Wage Sixteen THE MICHIGAN DAILY THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, November, 6, 1955 Sunday, November &, 1955 THE MICHIGAN DAILY i n __ Football Up Close 2. 'Offense In Motion ...And Nothing Is Sacred (Continued from Page 4) (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the sec- ond of two articles explaining the subtler points of Michigan's offensive system.)1 ,By MERRIT GREEN In the last article we examined offensive alignments of the Mich-1 igan system and pointed out strength and weaknesses. This ar- ticle will examine in somewhat1 more detail the offensive pattern. The Series . . . The team settles into various formations, as has been discussed, before executing each play. Once the play is in motion there are distinct backfield maneuvers, mak- ing up a fairly complete system, which jan be termed a series. The single wing as it has de- veloped at Michigan is an excel- lent example of one formation using numerous backfield varia- tions. In each variation the back- field performs the same general l maneuvers on each play. However, in each series it is usually possible to have the ball eventually car- ried by every member of the back- field, and perhaps an end. In the single wing, the ball is passed directly to either the left half-back or to the fullback to start the play in motion. If the ball is passed to the left half, he can plunge into the line at any point on the left side of the cen- ter or hand the ball at some point behind the line to any other mem- ber of the backfield. If the ball is centered directly to the fullback, an even greater variety of maneuvers can be at- tempted. He can hit directly into any part of the line or hand the ball to the right half or the quar- terback. If the ball is handed to the quarterback, a distinct series known as the buck lateral is be- See OFFENSIVE, Page 18, FIGHT LIKE STEGER--An historic picture of an historic day. Michigan's captain Herb Steger is shown dragging four Illini with him, as his 1924 team fell to Illinois and Red Grange 39-14. Michigan Tradition By PHIL DOUGLIS Daily Sports Editor TRADITION at Michigan is al- most a way of life-a scheme of nostalgia and reminiscence that is tied inexorably to a still larger framework of athletic prowess. A phrase like "Fight Like Ste- ger" may not mean very much to most of the University's countless students-but it still stands as a symbol of the brilliant history, which enfolds the Michigan ath- letic scene down through the years. It is a phrase such as this which ties such names as Yost, Harmon, Elbel, Oosterbaan, Heston, Crisler and many more into a tradition which will last as long as Michi- gan itself. WHEN discussing tradition, the first name which appears in any discussion of Michigan tra- dition is that of Fielding H. Yost. Coaching from 1901 to 1926, Yost built the unstoppable teams of Heston and Snow, of Friedman and Oosterbaan, and many more. Behind the crushed cigar that always loomed from his jut-jaw face was the spirit of Michigan ... an unquenchible thirst for excel- lence an1d achievement in sport which few individuals have ever surpassed. A N EXAMPLE of this fiery spirit that was Yost, took place one grey Saturday afternoon in the roaring 20's. according to popular legend. Yost was rallying his team in a typical pre-game oration. "Get out there and give everything you have for Meechigan" he bellowed -and then, in the tradition .of Knute Rockne and Bob Zuppke, his voice rose to a crescendo-and his men slowly began to boil in- wardly. Yost ranted on-and finally with a burst of energy-he shout- ed Get out there and win"-and with that he threw open the door he thought led into the stadium. Unbeknown to Yost, he is said to havekthrown open the wrong door, and nearly the entire Michi- gan team poured through it in blind rage-right into a swimming Spool. BUT the man whose teamsdhad once compiled a record of fifty-five games without defeat, (1901-1905) also had some lean days. It was a day such as this that spawned one of the most dra- matic yet unknown of all Michi- gan' traditions-"Fight Like Ste- ger." On a sunny fall afternoon back in 1924, a galloping Illinois red- head named Harold E. Grange stood America and Michigan on its ear by scoring four touchdowns in the first ten minutes of play- and gaining a total of 303 yards in eight trys. In the face of such adversity Michigan failed to give in. Led See YOST, Page 18 Nast was sometimes unjustly cruel. His 1872 drawings of Hor- ace Greeley, as, shown in the cigar store Indian cartoon, alligned the erratic Democratic candidate with sordid elements ranging from Boss Tweed to John Wilkes Booth. B UT CRUELTY was not new with Thomas Nast, nor did it stop with him. Many cartoonists had bitterly dramatized Andrew Jackson's pugnacious past. One campaign lithograph shows "Old Hickory" vigorously hanging a man, an allusion to some of his strict martial justice during the Seminole War. Jackson's skillful and frequent dueling was represented by a car- toon of a somber line of black coffins, each representing a less fortunate opponent. Zachary Taylor's military back- ground was attacked by one car- toon showing the 1848 Whig can- didate, scepter in hand, enthroned atop a mountain of skulls. Lincoln was not only held up' to the cartoonists' ridicule as anj awkward backwoods railsplitter but as a hairy gorilla as well. Lin- coln's sense of humor was held against him (see cartoon), and he was described as laughing at Un- ion casualties. And -during the campaign of! 1884, vicious references (the car- toon pictured is an example) werel made to Grover Cleveland's youth- ful indistretions with Maria Hal- pin, a young Buffalo widow. IN FACT, 1884 was one of theI dirtiest campaigns in Ameri- can history. Republican torch- bearers made rude allusions to Mrs. Halpin's child as they march- ed through city streets chanting,{ "Ma, Ma, where's my Pa?" "Gone to the .White House, ha, ha, ha." Cartoonists gouged their pens deepj into the Achille's heel of "Grover the Good." By way of contrast, the Republi- can candidate, James G. Blaine, had an impeccable private life but a dubious public one. Evi- dence that "The Plumed Knight" had taken bribes from the Rock' Island Railroad were injected into the campaign in the form of his indiscreet letters to Messrs. Mul- ligan and Fisher of the railroad, interests. The most publicized ended with the revealing close: "Kind regards to Mrs. Fisher. Burn this letter." The letter wasn't burned, and Democratic crowds were able to counter by chanting the telling quotation. The revelations about Blaine's career were dramatized with the accompanying cartoon, "The Tattooed Man," which show- ed Blaine without his plumes. Even the Republicanism of Tho- mas Nast was shaken, and party leader Roscoe Conkling explained his failure to campaign for Blame by curtly commenting, "I do not engage in criminal practice." BUT it was last minute blunders that actually cost Blaine the election. When a Reverend Burch- ard, speaking on the same plat- form with Blamne, assailed the Democrats for "rum, Romanism and rebellion," the candidate fail- ed to repudiate the remark, and the Catholic vote was alienated. While cartoonists were quick to comment, depicting an injured elephant lamenting the unfortun- ate remark, they had a field day on another Blaine indiscretion. He naively attended a banquet at Delmonico's given in his honor by some of the wealthiest men in the nation. The "Boodle Ban- quet" was immortalized in a car- toon by McDougall and Gribayed- off which showed Blaine at the table with men like Vanderbilt and Gould relishing delicacies, while, a depression-weary family in rags looked on hungrily. "The Royal Feast of BelshazzarI Blaine and the Money Kings" was made into posters and billboards by delighted Democrats. Blaine lost New York State with its large Irish-Catholic popula- tion by 1,149 votes and with it the election. Cartoons. had played their role-adding humor if not dignity to the campaign. IN THE last part of the nine- teenth century newspapers took over from the weeklies both their circulations and many of their cartoonists. Soon no paper of consequence could afford to be without its own staff cartoonist. The new generation soon found a number of personalities it could sink its teeth into. Perrennial candidate William Jennings Bry- an was one of their favorites. His broadly brimmed hat and broadly grining mouth were seemingly de- signed for the caracaturist. Some pictured Bryan with a bellows, filling the air with con- fusing catchphrases like "16 to one." Another drew the "Great Commoner" as a political Sven- gali, deviously attempting to hyp- notize Uncle Sam. Sam, not one to let such things upset him, winks cheerily at the reader. Mark Hanna, McKinley's angel and manager, was often pictured in expensive suits decorated with dollar signs. One cartoonist de- picted him as a nursemaid, seeing to it that young Teddy Roosevelt was kept in line. "T.R." was a cartoonist's holi- day. His heavy mustache, Rough- Riding past (often symbolized by a hobby horse), expressions like "Bully" or "I feel strong as a bull moose," but most of all his vigor- ous way of exemplifying "the strenuous life" set the artists to filling volumes with his likeness. DESPITE widespread use of can- did newspaper photographs cartooning continued to flourish. Some innovators even expressed their political ideas modeling clay statuettes, which were photo- graphed and printed. However, the practice never became wide- spread, perhaps because the at- tractiveness of the cartoon was usually sacrificed to the third-di- mensional effect. But in either clay or pen and ink Herbert Hoover's stiff collar andr s t i f f e r physiognomy, Franklin Roosevelt's tilted cigarette holder,I toothy smile and even his "little dog Fala," and Wendell Wilkie's drooping forelock all delighted theE cartoonist and his public.- Harry Truman's loud Hawaiiant sports shirts, his energetic but folksy ways, his stubborn cour- age; Thomas Dewey's black mus- tache, mechanical mannerismsf (see cartoon) and "Me Too" lib-I eralism; Henry Wallace's flowing grey hair, prominent white teetht and shockingly pink politics; JoeI McCarthy's heavy beard, unlikelyI blusterings and impossible burden of proof; Douglas MacArthur's corncob pipe, reluctant "fade" andI "I shall return" bearing-all weret "naturals" for recent cartoonists,) who slashed and exalted, but most-I ly just made us laugh.? Today, a multitude of issues and 1 personalities are beings summed up in a quick picture and brief caption. Their appeal is nott that of Little Orphan Annie. It( resembles more that of "Gulli-( ver's Travels"-the appeal of clev- erly conceived satire.1 "I KNEW HIM HORATIO--A FELLOW OF INFINITE JEST .... Hamlet, in the form of Democratic nominee McClellan as heview., "Little Mac" and his supporters were often critical of the Preside joke was on them when the ballots were counted in 1864. Curiously Adlai Stevenson has been assailed both as a vacillating Hamlet and 7 Gothi A still from "Lot in Sodom, with "The Baker's I A .2pectat L ' t,. Be different this finte -- instead of a gift that wilts or melts -- make it Jew- elry -"tlae gift that lasts and lasts." Yes, ites inexpensie too. You can Inay c Jewelry starting at $1.00 at . . . arcade jewelry shop Registered Jewelers,'WAmerican Gem Society We engrave and gift-wrap ail purchases -- FREE! . i t 0{ < - -.}S=f- Y {7 {}< >t ' THERE IS no Cinerama and no stereophonic sound, only a 16 millimeter film projector and a loudspeaker. And at some meet- ings of the Gothic Film Society even the loudspeaker isn't used, if the evening's feature is one of the silent movie classics from the film library of the Museum of Modern Art. It is not a love of the antique or the quaint that motivates the members of the Gothic Film So- ciety, but an interest in the his- torical and aesthetic aspects of the movies that cannot be satis- fied in the neon-lighted palaces of Ann Arbor. The revolt against the pop-corn movie culminated in a withdrawal to the Rackham Amphitheater, where on the traditional Monday nights during the past eight years, Gothic has shown over one hundred important films from all over the world. Realistic, surrealistic, symbolis- I' t a C r f f i. 0 C r To r t tic, experimental, silent, sound, jd color, black and white, adventure, comedy, romance, melodrama, each year the films shown have il- lustrated significant developments -Walt Kelly-New York Sun "THE MECHANICAL MAN" was a favorite appelation for 1948 Republican candidate Thomas Dewey, a reference to his well- oiled campaign organization, stiff mannerisms and automatic smile. The theme is carried out in "The Campaign Begins in Earnest," while Progressive candidate Henry Wallace is shown running with his basketfull of political boomerangs and Harry Truman seemingly not caring what way he runs, as long as it's fast. A cartoon may not be logical, in the film as an art form. it may not even be consistent with yesterday's drawing, but that hard- THE EMPHASIS this year is on ly matters. Ridicule is for the the sound movie but three si- moment -- a moment in which lent films, Beau Geste, The Cat pomp is deflated, character is re- and the Canary, and The Last vealed or distorted, and issues ap- Laugh have been rented from the pear in terms of black and white. Museum of Modern Art. Each of With all its abuses, politics just them demonstrates the principles wouldn't be politics without it. on which the Society operates. d A u