SPORTS SECTION ig 5kO :4Ia itxj SECTION TWO ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1940 Miehigan State. don wirtelufter's I - DAILY DOUBLE EN ROUTE TO ANN ARBOR, Oct. 1.-A speeding train is whirling through the night. The vast prairies of our great country are rolling by my window. We are approaching Omaha. This magnificent trip is almost a memory. Tomorrow, a train will come to a halt in little Ann Arbor town, as several trains have a habit of doing. To just about everyone else in this world, it will mean nothing but the ordinary train stop. But to me it wil mean the end of an amazing visit to the Golden West, an interesting grid- iron spectacle, and a rapid-fire streamliner whirl back to normalcy. It is already night. I am pinched in a corner of my car, trying des- perately to bat off this bit before several of the other passengers around become too disturbed in their efforts to find rest and quiet as we speed across the peaceful plains. My typewriter sounds louder than ever to- night. Oh, if it would only calm down.. just enough so that the purring of the train wheels would drown it out and I could go on unnoticed. But, no such luck! About fifteen minutes ago, I thought that maybe I would finish in just a few minutes, turn out the light above me, and retire for the eve. I knew what I wanted to say. There was so much to tell about what happened Saturday in Berkeley. I was well on my way . . . when an elderly man across the aisle reached over and tapped me gently on the shoulder. I looked up and disovered he desired to converse, of all things. "Say, son, I noticed you are writing for a Michigan newspaper. I could tell that from the sticker on your typewriter. That's right, isn't it?" Hrmon I verified his impressions and then he sailed on. "Well, then, tell me one thing. I didn't happen to see the results of that game last Saturday at Berkeley. I haven't read a paper since this train pulled out of 'Frisco. But, frankly, that battle doesn't interest me. I'm a loyal Michigan rooter, and what I want to know is why no- body is picking my Wolverines to snatch the Big Ten crown this year. They look plenty tough on paper to me. I can't understand it." Conversation was really the least thing I cared to engage in at the time, so almost without thinking I snapped off "schedule and reserve strength trouble, mister, that's all." And I let it go at that. I started back to work, but when from across the aisle came "what do you mean?", I knew it wasn't going to be as easy as all that. So I began thinking about the situation. It was the first time my noggin had been put through a workou since the gay old final exam days of last spring. From those rusty cr , es, however, came forth just a few of the reasons why tlose nasty ex. is and pre-season dopesters have given our Wolverines the well-known go-by. I pointed out to the old gent that Fritz Crisler, Tom Harmon, Forest Evashevski, Ed Frutig, etc., have little to do about the s - matter. For during this year of 1940, Michigan really will have to meet nine foes . . . California, who they met Saturday, seven other schools, and last, but far froms least, the old SM's . . . the schedule makers. It didn't take long to show my neighborly neighbor :::". that the Wolverines had received a raw deal from the ' SM's . . . one that has all but ruined the chances for a Western Conference crown. They gave Michigan two knock-out punches, as far as I can see it. First of all, they left the Wolverines with a four-game Conference - program. That in itself is equivalent to two right smashes Frutig to the midsection, a left upper-cut to the chin, and a right cross below the belt. Ohio State, Minnesota and Northwestern, the three big shots besides Michigan, will play six league games this term. Iowa, who this writer feels was an inspired flash last year, also has a six-game program. Through good common horse sense, you might conclude that the less games you play, the less you are likely to lose, and therefore, a pee- wee schedule is a gift from the heavens. That might work in tiddle-dee- winks, a game which I will challenge the world at, but in football, it's usually a highly different story. For example, let the Wolverines lose one and tie one of those four games. That's a record that would be far from bad, and yet, it would leave them with a .666 rating, hardly enough to snatch the crown. The teams that play six games, on the other hand, could lose a match, fiddle around and tie three and still wind up with a .666. If that wasn't sufficient, the nasty SM's came through with another wallop that all but tore our poor Wolverines' guts out. That one was equivalent to six right smashes to the mid- section, three left upper-cuts, etc. For three of the four Conference games Michigan must play come at the end of the season when injuries are liable to massacre a squad weak in reserve, strength. And, of all things, the three are with Minnesota, Northwestern and Ohio State. Oh, yes, what did I say about those three teams before? They are pretty fair, aren't they? To be sure, the Golden Gophers are crying the blues. Evashevsk Tut, tut, they are not expected to be much better than last season when they skonked our boys, 20-7. Northwestern is yowling about a weak and green line to get DeCorrevont and company through to pay-dirt. Ohio, well, the Buckeyes have enough reserve strength to guard the Panama Canal from attack by land, sea or air. They come up against the Wolverines one after another, those three do, Yep, those are real knock-out blows. "Can you blame the experts?" I asked my neighbor. He was convinced. "Phooey on the SM's," he replied. And out goes my light. Yost Pans Pop Warner System Football Squad Priming For Wolverines Varsity Linemen .. . Towering Joe Rogers, a power of defense arn: a capable :ass snatch- er, is the i1 chigan vars'ty right ':nd. J cr me alcg fa-t last year,; rela ng tb, nj -i &,,a n , 10- son and has nuw cinched a starting berth, teaming up with Ed Fkutig. Gym rogram Includes Two New Divisions Co-Operative Group Big; Owen Took Independent Championship In 1939 A pair of divisions, created to in- clude two large groups of men stu- dents which have grown in size and' importance in the past few years, will feature the 1940-41 Intramural athletic-program which gets under way next week. Largest of the two is the projected cooperative division. Included in the schedule only as independents in the past, the coops have grown to become a comparatively large part of the campus population, and, as such, rate a league of their own in the de- partment's books. An indication of the spirit and organization now ex- istent in the cooperative houses is the record of Robert Owen, which copped the Independent champion- ship last year. Managed by Julian Griggs, Robert Owen won the volley- ball and golf titles and piled up a total of 773 points, to lead the sec- ond-place Forestry Club by 47 points. More Coops Entered Other cooperatives competing last season were Rochedale, who placed 12th, and Coigress, who finished 16th in the =fi:ial standings. Plans for the new loop at present are for eight-team leagues. The fall schedule will open on or about Oc- tober 10 with the beginning of the touch football race. The other innovation will be a two-way fight for graduate dormi- tory honors. Victor Vaughan House, medical dormitory, will mee't teams from Hinsdale House, the new resi- dence hall for graduate students in the East Quadrangle. Play will start this fall with competition in volley- (Continued on Page 6) Varsity Eleven Set For Tough Battles Ahead Strong Gophers, Wildcats, Buckeyes To Provide Test For Wolverines Michigan's fighting Wolverines, bruised and battered from an en- counter with California's Golden Bears, have gone through just the first of a long series of tough battles in their quest for national football honors. This Saturday, the stalwart Spar- tans from East Lansing will invade Wolverineland to test the strength of Coach Fritz Crisler's new and per - fected grid machine. The Men of Sparta that Coach Charley Bachman is bringing is -practically the same sophomore squad that he tutored last fall. That means' an experienced band of juniors supplanted by the strongest freshman group in recent years. The 36th meeting of the two rivals should afford a real test for Mich- igan's flying team. The Spartans once again are out for revenge and that spells trouble for the Wafy Wolverine. Buckeyes Toughest Something is certain to fly when the Wolverines chug down to Colum- bus in the final game of the season where they will attempt to crack the toughest Buckeye squad in history. Ohio State, despite the weirdest schedule in the Big Ten, is picked to be one of the nation's top teams. Picture a backfield with the spec- tacular Don Scott, Jim Langhurst, Jim Strasbaugh and Frank Zadwor- ney and you have four excellent rea- sons. Francis Schmidt ,famous for his merciless teams, will pull no strings to lick the scrappy Wolverine which upset his applecart last fall with a minute to go in the game at Ann Arbor. The Maize and Blue might be black and blue after this battle, but Mr. Wary Wolverine would find victory a soothing balm for a weary body. Stiff Schedule Ahead That, sport fans, should be the toughest assignment for the Crisler Crew, beating Ohio State. But be- fore they even get to the Buckeye stadium they'll have to meet in mor- tal combat with Northwestern's mighty Wildcats, Minnesota's Go- phers, the cagy Indians from Illinois, a gang of Quakers from Pennsyl- vania, in addition to the highly- touted Harvard Crimson team. Bernie Bierman's Gophers are once again climbing to the top of the pig- skin pile. Now rated as second only to Ohio State in the Big Ten, Minne- sota, with halfbacks Bruce Smith and George Franck running loose, should cause the Maize and Blue a busy afternoon. Take eleven tall, rugged Norsemen, add a bit of Bierman strategy, and you have a football team any way you slice it. That's Minnesota, sport fans. Reagan Spells Trouble Remember Reagan? Francis Xa- vier Reagan, that is. He was the (Continued on Page 2) ... In Limelight Husky Al Wistert, brother of Michigan's famous All-American, "Whitey" Wistert, started and played in his first game of organ- ized football Saturday in the 41-0 rout the Wolverines gave to the University of California at Ber- keley. Michigan Honors 'Grand Old Man' With Celebration Once in a century. That's how often a man like Field- ing H. Yost, Grand Old Man of Mich- igan athletic tradition, appears in the sports world. On the evening of Oct. 19, night of the Illinois homecoming battle, students, alumni, and friends of the University of Michigan will gather at a gigantic testimonial dinner, fet- ing the 69-year-old Athletic Director who has devoted 40 years of en- thusiastic service to the University. Upon reaching his seventieth birth- day April 29, Yost will step down from his present post ofsAthletic Director, thus climaxing a long career as coach and in an administrative capacity. The story of the "Grand Old Man" since he first became connected with the University in 1901 is almost synonymous with the history of Wol- verine athletics. The feats of his point-a-minute gridiron juggernauts just past the turn of the century are indelibly inscribed in Maize and Blue sports tradition. Three Planes Flew Gridmen To California The three "Michigan Football Spe- cial" United Airline planes that winged the Wolverines out to the Coast carried 35 players and 18 oth- ers including Coaches Crisler, Munn, Martineau and Oosterbaan. Players making the trip included 12 sophomores, 13 juniors and eight seniors. They are as follows: Ends: Joe Rogers, Ed Frutig, Ed Czak, Harlin Fraumann, Rudy Sine- ja and Philip Sharpe. Tackles: Al Wistert, Reuben Kel- to, Robert Flora, Jack Butler, Ted Denise, Robert Smith and Rudy Sen- gel. Guards: Milo Sukup, Ralph Fritz, Robert Kolesar, Bill Melzow, John Laine and Leo Cunningham. Centers: Robert Ingalls, Ted Ken- nedy and Clarence Hall. Quarterbacks: Forest Evashevski, George Ceithaml and Jim Grissen. Halfbacks: Tom Harmon, Norm Call, Dave Nelson, Robert Kresja, Cliff Wise, Harry Kohl and Elmer Madar. Fullbacks: Bob Westfall, Robert Zimmerman and Harold Lockard. In addition to the players and coaches, Ralph Aigler, faculty repre- sentative, George Hammond, team physician, Ray Roberts, trainer, Fred Howarth, team manager, Henry Hatch, equipment manager, and Harry Tillotson, ticket manager, also made the trip. The extras taken along included Col. Tuttle, United Airlines physi- cian; T. Hawley Tapping, general alumni secretary; Paul Williams, broadcaster for radio station WWJ, and two sports writers. Added Experience And Speed Make Spartans Tougher Schoolboy Rowe's Comeback Sparks Tigers' Pennant Drive Speedy Backs To Follow A State Line Averaging Two Hundred Pounds William Batchelor To Threaten Again Michigan Ends Superior To East Lansing Boys; Bachman Needs Tackles By GENE GRIBBROEK EAST LANSING-There is sup- .sed to be a great deal of joy in his man's town this fall. At least hat's what all advance reports con- erning the Spartan grid machine ay. But if Coach Charlie Bachman hares the feeling, he does a good ob of hiding it. Added experience end "a little faster" squad are all the partan head man will promise to end onto the stadium turf Satur- lay. There is much more than that to he 1940 State team, however. A line veraging around 200, with two uards and a center who won't have o give ground even to Michigan's tellar trio, and a rabbit, backfield hich won't be as shaky as the soph- >more backs of last year will give he title-dreaming Wolverines a tough *fternoon. 0 Three Senior Stalwarts The keystone of the Spartan for- ward wall is a trio of seniors, the ast three remaining from a rather ismal 1937 freshman squad. The ivot-man, Bill Batchelor, has been n important cog in Bachman's teams since his sophomore year, and this season should be his best. Batchelor was the man who took advantage >f a Wolverines lapse last fall and natched a pass on the 22 and scored State's first touchdown. Batchelor's two running mates won't take any shoving around. I'hird-year men Ed Abdo and Paul "riffeth will be in there at the kick- ff prepared to play a lot of good football. And if they tire a couple f youngsters, Kutchins and Rupp, will spell them. Wolverine Flankers Superior Michigan's flankers will have a definite superiority over the Spar- tans ends, but Bruce Blackburn, tall, husky Flint Northern product, a start- er last year, and Lew Smiley; reserve ast season, have shown enough to rate the jobs. Both scaling just under 200, they will be hard to move. Friendlund and Pound will flank the econd line. The tackle spot is Bachman's big- gest question mark in the line, but the Spartan tackles will be no weak- lings. Karas and Carter, both edg- ing 210, have experience and are good bets to start. Letterman Alex Ketzko, the midget of the lot at 185, and a massive sophomore, Johnson, who scales 220, may beat out either or both. Any of these boys will be tough to get by, even if only for sheer bulk. Speedy Backfields The ball carriers who will be iii there at kick-off time will have to bow to the Wolverine dream backs, but speed will make them plenty dangerous, especially with that big forwArd wall to help them shake loose. And Bachman has more than four -he has them two and three deep at every position. Calling the plays for the Spartan speedsters will probably be letterman Sob Sherman, of Lansing, whose work in the pre-season drills has stamped him as the squad's best field gen- aral. Wilford Davis, also a veteran, rates as the number two quarter, and that's the way it will be Satur- day. Both boys weigh around 175. The left halfback post is a toss-up .)etween Wyman Davis and Mike Schelb, both juniors. Davis, a Dun- dee product, will be an important cog in the State passing game. Schelb Ls the boy who flashed into the lime- light last fall against Santa Clara and Indiana, and then really hit his stride when he averaged 13 yards per try against Temple. He has im- proved his kicking this year and this combined with a world of speed and By ART HILL As Rowe goes, so go the Tigers! That was the watchword of Detroit fans back in the gravy days of 1934 and '35, when the fabulous career of the popular Schoolboy from El Dorado, Ark. was at its peak. That's the watchword today as the Tigers prepare for the opening game of the World Series in Cincinnati tomorrow. But between the pennants of '35 and '40, there has been an interim of heartbreak and discouragement which might have broken the spirit of anyone less game than Rowe.aIn 1937, he came up with a sore arm and was hard-pressed to last out the season. The following year, it be- came apparent that he no longer had the stuff to pitch big league baseball. I Bill Watson, Joe Louis, Don McNeill HighlightAnother Summer Of Sports Before midseason of that year, the Schoolboy had left the Tigers andt was pitching for Beaumont in the Texas League where it was hoped f that the warm weather would aid his1 comeback. He had fair success in the Lone Star Loop and in '39, he was back with the Bengals. He turned in a record of 10 victories and 12 defeats with Detroit last seasonA which didn't cause anyone to shout with joy. The consensus was that1 the big right-hander might hang on for a few more years but that his starring days were over. When the training season opened3 last spring, Del Baker, Tiger man- ager announced that the Tigers might surprise the experts if Rowe regained his old time form. No one paid much attention. That "if" seemed just a little too big. Rowe Leads League Well, the season is history now and the Schoolboy not only came back but he pitched his way to the leader- ship of the league in won and lost percentage with a copped and dropped record of 16 and 3. Without him the Tigers would have been hard- pressed to finish in the first division Few fans realize how completely made over as a pitcher the Schoolboy is. There was a time when, if he got in a tough spot, he could just rear back and fire that high, hard one past the dazed hitter. But all that is changed now. The old fast one isn't so fast any more and Schoolie is forced to depend on his brains and his excellent control but he has plenty of both as he so defin- itely proved this season. Series Starts Tomorrow Tomorrow, thanks to the School- boy's return to form, the Tigers are scheduled to face the Cincinnati Reds in a seven-game series for the World's Championship. This should be one of the most interesting October Classics which the fans have had served to them in i Fielding "Hurry-Up" Yost, Mich- igan's Grand Old Man, journeyed1 out to the Pacific Coast a week ahead of his Wolverine gridders to make the rounds of the banquet circle and while doing so he took a none-too- gentle poke at his old friend, Glenn "Pop" Warner. "Warner has conceived the very worst system in football-the double wingback," Yost remarked at a a sports writers' luncheon last week .; ." Tsn na~ conceived in the mind of man-and its inventor, Pop Warner, "my old friend, will tell you it's no good," said Michigan's athletic director. Yost coached San Jose 39 years before Warner ever got to the cam- pus and in addition took the inimi- table Willie Heston from there to Michigan. Mack Asks Waivers On Infielder McCoy By HAL WILSON Overshadowed and curtailed some- what by the machinations of the power politicians in war torn Europe, sports activity throughout the na- tion, nevertheless, moved along true to American athletic tradition, main- taining a torrid pace the entire sum- mer. Chief among the famous sports events conspicuous by their absence this summer were the Olympics, orig- inally scheduled to be staged in Fin- land, and the Davis Cup matches. However these plans conflicted with those of a little fellow with a little mustache, but big ideas. The re- sult-no Olympic games, no inter- national tennis competition. Highlighting that part of the sum- mer sports parade moving along more or less uninterrupted by the foreign lad's Sobbing Sioux startle the base- ball world and Oscar Vitt in de- manding the latter's dismissal as manager. Chief complaint is that he "persisted in comparing the In- dians with minor league teams he has managed." June 17: Big Bill Watson, former Wolverine track captain, puts on a one-man show in Cleveland, smash- ing two world decathlon records, the 100-meter dash and the discus throw, thus capturing the National Decathlon championship. June 17: Two Michigan quarter- mile aces, Warren Breidenbach and Jack Leutritz, help the Big Ten's mile relay team shatter a meet record in the annual Pacific Coast-Western Conference track encounter, won by the superbly-conditioned coast ag- gregation, 96-40. I I