tfliE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. P i (D A rr- t Poll poolm 72 WrAw"Ift M Y UPSETS MARK DAY WHICH 1uiwriUl IiV r 1-4.1 iAqiieinm, 1hursday's Games 4 P SIfIIV11 LL I LIIL1J ULU iJ~flUUI nd J. Defeats West Virginia; Pitt 6. Walter Koppisch, star Columbia urprises Penn State; U. of D. halfback, was injured early in the4 Beats Gonzaga game and his absence took most of the punch from the team's attack. Al- E BIG COLLEGE ELEVENS though outweighed, Haughton'sl ARE UNDEFEATED FOR YEAR charges put up a game up-hill battle, but were unable to cope with the! veral upsets marked the gridirondriving attack of the Green aggre- ests played on Thanksgiving Day, gation. h virtually -wrote finis on the Although they were able to wind season. up their brilliant season with a vic- kough several games will be tory, Knute Rockne's Notre Dame warriors had to play real football to! ,d today, none of them is of any dw t oi nvriy h i- importance. Thursday's games lown St. Louis University. The fin- ght together a number of the al score was 13-0. A soggy field was gest teams in the country. Bya factor in the closeness of the bat- efeat at the hands of Washington tle, as the Irish were unable to em- Jefferson, West Virginia was ploy their famous wide open tactics ked out of its place among the with success. Layden starred for the feated teams of the country. The winners, scoring . both' the winning L of the Mountaineers, which touchdowns. accomplished by a score of 7-2, Another Turkey Day upset came at one of the upsets of the year. Detroit when the U. of D.tripped up Presidents displayed an impene-D - defense when their opponents Gonzaga, 13-7. Defeated by M.A.C., tened to cross their goal line. and held to ties by a number of The annual basketball tournaments for the fraternity, class, society, and I other :league teams will begin within I a few weeks and the Intramural de-1 partment is desirous of securing a goodly number of capable referees to! handle the contests. All men who have had experience should apply as soon] as possible. Basketball practice under the direc- Mi o th- Tf h .. r......1 i - __ ____ INDIAN COACH SEEKS GAME WITH BIG TEN ELEVEN Chicago, Nov. 30.-(By A.P.)- Dick Hanley, coach of the Has- kell Indians, arrived here to- day to confer with the Big Ten coaches assembling in their an- nual schedule meeting. He hoped to arrange some contests for 1924 with Conference schools for the Indians, he said. The only two games lost this fall by the Indians of the pine play- ed were to Minnesota, 13-12, and Butler, 19-16. John Levy, an Oklahoma Indian playing full- heir. ability to hold the Virginians check, coupled with their ability taking advantage of the breaks en- led the W. and J. gridders to pull , unexpected, and return home with victory. The only touchdown of e game came in the second period, aen Nardacci, the Mountaineers' ar, fumbled on his own 10-yard line. he Presidents recovered, and Amosl rried theleatheracross the lineaf- r line plunges had brought the ball nost to the goal. W. and J. made eir foemen a gift of two points in e last quarter, when ICarlin downed a ball behind his own goal line in eference to punting from such a ecarious position. Pennsylvania's great stand against rnew's steam-roller was a high ot in football Thursday. Although e Cornell-Pennsylvania games are ways closely-contested, the compar- ve records of the two teams left room for doubt in the minds of )st critics as to the outcome. Do- 's eleven was expected to win the me by a large score,but the des- rate fighting of the Quakers held e Big Red team to a count of 14-7. te work of Quarterback Pfann, xnell's hope for the All-American im was the feature of the thrilling . The pilot of the winning team! gred the two touchdowns which n for his aggregation. Every man' both teams made his contribution! one of the most spectacular gamer the season in Eastern circles. .n its last game as a Warner-coach- team, the Pitt eleven upset all the! pe by defeating Penn State, 20-3. e famous coach of the winning ,m will handle Leland Stanford's dders next year, and his proteges re him the best possible sendoff en they took their opponents into mp. The result of the game can- be attributed to luck, as the size the score shows. After the Stat3 ven had scored with a field goal the first few minutes of play, Pitt me back and pushed over three c4downs, while the losers were pless before a powerful defense the remainder of the game. The nthers' victory served as a fitting nax to Glenn Warner's career as i's coach. Dartmouth's strong eleven came ough with an expected victory' en the conquerors of Harvard and1 own downed Percy Haughton's Co- ibia aggregation by a score of 31-1 teams, the Red and White passed their way to a victory. Brett's touchdown, and Welch's two- field goals gave the Detroiters the victory, and their abil- ity to break up the famous Gonzaga! aerial attack enablod them to hold their advantage. The Westerners scored in the last moments of the, game, when Stockton, the Bulldog star, snatched a U. of D. pass from the air, and raced 55 yards for the only Gon"aga score of the day. TheE Bulldogs failed to live up to expecta-! tions, while the Detroit team, played the best football it has shown yet this year. West Virginia's defeat leaves, Mich-] igan, Illinois, California, Yale, and ICornell in the undefeated class. Yale is rated the best team in the East, Cornell's great record notwithstand- ing. Much hinged on the Cornell-, Pennsy game Thursday, and failure' 1 of the Big Red team to win by a decisive score is taken by dopesters in the East as an indication that Do- bie's eleven is not as good as that of Yale'..t In the Far West, California stands at the top. The Bruins have wont 33 games in the last four years, two1 have resulted in ties, and they have encountered no defeats. The Smith- coached aggregation has proved itself to be one. of the best in the coun- try. California has not played any important teams farther east this sea- son, so its comparative merits are not known. In spite ° of their great showing this year, the Bruins can- I not boast of an absolutely clean. slate, as they have one tie marked up against them. Bursting the one and only available ball held up the first Yale-Princeton game back in 1873. It took a halfI hour to fix the pigskin and in that time the Tigers changed their entire system of attack and won the game. WRESTLING HOURS CHANGED I Wrestling practice will be held every afternoon at 3 o'clock, in- C stead of at night, as has been the I case for the past six weeks..' Men Iof all weights are urged to come 1 out. Opportuniiy is also given to Freshmen to work out at this time until the Christmas holidays. I Coach Barker(; Lion oL i nramurai epartment will .-, start Dec. 3. All managers should I1 back, is the largest point scorer take notice of this and sign upafor the; of the season, Hanley believes. tournaments as soo- as possible and Levy, with his 208 pounds of get assigned a practice period. The brawn has totalled 138 points,C date for the opening of the games has nearly double that of Grange, not been decided upon as yet. Illinois, the leading Bg Tbn scorer who made 72. Handbau is fast coming into the i home stretch and the manager -of the tournament expects to have the finals u played off by next Tuesday afternoon if nothing interferes. I U U UlUL The interfraternity swimming meet I I~ promises to be the biggest one in the INT L history of the Intramural department as more than 35 teams have been Tulsa, Okla, Nov. 30-(By A.P.)- entered and all of them are certain A new order of athletics; providing that they, will be awarded the silver loving cup for the championship when team competition for every ,boy,. and the points garnered in the different with less emphasis on winning squads! events are made known. Many men on these teams are tak- for interscholastic games, is the rule ing advantage of the Intramural in Central High School here, one of swimmers privilege at the Y pool and the largest high schools in the world, are training every day in preparation under the Athletic Director E. W. Rau. for the preliminaries which will be Rau's methods and his systems of held Dec. 10. The finals are sched- student classification, have attracted- uled for Dec. 12. wide attention. I A formula for growing boys accord- Munich, Nov. 30.--Mme. Alice Urban ing -to their physical prowess, re- opera star two generations back, is gardless of class room standing, as- dead, 80 years old. She was born in sures equalized competition with a New Orleans. chance for every participant. The students are classified by this mathematical equation-four times I QUESTIONS ASKED BY the age, plus half the weight, plus VOCATIONAL COMMITTEE f the height, expressed in inches, which ljgives the index number.- Students who are experiencing New students are classified and as- difficulty in choosing their life signed to their proper group, usually work will be given help by the eight in number. Each group is in I S. C. A. Vocation committee. Stu- charge of a trained professional coach C dents who care to participate in I!In addition to the sports usually the benefits of the committee fill found in high schools R-ix has regular out the following blanks and mail teams In: boxin~g, wrestling, tennis, the answers to Egbert Isbell, im gd - eyball. The school [ '26L, 329 Catherine. ;~fif~~ 1. Have you selected your life has eight regular football teams; 16 work? .basketball squads, 19 track teams; 2. If not, what profession or ! six baseball teams. and seyeral tennis vocation would you be most in- i ready are on teams, against less than terested in investigating? 100 prior to the inauguration of the present plan. Interclass football this ..''..'...'............'........' ryear brought out 245 players. 3. What men now prominent in these professions would you Foster Sanford, one of the very few like to meet?..................coaches who worked for nothing, has ..........'..........'..''..'...' - resigned as football mentor of Rutgers I after an active career of 10 years. WEST U. of D. 13, Gonzaga 7. Western Reserve 34, Case 0. Scott High 14, Waite High 13. Haskell 38, St. Xavier 0. Marquette 20, Vermont 0. Nebraska 34, Kans. Ags. 12 EAST Dartmouth 31, Columbia 6. Pittsburg 20, Penn State 3. - Cornell 14, Pennsylvania 7. W. and J. 7, W. Virginia 2. Dickinson 14, Bucknell 0. Ursinus 17, Susquehanna 6. Hobart 10, Rochester 0. SOUTHn Virginia 0, N. Carolina 0. Notre Dame 13, St. Louis 0. Flordia 16, Alabama 6. Texts 16, Baylor 0. Georgia Tech. 0, Auburn 0. John Hopkins 6, Maryland 6. Vanderbilt 7, Sewanee 0. Tennessee 18, Kentucky 0. Tulane 19, Washington U. 0. STATE INTERSCHOLASTIC Arthur. Hill 7, Saginaw 7. Lansing 54, Carl Schuz 6. Eaton Rapids 33, Charlotte 7. Muskegon 39, Grand Rapids Crsnt- NO mTmhl A1 J wam WE wo-MMIM= r' I fti,, .. Colleges face a difficult problem1 connected with the conduct of their l football. Few of them have adequ-j ate facilities for ha ding the maxim- um crowds at the big gamines each' have due regard for the ever present. danger of commerci-lizing the sport and do not want to appear in the light of placing the financial end of the game in the foreground. Yet the fact remains that these institutions depend upon the grid sport to finance their athletic activities.f To my mind the erection of giant stadiums alone does not tend to com- mercialize the sport. The booking of games with the sole desire of drawing huge crowds to those arenas regard- less of the traditions connected with the games would throw the sport into the commercialized list, however. This is what the schools, whatever their seating equipment may be, must fight. Now comes the jolly basketball sea-l son when the cleverest guard is the one who can trip his forward the greatest number of times without be- ing caught at it. Luis Firpo knows how to sock 'ei at the right time when he is in the ring. But we can't say that much for his vocal ability. Every time Luis opens his yap back home in Argentine he stuffs his glove down his throat, so to speak. lock once. This year's victory gives Illinois and Zuppke the odd game. Zuppke can now boast of having the edge over every Big Ten team Illinois has met since he became coach-with the exception of Michi- gan. When the Wolverines licked the Illini last year Yost's men made it an evenbreak with the Illinois team. Incidently, now that New York pro- moters are trying to nurse along a battle between Harry Wills and Luis Firpo, they speak of Wills as "as clean cut a sportsman as there is in boxing." But that wasn't what they said about Wills in times gone by- when he was fighting setups. When Coach Bob Fisher of Harvard speaking of the defeat of-his Crimson lads at the hands of Yale, said, "The only thing we can do is to wait until next year," he automatically set at rest any rumors that he might give up his coaching at Cambridge because of the licking his boys received. The shifting of Casey Stengei from New York to Boston gives the hub team the champion nose-thinber of the league...And it practically eli- minuates what chance Casey might have had of wriggling his fingers In an other world's series. yll , ral 0. Bay City Central 3, Flint 0. 'FIVE VEER N N TTORS ON GOPHERTANK SQUD Minnesota enters the 1923-24 swim- ming season without the champion- ship prospects of the past two years, due to graduations, but with a large squad of consistent performers from whom Coach Niels Thorpe expects to develope a capable team. Meets with the Minneapolis "Y" on Dec. 15 and with the St. Paul "Y" a week or two later, will begin the season. Letter men who are' back include! Capt. Huge Hanft, St. Paul; A. C. Bird, of Fairmont, conference diving champion; ;A. W. Holmes, St. Paul, backstroke; H. W. Nutting, Minneap- olis; and Clinton Merril, of Minneap- olis, breaststroke performer., New men to whom Thorpe is look- ing for strength on the team are the following: Cliff Johnson, L. S. Wal- lace, St. Paul; Harold Richter, St. Paul; H. S. Craig, Minneapolis,.E. L. Ludwigsen, Jackson, Minn.; P. H. Flaaten and T. V. Mitchell, Duluth; Frank Bessessen, Minneapolis; George Jansen, L. E. Stafford and Gilbert! Hamm, all of St. Paul, and George! Fertier, a fast performer from Fair- mont, Minn. A pair of capable 220 yard men are Clifford Jenkins and Carol Dickson, both of St. Paul. While Yale failed to walk over Har- When Illinois emerged troimphant vard's carcass in the rough manner, in their annual battle with Ohio many predicted the Bulldog would, State's much mauled grid team the followers of Old Eli are more than other day they had broken the tie ex-( satisfied. For one thing, old New isting between the two schools after Haven grads point out that when nine years under the regimes of "Ducky" Pond scooped up a Harvard Coaches Zuppke and Wilce. Zuppke I fumble and made his long run for a took up his coaching duties in 1914. touchdown he chalked up the second Wilce assumed the reins at Ohio Stato score by touchdown Yale had made the same year. Up to the game of a against Harvard in fifteen years., few days ago the teams had each won Isn't that almost enough honor for four games and had fought a dead- one fall? ~.. s . . ... . . " R . #Yit R. "- R s t# ... " -.s. a Personal Engraved Christmas Cards We Can Furnish These Either Printed or Engraved: iy Tie MAYER-SGHAIRER Company Engravers, Printers and Office Outfitters. 112 So. Main St. Phone 1404. R . .,,,,.,,, . . . ... .. .. . TRY OUR FAMOUS SHOES MALTED MILK AND ICE CREAM Sundaes and Sodas TOILET ARTICLES I-liking shoes for men and women. 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