THE MICHIGAN DAILY IN THIS CORNER Varsity Eleven Unimpressive In Final Scrincma! i (~4) By Mel Fineberg $parta's Fall Due EAST LANSING, Sept. 30.-Michi- gan'State showed little in its 16-0 victory- over Wayne University today to warrant any undue fears that the Wolverines will have the quietus put to their championship hopes here: next Saturday. Regulars Nose Out Reserves By 13-12 Score Strong's Play Bright Spot In Practice Strong's Passes Weak Michigan Defense; Renda Reveal Aeriai Stars State showed no running at- tack, good passing and a fair de- fense and might have gone with- 4ut scoring had riot the gallant, undermanned Wayne eleven fad- edan the ast= eight minutes when te'parta sscored all of their There was little doubt that Coach Charley Bachman had his club play- ing uilnder wraps, but as the game wore 'on it became apparent that' State just didn't have the stuff. Their b ocking, usually a Bachman forte, was negligible;' on ofense the line was logy aiid failed to .charge. Only oice, when Ed Pearce went24 yards ot his right tackIle in the third period; did State show anything that resembled a grouind attack. When- e er Spartan power started to inc- ion, rmIles would mar 'the'aWick. ey fuibled ten times with Wayne falling on six of them and gained ol 65 'yards on the ground. The only bright spots the up- staters showed were their pass- " sand kicking-and most of "_t 'twas dote b-Crostl~waite, unheralded saphomore who was the best back on the field. If was the second' year m u who hurled" a" -yard^ tou~chdown pass. (20 yards from the line of scrimmage) 'to another sopho- nore, Bill Kennedy. Even then, "Cr.sitaite had so nmuch ro- tectoh 'that, had Bachman not been looking, he could have smked a dime cigar. And Ken- nedy was entirely alone .on the goal line. Crosthwaite and Stan McRae, an end, averaged 41 yards from scrimmage on teir 'punts.: The Spartans' best play was a short1 bullet pass to a cutting end about1 fibe yards past the line of scrim- Ogge. It is "the same pass that Johnny Pingel used to thro.w to Ole ielsdrl: Each tie they pulled that one out of the bag, it was good for least ,eight yards. They com- ted five out of seven attempts te g n59 yards while Wayne hit four| for nine. The Spartan forward wall com- l;letely snothered thl :' . yi'e running attack and helt the' roiters to a net total of two yards and one first down. Butr "his was dub as much to the in- fitiency of Wayne's blocking as o the'charge of the State line. lhree times State's left end was suicked ii, twhce by short sidel ;hrststs and once on a fake kick and reverse. Wolver es Three Up 'On the basis of tody's play, Michi-f gat is three touchdowns better than the Spartans; but next Saturday won't be like today. During the next wiek, Bachm:an will iron out plentyr afi wrinkles, and the State team will come up here a much different out- One thing is e ;rtain, Bachman #idn't want to show anything in his hand today. . He used nly fundamental pays and did't open the bag of tricks even when the minutes were. ticking away. Aput unless State Improves plenty .over yesterday's debacle, tricks 'won't do them any good. The Spartans had a few standouts.. McRae was tough to move alL after- noon. They never turned his end arid when Wayne tried to force him out, he took two of the interference with him. Lyle Rockenbach at guardl was a rock in the line. He intercept-l ed a pass and went 12 yards for a so re in the last period and with Ed Abdo at the other guard will be hardt to move. Ron Alling, All-American candidate at center was hurt two. pluys after he entered the game, butx Bill Batchelor took care of. thatspot.t At tfie tackles, 'State is weak and dwnfield. blocting is poor. "But next Saturday' may be differ- Coach Fritz Crisler's first string grid squad turned in its spottiest per- formance of "the fall practice yester- day afternoon when it barely man- aged to turn back the second andI third stringers 13 to 12 in the final stadium scrimmage before next Sat- udysopener with Michigan State. Little Dave Strong teamed up with Herc Renda at the halfback post for the reserves to give the varsity 'a hec- tic afternoon. Strong threw passes all over the field with 'deadly accur-' acy to show up glaringly the weak Wolverine pass defense that has caused Crisler so much troublb in the past fe,:, days. Strong also did some fancy run- ning through the regulars, and ran back one of Bill Smith's punts 52 yards for a touchdown. Renda, who because of his small stature (five feet, four inches). is not supposed to rate highly on pass defense, stole the show as he stopped several varsity aerial thrusts. One of these was a blocked pass intended for' Ed Frutig, stellar varsity end, from Tom Har- mon, Michigan's All-American half- back candidate,, onthe reserves' three yard line. The varsity scored first when Paul Kromer, working at the halfback' berth opposite Harmon, went over from the' one yard line after a 20- yard pass from Harmon to Ed Chris- ty, who played the greater portion of the scrimmage at fullback with the first stringers, had put the ball in scoring position. Harmon kicked the extra point. Then Strong cut loose with three passes which netted 42 yards, and Bob Zimmerman, at fullback for the reserves cut back through tackle on a spinner to go 30 yards for another touchdown. After being run all over the field by the second-stringers, the regulars came back to life and on a series of passes from Harmon to Evashevski and Kromer carried the pigskin to the one yard line from where Christy carried it over fodr the ,'ore that .par- tially saved the regulars faces. Union Waiters Battle or Gridiron Glory A civil football war will be fought again between the upper floor, main dining room Union waiters, and the busboys and other employes of the Union taproom' at South' Ferry Field today at 10 a.m. The taproom (Cellar Rats) eleven holds an edge of several victories over the white coats. Lindley (Mouse- trap) Dean will be mascot, it has been announced. The game is a tradi- tional -event staged annually by the boys. 'ollegeGrid ScoresJ Holy Cross 28, Manhattan 0 New York University 7, Colgate 6 Dartmouth 41, St. Lawrence 9 Fordham' 34 Waynesburg 7 Army 16, Furman 7 Navy 31, William and Mary 6 Carnegie Tech 35, Wittenberg 0 Brown 34, Rhode Island 0 Gettysburg 6, Bucknell 0 Villanova 14, Muhlenberg 0 Washington and Jefferson 16, Muskingum 7 Georgia 26, Citadel 0 Tulane 7, Clemson 6 Duke 26, Davidson 6 North Carolina 36, Wake Forest 6 Alabama 21, Howard 0 Mississippi College 7, Centre 0 Notre Dane 3, 'Purdue 0 Nebraska 7, Indiana 7 Minnesota 62,: Arizona: 0t Wisconsin 14, Marquette 13 Iowa 41, South Dakota 0 Beloit 6, Chicago 0 Illinois 0, Bradley 0 Missouri 30, Colorado 0 Michigan State'16, Wayne 0 Toledo 19, Detroit Tech 6 Ohio Northern 6, Wooster 0 S. Methodist 7, Oklahoma 7 Texas 12, Florida' Mississippi State 19, Arkansas 0 Tulsa University 23, Wichita 6 College of Pacific 6, California 0 Oregon 7, USC 7 Arizona State Teachers 9, U. of Nevada 7 Penn College 12, Upper Iowa 0 Pittsburgh 27, Washington 6 PITTSBUROH, Sept. 30. -(A')- President William E. Benswanger an- nounced tonight Frankie Frisch will manage the Pittsburgh Pirates oZ the National Baseball League in 1940 and 1941, succeeding Haroll (Pie) Tray- nor, Although it had been rumored here for days that the Fordham Flash was to succeed Traynor, who resigned Thursday, Benswanger said the deal was not closed until noon today by telephone. Frisch will sign a contract in New. York, probably Tuesday, when he will meet Benswanger and Traynor at the draft meeting preceding the open- ing ofrthe World Series Wednesday, the Pirate president 'added. Traynor resigned, he said, because of the "low position" of the sixth- place Pirates, a traditional 'first divi- sion club, which this year experienced its poorest season since 1937. Benswanger said Frisch was his first choice for the job, but that he was unable to disclose this earlier because he and Frisch could not agree on the length of the contract. In line with Pirate policy, the terms were not disclosed. Dodgers Beat Phils Twice;' Cubs Split With Cards BROOKLYN, Sept. 30.-(P)-The Dodgers swept a doubleheader from the last place Phillies 14 to 5 and 5 to 1 today to regain third place in the National League. Luke Hamlin pitched a four-hitter for his 20th victory in the nightcap, which was called 'after seven innings because of darkness. CHICAGO, Sept.. 30. -P)- With not more than a iew hours remaining of the season, the Cubs still haven't settled or. their final position for 1939. Today they dropped into fourth place when they lost the first game of a doubleheader wits the St. Louis Cardinals, 7 to 5, and then won the second, 5 to 1. Frisch To Manage Pittsburgh; Brooklyn Regains Third Place Dave Strong, ex-Illinois quarterback, now playing halfback for Michigan, stole the show in yesterday's scrimmage with his sensational . display of running, passing, and returning punts. Dave ran back one punt 52 yards for a touchdown. Unsnn'g Reserve Bhacks To Play Majorf Role in___Michigan Drive By MASE GOULD 47 yards on two consecutive end There is no escaping the fact that sweeps against Penn last year. And the regulars on any football team, the who can forget the time he was hit by boys who bear the brunt of the sea- the aalanche of Twedell, Bell and son's play, get and deserve the most RakireungaMnestkc- credit if their team is a winner. But Roark in returning a Minnesota kick- as any wise coach will tell you, eleven off two years ago? Didn't he bounce men don't make a winner. right up' when everyone was prepar- n this era of quick-tempoed, hard- h wto it taes. driving football, a coach must havek at his command another group of Then there's Freddie Trosko. Not players, and even a third in the case. a true star because his slight build of big-time, suicide schedules-that will not permit him to play a full group is the reserves. game or thereabouts. But he's one Wildcats Sirong Here, Too of.the fleetest backs on the squad and It is a question whether Fred Tros- a fearless tackler for his 154 pounds. ko, Here Renda, Dave Strorig, Walt And Dave Strong. Another dimin- Kitti, Bob Zimmerman and the rest utiv.e fellow, but endowed with a rare of the Michigan second and third- competitive spirit. Last year, in his stringers, measure up to Northwes- first: season at Ann Arbor, Dave was tern's imposing reserve list of Nick inpressive in both his passing and Conteas, Dick McGurn, Dick Rich- punting and will see plenty of service ards, de Kepford and sophomores Bill before the 1939 campaIgn is over. De Correvont and Don Kruger. Time The list goes on. Walt Kitti, form- alone will tell that. erly a halfback, is now making a real But the aggressive manner in which bid for the alternate quarterback the Wolverine alternates have been post; Bill Luther's unerring arm is a running, passing, blocking and tack- cinch to work in some of the tussles; ting of late bodes ill for all enemy and sophomores Bob Zimmerman at .defenses. There's a scoring urge in fullback and. Norm Call and Dave every one of them. Nelson at the halves can always be Take little Herc Renda. Herc used. stands but 5 ft. 4 in., but he's heavy To be sure, the quartet of Evashev- set,. hard as nails and possesses an ski, Harmon, Kromer and either amazing amount of leg drive. He has Westfall, Christy or Zimmerman at made the crowds cheer, too, perhaps fullback, will do most of the back- nmost vociferously when he ripped off field work in Michigan's drive for I Gophers Wallop Arizona Minneapolis, Sept. 30.-(P)-Min- nesota massacred Arizona in the Big Ten champions' opening game today, winning' 62 to 0 before 43,000 per- sons. The Wildcats from the Far Western Border Conference were hopelessly, outclassed, Minnesota getting 341 points in the first period. Coach Bernie Bierman used almost five elevens,' testing out his squad for the strenuous schedule ahead. Ie found' needed' front line power in Bob Smith, guard, and John Billman and Butch Levy, tackles, all sopho- mores. 'a Unknown Reserve Boots Irish To 3-0 Triumph Over Purdue 'I SOUTH BEND, Ind., Sept. 30.--(") -A 21-year-old Irishman named John Charles Kelleher bobbed 'up from the ranks for one brief, glory- filled moment today, booting a field goal that gave Notre Dame a hard- won 3 to 0 victory over Purdue be- fore 40,000 spectators in the Irish stadium. Kelleher, who lives in Lorain, 0., has struggled gamely through the past two seasons as a fifth or sixth string quarterback, trotted onto the field in the third period to collect the points which gave the Irish their hardest von opening game in years. Steve Sitko, first string Irish sig- nal-caller, opened the Notre Dame drive that ended with Kelleher's game-winning boot. Sitko returned a Purdue punt 13 yards to the Boiler- maker 34 yard stripe to start. a smashing offense which carried to the Purdue 21. Then Joe Thesing, Irish fullback, spun and fought his way 17 yards- to the Purdue four yard marker. Purdue's famed "Three Bees"- Lou Brock, Jack Briwn and Mike Bye- lene-had little success against the Irish forwards. itd a EARL "FATHER" HINES 1 The Place to Go- Intranural Building Saturday Night, October 7th Nine until Twelve The Price to Pay- $1,0 Per ople 3. T heBand to Hear- EARL "'FATHER" -HINES J4mmPiece Band, EARL INES... Known as King of the Ivories They ENTERTAIN... T heg SING... Th'e, SWIG ... ! } t . . ... a 1} , ,, . .... . III cAnnouncing > "Cram" in Comfort! Get into a RUGBY SWEATER I the removal to a new location at 438 South State Opposite Angell Hall I When midnight oil replaces the gay nite-lights you'll get as much easy comfort out of your RUGBY Sweater as you do when you wear it for sports. They're dressy, too, as you'll learn when you see the new I Tickets Available at- Wahr's Bokstore Parrot Restauran t Sa ffefl +& Bush r1 THE BOOK ROOM