal ack rer. Pirates Obtain Philly Catcher is line or lateral Frisch Pays Unannounced around Sum For Virgil Davis play as ~for a againist PITTSBURGH, Oct. 27.-(MP-Ii on this his initial step to rebuild the ailing scored pirates, Manager Frankie Frisch an= Bowl ond's rn of been nounced tonight the purchase of veteran catcher Virgil (Spud) Davis from the Philadelphia Phillies. The cash consideration was not disclosed. The new Pirate manager expects the 210 pound, six foot, six inch back- stop to boost the hitting "punch" of the Pirates, who finished sixth in the' National League race this year after collapsing in the final days of the league pennant chase in 1938. Davis hit .307 last season. For some time rumors have floated about the senior loop that shortstop Arky Vaughn and the brothers Wa- ner, Paul and Lloyd, veteran out- fielders, would be traded down the river. -S s f [s - :d n ,n d t - If gee Former Wolverines Pond last night said that "if stop Tom Harmon we may ,' 1 Campus Poll Reveals Yale Is Here! ere three rley Hoyt, ,nd coach, d coach. on played Hoyt was, ity track Yale band, the trip and hs escorted1 train. 70 an the strong, also entourage of -team on a By HAROLD WILSON Not to be outdone by the Gallup poll of public opinion, the Roving Re- porter did a little galloping around himself last night while canvassing the candid opinion of what the man on the street thinks about the Michi- gan-Yale game today. The matter! might be dismissed; by saying thel man on the street doesn't think much of it, but that isn't the way the Roving Reporter does things. No effort was spared in providing the readers of The Daily with an accurate mirror of public opinion. It; matters little that the mirror is cracked. Famou's and infamous alike were questioned: "What do you think of the Michigan-Yale game?" Fritz- Crisler, reported to be close- ly connected with the Wolverine team: "It'll be a tough battle." Ducky Pond (ditto with Yale team): "It'll be a tough battle." Franklin Delano Roosevelt, govern- ment employee: "I caught some big ones but you should have seen the one that got away." Charley McCarthy, fugitive from a sawmill: "Are you sure they don't have any wooden goal posts any more?" Annony Moose,. local phosopher: "The Russo-Franco-Germo- rito sit- uation is of particular significance at the present time, but I'll take the Yanks in four games." Alpha Phi Sister, member of local sorority: "Where are the Yale men?" Luren D. Dickinson, political work- er: "It will certainly be a great spec- tacle-if the Boy Scouts keep their knees covered." Michigan's Live Wolverine, a mas- cot by trade: "Where's the Eli Bull- dog? I'll moider da bum." Ivan Aytoclock, occupation un- known: "Yale has tradition, but Michigan has Harmon, Evashevski, and Kodros." Yale Man, described by observers as "tall, smoking a pipe, conceited, and sporting a crew haircut": "Aren't there any decent coeds here?" Harry Tillotson, Michigan ticket manager: "Hope it doesn't rain, hope it doesn't rain, hope it doesn't, rain line-ups follow: Pos. Michigan lemy LE Frutig LT Savilla n LG Fritz C Kodros RG Sukup y RT Smith RE Nicholson QB Evashevski nan LH Kromer ur . RH Harmon FB Westfall wee, Frank Birch, Earlham. e, John Schommer, Chicago. Judge, W. D. Knight, Dart- Linesman, J. J. Lipp, Chicago. ac its me ex Vol to wlh on Te w Sol te; ra cif tin SC p1 WE century, will carry their rivalry into 33rd game at Dyche Stadium to- orrow before a crowd which may ceed 35,000 spectators. Northwestern will be a slight fa- 1b 1 -4 Take Home a Souvenir MICHIGAN SONG BOOKS. $2.00 f ". " r*, " I MICHIGAN ILLUSTRATED - A Book of Views. $1.00 MICHIGAN COOK BOOK . 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