SDAY, NOV. 11, 194% THE MICHIGAN DAILY Frosh Lineman Boasts Envidble ®r Prep Record f George Kraeger Shows Promise at Guard Sl t BIENCHCOMBER By BUD IENDEL Daily Sports Editor By AL STEINMAN One of the boys that the Michigan State freshmen will be obliged to stop if they hope to defeat the Michigan Frosh next Friday is George Kraeger who will occupy the left -guard posi- tion. George is a tall, pleasant-looking chap who tips the scales at 202 pounds. Thus far he has proven him- self to be th outstanding lineman on Wally Weber's squad. But being outstanding is really nothing -new to George Kraeger. While attending Shortridge high school in Indianapolis, Indiana George built up a name for himself that the best of men can envy. All-State Recognition He played three years on the Short- ridge varsity football team, and gained recognition his senior year. At the. end of his last season for the Shortridge gridders, George was named the most valuable player on the team. Incidentally, he had Walt Freihofer currently of the varsity as one of his teammates when he first started playing. Football gained George Kraeger statewide praise while in high school, but he didn't stop there. He was the shot-putter on the track squad, show- ing his ability'by breaking both the city and county records. George threw the shot 52' 62" which is good enough to make any track coach smile with admiration. Gets Straight 'A'se Kraeger received his greatest thrill when he was given the award as the best athlete-scholar in the high school. There wasn't even close com- petition for the award because besides being hands down the best athlete, he excelled in scholarship getting all "A's" during his entire high school career. George picked Michigan because he thinks that it is the finest school for both athletics and academic work. in the middle west. He is enlisted in the Navy V-1 plan and hopes to be able to achieve a lifelong ambition by playing guard for the Wolverines next fall. id If you're topcoat t Woven f into a fi enr Toj fabrics of Many famous The THE DOWNTOWN STOF We STrve M 300 SOUTH tN AFTER 33 YEARS of hoping, wait- ing, pleading and threatening, sports-minded Michigan alumni will see their prayers answered Saturday. The occasion is football's gala game of the week and possibly of the year, Michigan versus Notre Dame, and the site is -South Bend, Ind., home of the Fighting Irish. Kickoff time will be 2 p.m. Central War Time, or 3 p.m. in Ann Arbor, and if you don't have a ticket now you had best resign yourself to staying home and listening to the top radio announcers of the nation describe this gridiron classic. A complete'sellout of the 56,000 available seats in picturesque Notre Dame Stadium has been announced by Joseph Petritz, the genial gent who -handles publicity affairs for the Ramblers, and not even a promise to vote the right way in the next election will get you one of the prized ducats. The only interest money will hold in South Bend this weekend will be concerned with the manly and time- honored sport of wagering, and there is every assurance that the long green stuff will be floating in abundance and passing from hand to hand right up to the starting time of this strug- gle. You can bet either way at prac- tically the same odds. In Detroit you'll take Michigan and give five to four, while in South Bend you'll plunk that hard-earned lettuce down on the Wolverines and receive five to four. HE LAST TIME the Maize and Blue warriors of Michigan met the Green Ramblers of Notre Dame was in 1909 and the final result. found the Wolverines on the short end of an 11 to 3 .score. Up till then, Michigan had walloped the Irish gladiators eight times in eight games. After that 1909 game, things became hotter and hotter in the relationship between the two schools and on the very day of the next annual fray, Michigan's Board of Athletics cancelle the' game with the Notre Dame team already on its way to Ann Arbor. Just why the series was broken off has never been clear to anybody. V ERT the answer! wondering what to buy in a his fall ... Covert is the answer! rom 100% Virgin wool yarns rm smooth finish, makes a Co- pcoat one of the outstanding the year. y others of Staeb & Day's gqality Topcoats at $30. famous Knit-Tex topcoat at $37.50._ RE FOR MICHIGAN MEN Serie qdTrlET v4A N STR~EET According to old newspaper files, Notre Dame was given an ultimatum by Michigan to the effect that two Irish players by the names of Dimick and Philbrook be withheld from the battle on the grounds that they were ineligible. The Rambler authorities didn't see eye to .eye with the Wol- verines on the point, and they an- swered in the negative and hinted that Michigan might do well to 'keep two gridders named Cole and Clark on the bench as they too didn't ex- Crisler Drills Wolverines in Secret Session Ramblers' Plays Click against Varsity; Yaap Is Lost for Season Faintest odors of something being cooked up for Notre Dame Saturday escaped from the confines of Ferry. Field yesterday as Coach Fritz Cris- ler put the Wolverines through their initial secret practice session of the year. The gridders were given a grueling scrimmage with Wally Weber's fresh- men, equipped with Notre Dame plays, furnishing the opposition. Afterward Crisler admitted that he was not at all pleased with the team's showing against the yearlings. Meanwhile, the Maize and Blue casualty list took a jump upward when team physician, Dr. A. W. Cox- on, indicated that Warren Yaap, promising sophomore halfback, who has been confined to the University Health Service with an attack of pneumonia for the past two weeks will be lost to the team for the re- mainder of the season. Fullback Don Boor is the only other injured Wol- verine and there is still doubt about whether his ankle will be ready Satur- day. Both teams have hit stumbling blocks this fall, yet both are rated among the top teams in the nation. The Irish started slow bowing to Georgia Tech and tying Wisconsin while Michigan has fallen before the Iowa Cadets. and Minnesota. Both teams, however, have picked up mo- mentum as the season has progressed and Saturday's clash should find them at their peaks. PERSEVERANCE PAYS DIVIDENDS- Paul White Shows Brilliance after Overcom By ED ZALENSKI Now it can be told! After watching him turn in consistently good per- formances on seven succeeding Sat- urdays, there isn't a shadow of a doubt left that the amazing trans- formation of Paul White from a fair ball-carrier in 1941 to one of the Conference's outstanding halfbacks of the current campaign is no fluke. Three factors, and maybe more, stand out to account for this im- provement. An' additional year's ex- perience has undoubtedly helped the River Rouge 185- pounder to hit his stride. And the ab- sence of a serious hurt, similar to that shoulder injury ear- ly last fall, has probably been the biggest cause. The fact hat White may be play- ing his last season of football for Michigan, must have influenced him PAUL WHITE in giving just a little more every Sat- urday. The other day he received his six-months' notice from the Marine Reserve Corps, which means that he'll be leaving next spring. There are a number of other fac- tors which seem less important, but which can't be counted out. Michi- gan is blessed with more than a dozen good backs this fall and the compe- tition has been terrific for those half- back slots. Few Wolverine fans know that the sophomore end on the Ohio State squad, one John T. White, is Paul's elder brother. Here again is a reason for White's improvement. Michigan meets the Buckeyes soon, and it will be brother against brother. And it's S4 Sng Injury Jinx only human nature for a kid brother to try and best his big brother. Predicts Win Saturday The quiet, dark-haired White is most anxious to beat Ohio State, of course, but Notre Dame comes next. "I think we'll beat the Irish," he said in his soft, serious manner, and such confidence is much more effective than the usual cocky "we'll pin their ears back" statement, White came to Michigan with an all-state tag pinned to him and that Sdidn'thelp. Three years of varsity ball at River Rouge were climaxed for him in 1939 when he was named all-state halfback, largely on the strength of his ball-carrying ability. He didn't do any passing or punting in high school.The added role of passing was picked up here. as a. freshman when coaches decided that a southpaw pitcher would come in handy some day. Played in High School A glance at Paul's high school ath- letic career proves that the husky River Rouge youth is a natural. He played three years of varsity basket- ball, making all-state honors at guard in 1939 when his team lost out to Muskegon in the finals. As a trackman, White reached the top without much difficulty. Entered in the state tournament in 1939, he led the field home to take the 120- yard high hurdles in 15 seconds. He took a crack at baseball one year and made his varsity letter as an out- fielder, showing plenty of power at the plate. His ability to knife between tack- lrs, leap fallen linemen and hit the air for high passes is the combination of his speed, driving power and hurd- ling form. Saturday should find White hit- ting the peak of his quick rise to Big Ten recognition as one of its leaning halfbacks.t Bits of Humor Stolen from the Sports World GREEN BAY, Wis., Nov. 10.- (AP)- Tony Canadeo, of the Green Bay Packers, claims the shortest touch- down pass on record. "The ball was on the one-inch line when I passed to Don Hutson for a touchdown," insisted Tony. "Why did you ever pass in a spot like that?" scolded one of the coach-- es. "Cecil Isbell tossed a four-incher not long ago for a record and I want- ed toi beat it-you don't get an oppor- tunity like that very often," grinned Tony. BLACK MOUNTAIN, N. C., Nov. 10.- (- Although an audit of the Black Mountain College budget showed the highest expenditure for sports this year in the history of the school, it had something of a low rec- ord for subsidies toathletes. The outlay was $10.35. COLORADO CITY, Tex., Nov. 1Q.- (A')- Gob Walker, of Cross Plains,. is the new Colorado City High School grid coach. He replaced Carol Benson, who re- placed Merrick Pyeatt, who replaced C. B. Boland, who replaced John Dib- rell, Jr. It started when Dibrell took a job at Big Spring. Then Roland became a flying instructor. Pyeatt joined the Naval Reserve. Benson decided he liked his old job better, and returned to Merkel. Fans are pulling for Walker to last out the season. ** * * LANSING, Nov. 10.- P(A)- Coach Charley Bachman, of Michigan State, is perfectly satisfied when Fullback Ed Ripmaster lives up to his name by ripping up the opposition, but he shudders to think about a freshman tackle who'll be coming up to the var- sity next year. The kid is George Kill- master. FIELDING H. YOST actly appear as Simon-pures in the light of recent findings. For over a quarter of a century the two schools were split further apart than the Cards and Phillies. In the last six years, however, they. have tangled in practically every other sport, but not until Saturday will the gridiron relations be offi- cially resumed. And when this hap- pens, the fireworks appear to be of such proportions to dwarf any other Michigan game of the year. NO TITLE hinges on the outcome, no championship will be deter- mined, but two of the nation's per- ennial powerhouses will lock horns and struggle back and forth over 100 yards of striped turf to the accom- panying cheers and groans of a pack- ed house. For years and years, loyal Wolverine alumni have been asking for this spectacle, and Saturday they will get it with all the trimmings that even a. war can't stamp out. Even the Michigan band will be there, 100 strong, to show the Irish how well the musical end is handled in Wol- verineland. FRED DELANO, publicity baron of Michigan athletics, tried to have relations resumed in 1937 with a series of columns in-this. paper, but his efforts were to no avail. But two years ago arrange- ments were completed with Field- ing H. Yost, the Grand 'Old Man of Michigan, sitting in the athletic director's chair and taking care of the matter. Yost was coaching the Wolverines when the series came to its abrupt and untimely end, and today he says, "Let dead dogs lie. It's water under' the bridge as far as I'm concerned and there's no good reason why two great universities such as Michigan and -Notre Dame shouldn't meet in football." Yost will make the trip to South Bend with the Michigan team, he'll stay with the Michigan team in Elkhart the night before the game, and he'll probably be the most ex- cited spectator in the entire mob of hyper-excited fans Saturday. 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