WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1949 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pirates 6-4 Win Cuts C 'I S Ji/1if'g Saffell's Grand Slam omer Provides Necessary Edge THE OFFICIAL attendance figures for the Michigan-State game last Saturday listed the crowd at 97,239; but there was a person there who wasn't included in that all-time mark-he couldn't be seen, but he was there, his presence was felt; he's the man who made that spectacle and the other prodigious athletic facilities at Michigan a reality: the late Fielding H. Yost. Let's go back to 1901 when "Hurry Up" Yost first came to Ann Arbor to coach a faltering football team, back to the start of the career of a man who was to become a legend at Michigan. Yost coached Michigan's football teams from 1901-1926, and was Athletic Director from 1921-1941. Always foremost in Yost's mind was "Athletics for All." He realized that such a project would take a great deal of money, but maintained that football alone would pay for such a plan. YOST FORESAW that in years to come the thousands of Mich- igan students would be taking part in athletics-not to make the varsity, necessarily, but just to enjoy themselves and build up their bodies at the same time the professors were building up their brains. He told Charles Baird, then manager of Athletics at Mich- igan, "We'll not have two tennis courts, but fifty or a hundred; not one basketball court, but fifteen, maybe twenty; we'll have four or five football fields and fencing rooms and handball courts and swimming pools and rifle ranges-Mr. Baird, this University is going to have the finest athletic plant of any college in the country! And it's not going to cost the taxpayers of this state one cent!" Yost's plan was to produce football teams that thousands upon thousands of people would come to see. Back at the beginning of the century his teams played in old Regent's Field before a possible capacity crowd of 800. BY 1905, after Yost's teams had gone 56 games without a defeat, the capacity was upped to 4,000 people, but he told Baird that the stands would have to be enlarged again in a few years to hold at least ten thousand fans-but still that wouldn't be enough. "Someday," Yost said, "we're going to build a real stadium here at Michigan. It's going to seat fifty-maybe seventy-five thousand people." Baird was all set to put in a call to the insane asylum. "Wait and see," was all the envisioning Yost said. They only had to wait until the fall of 1927 when Michigan played its first game in the "Bowl that Yost built." Yost and Baird stood at the top of the stadium looking at the jam-packed crowd. Finally Yost turned to his old friend and with a knowing smile said, "Eighty-five thousand people, Charlie, and they all came to see a football game." * * * * AND BECAUSE they came to the game and have continued com- ing, because Yost had a dream and struck to it, because of Yost's faith and foresight, Michigan has one of the finest athletic plants of any college in the country. The Stadium is the largest college-owned stadium in the country; Yost Field House, the Intra-Mural Building, the Hockey Rink, Ferry Field, Waterman and Barbour Gyms, the Women's Athletic Building and adjoining grounds, and the University Golf Course give Michigan students almost unlimited athletic and recreational opportunities. Fielding Yost is dead. He died three years ago. The great Michigan teams and students of today know him only as a memory. But Fielding Yost is not and can not ever be forgotten. Wherever football is played, as long as athletics remain a part of our lives, he will be remembered. I,' M Bottles Up Indian Plays In Grid Drills Kerpthorn Holds Offense Position Michigan's blue-shirted defen- sive line bottled up Stanford's po- tent T-formation yesterday play- ing against a red-shirted Jayvee eleven on Ferry Field's practice gridiron. The Junior Varsity, using chief scout Ernie McCoy's Stanford of- fense, battered futilely at the unit that halted the Michigan State at- tack last Saturday. STAN MUSIAL ... ace of Cards PITTSBURGH-(/P)-A mighty Home Run blast with the bases loaded by Tom Saffell, a little known outfielder who only two months ago toiled in the bushes, almost broke the hearts of the pennant-starved St. Louis Cardi- nals last night. The paralyzing blow came in the second inning with George (Red) Munger on the mound and paved the way for the Redbirds' crushing 6-4 defeat at the hands of the sixth 'place Pittsburgh Pirates. THE COSTLY setback, St. Louis' sixth in 10 starts here, sliced a half game off the Cards' first place lead over the idle Brooklyn Dodgers who now trail by only one game. Thus the Brooks now can tie for first place pro'vid- ed they win all their remaining four games while the Cards drop one of their four. Willie Werle, a 27-year-old southpaw from San Francisco, who only 11 days ago handed the Dodgers a disastrous defeat, repeated the trick against the Cards. However, a fine relief chore by Vic Lombardi, a Dodger castoff, helped Werle register his 12th triumph and his first of the season over the Redbirds. Wally Westlake led off the Pitts-! burgh second with a single and should have been erased on Pete Castiglione's bouncer to Tommy Glaviano, but. Red Schoendienst dropped the third sacker's throw in a double play attempt, and all hands were safe. Westlake was cut down at the plate on Monty Basgall's grounder, but Munger All fraternity athletic man- agers are urgently requested to attend an important organiza- tional meeting tonight in the main office of the I-M Build- inEg. --Earl Riskey. walked Clyde McCullough Stan Rojek to force in a run. and THE HIGHLY-TOUTED Stan- ford Indians have scored a total of 93 points in their first two outings without having been scored upon as yet. Small San Jose State was the first victim while Art Valpey's Harvard club fell last weekend. Signal drills, both offensive and by the pseudo-Stanford ma- chine, were also conducted as the session culminated with Var- sity offensive scrimmage. Physical condition of the squad is reported at tip-top as the team prepares for tomorrow's flight to the coast. Leg-cramp injuries to wingback Leo Koceski and full- back Don Dufek have responded to treatment although Koceski's leg is still bandaged. * * * MICHIGAN does not lack a completely sound fullback, how- ever, as Coach Benny Oosterbaan reaffirmed his faith in Dick Kempthorn as an offensive line- buster by keeping him in that slot during today's practice session de- spite the Canton, Ohio boy's near fatal fumble in the first play of Saturday's encounter. The Michigan Coach said, "I think Dick turned in a fine per- formance, that fumble could happen to anybody. I did it my- self when I was playing ball." Oosterbaan utilized the speed of frosh back Dave Hill, sensa- tional three sport athlete from Ypsilanti Central, on the J-V unit in an attempt to simulate the speed of the Indian scooter Harry Hugasian. Save 20% to 50% on Nationally Adversised Famous Products Refrigerators * Radios * Washers Cameras " Projectors * Television Household Appliances Gifts a Pens " Jewelry * Watches * Typewriters Prices That Challenge Comparison The John Stanley Howard Corp. 25 COENTIES SLIP (So. Ferry) New York City BO 9-0668 S'K'ClubWins BATTLE CREEK - (P) - The Kalamazoo, Mich., Sutherland Pa- pers team captured the Amateur Baseball Congress National title yesterday with a 17-5 win over the Hannibal, Mo., Pilots. DO YOU KNOW . . . that when the Wolverines won the basketball crown in 1948 it was the first time since 1927 that they had taken the title out- right. SAFFELL THEN slammed a 2-1 N pitch into the left field stands to clean the bases. The Cards fought back vali- antly, closing the gap to 6-4 with a tree- run uprising against Werle in the eighth. RED BIRD Manager Eddie Dyer practically cleared his bench of pitchers in a futile effort to sal- va e the game. After Munger was blasted in the second, Wilks, Pol- let, Martin and Brazle all took their turns on the mound, but the damage had been done. $4th 0 Ann/N/ the BIG Annual' PHILIP MRIS n, FOOTBALL What Scores Do You Pred ict ? ....... ... - - MICHIGAN v. ARMY MINNESOTA v. NORTHWESTERN MICHIGAN STAT E Y. MARYLAND CORRECT SCORES CORRECT SCORES CORRECT SCORE WIN 1,000 WIN 200 WINS 100 PHILIP MORRIS CIGARETTES PHILIP MORRIS CIGARETTES PHILIP MORRIS CIGARETTES 'Grandelius Set For Halfback Spot at MSC EAST LANSING -(P) -Sonny Grandelius, Muskegon Heights senior, now looks to be the top candidate for left half position on the Michigan State football squad. Grandelius didn't get a chance to carry the ball in the Michigan game. When Coach Biggie Munn wanted to put him in, the makeup of the rest of the backfield was such that he needed a punter at the position. "SONNY understands the way things worked out," Munn said. "But he'll get his chance at the position." Grandelius was getting a good share of the work at the position in the first practices this week. Since track stars Horace Smith of Jackson and Jessie Thomas of Flint failed to make much head- way against the Wolverines, the Western Michigan boy would seem the logical candidate, Dedicate Hack Wilson Grave MA.RTINSBURG, W. Va.-(,)- Some of baseball's famed old tim- ers stood by silently yesterday as Joe McCarthy unveiled a simple monument at the grave of Hack Wilson, the old rowdy boy with the big bat. They gathered in a corner of Rosedale Cemetery in front of a tapered granite block about 30 Inches square at the base and ten feet high. * * * ON IT WERE crossed bats and a baseball, and a simple inscrip- tion: "One of baseball's immortals, Lewis R. (Hack) Wilson, rests here." McCarthy took time out for tnp n.nmnn ,. .Qni a th *.n- THE MICHIGAN "CREW-CUT" is a popular, collegiate hair style featured with us. Try one!! 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