SIX - 4 THF MICI-TAN DAILY WEDTNESDThAY, NOVEMBR,. C1925. _ 1111 lYl llal 11 VL-'l1V L!'91L1 vvy vavyrrvyr-[w 0. LA } All Y L' iviLL' 11. Y .4J4J J/ ' '........ .w =" -N I C IO r /ywy rrr ,1 rr M4uiNwi u i HIM ow .0posposomm-ft- 1 ' 14 MEN CUTFROM All of JAut Years V terans and Reserves Manage to Survive -' First Cut of Season RETAIN 20 PLAYERS , With four weeks of preliminary training over, Coach Mather has cut the Varnity basketball squad to 20 members so that he may devote more time to individuals. Fourteen men were cut from a squad of 34. All of last year's veterans and first string reserves have managed to survive the first cut of the season, so that Coach Mather will have an array of experienced talent about which to, mould a winning five, though several men from last year's yearling squad are nvIking a strong bid for first string berths. The following men have been re- tained ,on the squad: Captain Doyle, Royale Cherry, Edward Line, Ray Hutzel, Walter Kuenzel, Frank Kuen- zel, Eddie Chambers, Ken Morgaridge, Russell "Red" Davis, Spafford, Gar- net, Payne, Gawne, Petrie, Ginn, Schroeder,. Westnedge, Weiss, Ras- nick, and Reese.1 The squad will continue working out four nights a week at Waterman gymnasium until the regular floor is assembled at the field house. The freshman squad will not be able to practice regularly until that time be- cause of lack of playing space. When practice is transferred to the field house, the freshman and Varsity will probably follow the same system as last year of alternating practices, the, freshmen practicing in the afternoon1 when the Varsity practice is held at night and vica versa. More men are expected out at the end of the football season and anoth- er cut will probably be necessitated. There will be no other cut until that time. Oosterbaan, Molenda, and Bab- cock are a few of.the men who are expected to report when they have finished their work with the grid team, BADGERS WOULD DEVELOP INTRAMURAL FOOTBALL r I I~ I I l+ i f 4 ,( ,f 1 GRANGE AND KAW REAPED LAURELS ON SAME FIELD NEW YORK, Nov. 3.-Red Grange has been likened to Ed- die Kaw, of Cornell, more than to any other modern gridiron star, and it is a coincidence that the Ilinois star splashed to last- ing fame on the same field and under conditions similar to those that marked Kaw's famous offen- sive against Pennsylvania in 1921. That year Kaw led a drive that enabled Cornell to overwhelm . Pennsylvania, 41 to 0, on a field that was ankle deep in mud. There is a peculiar similarity to Grange in an account of Kaw's work four years ago, which says "the running of Kaw on the slippery footing was nothing short of marvelous. His feet worked just like paddle-wheels as he kept driving through the) Penn line, and finally, just to show his additional ability, he made some cut-in plays which seemed impossible on such a field." It was for such "cut-in" work that there was a high spot in Grange's performance. A THE PRESS BOX (IBy Associated Press) By Jacques O'Grady Coach liather scouted Northwest- I ROXIDENCE ,RI., Nov. 3. - Although the Northwestern eleven ert Saturday, and yesterday he sent Watches will be discarded and periods has failed thus far to exhibit the : his freshni an footballers against the will be measured by the number of strength experts had conceded it to VTrsity in a dummy scrimmage, the plays to a period in a football gamel possess before the season started, *VYaaVlllgs using the Northwestern to e ulayed here Saturday by Brown Coach Yost andn y his Wolverinesidarestnforisations and trick lays.. ,ng nothing for granted in Satur- rIlhe squad will hold another h'ard styand oston unersity r (lay's contest. When asked what he workout tomorrow afternoon and to- S day's game will he the fir.;t thought of Saturday's encounter with morrow night will entrain for Chicago, time the plan, long discussed, will the Wildcats, Coach Yost remarked, arriving early Friday morning. A! have been used in an official intercol- "When a team begins to feel too sure final drill will be held at the Grant legiate contest. before a football game, that is the Park stadium, where the game Satur- Each of the four periods will be time for it to stop and pinch itself." day will be played Friday afternoon. ended when 40 plays by either or both One need not go very far to find The team will be quartered at the sides have been effected. Watches examples of. supposedly weak teams Cooper-Crlton hotel on the south will come into use only in timing in- upsetting the chimnplionshiP hopes Iide of the windy city. termissions and time out for accidents of a strong eleven. ,Northwestern, With little likelihood of Torn Ed-; or other causes. weaker last year than this season, wards playing Saturday, Michigan will Harry R. Coffin, Harvard '94, and held the strong Notre Dame team, Jbe. represented by the same line thatj R. W. P: Brown, former Harvard including the famed Four Horse- has taken the field in the last two coach and Brown strategist, claim forI ien, to a 13-6 victory. I encounters. Although the Wolverine the play system that it will give a Although Coach Yost gave his play- forward wall has played remarkably better balance to football games. In ers a rest on Monday, confining their well in the last two games, the re- timed periods, they say, the first team work to mere limbering up and play- turn of Edwards would give Michi- to score can block games by legiti- ing around, yesterday found the squad gan a line that would- rank as the mate plays, leaving the opponent with hard at work' preparing for anything best in the land. almost no chance to score. They say Coach Thistlethwaite may uncover. The Michigan goal line remains that in 39 Harvard-Yale games the With,"Moon" Baker scheduled to uncrossed after five contests, and team scoring first won every game ex- take his regular place in the North- this splendid exhibition of defensive cept that played in 1916. western backfield Saturday, and with l play is due chiefly to the prowess Members of the football rules com- Lewis, a sophomore, playing a stellar of the linemen. mittee and leading eastern coaches game while Baker was forced to sit' With a strong defensive line, and are expected to watch Saturday's ex- on the sidelines, Michigan will be con- I as fine a quartet of defensive backs perimental game, in which no other fronted with a strong offense. as an'y school can lay claim to, Michi-! football rules will be changed. Realizing the ability of the North- gan has a splendid opportunity of western backs in an open field, Coach finishing the season without a point MINEOIjA, N. Y., Nov. 3.--Lieut. Yost placed considerable emphasis on being scored upon her. Walter C. White, of Pensacola, Fla., open field tackling in yesterday's, But the star backs of Northwestern,) former football star and middle workout, and this work will be car- Ohio State and Minnesota will extend weight wrestling champion, of the ried .on the remainder of the week. the Wolverine defense to the limit. army, was painfully injured today * A ~1T ~UTU"TbU&1 M i i i 1 , To Discard Watch And Count Plays In Brown Contest A BULLDOG ELE VET RECUPERA TING FROM LAST THREE GRID GAMES NEW HAVEN. Conn., Nov. 3.-Yale's I Yale's line-up is regarded virtually eotball policy for the week has shift- settled for the Maryland argument' ed from the strenuous campaigning of and perhaps for the Princeton and the last three weeks, when the Elis Harvard games, the climax of the aced West Point, Brown and Penn- eastern season. sylvania in succession. 'While it is uncertain whether the Yale passed the last of these hard first-string halfbacks, Ben Cutler and games yesterday in winning a 28-7 Billy Kline, can regain physical con- decision over the Cadets, and will let dition in time for the clash with the down perceptibly this week in antic;- Orioles, they are slated for regular pation of an easy card in the Mary- service against the Crimson and the land match the coming week-end. Tiger. Noble and Foote will be given There may be no scrimmage prac- the halfback assignments next Satur tice whatever this week. If Head I day. Kline was the only Yale player Coach Tad Jones decides to order any injured yesterday. His weak knee it will be for only a few minutes to- was slightly wrenched againand he day or tomorrow. Every day will be will be kept from practice until just of the recuperative variety, devoted before the Princeton game. to dummy football and signal rehears- Cutlers knee is slowly recovering, ais ifrom an injury received in the Georgia game three weeks ago. Ben Butter- when he fell 500 feet at Mitchell field worth will hardly regain condition for while practicing acrobatics in a plane. the Maryland game and Burt Benton's The plane went. intQ a tail spin and play has improved so rapidly as right was totally wrecked. White suffered tackle that he and Butterworth are a fracture of the left ankle, and a about on even terms for the nomina- sprained back and lacerations. tion. V i MADISON, of Wisconsin Wis., Nov. is seeking 3.-University to develop in- to a football school through intra- mural athletics, the program for the 1925-26 season announces. The promotion of interfraternity football on a large scale is' a new de- parture in intramurals instituted this fall. The first were played last Sun- day. "We consider this the most import- ant intramural activity, and we be- lieve it will go a long way toward 'naking Wisconsin known as a real 'football school," the athletic depart- ment stated. ' The first month of play will consist of a modified game of passing andI kicking, in which there will be no 'blocking or tackling. Several times a week there will be lectures by mem- bers of the coaching staff, in which details of play will be gone over. A regular schedule of collegiate type r of football will be played in November. The preliminary work is expected by athletic officials to condi- tion the men for the regular games. The participants in intramural sports at Wisconsin last year num- bered more than 7,000, George Berg, director of intramural athletics, re- ported. The largest number, 1,170, took part in basketball competition. The other intramural sports are base- ball, track, cross country, tennis, horseshoe pitching, soccer football, bowling, swimming, free throwing, crew, gymnastics, hockey, fencing, boxing, wrestling, skating, skiing, water basketball, indoor golf driving, golf, and indoor baseball. The intramural athletes are divded into three groups: Fraternities, a .church league, and a block league. In the latter, the residence blocks around the university are named for former Wisconsin athletes and teams are formed from men living in these blocks. GOD AMES -FEATURE, CLOS:IG F SPEEDIALL In a hotly contested game which was not decided until the closing min- utes of play, Beta Theta Pi fraternity defeated Tau Delta Phi in the speed- ball contest that determined the win- ners for that bracket. The necessary tally came by means of a forward pass which counted for two Ooints. Tau Delta Phi was lead- ing at the time 2 to 1. The final score was 3-2, Warick and Roth star- red for the winners. The game was the first of the semi- final round Beta Theta Pi, the sur- vivors being now in the finals. They will meet the winners of the Phi Sig- ma Delta-Alpha Sigma Phi game for the speedball championships. Phi Sigma Delta in the other game of the afternoon easily defeated the Phi Gamma Delta team to the tune of 13 to 3. The winners displayed a forward passing attack that penetrat- ed the Phi Gamma Delta defense time after time and resulted in scores. The Phi Gamma Delta team took the lead early in the first quarter by virtue of Mogaridge's drop kick but. the Phi Sigma Delta team was not to be denied and with Mayer atethe re- ceiving end scored pass after pass., The defense of the victors also fea- tured. Miller and Cherry played best for the losers, while Mayer and Des- enberg starred for the winners. The game in the other semi-finalist round between Alpha Sigma Phi and Phi Sigma Delta is to be played to- morrow at 4:30 o'clock, the finals to take place next Tuesday. Start Fraternity Swimming Meets Interfraternity dual swimming meets were inaugurated yesterday l afternoon at the Union pool, when the Alpha Rho Chi team defeated the Phi Sigma Kappa swimmers 36 1-2-211-2 and Theta Xi won easily from Alpha Sigma Phi, 50-15.; The dual swimming meets are anf innovation in the intramural program this year, and promise to develop into one of the most popular events in the inter-fraternity; competition. die at any time yesterday, the game would be called off. Iet The Daily sell it for you thru the Classified columns.-Adv. IAA irilu UFr~LIL U A Complete Line of Equipment for Every Sport A small deposit with your order will insure delivery, when wanted Order now WGMR&COPAHY jfor iTen C ,rnce 144 U I. 711 N. 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