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October 23, 1926 - Image 6

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Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1926-10-23

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

I*

PAGE SIx

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1926

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HARRIERSWILILRACE
PURDUE SOUAD TODAY
Captain Briggs Will Lead Veteran
Team Against Boilermakers
In First Race
t-

Ka

ssel, Illini End And Captain, Will
Lead Strong Team Against Wolverines

'PURDUE MEN NOT NAMED
Coach Stephen J. Farrel's Wolver-
Ine cross-country team will meet the
Purdue harriers in the first Confer-
enco dual meet of the year for both
teams at 10:45 o'clock here today. TheI
race will be run over the regular
varsity course, starting in front of the
Yost field house and ending at the
Ann Arbor golf club. The distance to3
be covered will be four and one-half
miles.
Coach Ed O'Connor, the Purdue
-mentor, will not name the men whoi
will represent Purdue until just before
the race today. Captain Briggs, Isken-
derian, Monroe, Lamont, HIll, Win-.
slow, Wuerful, Aubrey Hornberger,
and Whitmore will run for the Wol-
verines, it was announced yesterday
- by Coach Farrell.
The meet will afford Coach Far-j
rell a definite opportunity to see hisI
men in action and approximate then
chances in future runs. Coach Far-
rell got an insight in the team's pos-
sibilities last 'Saturday when the team
ran a trial' ace. Despite the water-
soaked contlition of the course, the
Maize and Blue runners established
comparatively good time, negotiating
the distance in 18:35.
Captain triggs, Hornberger, Hill,
iskenderian are all veterans of last
year's team, and are expected to show
up well. Wuerful, Aubrey, and Win-
slow, were members of last year's
freshman team, and today's race will;
initiate them in intercollegiate run-
ning.
Little is known of this year's Pur-
due team, but in preyious year's, the
PurdIue teams have always figured
prominently in the Big Ten cham-
pionship runs and they will bend all
efforts to win today against Michi-}
gan.

rGDThAL
Big Teni
Indiama at Wisconsin.!
Wabash at Minnesota.
Iowa at Ohio State.
Notre Dame at Northwestern.
Purdue at Chicago.
West
Lake Forest at Michigan State.
Central Normal at Ypsilanti.
Kalamazoo at Albion.
DePau at Butler.
Washington at Grinnell.
Haskell at Hastings.I
Nebraska at Kansas.
St. Marys at Marquette.
Cincinnati at Ohio U.
Boston College at St. Louis.
Western Reserve at Wooster.
Mississippi at Drake.
Missouri at Iowa State.
East
Brown at Yale.
Syracuse at Penn State.
Williams at Pennsylvania..
Dartmouth at Harvard.
Lehigh at Princeton.
Bowdoin at Colby.
Duke at Columbia.
St. Johns at Delaware.
W. & J. at Fordham.
Western Maryland at Holy Cross.
Loyola at Johns Hopkins.
Bates at Maine.
Carnegie Tech. at Pittsburgh.
Oberlin at Rochester.
Ursinus at Swartmore.
Boston U. at Army.
Colgate at Navy.
Amherst at Wesleyan
Albright at Lafayette. -
South
Birmingham Southern at Chatta-
nooga.
Kentucky at Florida.
W. & L. at Georgia Tech.
North Carolina at Maryland.
Alabama at Sewanee.
Center at Tennessee.
Georgia at Vanderbilt.
Far West
Southern California at California.
Utah at Colorado.
Montana at Montana State.
Arizona at New Mexico State.
Stanford at Oregon.
Washington State at Washington.
hard fought game aid I know that
the battle will evidence the same
brand of sportsmanship that has
been shown in Michigan-Illinois
games of the past. Win or lose,
Illinois always likes to play foot-
ball against Michigagn"

When the Yale tank squad enfrains
! for the West next April to_ participate~
in the national intercollegiate meet at
Iowa City in the new Hawkeye pool, it
will open a new era in collegiate
swimming for the West and for Michi-~
gan especially.
Coach Matt Mann, with the assist-
ance of Paul Roberts, captain of the
Eli swimmers in 1914 and 1915, and
formerly a pupil of Coach Mantn's
while he was still at Harvard, "has
tentatively arranged a dual meet in
l3etroit between the champions of the
East and the Wolverine squad, run-
I ers-up for Conference honors last
year and present stage A. A. U. title
holders.
Mr. Roberts now is a resident- of
Detroit and is an intimate friend of
Coach Mann, and in the interests of
the sport he and Coach Mann are en-
deavoring to persuade the New Haven
authorities to sanction a meeting of
the teams in Detroit.
Varsity swimmers under the direc
tion of Coach Matt Mann will open a
strenuous competitive Friday, Nov.
25, in the first of a series of A. A. U.
state championships to be held at the
Union pool, in which the entire squad
will participate in defense of their
honors won last year.
This meet will represent only the
start of a campaign which will include
eight Conference dual meets, a series
of encounters with the leading tank
squads of the principle cities of Ohio
and Indiana, a dual meet with Yale,
participation in the national intercol-
I legiate championships, and the Big
Ten meet.
If the plans advocated by Coach
Mann are embodied by the other Con-
ference coaches, each of the nine
teams represented by swimming teams
will meet each other at some time
during the course of the year. This
plan, according to Coach Mann, will
tend to emphasize the team factor
throughout the Conference.
Michigan was unbeaten last year in
a series of four dual meets and should
not encounter much opposition in this
field until it meets with the Minnesota
and Wisconsin squads. Both the
Gophers and Badgers are returning to
competition this season without the
loss of a single veteran. Moreover,
many sophomores of promising abil-
ity have come up from the freshman
ranks to bolster their teams.
However, on the tour through ;Ohio
and Indiana there will undoubtedly be
found much keener competition. Dur-

ing the course of this barnstorming
tour in December, Coach Mann's squad
will hook up with the leading athletic
clubs of Toledo, Cleveland, Columbus,
Cincinnati, Indianapolis and Fort
Wayne.
At Cincinnati the Varsity swimmers
will engage in a meet with the Cin-
cinnati Y. M. C. A., holders of the na-
tional senior A. A. U. team champion-
ship. This squad is led by Walter
Laufer, holder of various world's rec-
ords at varing events and recognized
as one of the best all-around swim-
mers in the world.
Besides these there will be others
with the principal tank teams of the
country who will meet the Wolverines
in the Conference meet and in the na-
tional intercollegiate contests to be
held in April at Iowa City, in the new
Hawkeye pool.

Tentative Dual Meet With Yale To Be
Among High Lights Of Swimming Season

MC INNISSLCE
TO0 PILOT PHILLIES
PHILADELPHIA, Oct. 22.-John P.
(Stuffy} McInnis, former manager of
Connie Mack's $100,000 infield, is to
return to this city next season as
manager of the Philadelphia Nationals.
He succeeds Arthur Fletcher, who has
been released.
"He needs a new third baseman and
two good pitchers, said President Bak-
er. "With these new men he believes
he would have enough to make a good
start."
McInnis was signed when a free
agent, having been unconditionally re-
leased by Pittsburgh shortly before the
close of the season. He is 36 years
old and has been a major league play-
er since 1909, but has had no man-
agerial experience.
"McInnis is not only willing to play,
but he insisted' upon it," said Baker.

Y

I

Charles "Chuck" Kassel
Sensational end and captain of the fighting Illinois eleven which will
face the Wolverines in today's most i mportant game. Kassel was mention-
ed for all-American honors last year and will attempt to match Ooster-
haan and Flora for the honors today.

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Breakfast
Luncheon

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ft
.
A +

i ON

1e
THE SIDELINES

>/

Dinner
-.Desserts

Sandwiches

- -Salads

I

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SPEEDBALL RESULTS

Results of the speedball matches in
the Interfraternity league played re-
cently follow:
Phi Gamma Delta, 12; Chi Phi, 8.
Phi Sigma Delta, 20; Tau KappaI
Epislon, 9.
Alpha Kappa Lambda, 1; Zeta Psi,

I

On the eve of the game of all games,
Michigan versus Illinois, Mr. Tillot-
son "hangs gloom over the campus" by
announcing that 2500 applications for
extra tickets for the Wisconsin game
will be returned. All of us who hand-
ed tickets in after Sept. 28 will get
out money back and buy an eighth
interest in a bleacher seat for the
Army-Navy game at Chicago.
Last week we had a battle for
all-Conference fullback honors
between Joesting and Molenda,
but today's game will be a feature
for the all-Conference ends. Oos-
terbaan, Michigan's 14th All-Amer-
Jean, and Kassel, captain of the
lllii, were the two outstanding
ends in the West last year, and
we will have an opportunity today
to determine the supremacy if the
field is dry. Both men are strong
defensively and expert in the art
of snaring forward passes. Eck-
ersall will toss the coin to see

which one will be picked for left
end, and the loser will have to
take all-Conference honors on the
right flank.
Carl Lundgren, acting director of
athletics at the University of Illinois,
was formerly connected with the Wol-
verine athletics, acting as baseball
coach, before Ray Fisher reported
here.
In commenting on today's game,
Coach Zuppke said, "I expect a

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Sunday Dinner, 12 to 2
24 HOUR SERVICE

0.
Beta Theta Phi, 16; Phi Mu Alpha,
0.
Sigma Zeta, 1; Acacia, 0.
Before a school can completely pre-
pare a player on the gridiron for the
season it must expend $188, accordingj
to the figures of Major Griffith, athletic
commissioner of the Western Confer-
ence.
Subscribe for The Michigan Daily.

620 East Liberty

4

I'

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