Ot 1942THE MICHIGAN DAILY ,"~RIlnr Franks, Agase Duel To Feature Illinois Game "N Both Guards Have Played Important Roles In The Success Of Their Teams 11 obbyinjured. Halfbak, Ma Play i -_________ By CLARK BAKER What looks like a hot battle be- tween Illinois and Michigan tomorrow may well turn into a personal scrap between a pair of rampaging guards, Alex Agase of the Illini and Julius Franks of the Wolverines. If past- performances count for anything, fans hereabouts should get a look at a lot of classy line play. A couple of weeks back the galloping Illini guard almost single-handedly wrecked Dr. George Hauser's Con- ference debut as head coach of Min- nesota. Just. a week later against Northwestern Franks sent Otto Gra- ham back home wondering just how one man could be in so many places at the same time. Fans To See Guards Tomorrow Michigan fans will get a first hand look at the two All-Ameri- can candidates on the same battle- field. Little is known here about the Il- linois junior outside of his great per- formances against Minnesota and Iowa. Like Franks he fails to tip the scales at 200, weighing in at 187. If this is any handicap, Alex makes up for it with his speedy, heads-up play. Against Minnesota he stole the pig- skin from Bill Daley in the second quarter and dashed 35 yards to the Illini'sinitialdmarker. Then with the score knotted at 13-all in the final period, the Illinois lineman floated through the Minnesota forward wall to cover afree ball in the Gopher end zone and give his teammates their winning margin. Agase Blocked Kick But that wasn't enough and the following week at Iowa, Alex supple, mnitedhis usual gressive play with. Anblocked kick in4 the opening stanza that led to one of the two scores the Illini needed to keep their record spotless. The lads from Illinois won that one by the skin of their teeth and Agase's wide-awake play, 12-'7. During the long winter lay-off Alex keeps in condition by holding down the heavyweight' spot' on the Illinois wrestling team, and last spring he. garnered a third in the Western Con- ference grappling championships. To elaborate on Franks' prowess wotild only be repeating what all loyal. Michigan fans already know. They've, been boosting the popular guard for. All-American ever since he led the Maize and Blue linemen when .they ripped the huge Great Lakes forward wall to shreds in the Wolverine cur- this game to stay in the Conference race and their practice sessions down at Ferry Field prove that they are doing their utmost to take this one.j Yesterday, Fritz Crisler had Tom Kuzma throwing pass after pass and the Gary Ghost showed a return of his old form as he did everything but thread a needle with his tosses. Bob Wiese still has a little soreness in his injured ankle so there is a pos- sibility that he might not start to- morrow, but he should be ready for part time service. Don Robinson's shoulder is bothering him still so that it is fairly certain that he won't start the game. Whether or not he plays at all depends on how much more it improves before game time. Listed below are the minutes played by the members of the team. Badgers Have Chance Iowa Players Ailing MADISON, Wis., Oct. 29. - We) - IOWA CITY, Ia., Oct. 29.-(P)-Dr. Coach Harry Stuhldreher, after hear- Eddie Anderson, Iowa football coach, ing forecasts on the Ohio State-Wis- said today he "doubted very much" consin game Saturday from every- that Bill Burkett and Dick Hoerner, one from professors to the guy who his two ailing varsity players, would sweeps the boathouse, decided today see action against. Purdue Saturday. to do a little talking himself. Hoerner, big sophomore fullback, "We have a good chance to beat was out for his first practice of the Ohio State," the Badger grid boss week but participated in the drill remarked. "Ohio State has the more only to the extent of warming up on impressive record-and using the re- the sidelines. Burkett, who missed his spective Purdue games as a compari- first game trip in three seasons last son-they have been adjudged the Saturday because of his damaged favorites, and they are, but we have knee, also took a light workout. a good chance." The varsity today polished its of- Stuhldreher, a native of Massillon, fense in a live dummy scrimmage O., who matches his coaching talent while the reserves were given a de against a former hometownsman, fensive session against Purdue plays. Buckeye Coach Paul Brown, looks for a tight game, with breaks liable to tip the scales either way. We have them - Brooklyn Dodgers Fine Overcoats, Sign Branch Rickey Coverts, Fleeces, BROOKLYN, Oct. 29--(P)-Branch Tweeds, in all the Rickey today became president of the Brooklyn Dodgers, glad to join a club "where you don't have to consider n the need of money" in selling a ball AT A PRICE YOU CAN player. The 62-year-old veteran of four AFFORD TO PAY! decades in the national pastime- generally regarded as the father of farm system baseball-signed a five- year contract asepresident and gen- U O H N eral manager of the Dodgers. He suc- ceeds Larry MacPhail, his one-time 122 E Libert protege, who resigned several weeks ago to become a lieutenant colonel Next To P. Bell On The Corner in the Army. Time Played In Minutes Games George Ceithaml, QB . ...5 Julius Franks, G.......5 Bill Pritula, G ..........5 Al Wistert, T ............5 Merv Pregulman, C ......5 Phil Sharpe, E ..........5 Elmer Madar, E ........5 Bob Kblesar, G.........5 Paul White, HB........5 Bob Wiese, FB..........4 Don~ Robinson, HB .... .5 Bob Chappuis, HB ....5 Don Lund, FB ..4 Tom Kuzma, HB.......2 Frank Wardley, HB ...... 5 Mins. 298 285 284 282 282 280 271 256 194 188 123 117 98 78 68 ALEX AGASE .. Possible All-American guard who makes a habit of scoring touchdowns. tain-raiser. Franks has been to the "Seven Oak Posts" what Tommy Har- mon was to the fine Michigan back- field of .1040. :Unlke', Agase, Julius has confined his athletic .abilities to football, for which we can almost hear the sighs of relief from-other Big Ten coaches. MiCehigan, Illinois Prepare, The Illini haven't won a Western Conference grid crown since 1928, and so far-this year they have shown indi- cation that the Orange and Blue has been too long without a title. Illinois has downed Minnesota and- Iowa so far and tomorrow they will be out to protect their perfect -Big Ten record. On the other hand, Michigan needs Don Robinson, junior from Detroit, played one of the best games of his career against the Golden Gophers last Saturday. He took a re- verse from Tom Kuzma, who had gathered in a Minnesota punt, and went for 52 yards down the sidelines before he was tackled on the 11 yard stripe. -__ THE BENCHCOMBER .. W E NOW RING down the curtain on the M.M.M. (Michigan-Min- nesota Mess). We ring it down with the single utterance, "What a man, the Major." The Major, John L. Griffith-Com- missioner of Big Ten Athletics, issued a statement the other day about the M.M.M. Quote the Major: ... I have no way of knowing whether Minne- sota still would have had time to kick its field goal." The Major, evi- dently, is not a mathematics gen- ius. He admitted that his referee, James Masker, made a mistake, but he didn't allow any smirches to be cast upon his league, the Western Conference. He just overlooked a few mathematical facts, the Major did. EVERYBODY KNOWS what caused the Major's elucidating state- ment-that fateful dropkick field goal by Gopher Bill Garnaas with one sec- ond remaining of the first half. It gave Minnesota the ball game, that field goal, but the Major couldn't see how a few figures added together helped. Now the way most people look at it, if Masker had given the Gophers their due penalty, with the clock running as it should, Minnesota never would have had time to kick that fateful field goal. There were nine secon'ds to go when the substitution was made. There was one second left when Gar- naas wobbled his precious three points over the cross bar. It takes approxi- mately ten seconds to pace off the penalty and go through all the ac- companying motions. The half, on a simple mathematical basis, would have been over. But the Major, staunch and true, has no way of knowing. FROM BUCK DAWSON, the in- imitable Buck Dawson and one of the swellest guys ever to grace this campus, comes this next item. Buck enlisted and will be inducted into Uncle Sam's fighting Army Nov. 12 and this happened as he was on his way to Chicago from Ann Arbor early this week. But let Buck tell it: "On the train I ran into the Chicago Cardinals' trainer bringing Chet Bul- ger, 246 pound Auburn tackle, back from a Detroit hospital where he had been laid up since the Cardinal-Lions game with a broken back. "It seems this Lion lineman kept taking a sock at Bulger's chin. Now that in itself wouldn't have bothered Wee Bulge, but the fellow's aim was a bit poor and Wee Bulge got sick and tired of taking the old one-two on the Adam's Apple. "Finally, in desperation, Wee Bulge let fly with an off-balance haymaker from wayback. He missed the Lion, fell on his own posterior and broke his back. The result was the hospital for Wee Bulge instead of the morgue for the Lion as planned. "Demonstrating the results with a slap to his plaster girdle, the six feet, five inch pygmy then started telling us about his experiences at the Ma- rine Officers' Training School at Quantico, where he was finally dis- missed because he couldn't even ap- proach the maximum weight mini- mum. * . By Bud Hendel "It seems a Lieutenant was demon- strating jiu-jitsu to the boys and he picked old Chet as his flunky. Well, Chet promptly gets thrown. "Next," says the big Lieutenant, and out steps a little 150 pound fellow who prompt- ly picks up the Louie and throws him down like a sack full of door knobs. " cn - "Everybody is practically dying with laughter but the Louie and this dead-pan kid is offering the officer a hand. I asked Wee Bulge if he remembered the kid's name and he said it was a kid named Bill- Combs who claimed he had done a little wrestling in college. "As if it could be anybody else. What a character that Combs is. One fabulous deed after another." COMBS, YOU KNOW, was Michi- gan's wrestling captain in 1940. Latest reports had Combs fighting in the Solomons ,where it is said he staved off eight Japs with a tommy- gun and killed the last one with a grappling hold after his gun jammed. * * * DRIFTWOOD AND SPLINTERS: Jinx Johnson, captain of the Wolverine tennis team, is a track man these days . . . he did so well in the Interfraternity Meet last spring that he came out for the cinder sport this fall...and speak- ing of track, did you know Coach Ken Doherty trails his milers around the circle on his bicycle? an C7/ ,-1he ?1 Reasonably Priced MICHIGAN'S 4ar"a( BEER . 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