THE MICHIGAN DAILY (, r4 / t : NOW- NMI rg= r oil, 111i iSockless Because Of Heat, I Urbana, Ill., Oct 21.-When the Il- PAIPAA FO 'B linois football team trotted on the feld for the game with Michigan, !iawleyes and 1 arroons Favored to wearing no socks, it was merely to op 1i11 r0if Any Team offset the weather conditions, accord- Does ing to Coach Robert Zuppke. No thought ,of making the perspir- ing slippery legs of the Illini backs MEET IOwA NEXT WEEK harder to hold, entered into the scheme. "Tied" Grange, the Illini who turn- "On 'a warm day heavy wool socks ed the trick against Michigan in the tend to denress a team and make it Memorial stadium last Saturday is due sluggish; while the cold air striking to iet his Waterloo within the next the bare perspiring legs causes the three weeks if lie is to meet it at all perspiration to evaporate and stimu- this year. lates a man," said Coach Zunpke in Iowa will visit the stadium a week3 3xplanation of the sockless Illini. from Saturday, vowing that they will I repeat lasta year's. performance of nt the B . There are likely stopping the great All-American for itgainstte Badgers. Thr r ieythe first three quarters of the ,game o he a number oftother shifts onthe and almost for the entire period of quad but the center of the line willanalstfrhenieprodf remain intact. It was this section of the contest. Chicago will entertain he squad which was up to color the "Wheaton Wonder" a week later on Stagg field. Illinois will have hrouglout the entire game against games later on with Ohio and Minne- inois.ve Individual Work sota but the Marroons and Hawkeyes seem to be the best competition that Night meetings of the squad will will be offered the Suckers. be held every other day until Fri- Iweronhas the ut tht.i lay. The work on the field will be Ingwerson has an outfit that will confined to individual instruction to give any opposing backs a real work- t nrge tndivy in on to out. Besides having all of the mate- :mlrge xten Evey anton te rial in the world on his squad Ing- eam wil be given close attention and werson has an advantage over the iard team work will not be given the other coaches in the Conference when players at any time. There will be it comes to stopping Grange. In 1922 our other Conference games, three of Ingerson coached the Illinois fresh- vhich will demand everything that men and it was he who' had Grange Vichigan can muster after the Bad- under his wing the year before he gers have come and gone, and over- made his name with the Indian reg- onditioning is being carefully avoid- ulars.. d. A number of football experts Alonzo Stagg, of Chicago, is anoth- have ventured the opinion that Michi- er man who may succeed in halting gan was too highly primed for the the Illinois star. Although Missouri Illini, making difficult a rally after managed to beat out Chicago, the he great "come down" of the first deal since that time and last week quarter. With five Conference games Marroons have shifted around a great ahead of it, all of them of about equal presented a real outfit to do bttle mportance the team will not be like- with Indiana. Harry Thomas, left y to be bothered by overtraining for half of the Chicago eleven, is no slouch any one contest. in the backfield himself and Stagg is All sessions of the squad for the j counting on him to turn the tables' rest of the week will be held behind on the Illini. Chicago still smarts losed gates. I under the victory that Grange scoredI I over them last year when he spoiledl Connie Mack, owner of the Ath- a tight contest in a run the length etics, paid $100,000 for "Lefty" Groves, ; of the field. star southpaw pitcher of the Balti- more Orioles. Kingston, Ont., Oct. 21.-McGill uni- versity successfully defended the Can- When Dartmouth tied Yale in Sat- adian intercollegiate track and field urday's battle, 7-7, history was made; championship here recently, with a Dartmouth had never crossed the total of 63 points. Yale goal line before. y s Don't delay-Pay your Subscription Daily 'Classlgeds for superior "Results: today. 1 ~~ II 1924 Grid Season Sees Fall Of Leaders In All Sections One year ago at this time, the foot- ball situation in both the East and the West was a fairly well-defined affair; Cornell was well on her way to another season of supremacy over the schools of the Atlantic seaboard; Michigan and Illinois were plainly the leaders of the Big Ten, and Yale led the "Big Three." Things are different this year. Cor- nell has lost two successive games to opponents of questional ie caliber, ViWbigan's decisive defeat at the hands of the Illini last Saturday prac- tically eliminates the Wolverines, and the Big Three is a doubtful quan- tity. The Illinois eleven seems to be the class of the Conference, and should win the title without much trouble if Grange remains uninjured and- otherwise unhampered. 'Iowa and Ohio State and Wisconsin and Min- nesota have tied each other, which does not tend to clarify the situation. Chicago has not lost a Conference game, and the Staggmen are confi- dent of their ability to stop Grange when they clash with Illinois Novem- ber 8. If they can, their- chances of winning from the Suckers are even, no better. Iowa is strong, but the Hawkeyes do not put up their best all the time. They play inspired football for one period, then sink to mediocrity for the rest of the game, or vice versa. Th'ey are in-and-outers. Coach Jack Ryan has a formidable team at Wis- consin, but they are almost certain to be beaten. They will be fortunate to keep Michigan from spoiling their record Saturday at Ferry field. Iowa and Chicago will furnish the Confer- ence opposition for 'the Badgers in their last two Big Ten contests. The tie with Minnesota last Saturday shows the potentialities of the team, but its real merit will be tested against Michigan.. The rest of the Conference elevens are as much as out of the race. They are good, but not good enough to cope with Illinois, Chicago, Michigan, Iowa, and the others. The Eastern situation is even more muddled. At present, 10 teams re-I main in the undefeated class. Harvard Yale, Princeton, Dartmouth, and Syra- cuse are the best prospects for ulti- mate glory. Dartmouth and Yale tied, 14-14 last Saturday, but the other leaders have not yet clashed. It is Impossible to Ipick the first of these teams, as any olie seems to have ability erough to win ouc if the breaks are kind.' California and Stanford are fight- ing it out in the Far West, while Notre Dame is probably the leader in the West, outside the Conference. The Irish look like the superiors of any eleven in the Big Ten with the possible exception of Illinois. Rock- ne's eleven has an exceptionally stiff schedule ahead of it. In sheer ability and speed, the Irish are the equals of any team in the West and prob- ably of any in the country, but they are light,, and the grind of so many ganes against heavier opponents may wear them down so that they will lose to an aggregation far inferior in everything except physical equip-1 ment. There are seven men on the West Point eleven who never played foot- ball before they entered the Academy. 4a The'1924 automobile racing season has been marked with 15 casualties among the ranks of the drivers. Pay for your Subscription today. flI9 TEN GROORECORDS. GIVEN IN PUBLICATION T A Kucharski, who graduated i from Purdue in 1917, had compiled the complete records of all the foot- ball teams in the Conference, 'from the time they entered competition through the season of 1923. The title of the booklet which con- tains this material is "Big Ten Foot- ball Records." Every score given wa: checked from four different sources before being entered in the publica- tion, and the result is a complete and authoritative compilation of the facts of general interest to fans who follow Conference football. In cases of doubt ' as to the correct nature of the records received, the editors looked up the ac- count of the particular games con- cerned in the newspapers published at the time of the contests. Notre Dame 'has won eight of its eleven encounters with the United States Military academy. Reac' the Want Ads GET YOUR 'FECU LATIO0N0 GY UITS NOW Nr Next to Arcade Theatre n_ ., : 1 :: It Costs ow ," NW wfw r Wo -w - - hw tc m IIm - - - U Y IIA s Less to V uy Good Clothing :: 1i 1 1 I , I,. .--a 1* / *i 1~ I I I I I OVERCOATS hats ties socks In the two best models of the year. They are both long-one single-breasted and the heavier weights in the double breasted style. Both coats have low but- tons and low pockets. 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