FRESHMAN SUPPLEMENT L G gilt ian I:3aittl SECTION TWO 1 i ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 1938 ew oaching taff Buoys ootballH apes . PRESS PASSES By BUD BENJAMIN 1! EN OF THE NATION'S most powerful football factories-all top-notchers in this great million dollar industry-call their men back to work September 10. Production in the Big Ten starts the following month, and already the speculators have begun to speculate and the coaching captains of industry to fret. The music of the bands grows nearer. The chatter of the signal caller, the myriad of colors, the weaving hips of the flying halfback, and the battered physiognomies of the fall guys portend another great year for this virulent, young business. In short, it's a bull market in the Western Con- ference this season. The far sighted have already appraised the scene. Briefly their analysis follows. Minnesota Utilities, a vast holding company controlling the meat of the Northwest territory, will enjoy its usual prominence among the shares. North and Western will have more than a medi- cum of success. Schmidt's Lager, an Ohio corporation, will be a trifle green. Two rising young concerns, say the experts, are Wisconsin Inc. and Iowa Tubbs, and both may toss surprise packages into a usually serene market. Purdue Engineering and Construction Co. is of unknown quality. Indiana and Son will employ talent from all sectors of the country-with promising results. Illinois Central, headed by wily Bob Zuppke, its able executive, you may label as "ever dangerous". Chicago Ltd. will be very limited. Michigan and Co. will. YVES, WHAT WILL Michigan do. To date their future has alternately been described as (1) exceedingly promising; (2) exceedingly mediocre; (3) exceedingly gloomy; (4) punk; (5) so-so; (6) brilliant; (7) average;. (8) hellish; (9) amazing; (10) o. k. Without pulling any numbers out of the hat, I'll try to present a few facts which may help you in your own analysis. DrastV revisions in the organization's personnel features its 1938 cam- pain. On the coaching line sits Herbert Orrin Crisler, late of Princeton, as ihentor-in-chief. By his side will worry ex-Princetonians Earl Martineau and Campbell Diekson backfeld and end bosses respectively, and Clarence Munn, formerly line coach at Syracuse, now here. Out of the picture or considerably dimmed are Harry Kipke, Hunk Anderson, Cappy Cappon, Bennie Oosterbaan, and. Wally Weber. Of this group of 1937 pilots, only the latter ,two will serve in any capacity here in '38. OW AS TO PLAYER personnel. Not being graced in mental tele- pathy, L can't possibly tell you what schemes and plans are busy- ing Crisler's mind these days and will continue to do so for the next four months. Frtiz himself probably couldn't, wouldn't, and won't venture any lineup predictions until early in October, any success predictions until late in November. So what I'm passing on is little more than a bird's eye view of the team as they stack up in the . august iorm book. And need I say that'|s a mighty unimportant volume. If Crisler so desires, he can start the same line this year that played all lat season. Not a man is missing fromthe first seven. Here they are, along with their most important rivals. .ENDS:- Dan Smick and John Nicholson. Smick, on his way to nine letters here, is a six foot four incher, tough, and versatile. He catches passes adeptly, place kicks well, and can play a whale of a game when he feels so inclined. Nicholson, an affable, well liked chap, shines on offense being a first rate blocker. Add as competition Elmer Gedeon, whom Fielding Yost called the fastest end he'd fever seen, and Joe Rogers and you have the picture. TACKLES:- Four men handled this position last season and will con- tinue to do so this year. They are Captain Fred Janke, Don Siegel, Bill Smith, and Joe Savilla. All 200 pounds and over, all experienced, and all rough and ready, they most adequately staff this berth. Janke, the quiet and respected leader, should have a great season. Dogged by injuries and hampered by a trial at fullback, Fred never had much of a chance to reach top form. Watch him. GUARDS:- Ralph Heikkinen and Jack Brennan. The former is a sure- shot starter. Mentioned on practically every Western Conference team, Hike should enter a strong bid for national recognition this season. Brennan, a husky, blond adonis, will be pushed by two of last year's injured men, Fred Olds and Fortest "Butch" Jordan, as well as sophomore Ralph Fritz. CENTERS:- Archie Kodros and Forest Evashevski tell the story here. Chuckling, shy, barrel chested Archie, who beat out the captain of the 1937 squad as a sophomore, won the Chicago Alumni Trophy as the most improved man on the squad. Right behind, with mayhem in his heart, is Evie, the "One Man Gang," a great sophomore competitor with the strength of an ox and plenty of go-go. BACKS:- A wealth of material with your guess as good as anyone's on whom will click. The returning veterans are plucky Norm Purucker, who came up from obscurity to shine last season, Fred Troske, Tex Stanton, Wally Hook, Lou Levine, John Kinsey, Herc Renda, Harry Muhlholland, and others. B BUT HERE'S THE STICKLER. There's a sophomore crew eligible (I hope) of pronounced capabilities. In fact some say they'll relegate the veterans to the warmth and comfort of the bench. Big names:- Tom "Ace" Harmon, the boy Tulane urged to join their party last winter and a truly great prospect ,is slated for one back- field job. Harmon, leading high school scorer i the nation in 1936, carries his 198 pounds on a football field with a deadly finesse. He can really run and will be in there because of that. Ed Cristy, 200 odd pounds of fullback, will also enter a strong bid. So will satchel Jack Meyer, a blocking specialist, Paul Kromer, Howard Mehaffey, and Dave Strong. The latter is a senior, having transferred from Illinois for whom he kicked a field goal to whip Michigan in 1936. There are many more names-the squad will number 60 or better-but those listed are the seeded entries. And, oh yes, now you want a prediction on our prospects. Because of a wide divergence of opinion, I finally flipped a coin 100 times to cement my decision. Heads meant good, tails rotten. Heads came up 51 times, tails 49, So there you have it. A great Michigan team in 1938-is hereby decreed to be inevitable. 4 Big 10 Titles Are Captured By Wolverines Hockey, Wrestling, Track Squads Win Conference Championships In '38 Tank Team Takes NationalCollegiates By MEL STONE In spite of the woeru showing in both football and basketball, Michi- gan athletic teams proved their claim to the title "Champions of the West", by annexing four Big Ten and one national championships in the past year.- The biggest disappointment of the year was the basketball squad. Her- alded as potential title-winners and as the strongest Wolverine quintet in -ecent years, ex-Coach Cappy Cap- pon's squad began the Big Ten sea- son auspicially with three successive wins. Attack Bogs Down But after this impressive start, the Michigan attack bogged down and subsequent games proved that a good defense can not win basketball games. In spite of the inspired play of Captain John "Jake" Townsend, who broke Bennie Oosterbaan's All- time Michigan scoring mark and was three times All-Conference, the team wound up the season in a tie for fifth place with six wins balanced by a half dozen losses. But if Oosterbaan lost the scoring mark, he gained something more de-. sireable-the head coaching post, re- placing Franklin C. Cappon. But Oosterbaan will have no easy time of it in this, his first year as head coach. Gone from last year's squad will be Townsend, the spear- head of the Wolverine attack for three years, Herm Fishman and Bill Barclay, both three year men. Heading this year's squad will be Captain Leo Beebe, Ed Thomas, nine- letter man Danny Smick, Jim Rae and Charley Pink. The last two showed considerable promise last year as sophomores and should im- prove greatly. From a none too promising freshmen souad will come Herb Brogan, a shifty long shot artist and Mike Sofiak, another small but fast boy. Share Hockey Crown Michigan's first Big Ten title of the year came in hockey but had to be shared with Minnesota's Gophers. But this year's prospects depend largely on whether or not Ed Allen decides to return to school. If Allen does not return the whole first line of James, Allen and Johnny Fabello will be gone, leaving a competent but light and inexperienced second line. Burt Smith and Captain Bob Simpson who left their defense posts last year only on periodic treks to the penalty box have left permanent- ly through graduation. Only member of the first six left will be Goalie Elden "Spike" James. Left to bear the brunt of the usual heavy puck schedule will be Captain Les Hillberg, George Cook and Evie Doran who will be aided by some promising freshmen. Michigan's second and third title Michigan Intram Is One Of The Tennis Courts, Baseball Diamonds, Golf Course Available To Students This University is one of the few large educational institutions in this country which cannot be accused of over-emphisizing intercollegiate ath- letics at the expense of intramural sports and which can undoubtedly boast one of the finest "athletics for all" programs in the United States. According to Elmer D. Mitchell, di- rector of Intramural athletics here, more than 300,000 students use the facilities of the huge new Intramural Sports Building, erected in 1928, during the course of a school year, and on the average of 1,000 to 15,000 use the building every day. Mitchell said that 7,500 men stu- dents in the University enrolled in some form of competitive intramural sport during the last school year, which is approximately 70 per cent of the student body, while 5,000 more were registered in more informal types of contests. 32 Sports Offered A total of 32 sports are offered the students and the entire intra- mural program at Michigan is wholly arrived on the same night. The wrestling team, with three individual winners, nosed out a favored Indiana aggregation by three points. Co-Cap- tain Johnny Speicher, Harland Dan- ner and Don Nichols annexed the 118-, 155-, and 175-pound titles in that order. The mat prospects appear particu- larly bright with two of the three Big Ten champs returning next year. Both Danner and Nichols will be back and thei will be aided material- ly by Captain Harold Nichols who reached the semi-finals last year. Most promising of the freshmen are Bill Combs and Tom Sparks. And Track }indoor) For their third ig Tn tle ichi- gan just continued in the well-oiled groove when they swept to their fifth consecutive indoor track champion- ship. The Wolverine thinclads went unplaced in only one event, the sprint. The Wolverines continued in their cinder winning ways 'on into the spring when they cleaned up at the outdoor meet. Paced by Watson who captured first places in the shot, the discus and the broad jump and a third in the high jump, the men of Coach Charley Hoyt won going away. Stronger This Year The opposition is ever more pessi- mistic about halting Michigan track power this year than they were last. For returning is Watson (The One Man Track Team), Gedeon and Stan Kelley in the hurdles, Wes Allen, second ' in the high jump, Ralph Schwarzkopf, second in the two mile, and, if these were not enough bad news, freshmen Phil Baleyat, national junior 400-meter champ, Warren Breidenbach and Jack Leutritz will be around to make the 1939 edition of the Michigan track team twice as tough as ever before. The one national championship came to the Wolverines in swimming after having being beaten by Ohio State in Conference meets. The Wol- verines under Coach Matt Mann are perennial favorites in Big Ten and (Continued on Page 1i) rural Department Country's Finest supported, with the exception of the instructors' salaries, by proceeds col- lected from intercollegiate football games. The salaries of teachers are paid from the University budget. According to Mitchell, a good share of the net profit from football, the only paying sport, goes for the main- tenance of indoor and outdoor ath- letic programs. The erection of Yost Field House in 1924, dedicated to the real "Grand Old Man" of Michigan Athletics, Fielding H. Yost gave great impetus to the intramural sports program by removing all varsity practices and games from Waterman gymnasium, which building was at that time the focal point of all indoor intramural athletics. An even greater boon to the "ath- letics for all" program was the erec- tion of the huge Intramural Sports Building. Caters To All Tastes Housing almost every conceivable type of facility for the advancement if the intramural sports, the erection of this building, of course greatly fa- cilitated the program in a number of sports which heretofore had been partially neglected on the sports pro- gram because of inadequate facilities. Chief among the new additions were swiming, basketball, boxing, wrestling, handball, squash, indoor baseball, volleyball, indoor golf, water polo, badminton an tennis. Beside the large number of in- door athletic facilities of the Intra- mural Department, there are a great many outdoor sports available, some of which are organized under the de- partment and others which are of the more informal nature. The University of Michigan boasts the finest 18-hole golf course of any college or university in the country. It is a testing layout, affording the expert keen competition, yet at the same time it is fair enoug to allow a good score if said "dub" is fairly hot. The course is situated south of town, about a mile from the campus proper, in an exceedingly hilly terri- tory, and it's said to that one of the finest thrills to be offered on the course is the view of-the entire cam- pus among the huge oaks and maples in the valley below the eighteenth tee. 42 Tennis Courts Besides the excellent golfing facili- ties the University boasts 30 tennis courts at Ferry Field for the men students and 12 more at Palmer Field, reserved for the use of women stu- dents. Those at Ferry Field are prin- cipally clay, although there are a few cement courts, while those at Palmer Field are one-third concrete. The facilities of South Ferry Field provide opportunity for touch foot- ball and soft ball in season. -Women of the campus have their seperate intramural program, which although not as extensive as that of the men, is nevertheless inclusive enough to take care of the athleti- cally-minded girls enrolled here. They too have had a new building erected for their personal use, the Palmer Field House being listed among the best of its kind in the country. In it there are facilities for tennis, archery, golf, bowling, bas- ketball, and volleyball while the beau- tifully clipped grass of the Palmer Field is used in the tall for field hockey. Crisler Will Have, Veteran Line Intact From Last Season .:. --- > To Coach Varsity Herbert O. (Fritz) Crisler; who will attempt to play Moses to Michigan's football tribes when he starts his first year as head coach, has already impressed the campus with his efficient and businesslike system. Crisler had a free hand in. selecting ;his three assistants and chose men with whom he had worled before. To Captain Varsity Five Varsity Backs Also Due To Return; Soph Stars Add To Material Punt - Pass - Prayer System In Discard By MEL PINEBERG With an almost entirely new coaching staff as a foothold, Michi- gan's football team will attempt to pull itself out of a five year old limbo which has seen it plummet from thepeak of the gridiron world to the bottom. Following the deposition of Head Coach Harry Kipke and Line Coach Heartley "Hunk" Anderson and their subsequent replacement by Head Coach Fritz Crisler and his aides, Campbell Dickson, Clarence Munn and Earl Martineau, followers of the Maize and Blue hoped the Wolverine football fortunes would take a de- cided upturn. Material Is Good Crisler is stepping into a position which can easily make him either hero or goat. He has the material to produce a winning club. Last year's entire first string line, from end to end, will return intact. He has three letter winners at the ends, four 'at the tackles, four at the guards and one center. Returning for the backfield are five varsity men who, if given the chance, should be able to produce, But even if these :are not enough, there is the most promising sopho- more crop in years coming up, a crop which should not only fill what- ever holes graduation has left but which should push some of the hold- overs out of their postions. He 17 Trouble Shooter Campus reactions to Crisler ind his policy were decidedly favorable. The new coach is known as a trouble hooter.- When he went to Princeton as head coach in 1932, the football outlook was as cold and dark as it is at Michigan. The Tiger had not been growling hard enough to fright- en West Podunk Teachers. And yet, in the next five years, his teams lost but five games and in two of the season's, '33 and '35, were undefeated. Crisler lays no claims to bing a miracle man.,His first year will be devoted to making "a creditable showing". But he does stress/me thing-he wants fighting teams. The desire to play football is a prerequisite to playing on a Crisler-coached team. He warned all potential candidates "if there's any team on next year's sched- ule any of you think you can't beat, you might as well not come out." New Spirit Prevails The same spirit pervaded the spring training practices. The men went at their blocking, tackling and calisthenics with a vigor scarcely con- spicuous in previous springs. Spring training was run as it had never been before. Crisler and his assistants had every move planned. Everything clicked with Military pre- cision. And yet the force behind this efficiency wasn't driving, or goading the men on. The novelty made the workouts fun and the efficiency de- veloped will pay dividends in the fall. Learn Fundamentals In the first two days of spring training, the men were engaged in furious blocking and tackling, some- thing that had formerly been reserved for the second week. Crisler had teams formed and actual scrimmages going at the end of the first week. With the coming of Crisler, an ex- ponent of the Minnesota shift which had already added a snap and pre- .ision to the football workouts, the death knell of the famous Michigan punt, passband prayer system ap- peared to be sounded, although ac- cording to the new coach, he's "going to do plenty of praying". New Assistants Too Crisler brought his own entourage along with him as assistants. Marti- neau and Dickson, both of whom worked with Crisler at Princeton, will be here as backfield and end coaches respectively. Muinnn All- Ameriest" 1 Fred C. Janke, Jackson, will lead the first edition of the Michigan- Crisler football library. Janke, a sensational sophomore tackle two years ago, was injured and had to forego football for the remainder of the year. He was converted in- to a fullback for two games last year and then was shifted back to tackle. AULD LANG SYNE The Princeton football team will travel to New Brunswick on Novem- ber to play Rutgers in the first game in the latter's new stadium. The Tigers haven't played a football game on the Rutgers ground since 1888. i -- i Composite Big Ten Football Schedule Team- Michigan Illinois Indiana Iowa Chicago Minnesota Nor'western Ohio Purdue Wisconsin Ohio U. Sep. 23, nite Washington Detroit Sept. 24 (no game) at (no game) U.C.L.A. (no game) at (no game) (no game) at (no game) Champaign , Los Angeles Minneapolis Lafayette Mich. State De Paul Ohio Bradley Nebraska Kans. State Columbus Butler Marquette Oct. 1 at at at (no game) at at at at at at Ann Arbor Champaign Columbus Chicago Minneapolis Evanston Indiana Indianapolis Madison Chicago Indiana Illinois Wisconsin Michigan Purdue Drake S. Calif. Minnesota Iowa Oct. 8 at. at at at at at at at at at Ann Arbor Champaign Champaign Iowa City Ann Arbor Minneapolis Evanston Columbus Minneapolis Iowa City Minnesota Notre Dame Nebraska Chicago Iowa Michigan Ohio Nor'western Fordham Pittsburgh Oct. 15 at at at at at at at at at at Minneapolis South Bend Lincoln Chicago Chicago Minneapolis Evanston Evanston New York Madison Yale Nor'westernBloomington Colgate Ohio Illinois Chicago Wisconsin Purdue Oct. 22 at at at at at (no game) at at at at New Haven Champaign Kans. State Iowa City Columbus Champaign Columbus Lafayette Lafayette Illinois Michigan Wisconsin Purdue De Pauw Nor'western Minnesota New York U. Iowa Indiana/ Oct. 29 at at at at at at, at at at at Ann Arbor Ann Arbor Madison Iowa City Chicago Evanston Evanston New York Iowa City Madison Penn. Boston Coll. Minnesota Harvard Iowa Wisconsin Purdue Ohio Nor'western Nnv R t.(nncana a Q+Q+n+ x + -- 4.-r i Ricard Lost $200,000, On Tunney-Heeney Bout In 1928, when Gene Tunney made his final appearance as champion against Tom Heeney, the famous hor- izontal Englishman, Tex Ricard, then Students Admitted Free To Contests Included in the tuition for each full-time student of the University