1947 tH~ MICHIGANitIy -- , M I olverines-Indians To Renew Gridiron Feud After 45 Years I l * * * Jayvee Squad Starts Season Against Grand Rapids Today Casey Posts Second Win As Bums Rally in Ninth Lavagetto Ruins Bevens' Bid for No-Hitter With Double after Two Outs in Final Inning Michigan HeavyFavorite In Intersectional Contest Quist, Anderson, Stanford Stars Sidelined; Bob Mann Available for Action at End Post Michigan's Jayvee squad will in- augurate its '47 campaign in a game with an up-and-coming Grand Rapids Junior College team this morning at 10:00 a.m. on the Ferry Field gridiron. Though defeated in her initial start by Hope College in a 14-7 contest, Grand Rapids is consid- ered a formidable opponent for the untried Wolverine team. A heavy forward wall is expected to cause the Jayvee line plenty of rugged trouble. Kisielewski and Olman are slated for starting posts in JC's line, with Bergstrom and Klap holding down the tackle positions. Huttman and Miller have been named for the guard positions and Wood will start the game in the center slot. The backfield quartet finds Lindguist in the quarter-back spot, Helder and Brown holding the half-back Grid Picks By AUSTIN BEALMEAR BROOKLYN, Oct. 3-()P)-Hav- ing picked New York to win the World Series in four straight, we plunge into another football fore- cast with some misgivings as the Yankees and Dodgers come to grips once more in that peaceful little valley known as Ebbets Field : Notre Dame vs. Pittsburgh - Can the Dodgers get that run back? They've got two men on base. Can the Irish go through another season undefeated? They've got the material. The side is retired without a score. Same for the Panthers. A confident bal- lot for Notre Dame. Stanford vs. Michigan - There' goes Rizzuto. Safe at second. Who said the Dodgers had the edge on base sunning? Those Michigan backs are pretty good runners, too. If Stanford doesn't look sharper than it did against Idaho, the Wolverines can trot home. One big vote for Michigan. UCLA vs. Northwestern-Rob- inson won the race to the bag to rob Berra of a hit. That boy can run. If he were playing with UCLA again he'd be on the win. ning side tomorroy. A hatful of votes for UCLA. Army vs. Colorado-DiMaggio is trying to score on Edwards' over- throw of first. He's out at home, by a mile. The Cadets are at home and should squeeze through. Per- haps close, but the guess :s Army. posts, and Plows operating fom the fullback position. Coach Gib Holgate, in charge of the B team during Coach Ceith- aml's absence, plans to start Dave Oeming and John Maturo at the ends. John Anderson and Al Fitch have been named the de- fensive tackles for the game with Dick Brown and Dick Strauss taking over when the team is on defense. Don Nichols will hold downthe center roleon offense with John Padjen taking over on defense. Norm Jackson will work from the quarter-back spot on offense with Hugh Mack playing quarter- back on defense. Jim Morrsih and All Noble will execute their duties fron the tail-back positions when the team is on offense with Prent Ryan and Don Jones assuming the defensive role. Irv Small completes the backfield playing fullback both on offense and de- fense. Though such stalwarts as Kampe, Heneveld, and Holloway have been lost to the varsity, the Jayvee squad is strong. Strong replacements have flled the gaps and those daily scrimmages with the varsity have sharpened the Wolverine claws for the opening game. 53 Wilcox, John 54 Frank Dan 55 Varriage, Kenneth 56 Smith, Ken 57 Strauss, Richard 58 Wedge, Ted 60 Noble, Alton 61 Ryan, Prentice 62 Padjen, John 63 Oeming, Dave 64 Nakamura, Frank 65 Morrish, James 66 Poppy, James 67 Maturo, John 68 Sandell, Bob 69 Small, Irwin 70 Marshall, Robert 71 Jones, Don 72 Twining, Robert 73 Lee, Dave 74 Linville, John 75 Mack, Hugh 76 Carlson, Alex 77 Brown, Richard 78 Eizonas, John 79 Nichols, Don 80 Andersen, John 81 Morey, Ed 82 Ashba, Ray 83 Combes, John 84 Gomberg, Dave 85 Fitch, Alan 86 Jackson, Norman 88 Geiger, Robert 89 Kuzma, Conrad 96 Derderian, Arthur (Continued from Page 1) free passes. In all, he issued a record-breaking total of 10 walks, during the game, and the last two finally ruined him. For the second straight game, Hugh Casey, portly Dodger relief pitcher, gained credit for the vic- tory which deadlocked the play- off at two wins each. He threw exactly one pitch, with the bases full of Yankees and one out in the ninth inning. Henrich whacked it back at him, and Casey tossed to Catcher Bruce Edwards to start a double play. Lavagetto, reserve third-sacker for the Dodgers, was given a wild welcome by his teammates as he trotted back across the diamond after watching Al Gionfriddo and Eddie Miksis, both pinch-runners, scoot across the plat far ahead of Henrich's throw-in. Five or six of them all tried to hug him at once, and when several wild-eyed Dodger fans tried to get in on the celebration the park police finally had to break it up and escort Cookie to the dugout. Bevens, after watching Lava- getto's blast hit the wall, turned dejectedly and trudged off the field, a forlorn figure. He owned the distinction of having pitched more hitless innings than any man ever before n a World Series, but that was small recompense for the bauble which escaped his grasp. Red Ruffing of the Yanks had a no-hitter going for seven and two- thirds frames against the Card- inals in the first game of the '42 series before the Cards scalped him. Tough C New York (AL) AB Stirnweiss, 2b .....4 Henrich, rf ......5 Berra, c..........4 DiMaggio, cf......2 McQuinn, lb ......4 Johnson, 3b.......4 Lindell, If .........3 Rizzuto, ss ........4 Bevens, p.........3 ookie 3 33 Totals .... Brooklyn (NL) AB Stanky, 2b .......1 * * ***Lavagetto .. . .1 Reese, ss ..........4 Walker, rf ........2 Robinson, 1b ......4 Edwards, c ........4 Hermanski, if .....4 Furillo, cf .........3 **Gionfriddo ......0 Jorgensen, 3b ......2 Taylor, p .........0 Gregg, p ..........1 *Vaughan ........0 Behrman, p ......0 Casey, p ..........0 ***Reiser .........0 ****Miksis ........0 R 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 O 2 2 6 2 7 3 3 1 0 26 0 2 0 3 0 11 7 2 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 27 Al 1 0 1 0 0 2 0 2 1 7 A, 3 0 5 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 151 (Continued from Page 1) first unit, leaving Dom Tomasi alone on the Wolverine injured list. Offensive Line The offensive line, which Cris- ler, strictly as a matter of nomen- clature, calls his number one unit, fields Mann and Dick Rifenburg, ends, Captain Bruce Hilkene and Bill Pritula, tackles, Joe Soboleski, and Stu Wilkins, guards, and J. T. White, center. Quarterback Howard Yerges will operate behind the number one line with halves Bob Chappuis, Bump Elliott, and fullback Jack Weisenburger. The last time these two schools met, Stanford faced what was prbbably the greatest of all Michi- gan teams, Fielding H. "Hurry- Up" Yost's "point-a-minute" elev- en, and the Indians went down to a 49-0 defeat. Titus Anderson HANK FONDE ... Wolverine Wingback .RH ......Elliott ..FB Weisenburger Line-ups Martin ........ RE ...... Mann Budge .........LT .....Hilkene Clark.........LG... Soboleski Flatland ....... C ...... White Feldman .......RG .... Wilkins Phleger ....... RT. ....Pritula Burke .......RE ...Rifenburg Bell ...........QB..... Yerges Anderson ...... LH. ..Chappuis IU-D Beats Wayne DETROIT, Oct. 3-(/P)-With sophomore fullback Mike Kaysser ian smashing across for three touchdowns in the first half, Uni- versity of Detroit overpowered Wayne 40 to 7 here tonight. Kaysserian carrying the ball eight times for 112 yards in the first two periods, Totals .........26 3 *-Walked for Gregg in 7th. S**-Ran for Furillo in 9th. *** Walked for Casey in 9th. * * * Ran for Reiser in 9th. S* * * *-Doubled for Stanky in 9th. New York (A) ....100 100 000-2 Brooklyn (NL) . . .000 010 002-31 A WINNER, A LOSER: That Bum Cookie's A Hero; B evens Misses Hall of Fame . PLAY BY PLAY with BOB UDER MICHIGAN VS. STANOR Saturday at 1 :50 i .I EBBETS FIELD, BROOKLYN, Oct. 3-(P)--Hal Gregg was ex- plaining in a sad, professional sort of way what it was that Bill Bev- ens had. "His curve ball breaks like a slider," he was saying as he shaved. "He keeps it outside and he keeps his fast ball inside, way inside." Harry Taylor, who put the Dodgers in quite a spot in the first1 inning, lay face down on a bench. The loudspeaker said Cookie Lavagetto was going to bat for Eddie Stanky. Fans Like It "Yeah, I guess that's all right," someone said. Then a roar started, growing in volume, reaching an ear-splitting crescendo. The words, "Tying run ... win- ning run" came out of it. The door burst open and players start- ed running in, screaming and cheering. Cookie Lavagetto came pushing and shoving along, a wide, intense smile on his face, his black hair falling down on his forehead. Men threw their arms around him and kissed him. He couldn't say anything. All he could do was grin the widest and most com- plete of all grins. He was hoistea on Branca's shoulders with everyone helping. They bounced him up and down. Manager Burt Shotton kissed him. "It was a high fast one, and I think it was over the plate, but I'm not sure," he said. Telephones Wife He managed to get to the tele- phone and call his wife in Cali- fornia. She gave birth to their first child last week, a son, Harry Michael Lavagetto, Jr. "I think it was last Thursday or Friday he was born." He wasn't sure of that, either. He needed a shave, but there was no time for that. He was dragged into the showers amid more singing and shouting. , EBBETS FIELD, BROOKLYN, Oct. 3-(P)-Floyd Bevens' eyes were vacant of any expression as he fumbled along in changing from his uniform to street attire in the Yankee dressing room after his defeat in the fourth game of the World Series today. The big right hander, who was one out away from tossing the first no-hitter in World Series an- nals, groped for words as report- ers, feeling his remorse, slowly, asked questions. Asked what kind of aball Cookie Lavagetto of the Dodgers hit for his game winning double in the ninth, Bevens replied: "A high fast ball, a little on the outside." Manager Bucky Harris was cor- nered, and after announcing that "Frank Shea will face the Dodg- ers tomorrow," he said, "No I didn't talk to the boys, neither did MacPhail. I just wanted them to cool off." Bevens and Shea had their heads together in a locker and it was hard to tell at first glance which had pitched the game from their sad appearance. Joe DiMaggio, who hurt his an- kle catching a fly in the fourth, was stretched out on a table, hav- ing his left ankle attended. Asked how it felt, DiMaggio said "It hurts." Read and Use Daily Classifed Ads FERRY FIELD BARBERS NOW 3 BARBERS WAITING TO SERVE YOU 806 South State Street WM. A. MILLER, Prop. We print 'em all No job too large or small. Programs - Tickets Stationery - Announcements ROACH PRINTING 209 E. Washington Ph. 8132 Iowa Battles Illini To Stay In Title Race A "this is it" game for both teams, so important that neither Iowa or Illinois can afford to lose, will unfold in Iowa stadium Saturday afternoon before a sell-out crowd of some 52,500 spectators. Illinois, the 1946 conference champion and the Jan. 1, 1947 Rose Bowl titlist, plays a return engagement with the Hawkeyes just eleven months after squeak- ing through a 7-0 win on the same gridiron. It's the conference opener for the old-time rivals, who have been playing off and on since 1899. As Illinois seeks its sixth straight win in the series, the universities arrive at their 28th game Saturday. For Iowa the, game offers a chance to atone for the 22-7 loss to UCLA, the Illinois victim in the Rose Bowl. Never before has a team faced Rose Bowl contestants on successive weekends. Illinois has a 16 to 9 lead in the series, with two tie gomes. The' Illini have taken five straight games, Iowa's last win being in 1941 at Champaign. Badgers Meet IU in Feature Indiana's Fightin' Hoosiers, vic- torious by a 17-0 count over Ne- braska in their opener at Lincoln last Saturday, face their first Big] Nine test Saturday against Wis- consin's high-scoring Badgers in a homecoming game in Memorial Stadium. task will be stopping the high- powered Badger offense that lastl week enabled Coach Harry Stuhl- dreher's eleven to roll up 32 points to Purdue's 14. Wisconsin's di- versified attack will give the Crimson's line-backing its first stern test and will further test a pass defense that broke down tem- porarily against Cornhusker aer- ials. THE WRIGHT WAY: 1902 Was Never Like This; Indians Speed East in Plane The eastward excursion made by Stanford from Palo Alto to Chicago to Ann Arbor didn't con- sume much time, thanks to those modern airliners. But the Wright brothers were still toying around with their aerial contraption when the fab- ulous 1901 Wolverine eleven was invited to play against Stan- ford in the first Rose Bowl on New Year's Day, 1902. Purdue Faces OSU Today Buckeyes Eye First Conference Victory Ohio State University's football team, successful in its first start last week against Missouri, will open its Western Conference schedule Saturday with the Pur- due Boilermakers at Lafayette. Opening the Boilermakers' at- tractive five-gamehome schedule, the first appearance in history of an Ohio State squad in the Ross- Ade stadium is expected to attract a near-capacity crowd. Having emerged from the 13-7 triumph last week without seri- ous injury to his players, Coach Wesley E. Fesler plans to start the same lineup against Purdue. In addition, the Bucks will have Halfback Bob Brugge available. , In Joe Whisler and Ollie Cline, who are battling each other for the Buckeye fullback post, Ohio IState can boast the two leading Western Conference touchdown scorers for the past two seasons. Cline, who returned to the Buckeye campus this fall after a stint in the army, tied for the Conference 1945 scoring crown with Wisconsin's Don Kindt and Purdue's Bill Canfield with 36 points on six touchdowns. So the late Fielding H. Yost and his 14-man Michigan squad left the Ann Arbor railroad station one wintry December day, all set for a 16 day overland route out to the West Coast. Actually, the trip only took eight days, because the . squad made many stops to practice, take in some sight-seeing, eat oranges, and partake in society dashes. The 49-0 Wolverine triumph on January 1, 1902 was consid- ered as a smashing personal victory for Coach Yost, who had brought StanfordatheePacific Coast title the year before. A rule barring non- alumni coaches had sent Yost eastward to Ann Arbor in 1901. The fact that only 11 Wolver- ines saw action against Stanford was also sufficient testimony to greatness of Keene Fitzpatrick, the well-known trainer. He kept the boys in tip-top shape for four playing months prior to the Rose Bowl game. Only one player was injured during the season; the casualty occurred on a Saturday, and the player reported in full stride at the following Monday's practice. In those days, the turn-outs at spring practice weren't even a quarter as large as the ones we see nowadays. But in ratio to the number of students at- tending a university at that time, the turnouts were impres- sive. Crisler's brand of football is more scientific than the type of rushing bone-crushing brand exhibited at the turn of the century. The intricacies of the forward pass has always figured prominently in Crisler's grid plans. It is easy to see that King Foot- ball has made tremendous strides during the 46-year lapse of pig- skin hostilities between Michigan and Stanford. I Presented by RICHLAND FURS of Blissfield, Mich. SWPAG-- WPAG-FM 'Gentlemen Prefer Blondes". . is a whimsical statement unsupported by the evidence a little ADVICE TO FRESHMAN r _ 4 .r_ . * * * * * * * * * * :Tfl But .. . "College Men Prefer Arrows".. Arrow Shirts-Whites, stripes, solid colors. from $3.25 Arrow Ties - Knits, stripes, foulards, plaids. from $1 Arrow Sports Shirts- Outstanding assortment for Fall. from $4.25 Arrow Underwear- Shorts with grippers from $1 Undershirts from $.85 J'ULLLnUUU-1j-L."Ll"1fhLn-n Hear Michigan's Number 1 "DISC JOCKEY" Jack The Bellboy SPECIAL GUEST STAR ON STATION WHRV SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5 r 4-30-5-00 -,l is a true tradition_ based on solid facts* r t it !!fJ:1,I Ask us for "ARROW"-bet on the best! The buy-word of college men from Yale to U.C.L.A. from Northwestern to Tulane. II ~ I I