PAGE;sr 'TT IT/-A1T.T7 RDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1926 6 1 CNEECGRID (By Associated Press) CHICAGO, Oct. 15.-The lull before the storm of football provided tomor- row by four games bearing on the big ten championship and two intersec- tional tilts descended like a blanlet on western conference camps today. Coaches of the eight big ten varsi- ties sparring for an opening advant-; age in the conference race in the mor- row's engagements conspired together in a taciturnity echoed among the undergraduates. th14 Both Zuppke 9f Illinois and Ingwer- sen of Iowa came up to the Illini's homecoming with no comment other than to admit a mutual respect in the matter of offenses. The game, ranking with the Minnesota-Michigan clash{ was generally reckoned a toss-up. { Much interest centers in the. Big Ten debut of Pat Page, whose Ioosi- era tackle Northwestern at Evanston, where the Purple has raced to two I triumphs this fall. The former But-. ler coach left Indiana's good name in the hands of Phelan at Purdue, where Wisconsin seeks first blood in the con- ference battle. Sped eastward with' enthusiastic send-offs, Chicago treked toward Phil- adelphia while Ohio State executed a flank movement and invaded New, York. With a somewhat battered squad Stagg hopes to score the firstt Chicago victory over Pennsylvania in the handful of games since 1898. The Buckeyes' objective is repetition of thesuccess which decisively shut out Columbia last year, at Columbus 9 to1 0. 4 1 VARSITY CR1SOS-CLUNTRY TVAxL WILL iJN IN TRIAL RACE TODAY Candidates for positions on the Var-; 'sity cross country team will hold try- outs today in a 3 1-2 mile race, the first 10 finishing to be chosen to-runj against Purdue next Saturday. f QUANTICO, Va.-The Quantico ma-j rines are doing the unique in football. The Marines are to face Lehigh today in Bethlehem, Penn., and their mode of transportation will be the most modern. They will use air-1 planes.t "Greasy" Neale has been signed asc manager of the Clarksburg club in thei Mid-Atlantic league next season. f GAMES IN EAST ATTRACT MANY (By Associated Press) 1VW YORK, Oct. 15.-The football pot that has been bubbling on the side- lines while world's championship box-- ing and baseball have held the sport spotlight will boil over tomorrow with an unprecedented array of early sea- son flashes in prospect all along the eastern gridiron front. At least a dozen contests in the eastern sector, all having an important bearing on championship aspirations, will attract big gatherings. The battle of Yale and Dartmouth at New Haven promises its full share of thrills with the Green 1925 champions meeting their first major test of the current campaign against the Blue outfit struggling to find itself in spite of injuries. Dartmouth, with a pow- erful and versatile attack in the hands of an experienced backfield is favored to win, especially since Yale has lost such stars aV Richards and Caldwell, but the Blues .have enough reserve strength to put up a stiff fight for victory. Chicago and Pennsylvania, separat- ed by only a single touchdown last year, appear closely matched again although the Quakers have shown a bit more impressively so far. Expeits concede the Navy at least an even chance of victory' against Princeton at Palmer stadium. Prince- ton's early season showing has been a disappointment so far', but both teams will miss backfield stars, the Middies having lost Allan Shapely, while Jake Slagel is out of the Tiger lineup. The Armhy is handicapiped by lack of reserve strength in the line for its tussle with Syracuse, but the -veteran backfield led by Hewitt and Wilson gives the Cadets an attacking edge which may be sufficient to upset the strong Orange eleven. Harvard, with her full strength re-, stored after two early season upsets, expects to break into the winning column for the first time at the ex-1 pense of William and Mary. The south- erners lo.st to the Crimson by a mar- gin of only one touchdown last year, but met defeat last week at Syrabuse, 35 to 0, and appeal' lacking in suffi- cient strength to hold the Car bridge squad. Pittsburgh, rallying from defeat by Lafayette, will have trouble checking the rush of Colgate, unscored on so far, in a game that may attract an- other big throng, with the Pitt stad- ium capable of handling upwards of 70,000. I 7 1 t ii _! t L t a t , HASKEL RUNNER HOLDS MARK IN DISTANCE RACES; Unblemished Goal Lines Threatened ON FOOTBALL GAMES TODAY THE SIDELINES 4(By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Oct. 14.-Football teams with unblemished reputations will see blots placed upon their escutcheons in today's games unless' an unprecedented number of score- less ties is registered. Neither Yale nor Dartmouth, meeting in one of the feature games of the week, has had I to line up near its goal posts to see an opponent try for point after touch- down. Cornell, called on to defend its un- crossed goal line, against the western invasion from Michigan State, doesa not expect an easy afternoon. Co, lumbia, among the select few whose heads are bloody but unbowed, views with some apprehension the appear- ance of Ohio State, although the i Buckeyes have had two touchdowns counted against them. Syracuse plays the Army, thej Orange team also defending its per-1 feet defensive position along with its honor. A Colgate team, with a record of noA having been scored on, meets Pittsburgh which has been scored on in each of the three games played. Navy, considered formidable, is called on to beat back an attack by Prince- ton, handicapped by injuries, to keep Its record clean. Brown is favored to keep its record straight against Bates, but Washington and Jefferson presents a menace to Carnegie Tech's success in stopping scoring plays. HASTINGS REACHES GOLF FINAL FOR SECOND TIME Robert Hastings, '27M, last year's all-campus champion, won his way into the finals again by a decisive vic- tory over T. H. Goodspeed, '28, yester- day afternoon. By scoring a 35 on the first nine against opponent's 39, last- ings stood 4 up at the turn. Wins on the 10th and 14th holes decided the match with a 6 and 4 margin._ The Vyse-Hastings finals is a repeti- tion of last year's tourney which went to -Hastings iby a generous margin. 1 l By Wilton A. Simpson Dr. Spears, with no malice of fore- thought, spoiled our proposed trip to "Cupid's hunting grounds" by bring- ing the Gopher team to Ann Arbor yesterday afternoon for a short sig- nal drill on Ferry field. The Gophers' wanted to get the lay of the land and plan their attackaccordingly. Sev- eral of the members of the team who aspire to be engineers liked the field, the drainage, and that sort of thing, but insisted that the Michigan score board was off center and inadequate to support the heavy strains placed upon it by the huge Wolverine "cores. With all this talk about the "Little Brown Jug," there arises the question, "what is in it?" It seems strange that men should fight over an empty jug.a Coach Spears took his men back to Ypsilanti for dinner, (too late to see the girl's football game), and expects to keep them there until noon. Coach Yost gave his men only a signal drill yesterday afternoon, after which he ordered the entire squad out to Bar- ton Hills for dinner. The treat was on the athletic association. Last month at this time all the tickets for the game were sold out and hence there is not a ticket available. In spite of the law of supply and demand and Mr. Tillotson, there will le ticket scalpers on hand. Scalpers, re- member, if Mr. Tillotson catches you, "It is too late for iterpicide." Barnhardt, who was confined to the university hospital at Minneapolis for several days after' the Notre Dame game, was in fine condition yesterday and is scheduled to resume his place in the Gopher backfield. In commenting on the outcome of today's game, Coach Yost said, "The boys are going to play to win; they have the power, but everything depends upon their will to do it." Quite right, we agree. This department has found a way to solve the ticket problem. Abolish co-education and the stadium.will be half filled. Then too, we would get into the "Maj" on Sunday morning. We heard of more than two' seniors drawing tickets in the East stands. Don't seniors have all the lucki? If some arrogant freshman parades up the 56 yard line for his seat, the mob rule will be in vogue. Some ingenious Minneapolis news- paper sent down a woman to get the. pictures of the individual members df the Michigan team. All the pictures taken show the boys holding a suit- case in one hand, a coat over the arm, and smiling broadly, and saying, "So this is Minnesota." The pictures will appear in some Minneapolis paper on Nov. 21, showing the Michigan men getting off the train. Of course, they had no train for a background, but that is nothing. You Americans have no imagination! All of the Michigan men had top coats carefully draped over their arms in the pictures, and many of them did not have hats. The pictures may not work so well, if the weather man orders snow for the Minnesota game -Nov. 21. After working for two days, we found out the derivation of the word :''Olley-oop." We heard the word be- ing broadcast in sonorous tones at the' Minnesota practice yesterday and con- cluded that it means "shift" in Swed- ish. After telling a myriad of people that there were no more tickets available for the Minnesota game, Mr. Tillotson hung out the old S. R. 0. sign. In the old days that sign meant, Standing Room Only, Fast Bates at Brown. Dartmouth at Yale. Chicago at Pennsylvania. Navy at Princeton. Colgate at Pittsburgh. Michigan State at Cornell. Syracuse at West Point. William and Mary it Harvard. Carnegie Tech at Washington Jefferson. West Virginia at Georgetown. Ohio State at Columbia. Geor'ia Tech at Alabama. Tulane at New York University. rY S-T Iowa at Illinois. Wisconsin at Purdue. Indiana at Northwestern. Penn State at Notre Dame. Washington U. at Nebraska. Southern Methodists at Missouri. Franklin at Butler. Detroit at Loyola. Grinnel at Iowa State. Oklahoma at Drake. Kansas Aggies at Kansas. Texas at Vanderbilt. Idaho at Washington. 0 & r r 11 hut now Sold Might Out seems more appropriate. The Michigan Bell Telephone-company has painted a sign for the pole clnim- ers, It. B. O.--(langing Roonm Only). Not to be outdone by Coach Yost, Steve Farrell, Varsity track coach, has entered the motion pictures. His latest production is now appearing at the Maj, and is ranked as one of the masterpieces of the film world. Fai- rell doesn't make passionate love to eny amorous looking squaw; he just fits into one of the 'scenes as an ef- fective background. Patronize Dally A lverd'sers. 1' ' 4 Philip Csif Patronze Daiy Adeiser. Captain of the Haskell Indian school cross-country team and a Pima In- dian, is called one of the greatest run- ners in the country. He won the six- mile junior A. A. U. title last July and the next day won the senior champion- ship with a new American record of X1:32. READ THE WANT ADS -f -1 1014 CHAPE ST. C ' itE SK4T. tor4OR" ca't1 Ensr NEw HAVEN, C3$4ShcYo Thursda, October 21 -is the day we will show our new Fali woolens at Ann Arbor. Representative Jerry Coan, at Hotel Allenel, Thursday, October 21. -4 i . 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