THE MICHIGAN DAILY 1 * * * * Sports O* r * $. - - Upto 4Y~l dugan 55; Miami,/ 7 ; M.? A. C., 21; Wisconsin, 13; Minnesota, S27; Northwestern, 137 JI~iois 9; Nebraska, j40; Butler, 39; Michigan, 45; DePauw, 36; Iowa, 21; Chicago, 43; S. WV. Teachers, 0; Ohio State, 13; Lawrence, 13; Minnesota, 0; Illinois, 7. ulr 76 S14; N. Dakota, 20; Haskell, 7; Wisconsin S0; Iowa, S0; Michigan, 7; Ames, 48 7 ; Purd~ie,/ 0; Iowa' y10; Ohio, Wesleyan, L 3; Chicago, 7; Wooster, 7; 4ndiana, 34 OUiicaga 0; Mssouri, a: 19; Brown, F23; Indiana, T i )tba11 Scores, to and Including November 8 STAGG ONE OF FOOTBALL'S OLD MEN Chicago Coach, Whose Strategy Baffled Illinois, Started At Yale The Cauldron, jBY IV, if.S. Stagg is on((, r thie great coa: in the game today, and his work wprofthy tribute to his never-fal loyalty, cleaunness, and innate spo mngh~sip. 0 0 39 0 0 0. 39 6 10 14 0 0 21 51 0 0 36 0 41 0 0 7 13 13 7 40 0 0 0 3 12 22 3 0 3 6 21 40 Navy 14; 3; 14; 7; 0; 53; Wmn. and Mary, Marquette, Princeton,. W. Va. Wesleyan, Penn. State, Vermont, 91 Pe nslyvanla 34; Ursinus, 52; Drexel 26; P. of M., 25; Swarthimore, 10; Columbia, 27; Virginia, 6; Lafayette, s33; Georgetown, 183 Penn State 47; Lebanon Valley, 51; N. Caroline. St. 26; .Gettysburg, 13 ; Georgia Tech, 6; Syracuse, 6;' Navy, 22;4 Carnegie Tech, 171 Syracuse 35; Hobart, 26; Mercer, 24;Win. and Mary, 10; Boston College, 10; Penn State, 1; Pittshiurg, 3; WV. Va. Wesley, I 7 21, 17t 10,) 6 0 61 0 0 7 7 7 0 0 17 3. 6 0 15 10 0 7 'WG N IS 6 YEART ,LN ME AR-O His EPENSES wimIG opa utAsL / w r 4 w w O F IV E 'YEA R S WJAS SHE STAR ITCIIE NE VIARsi1 W 4IE A14D 4ED OWN W ~4MEIROUS ERS To0 ENTER PRFES'NA ' rS 3Als Gio ORGT THAT i CS As A FOO1'L 'L COACH IMichigain's cross co-entry squad de- serves to receive the same amouant of credit A; hfc~h ha 7s iowed upoii the foorbal uHJ !h the fcotjbpl ~am reeivd ~ ~;undtriniruig at th~'l)~Ij~ f. 14 ~ when it. lad yn els ~ulY in> o round into shape and lU3>eCe-ch. Little's m~en, Steve b'arreli's squad, has shp wn a remnarklable amount of improvemenit Isince its fist a i ihilatior . Starting the season with, a sound trimming at the hands of the Badgers,i the Wolverine c coss comntry me,I-I- I der the guidin~g hands of Steve Far- roll camne back th~e next wveek n snowed under the Aggies aind a ;ee Itiago Saturday further added to k'.ir record by taking second in a tri angular meet with Ohio and Illinois. Ohio won by a very light margin, and~ ithe Indian runners were snowed un- der by the green Michigan team. Next Saturday morning the Con- breace meet will be held in Ann Ar- bo ad as a resul~t of their showing durinig the past three weeks the Michi- gan. team, composedl almost entirely of -inexperiencedl runners is cenceded a chance to take the Big Teni chain-. plonshipj If the Michigan runners Art to win the chamnpionship which their predelesscrs lost last yrear they will need all the moral support. that can be given them. A crowd of two orE three thousand Michigan spectators at the start cown near the fild~ house1 would go a long_ way towvaid. giving l the Michigan team the spirit that it' Iwill need to win out. SThe average person has an idea that cross country is a, poor sport to watch., Anyone who has actually witnessed a great race between 100 or more runners will testify to the contrary, however." No football, gasp ever brought out more: display of nerve than does the "average Conference 0 Recognized as supreme in tone and easy-.playing qualities, Gibsons give you great opportunities for pleasure and profit. Hiear and try the New M~astertone tenor-banjo -a sensation among )banjoists. Seour complete line of Gibson banjos, mandolins, mandolas, u~ndo-cellos, guitars. No obligation Reatd the WantA 0. 0. 6 'an,7 27 11 Columbia 29; 52; 35; 7; 27; 40; 40; 190 Haverford, St. Lawrence, Wesleyan, Pennsylvania, Williams, Cornell, New York U., 3; Ohio State, 719; Purdue, 21; Illinois, 85 Wisconsin 25; N'. Dakota, 17; Iowa 'State, 7; Coe,- 7; Minnesota, 0; Michigan, 3; Notre .Dame, Northwestern 28; S. Dakota, 42; Cincininati, 3; Purdue, 13; AT. A. C., 17; Indiana, 0; Michigan, 103 Indiana .~66; Rose Poly, 21; DePauw, 14; Louisana, 0; Chicago, 7?; Northwesters 12; Ohio State, 119 Purdue 21; Wab, sh, 0; Ohio State, 41; Rose-Poly, 7 ; Northw ester; 6; Chicago, 36; DePauw, 116 Princeton 40; Amherst, 0; Lehigh, 17; Navy, 0; Notre Dame 21; Swarthmore, 34; Harvard, 122 Yale "i, ci, 0 0 7 1 7 21 38 73, 0 0 7 s. 7 27- 60 0 20 20 17 17 67 67 7 7 3 19 0 39 6 14 12 6 0 38 0 6 14 3 7 0 30 0 6 6 6 0 34 52 West Virginia 21; W. Va. Wesleyan, 35; Allegheny, 7; Pittsb}Irg, +55; Geneva, 13; Centre, 71; Bethany, 34; x:2396 Colgate r 35; Alfred, 41; Clarkson, 7; Nebraska, f 49; Hobart, 42; Providence, 2; W. Virginia, 176 Notre Damne 40; Lombard,.f 34; Wabash, 13; Army, 12; Princeton, 34; Georgia Tech., 38; Wisconsin, 171 Neijilaska 6; Illinois, 7; Oklahoma, 33; Colgate, 14; Kansas, 14; Missouri, *74 ,3 0 0 10 3 14 0 30 6 6 14 0 6 6 2 40 0 0 33 0 0 34 67 0 0 7 0 3 3 3 9. 14 7 7 6 43 :WFOUS ME G t9Ar PtLEAS)iJIE At TAIS -TIMAE TO - Vc;+Tc r {~ - NE WAS GIVEN THE IA0ROWRiZAY DEGRE OF AV ~S-GR OF AZ I Alonzo A. Stagg, Chicago's aged coach, who' set the entire football world by tOe ears last Saturday when his team, rated as soft picking for Bob Zuppke's Illinois whirlwind, held; the Suckers to a 21-21 tie last Satur-t dlay, started his athletic career at Yale in 1884. H-is intentions at that time were remote from the football hield, that i151, as a life work. He was going to beI' a minister. Tlo this end, he took four years of regular academic work, and topped off his college preparation with a year in the divinity school.I When he entered in 1884, he was inI stiff straits financially, and he helped defray his expenses by waiting, table and] reporting for the Yale News. He supported himself almost e~mtirely, and took his live years of schooling instead of the usual four in order that he might be better fitted for the life he inten~ded pursuing-that of the ministr;'. Peculiarly enough. his first renowvn i n the athletic world caine through. his baseball slaying and not through any skill in the game of which hie was later to become a master. Hle start- ed pitching for thie Yale nine his first year in school, and his fame was al- most an overnight matter. He held d owin the position, en the Eli hurling school. at Springfield, Mass. Here he corps for five seasons, and starred met Dr. WV... Harper, president of throughout his career on the diamond. the University of Chicago, who was Hlis performance against Harvard in also a Yale graduate. Harper per- ibis fourth year is an epoch in the suzaded Stagg to take over the coach- history of the. New Haven school. ing position at the Midway school, The title was at stake in the contest; his salary being $2,500. with the Crimson, and. Stagg was the; His first year at Chicago, backfield man counted upon to bring victory to; material was scarce, and Conference the Bulldog. However, his arm had_: officials agreed to let Stagg play half- gone "dead" from the strain of so0'back on the team he coached, a jmuch work, and he was unable toi peculiar instance of the laxity of the throw a ball overhand. He went,,into; rules in the early days of the game. the game, and every pitch was from, The Chicago mentor was a star at{ an underhanded delivery, new to' the new position, and did much to Stagg. lieI won the game and the title harass his Big Ten foes. for Yale, the gamne being his second victory of the crucial series for his i From 1889 on, lie has held the school. same position;At Chicago, and his His kil onthediamnd as uchteamns ha*e rankied high throughout Hskilo the iamondd wassuhythe 26 lpdyears of his activity.. He de- th t a h eibo fc as ddallt e e o e m n other stars, W alter cold or dicourage hid sp ai foot- Eckersall, probably the greatest quar- ball fo whch ie ad spiatins.terbacki in the' annals of the game. However, he did go out for the team I a h emo hc cesl and played his last two years, mak- plyed thaeatmicn hian2-0eins190 ing the All-American eleven at the pae htba ihgn20i 96 end f hi fial yar.a game that ranks among the classics In 1889, when he graduated fromi of gridiron history. Yale, Stagg. gave up his plans of go- In spite of his advanced age, Stagg ing into the ministry on the grounds still dons his uniform nearly, every that he lacked the necessary rhetori- afternoon during the football season, cal and persuasive attributes for sue- and works with his men as actively cess in that field. Accordingly, he as he did when he first took over the w ent, to the Y. M. C. A. trainingren atCigo cross country run. There is nothing r U N to make a runner keep up, his pace IVEI1SI. whenx he feels; worn. out except, sheer' pluck and by the, end of five miles -IS C -O S '" SCthere is a need for a lot of that. By the same token men who are willing to put on such exhibitions ofskill andsMynard &J\illiaxn lnerve deserve all of the support that.'E -7a can possibly be, given them. (Continued on Page, Fourteen) f7 , Tusi o - S OOE t --.t 'I. 3 !sL S i. a I ........R. .-t. . . . . . . . .."ttit'P " /T~5r which ar,'~not books ,anid, nto pocket lnseibt l'are really shop-' ping, bags 11inatu ' - y.a (',no worn under thel'r ij nstead of swinging in th", Fandi . We hv a pleasing var iety of these ;in strikingly novel designs and all made of the best quality of leather. All sizes and shape and all reasonably priced. oF0 ILINSON 325 South Main Street "Luggage for Michigan Men and Women" Phone <' / r , } l r _ _ _ . ....v. __._ ..._ ._ _. __._ __.. _ } r 27; 7 1; 13; 7 ; 47; 115 Harvard 14; 16; 12; 0; -13; 0; IN. Carolina, Georgia, Dartmouth, Brown, Army, Maryland, Virginia, Middlebury, Holy Cross, Dartmouth, Boston 1T., Princeton, r I "fw hwd la ui o o Whni"omsofr pes-ahie :2 aws youd aretsSwouicnlond II WThen t omes of or pess-cin e. 11 11 Who doubts that the. best dressed man, ispartic lair about his I au-dr s I-" e Care in, selecting where one is confident that ones clothing will be laundered With a personal interest is an invest- a laundry I ment in. good appearance. give 55 Dartmouthu 40; Norwich, 5 2; McGill, -38; Vermont, 14; Yale, 6; THarvard, 10; Brown, 38; Boston U, 198 Brown 45; Colby. 7 ; Chicago, 35; Boston U. 3; Yale, 3; Dartmouth, 11 0 0 0 14 0 17 3l the Varsity a trial. It is bound to satisfy you. phone 2076-2077 Yr 0 19 0 13 10 17 11 THE 11