THURSDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE I PAGE THREE .' of C4t t by Ivan N. Kaye PRINCETON MEETS RUTGERS on Saturday in a game of football. Now there is nothing spectacular in the fact that two neighboring eastern universities are going to play a game of football, except for the fact that these are the two schools which started the whole thing back on the sixth of November in 1869 at New Brunswick, For it was on a gray Saturday afternoon more than three- quarters of a century ago that 25 gentlemen of Rutgers engaged in the first contest of "foot ball" with a like number of the sons of Old Nassau. No one on the field that day could in his wildest fancy have fore- seen that the means used to settle some old questions of honor be- tween the two schools would grow into a great autumnal pastime played in every village in the land. * * * * How It All Started .,. THE TROUBLE BETWEEN the students of Princeton and Rutgers had begun when each school claimed possession of an old, aban- doned Revolutionary War cannon located halfway between the cam- puses. The fieldpiece, left behind when Washington's army retreated across New Jersey, had been the object of a great deal of attention from the men of the two universities. A party of students had set out from New Brunswick one night and taken the cannon back to their campus. The next night several ,hundred Princetonians almost wrecked New Brunswick while effecting the recapture of the now priceless relic. And so it went for years. First one school and then the other would steal the old cannon. It became a class project. Finally one rainy night in the spring of 168 a band of Princeton men took the fieldpiece from New Brunswick over the bumpy dirt roads back to Princeton, and then sunk it in eight feet of newly poured concrete. The cannon was Princeton's for all time. * * * 4* 'The Princeton Incident'..... OVER IN NEW BRUNSWICK there was consternation. The sport- Ing blood of every Rutgers man was boiling over the "Princeton incident," as they called it. The only answer was a test of honor, on the athletic field. A game of baseball was arranged. Princeton won it by a score of 40-2. Even in 1868 that was a mighty lop-sided score by whichto lose a baseball game. So there had to be some other test. The men of Rutgers wait- ed until the autumn of the following year and then challenged Princeton to a game of rugby football, a new version of a sport which enjoyed a certain popularity in England. The game, won by Rutgers by six goals to four, made the eighth page of the New York Herald Tribune. The article mentioned that 25 students from Rutgers had defeated 25 students from Princeton in a football match held in New Brunswick two days earlier, THE EDITOR WHO BURIED that little sports item on the bottom of an inside page would have been greatly surprised if someone had told him that in the not too distant future, newspapers would de- vote whole sections and banner headlines to the coverage of the game which was born in New Brunswick that afternoon. The two teams arranged a second match to be played after the completion of the first, and Princeton managed to win to achieve a split for the day's activity and preserve its athletic dignity. Even though Princeton had won the second match, the men of Rutgers felt that the day had been theirs and there was much singing and merriment far into the night. It was good that the students of Rutgers savored their triumph, for it was to be 691 years and 35 football games before another Rutgers team would bring a victory over Princeton to the banks of the Old Raritan. Saturday they go at it again, just a few days after the eighty- fourth anniversary of their first, historic meeting. This time, however, 1 instead of a few hundred onlookers, there will be thousands in the big stadium at Princeton. Hockey Action Begins T onighit As RedWings Battle Rangers TauDelts Nip Theta Delta Cli13-12 M' Polishes Play for Big Ten Opener By JIM DYGERT In contrast with the Saturday spectacle of gridiron glamour, a view of a Wolverine practice ses- sion is particularly unexciting. As the Michigan football team crossed out another day on its practice calendar yesterday, one could see a half-dozen footballs in the brisk air or a half-dozen ends trying to catch them. IN ANOTHER part of spacious Ferry Field, the linemen are tak- ing refresher courses in blocking, complete with on-the-spot lec- tures by the football faculty. The fellows in the dull blue jerseys compose the varsity, and on the other side of the line is the out- classed fifth string. Across the dirt road cutting through the practice field are numerous backfields rehearsing plays, repeating the same one several times in search of per- fection. Now and then a player returns to his position on the run. But the spirit is a trifle lower than that of a week ago. Everyone is somewhat grimmer as he prepares for the Big Ten opened against Iowa, who he realizes will offer bet- ter competition than the teams so far encountered. SUDDENLY, all the gridders converge on one spot and a scrim= mage is organized. The varsity looks good both on offense and defense. But the opposition is the persistent fifth string in the num- bered white jerseys. The whites gain little against the varsity, but somehow they complete an occasional pass. Then the blue-shirts take over and yardagenbecomescheap. Tony Branoff and Ed Hickey, operating from right-half, are im- pressive. So is the passing of Ted Kress who fires several comple- tions to Gene Knutson And Bob Topp. Finally, another version of the weekday tune-up is over and thel boys. go home. Captain Dick O'Shaughnessy, however, remains behind for treatment of an in- jury. The big center suffered a twisted ankle that may keep him on the bench Saturday. One or two others limp slight- ly, but it's all in a day's work. Chi Psi Romps To Victory; GOPHERS STRESS PASSES: Theta Chi Decisions AEPi Spartans' Neal Sidelined for Saturday By JACK HORWITZ In one of the hardest fought and tightest games of the fraternity touch football schedule, yesterday Tau Delta Phi downed Theta Delta Chi, 13-12. Sparked by the expert passing of Evan Hirsch, who passed for both of the touchdowns, the Tau Delts fought shoulder to shoulder for the jwin. Hirsch passed to Al Shuster for the first touchdown and again to Chuck Baraf for the sec- ond tally. Gene Curtis tossed a short pass over center to Maury Friedlander for the deciding point. JACK DUNN threw two passes to Bill Whitingham for both of the Theta Delts' scores but the extra point tries failed. The Tau Delts played expertly against a very tough Theta Delt hteam.rCurtis passed to Max Schwartz for most of the yard- age. The Theta Delts ran beau- tifully for big gains but their passing failed them in the clutch. In a high scoring battle, Chi Psi outpassed Phi Kappa Tau, 28-12. Dale Ewart threw four passes, two to Art Fairbanks and two to Bob Sabo, to account for four touchdowns. Stu Scheifle ran for three of the extra points with Ewart scoring the other. SPARKED by the running of Bob McKenzie, Theta Chi scored a victory over Alpha Epsilon Pi, 12-0. McKenzie ran around left end for the initial tally with Jerry Stonehoff throwing to Roger Wil- loughby for the insurance marker. Phi Gamma Delta ran wild over Delta Chi yesterday after- noon to cop a 27-6 victory. Pete SPORTS JIM DYGERT Sports Night Editor DID YOU KNOW-that Fritz Crisler, athletic director of Michi- gan, has the distinction of being one of the two nine-letter men ever to come out of the Univer- sity of Chicago. He received three letters in baseball, football and! basketball. By The Associated Press Paulus started the scoring with EAST LANSING - Center Jim{ a 60 yard run in the first series Neal was on the sidelines yester- of downs and from then on it day as Michigan State prepared was easy pickings. for its home football opener A safety in the early minutes of against Texas Christian here Sat- the first half provided a two point urday. margin which was enough for Si- rNeal received a badly bruised ma Chi to squeeze by Delta Upsi- ( foot in the Minnesota game and lon, 2-0. Bob Littleson tagged a has been spared from scrimmage. DU player in the end zone for the Quarterback Tommy Yewcic, score. who didn't start in the Minnesnta. Freshmen, using MinnesotaI plays, scrimmaged with the third string varsity and made large gains. CHAMPAIGN - Illinois' foot- ball squad yesterday ended. heavy preparations for Saturday's game at Ohio State with a defensive scrimmage against the freshmen. Coach Ray Eliot stressed the need for halting a Buckeye ground attack which brushed aside Indi- ana and Califorhia. LAFAYETTE - Coach Stu Hol- comb named a pair of veteran juniors, end John Kerr and guard Tom Bettis, yesterday as co-cap- tains for the Boilermaker grid squad in their game Saturday with unbeaten Duke. The Boilermakers b a t t e r e d through their final full-scale scrimmage before the trip to Dur- ham. N.C. The squad worked hard on offensive and defensive tactics devised for use against the Blue Devils. SUPERB catching on the part of Doug Lawrence, varsity bas- ketball captain of the 1952-53 sea- son, provided a winning margin for Phi Delta Theta as they downed Acacia, 13-0. Lawrence in- tercepted an Acacia pass to set up the score. Don McClaren received a pass from Rusty Swaney to score the second touchdown. Ralph Boehn threw two long passes to Shelly Chambers and Bob Hobbs in the first half to give Phi Kappa Sigma a 12-0 win over Tau Kappa Epsilon. The scores in the initial half proved enough as the TKE's sprang to life in the last half to hold the Phi Kappa Sig's game because of a knee injury, ap- pears to be completely recovered. MINNEAPOLIS - Coach Wes Fesler shifted his offensive stress to passing yesterday, indicating Minnesota may rely heavily on its aerial arm Saturday against high- scoring Northwestern. Left half Paul Giel and quarter- backs Geno Cappelletti and Max Schmitt did the bulk of the throw- ing in another lengthy practice session. The Gophers' only offen- sive flash against Michigan State last Saturday came on back-to- back passes from Giel to reserve end Ron Smith. r Devils. er, NEW STYLES FIRST AT WILD'S scoreless. EVANSTON - Ends Joe Collier In the remaining games. Alpha and John Beiver consistently snar- Chi Sigma ran wild over Phi Alpha ed -passes from Dick Thomas and Kappa, 19-0. Delta Sigma Delta Don Rondou yesterday as North- buried Psi Upsilon, 18-0, while Sig- western stepped up plans for a ma Phi won a hard fought battle, passing attack against Minnesota defeating Delta Sigma Phi, 2-0. Saturday. STORE HOURS DAILY 9 TO 5:30 SUN-TAN SLACKS Tans - Greys Better Material - Better Fitting Zipper Fly 4.50 STATE STREET AT LIBERTY aI. 11 HARRIS TWEED SPORT COATS and TOPCOATS This distinctive hand woven cloth is perfect for our Michigan weather. Sport coats in natural shoulders, long narrower lapels, three-button, center vent. $39.50 to $45.00 'opcoats iq both raglan and set-in sleeves, Bal collar S62.50 (with zip-out lining . . . $72.50) AWILD SB State Street on the Campu I I p By The Associated Press The National Hockey League, bucking big time football for sports-page space, starts another long season on two fronts tonight. The Detroit Red Wings open their 28th season in the National Hockey League tonight, and they are expected to get away flying. The Red Wings will play the last- place New York Rangers. * * * THE WINGS are seeking their sixth straight. NHL title, which would put them one up on Casey Stengel's baseball Yankees. THE 1953-54 70-game schedule also opens at Montreal tonight with the Canadiens, featuring Jean Beliveau, against the Chicago Black Hawks. The entire league will be in ac- tion by Sunday night. The Maple Leafs, with substantially the same team that ended in fifth place last season, meet Chicago in Toronto Saturday. The Boston Bruins clash with Montreal in Boston Sunday for their first game. PERSONALITY HAIRSTYLING: * 9 BARBERS * NO WAITING f WELCOME The Bascola Barbers Near Michigan Theater The hand-welt "DORSET" belt. != r1 r. a fabulous Qua4 S TOR E H OQU R S D A I L Y 9 TO 5:30 .Ex I. 0 The "PETER BAIN" belt. * The "BUCKINGHAM" wallet. The "RUE DE LA PAIX" wallet. The "EMBASSY" suspenders. The "BARONY" garters. The "DARBY" wallet. The "PIGALLE" wallet. Pioneer's "SPORTING PRINTS" jewelry. 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