PAGE $I 'i HE MICHIGIIAN DAILY Wf,,)NFE'SDAY, OCTOBE1R24, 192 _...r'_"' ._ "-" i110 IMU + g Y. 4 Thomas Alb,'ert Dwight Joes fYale IsConte Uo Once More To Deliver . - .I IicJ. gal, Wisconsin, "itinnes oti, Ilii]. work stamping him as one of the lead- nois anid Chicago Unide- ing baclks of, the Conference. feated 1)iffil ult to Pick Win ner At. present is is impossible to make .RAWKEYES BOW 4rTTIL.INiT; any predictions as to the outcome ofI INDIAINA AND PUJRIWE LOSE the race 'for the Conference chain.- p.'onhip. All five contendlers' have As a result of Saturday's games? exceptionally good teams, and no onef five Conference teams remain in the othtemapartoavadcid edge on any of the others. Wiscon- xace for Big Ten football honors for sin's remarkable showing against In- the 1923 season. diana stamps the Badgers as a muchI Michigan, Illinois, Wisconsin, Min- fmore formidable aggregation than} nesota, and Chicago still boast of, they appeared to be at-the beginning clen sate, ue o vctr' s oerof the year'. Coach Ryan seems to clea sltesdueto vcto~es VOThave found the combination that works; their respective opponents. Illinois' together and from flow on his team. triumph over Iowa was probably the should look better with every game., most spectacular Western game of a .Chicago's veteran backfield has been day that was replete with thrilling doing excellent work thlis1_ season. If - - 0-N rN r -= HI- 'cfFAST 5L- K i\~ ~-LN&5~ To . MAE ~4ooV#.~. -~ T SUM ';y.. + .~r " '' ',. "-\ SL I}M '4 / q-~- "'' ir f' t -l.t'~i- , . - ' * S ,.g 1 "' .N C-t , / '~' {. _ J " +!nr+r . ~ ,"''"7r t - aa 1 " /~ .r L__ iae'\ 5 t ..'+ ~ r~lnt i I ( FIELDINGti1.,,-wT ii i, ,.--- - __.____________ ' i EVOL1UTION~ OF THE :dI)ER I In logical order then followed thne GA IFLOF FOOTBALL selection of one man to do the pass- _____ing, through the greater accuracy .Football is one of our oldest college whc a hsscrdadteain games and to-clay holds the center ofmotfthmeinheoradioi tions, instead of he old form of helt- attraction on the intercollegiate ath- ersetr.Ntrll heay e letic program, It fairly seeps inuriherse grupedabutalythe eteryomero tradition and honor and it omlbodie s weegopdauthecnrtor- not h~n th~mir ~ ~toct him and the man Immediately be- aavi. caa i. as Ci a. Ai l3 11 G41 GAC GAL G%11 C.s C: Vi (J li,)' liG f x '' xi r7 ss>3 xn ssroc rt s.n nnivn tixn s.. oc. TOE )ON~SSB T I s i Aso FoRMFIDTr C !bATTEW YFOQ YA, WS ' ITY NIN l~4 A '(A 191~6 14. AD PI IN PUYHUOU H ~ al developn ent. bitt all the strateg uuwl a o ocv l as CAPTANED TEAM4S adcafi ,sththsco;dw while the lighter and faster, men wore }4s TW from the sturdy Amnerican pioneers. asindtduyothed. I 4"Prior to 1906 football was donmiiatedl , oobalyfrst(aAin" by mass plays featuring the Pernusyl- ,,aas a school or college ,.amie in the 18th vaIa ad hc'adth ,Fyn ~ V century but during the three or feour ~ -~~~~§' icenuris pror o, tis ime foobal, wedge' of -Hrvard. The game ,be in avagu way figredcame almost Vilely a contest of gruzell- in iter-own"ng and incessant pounding and coin. . and1 country contests. At this time sequently resulted in m~any serious I. the object of the game was to carry 6r ijre tti iefobl em Ikick a ball over a certain mark taken asteopnn'Iollnwihwsedt eaoihddet t og a JONESture andi a conference was held .in sometimes several miles from the oth- N~ oki 96t ics h d --l tr s me l metd eu h visalillity of ei in2ating the =an a , \. or, at -as opponent fo accomuplishing the feat.cogesrt The game cam:ie to its present in- u The men at the conference Jecided portanlt po sitioni through a graduals evolutionary Icrocess in which both ai 4 - universal standard of play andl of rule as to eliminate its objectionale fea- _. were dvlpdt-ehr:nteerytures adfollowing this decisio z the distnctve y -rules were changed and what is oin-i items ad Rugb, 1only called the 'new game' caonme ifto andl it was from the latter of the~se two :being. Not only for the prevenitionr of testatorpesn am . the mass play, but for the bel)C41. of l ud n Otbr i7~ orsna I the spetators it was decided to change fives of Vale, Princeton, Rutgers and ; the 3~ downs for 5 yards gain requpired IA SrRco 3, I't,. ffl fesv emt on . M -' . -Columbia universities met in New ofteofni;ta oa3dws1 W SUPt oSf:D. .TECS GP2EAT bi< FOQ AYr n raiedaclegaecn yards basis and to limit the number * .~ Iference which was the beginning offPe ronues orw aredantwllto e our present day organizations whichITheruswoeatnnt ihte r liirna~before the contest and even yet are are directly responsible for the devel- acceptance of the forward pass; as ~~not drilled into the heads of the play- opuient of intercollegiate athletics to legtmeasiwsaredttfe sl p ers as well as they must be. More their present high plane. teams could make ten yards on mass (Continued. on Page Seven) l The novelty of the game itse'lf was ,pas El 9 productive of many suggestions and in92te orh onwsaI~ i ! was one of those which is really ac- x : i forma Golfrwhichst epan d furthetttimoe upte Infor~nal G lfers l~zflcountable for the wide differeonce which stl fpa n ic httm hr _____essbewe_-ubyad mr have been few changes in the rules., F L f tu ~ U~i d1 - arit ~exst btwen ugy ndAmr-Itis rsethe opinion obaof wllthe writer that Riniaider , of hoc ii tsle rna~nds that; Although somewhat hampered byf ican football. This was the adoptionp Wolverin VarshAy Ble ill Best { extremely cold 'weather which pro- of a clause whichi permitted the for- preetdyfotalwl ontinue f ,r wards to heel or nass the ball out many years to come with no very ma- i'ossi ,Z" Shake. I vailed yesterday, an informal Vr iyternal change. Changes, of course, cart' z-3 Y rrgolf team defeated the squad repre- frm hesrimae re toldb be made but it is 'doubtful if' thecy LI1ICII .t ORIU S l l",,1 senting Detroit Northern on the Anne grasped by one of the backs, who could P'1i PARATiION F]MtiL AUxG~I Arbor golf course. then advance it. would make the game any better ":n - ---The. Michigan club-swingers exper- This was a p~rocedure not toleraxted among those who love football, there: Confronted by a schedule which l ienced little difficulty in disposing of i in the 'original form of the gamo, lbut is a concensus of opinion that the, calls for tellyn ffv hr h iytathfia cr en the addition al interest which it ]M- game will and should remain Just as t211es on as many successive Satur- 17-0. ( parted was immuediately seen and the it is. days', , icligain's Varsity football' Northern's low score of 80 was I superiority of this Plan for putting the team, en lhusel after its sucessfull beaten by three of the Wolverinej ball into play, over the English moithr- Antba sador Vet, Sleart Leane battle with Ohio State last Saturday,l scores. The honor of making the od of kicking it about in scrimmage, Tokio, Oct. 23.-Cyrus 17,. Woods, Un- has little to look forward to except' lowest score of the match going to was so apparent that it was eagerly itod State$ ambassador, will go to Anm- work, with perhaps a. great deal of Quirk with a 77. The other Michigan embraced. Without this change, foot- erica about Nov. 1, on a short leave, glory thrown in. M. A. C. will throwl scores were Crosby 79, Brodeick 79,. hall would never hold the position it due to the health of Mrs. -Wood's her full strength agatinst the Maize!I Smith 83, Feely 84, Hloss 89., does to-day, mother. 4 y i 1 1 L' Q a } i r. i E a; ,, Tad the D~auntless Is, }'iorkinz in his calm 71fash~ion on ! 'the task of pl ling Y' ale oot of t he football rut. L< at eai li3;goneas tar as Tad is con crned, Tbhis year's another one. Till~e fact 7t a!, si- feredJ its worst yea;' b nany ?amoon last season undon b'eIv let its Imark' on Tad but the : itien i h vs is not. You'll recall that 'iton trap-- led on Tad's teamI, th i r id \\ '- ed over it and liiat even Ta'd's 1 )rot h- or Howard ca-I':.' (!h,,is I-a eleven to! New Haven nll diisec an i[,1- brotherly 6 to 0 dci ea t to the yale team. The one and oly thrill the Yale c adherenlts got froms the seaIson was the 7 to 7 tie with the A;-my. The soldier; ladls after licked tl ::avy 17 to 14, j which gave Old Eli somtin ecro l ab u - u o e yl u .rBut Yale folk rec ill Jones' (lellut as coach at the New H-aven institution.I and are not downceast. 1 Jones, after (caching Syracuse and and Blue cohorts neoxt Saturday on Spaulding school returned in 19f' t IFerry Field. Iowa will take on the Ylwhere he had made a iamze ,is j Wolverines a week later at Iowa City, a wonder--qoartei'baenii n l!;S w i coel- ndthe Quaantico Marines, *Wisconsin loge lays. When Jones tokci~ig andl Minnesota will follow on the next's of the Yale squadl critics zigre edlij e ivk ";ends. had hoeles mes o hisbans. hy'askwhich the coaches face hada hpelss nes o~~ ~ this year is a.lpeculiar one, the wh-ole Ten w~eeks later' havard iaild roc~ tonwee or'erngv~it;lilsitnat ion being brought up by the tact .. them. For Tad's pick-un team 3h a d do-idrbl to tepac n h feaed othrivls.?on .sv~r . r~i l ha schedule which hitherto has fetdbthrvl.Joe a Kgi ;1 xvav.s been filled by the less power- hero of the year. ful VI. A. C. Two of the strongest Tad is fair, plumnp and forty-onIe. le,,ns which will face the Varsity this Whe hewasbon i Exelo, .~ nsfa.1l have boen met and vanquished but . parents dlecided lie \\ ouhd go, ino wheiig victories later, on. The good sized namie, s;o they c h? rizcnc emlttelrettm i njs him Thomas Albert 1)~Wli51t J>I s about as5 good hyiilcniina The initials of the fiirst three handles ;t will be this season, and at the damed gave his boyhood irienfa' a way (nit titre tha t condition m~ust be mnaintain- and lie became "Tad." ed1 for another five weeks. Should Tad has been uinusu ally s5 aecsfsIii the team go stale at the present time as a coach. lie insrilis a s, iIr; ,; O. wth three of the 1'i;.-Ten's best miia- gamieness', s olsmlas11iin and 'gHLtt i1 climes yet to be faced, havoc would his I camswhi\,ch makae s them g<;lor is 'be raised with [lie Miechigan record. in defeat.I Although3 the physical condition ofI Wtherefore Yale's faith in Tad. the team is good, the team as a unit ___-- is in its first stages of formation. The Udine, Italy, Oct.-. -iepe ir-si'gials which were used in the 011i0 ardini, formierly i... _htor o 'lonies, State gamie were only in the hands is dead. of the teani members a short week T 11 A* s. es, m-. nw l a w l r n ux «.yyt m ws .. .. A. .. .;,.. k ( YL#I1( e LL iO W..".sHS L IVE)1.:. YY. R R ':D(ELOWOROL0 , Y u oxd\ \. Tn i- nlt MW i Ill L i _ _ (OLIVE) ivl=:-- 11 11 -K l