THE MICHIGAN DAILY Evashevski Given Even Chance To Start Against Minnesot Injuries, Keep M c ia I r9,,Michigwan Six Wolverines From Practice To Of Them W Savilla, Olds And Nelson - }njured In ilini ame; {?}. Paul Kromer Works Out Michigan's chances to beat Minne- sota increased 50 per cent yesterday afternoon when Forest Evashevski, .ichigan's great blocking quarter- :. back, was released from the hospital r... and given a better.............j:. :' f .. . S than even chance ~ * ::: :~::.::v:7 to play against the Gophers this com- Sing Saturday by Dr. George Hammond, ....., 'f team physician. It was feared .f, t h a t Evashevski might have a brok- en ankle, but x-> ".rays dispelled this,{ Evashevski and together with . . the rapid disappearance of the swell- ing the Wolverines' hopes have been bolstered considerably. The absence of the "One Man Gang" would beas disastrous to Mich- igan as the loss of the British 1Navy would be to the Allies. Whether Jim Grissen or Walter Kitti replace Evie TWo Illinois players (one of the in case he is unable to start depends Tom Harmon in the third quarter this owing they make in practice play, but he was smothered most o Kromer B rs a stunning 16-7 setback. Drops To 10th Place In National Football Ranking ere Needed To em is fullback Rettin ger, b of Saturday's game at Ch of the afternoon by the fig Additional life was added to the Wolverines when it was learned that Paul Kromer, who missed the Illini= game, will be ready to start against the Thundering Herd from the North. Kromner ran-through yesterday's drills minus the mile of tape that has been binding, his leg for the last few weeks. 11 harry Kohl, reserve quarterback who has been confined to the hospital E Po the with' a leg infection since last Tues- *a ow day, will probably be released some The fair weather football fans are .ha time today, but whether he will be at it in earnest now. One defeat do able to'see action is yet uncertain. and they, searching for a scapegoat, up *Four niore were pn the injured list will cast their hooks into anything fic tb. bring the 'Monday total to six, the they find. These are some of the cr newest additions were tackle Roland weird concoctions that have strayed Tr Savilla with a light into the minds of these searchers- th charlie horse, who after-fiction. All of them are as will °pr'obably be stupid and unfounded as they are wa back m 'action. to- . vicious. tin duay, nd halfback of Dave Nesnd whora 1. Five members of the team were of Dave Nelson, wh drunk Friday night. be h ip rd - who will . 2. The team was overconfident- be . lepUt out of 3. The line was jealous of the pub- tol scrimmage for sev- licity Harmon was jgetting and want- eral days.f. ..: ed to show him he wasr't important.. Fred Olds, who 4. Evashevski was jealous of thev played Saturday publicity Harmon was getting and i despite a shoulder Kromer wanted to show him how important t injury, lias not. shown any improve- his (Evie's) blocking was. As a re-r ment and will be used sparingly this sult, they say, he faked an injury sot week. After a week little Herc Renda he wouldn't have to block.t is still having trouble shaking off his The immediate reason why the charlie horse and seems to be mak- Wolverines lost was that Satur- I ing no advance towards complete re- day, Nov. 4, Illinois was the bet- ga 'covery;. ter team. They were on top al- pu: Gophers Strong most from. the beginning and fu tennie Oosterbaan reported that never relinquished .the position. sa the Golden dophers are not to be tak- But how could the Illini, a team at en a~s a setup despite a poor showing that had lost three games and go thig-season. Oosterbaan, who scout- tied Bradley Tech, be better than mo Cd 'the Minnesota-Northwestern game the title - bound Wolverines? the last Saturday, said, that the boys from There is no one answer; it was fu the North were still a Thundering Thcombinonofefans;thas fu Herd and depended on a powerhouse a combination of factors that ex line and backfield to wearout its op- saw the experts and This Corner ponents. In addition Bierman has (Saturday morning prediction, wa one of the best punters in the middle Michigan 27, IllinoisO) confound- Ha west this year in George Franck, who ' averaged 44 yards against the Wild- First, but not most important, was cats, the fact that Michigan wasn't ready Evidence that the Wolverines were phychologically and Illinois was. Not not totally dejected by Saturday's up- that Michigan was overconfident. It set was to be seen in the spirit of Bob wasn't. But the squad didn't think,{ Ingalls, reserve center, who asked to and not unjustifiably, that Illinois be given 'a trial at the quarterback had anything. Illinois, on the other post. Ingalls worked hand, was hopped up. For one thing out with the third it was Homecoming. For another Bob team, with Crisler's Zuppke, a master psychologist, had permission, only on them pepped up. And thirdly, their the condition that ire was probably roused by all the he still consider the newspaper talk about a Harmon- ' .. center post as his Grange feud. number one job. But all that wouldn't have made Crisler do u b t s any difference had not the game de- that he will be able veloped peculiarly. When the game to pick up enough started we daresay that no one in about the signal the stadium, Zuppke or any member calling post before ofthe Illinois team included, expect- Ingalls next Saturday, but ed to win. They won the toss and admits he may know enough about it elected to receive. They didn't even before the close of the season to get choose the wind because they were a trial, since the reserve job at this afraid to kick off and give the Wol- post has been a source of trouble all verines the ball. Oi the kick off season to the Wolverine mentor. Rettinger fumbled momentarily and .For forma l wear Crosby - Square.. dress oxfords Patent leather ., Dull calf kin OY OY C C1 By MEL FINE Illini were bottled uj vn 20. 'The first tw d the ball they kick wn. And with the pr on them, under whic ial inspiration probabl acked, their first brea osko fumbled a pass o ey .recovered. ' On this' play, inciden as hit hard and for th me he was in, was unal his left eye.' He ask taken' out after his* t Archie;*thinking t iserable about'-his pc d him to stay in. But after Illinois re was unable to gain an kick. Again Trosko fu time on his own 20, an never got out of this the Illini kicked a fie the first minute of 1 quarter. In all, Illinois recovere n fumbles. With th nting average of 36 n'bles cost 180 yards me time interrupted offense. And every t a break, it hopped tl ore. It had a cumulati ey stayed on top. ' mble five times against pect to escape unscath Another reason was t s being outcharged a rinon never got a ch Stop Harmon This Time Unbeaten Vols . Still Hold Lead In Weely Poll Wolverines And Buckeyes .:.::Only Teams With Losses .i.i.Y\, Listed Among First Ten NEW YORK, Nov. 6.-(P)-Their Ssy'"_,':surprise loss at the hands of wily Bob Zuppke's fighting Illini Saturday jolted the Wolverines from their cov- eted second place rating in the Asso- ciated Press national football poll down to 10th place, two points be- hind Ohio State. Tennessee's un-" : beaten, untied, and unscored-on Vol- unteers held down first place for the third week in succession. Major Bob Neyland's powerhouse, which has played only two major games but disposed of its rivals hand- somely in each, polled 81 out of 108 first-place votes in the fourth election of the season. This gave the South- eastern Conference leaders, apparent- ly headed for their second perfect ack to the, camera) are shown as they stopped campaign, .1,017 points for a walka- ampaign. Harmon made twelve yards on this way victory, and left all of the racing ghting Illini, who handed the unbeaten Wolverines to the runners-up. In a neck-and-neck battle for sec- ond place Texas A. and M., moved up from fifth to beat out Notre Dame by two points. Standing of the teams (points fig- 'O R N E R ured on 10-9-8-7-6, etc., basis, with first-place votes in parentheses): First Ten ;BERGTeam Points 1. Tennessee (81)..........1,017 p inside their going. Illinois was seeping through, 2. Texas A. and M. (6)......787 D times they rushing him on his passes, stepping 3. Notre Dame (11) 785 ed on third him almost. before he started to run. 4.SCalifonia (5) 7 ~esr ~5. Cornell () ..... ..655 essure piling Yet, he still looked like an all-Ameri- 6 Oklahoma (3582 1h theirarti- can, Everytime he got his hands on 7 Tlane....... ........382 y would have the ball, the stands expected him to 7. Tulane ............ ...378% k came. Fred score. After the game Zuppke called 8. North Carolina (1) .......360 /2 in the 45 and him the best back in the country. But 9.' Ohio State4........96 he never had a chance. 10. Michigan........-.. 94 tally, Trosko With a leaky line and his blocker Second Ten-11. UCLA, 91; 12. Du- e rest of the Evashevski only half a man because of quesne, 74; 13.-Southern Methodist, ble to see out a leg injury sustained on the third 69; 14. Dartmouth, 62; 15. Duke, 46; ed Kodros to play, he coudn't get away. ' But he 16. Santa Clara,.29;.17. New York U., next fumble was a heroic figure even in defeat. 24; 18, Kentucky, 23; 19, Mississippi, hat he was When he went through the line it was 9; 20, Alabama, 8. oor showing, never the first man that stopped him. Or the second. It always took at least Michigan has no chance for the Iig covered, it three men to pull him down. He Ten title - (Ohio State, ,Iowa and d forced to played 60 minutes and he took a phyi- Northwestern all-play sixe games, one mbled, this cal beating that would have cowed a more than the Wolverines) is -to for- Michigan lesser man. He never saw one of his get the Illinois debacle. Minnesota hole until own passes all afternoon. Those driv- comes next week. hole ntil ing Illini linemen hit him after every* * ld goal in throw. And the way they surrounded Incidentally, this "wait-a-minute" the second him before he could get set to pitch play on which Illinois scored had no was reminiscent of the siege of Ma- psychological effect on the Michigan d five Michi- drid. His 36-yard run in the first line. They were simply outcharged e Wolverine period took him over five would-be and driven back. None of them re- yards, these tacklers and he went the last seven laxed when Rettinger, in the tailback, and at the yards with two men hanging on his started to talk to distract their atten any attempt shoulders. It was a heroic Harmon, tion. * * * time Illinois a Harmon who made mistakes but Afterthought on the most ironical hem up some who never gave up under terrific part of Saturday's defeat: Paul Kro- ve effect and pressure. mer "resting for Minnesota." You couldn't Nor did anyone else on the t Siwash and team give up. They didn't have it ,4. ed. Saturday. They could never get hat the line off their heels but they were try- 11 afternoon. ing all the way. hance to get The important thing now that Hoosier Hammer Tops Conference Scorers CHICAGO, Nov. 6.-(P)-The BSig Ten's touchdown makers lost a good opportunity last weekend to cut Michigan's Tom Harmon's over- whelming margin in the race for individual scoring honors. Harmon, bottled up most of the afternoon by Illinois' inspired line, managed to add six points to his total, running his aggregate to 51 points in three conference games. Don Clawson, Northwestern sopho- more, held onto second place by scoring eight points against Minne- sota. Psi U Defeats Phi BJD.InI-M S peed ball Tilt One favorite fell by the wayside, while its two co-favorites did as ex- pected in the first day's play in the first-place interfraternity speedball playoffs yesterday. Psi Upsilon staged a minor upset as they eliminated Phi Beta Delta 13-6. Team-mates Paul~Keller and Chuck Evans continued where they left off in the regular season to lead the Psi U's to the win, while Rex Latham, goalie, played a fine defen- sive game. Martin Rudman was out- standing for the losers. Sigma Chi's powerful aggregation. found'little trouble in gaining the sec- ond round as thy swamped Chi Phi under a 15-2 scqre. Jack Cooper, Bob Reutter, Frank Morley, Al Kelso, and Jack Cory all had a hand in the licking. The third favorites, Phi Kappa Psi, managed to squeeze out a 9-8 decision over Phi Sigma Delta after a wide- open battle. Dick Bennett performed as expected for the winners,- kicking two field goals for six points. Ralph Read was the offensive -star for Phi Sigma Delta, but the real standout of the game was tiny Hanley Wolf, goalie, who turned in one of the best performances of the day. In a second-place playoff game the Sigma Alpha Mu entry went'into the second round with a 5-3 win over Delta Upsilon. Bob Krause and Dick Levy paced the winners. 1 -I i M v . Minnesota Given Lengthy Workout MINNEAPOLIS-(IP)-Contrary to custom, Coach Bernie Bierman sent the entire Minnesota football squad through a lengthy drill Monday, op- ening preparations for Saturday's clash with Michigan at Ann Arbor. Only three men, all or them injured in the loss to Northwestern, were ex- cused from the workout. By John- son, right tackle, suffered a dislocated elbow in the Wildcat battle and, his physician said, will be lost to the team for three weeks. Harold Van Every and Bruce Smith were the other in- jured Gophers, each suffering a leg injury. Both, however, will be ready to play against Michigan. * * Easy to Use Easy to. Look At Easy to Own Again Underwood '"Leads t he World" with superior features for fast, easy, quiet typing! See the new Underwood Typemaster Port- able (as illustr ted) only $59.50. r BALL'& THRASHER 229 So. 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Protects the briar (and that new tweed outfit of yours) from burning. The slotted grill controls the draft Thle Choice of Beverage 39c 'BLUE FRONT' CHICKEN STEW Assorted Rolls or Bread II A% i A w d C mlr D V