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October 29, 1926 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1926-10-29

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

FACE SIX

LTA' IkAT0L-1T0 A AT r-% A TT V

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PAG ~X T'~r JR~'!IT-NA~ TAT r

E11DAY, OCTOBER 29, 1926
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MICHIGAN WILL PLAY

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BEAT ILLINOIS" IS SLOGAN OF PENN GRIDDERS

NAVY ELEVEN IN1927

Yost Announces Plans For Trwo came
f CQntraet After Conyerence
Last Saturday
0. S. U. MAY DEDICATE
Michigan will play the United States
Naval Academy football team yin 1927j
and 1928, according to an official an-
nouncement made yesterday by Field2
ing H. Yost, director of intercollegiate
athletics. The Midshipmen will play
In Ann Arbor next fall and the follow-
ing year the Wolverines will journey
to Baltimore.I
Admiral L. M. Nulton, superinten-
dent of the Naval academy, and James
IL Ingram, director of athletics and
physical education at Annapolis, were
visitors last Saturday at the Illinois-
Michigan game, and at that time made
preliininary arangements for two
year home and home series with the
Wolverines. Final confirmation of
the agreement was made yesterday.
Director Yost 'further commented,
"it is a practical pertainty that Ohio
State will have the dedication game in
Michigan's new stadium, probally
some time the lattet part of October.
The games with Navy and Minnesota
will be played in November. This will
will give Michigan three big home
games in the first year in the new bowl
Which will be completed for the 1927
football season.
"Efforts are also being made to
schedule another big home game for
next year," continued Director Yost.
"If we are s>ccessful in doing this,
four major-contests will be played in
our new stadium, giving Michigan one
of the best home schedules she has had
dn 'years."
In 1922, Michigan .had the honor of
playing the dedicating game in Ohio
State's huge horseshoe stadium and
was returned victorious by a 19-0
count to break a string of three con-
secutive Buckeye gins. The Wolver-
ines have also won the three games
piayed since 1922 and the entire
Middle West is turning to this year's
struggle between Ohio and Michigan
Nov. 13. If final arrangements are
completed, the dedicatory game next
fall will be with one of Michigan's
traditional rivals.
NEW YORK.-Clarence Kummer
and L. M. Fator, two of the best known
jockeys, in the country, have been re-
instated by the Jockey club.

Nast Year's Freshn
CAMTAESquad Scores
INAMOST AT TENTION After several weeks of intermittent
-practice which has been interrupted
SmAeral Leading Grid Eleini ; In The by rain and cold, members of last
untry Will )eet Each 0yher ears'freshman squad scored victories
To Decide Supreiaciy i'n three out of four matches played
Wednesday at Ferry field with other
MICHIGAN OPPOSES NAVY members of the Varsity squad.
Horace Barton and Kingsley Moore
Intersectional contests will hold the dcfeated Olian and Setphene, letter
attention of football followers throu k- men from last year in straight sets,
6-31 6-1 in the one doubles match
out the County tomorrow, when ,ad- played. Moore was also victorious in
ing elevens of the East, West, and singles downing Goldsmith, a new
South meet to determine gridiron su- member of the Varsity by a score of
premacy. 3-6, 6-4, 6-2. Goldsmith was stroking
Michigan and the undefeated Navy with rare percision in the first set and
team will strive to keep their slatcs seemed to have Moore beaten, leading1
clean in one of the most important. in the second set, but Moore outlasted'
contests" of the day. After defeating and out-generalled him to win the
Purdue, Drake, Princeton, and Col-
gate, Coach "Navy Bill" Ingram's sing to play; the State team which has
squad is primed to avenge the crush- made a good showing in its games this,
ing defeat administered by the Wol- year. Columbia and Cornell will meet
verines last year on Ferry field, at New York in another important
Illinois will meet the invading Penn- game.
sylvania squad at Champaign in an-
other important intersectional contest.
If the Zuppke eleven succeeds in
downing the unbeaten Penn team,
western supremacy will be further
established.
Pennsylvania's hidden-ball attack
has drawn much comment from coach-

match taking the third set easily.
Algyer won over Finkleman, aMa
winner, in three sets by 'a score of 6-2,
4-6, 8-6. Earl Krickbaum, captain of
the 1926 team filled in and took an
easy pair of sets from Kimball, 6-0,
6-2 for the only. setback the sopho-
mores received.
Coach Henry C. Hutchins watched
the matches closely and declared after-
ward that he was much pleased with
the showings made. "With only two
or three days fit for practice all fall,
the men did exceptionally well," Coach
Hutchins declared. "If the present
moderate weather continues, the team
should get in some good practice
matches before winter sets in and
thus get a good line on the material
available for next year's sauad.
Olian, Varsity number one, will meet
Barton in a feature singles match
within the next few days. Lamoree
and Hicks, the former a numeral man
are also scheduled to play.

man Tennis
Win Over Varsity

;}

I.

I

IFour University of Pennsylvania
stars who will face Coach Robert C.
Zuppke's fighting Illini at Champaign
tomorrow. Charles Rogers, an un-
canny forward passer and'elusive ball
carrier, is the main cog in the Penn
backfield. He proved to be the out-
standing star in the Quakers 27 to 0
victory over Chicago last Saturday.
Rogers was stricken with acute in-
digestion during the early part of the
week and there was some doubt as to
whether or not he would be availableI
for service this week, but he has re-
covered sufficiently to participate in
Saturday's battle.
Duncan and Urban are two of the
stellar linemen who compose the pow-

erful Penn forward wall. Their ability'
to rip holes in the opposing line
has proved an important factor in the
Penn attack. Liard is a backfield can-
didate of unusual merit, although he
is overshadowed by exceptional work
of Rogers, Murphy, Schull, and Was- ,
colonis.
Pennsylvania has a great team this
year,. judging from its impressive vic-
tories thus far. Against four oppon-
ents, Franklin Marshall, Johns Hop-
kins, Swarthmore, and Chicago, the
Quaker eleven has scored 152 points
to seven scored by its opponents.
Remaining on the Penn schedule are
Illinois, Penn State, Columbia, and
Cornell. These teams comprise a good

J
season's work in themselves, but
Coach Leo Young, mentor of the Penn-
sylvania team, believes that his charg-
es can turn back this quartet.
Students of the University of Penn-
sylvania are filled with the hope that
Penn will go through the present sea-
son with an unblemished record. More
than this, they are a bit mournful be-
cause Yale, which has been showing
unusual strength this season, is not
on the Quaker schedule.
PORTLAND, Ore.-Tarra Miyake,I
Japanese Jin Jitsu wrestler of Chica-
go, defeated Tom Alley, Omaha light
heavyweight, last night for two out
of three falls.

es throughout the country, especially
from Coach Zuppke, who has pointed
the Suckers for this game in an effort
to repeat the verdict of last year's
encounter. Rogers, star halfback on
the Penn team, has been stricken with
an attack of indigestion and may not
be seen in action tomorrow.
In the Conference, Ohio and Chica-
go will meet to break last year's 3-3
deadlock in a clash which will serve
to test the mettle of the highly-touted
Buckeyes. The unbeaten Badgers will
strive to force tile strong Minnesota
squad furtheredwon into the ranks of
Conference "also rans."
Other important western games will
be between Notre Dame and Georgia
Tech at South Bend, and the clash be-
tween Northwestern and Indiana, in
which the Hoosiers and Wildcats will
meet for the second time this season.
Other Conference teams will compete
with teams outside the Big Ten.
Brown and Dartmouth meet in the
East in a contest that will test the
power of the Brown team that defeat-
ed Yale last week. Yale and the Army
will meet at' New Haven, with the
Cadets given the edge for the first
time in fifteen years. Colgate, de-
feated last week by the Midshipmen
by a narrow margin, comes to Lan-

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