THE MICHIGAN DAILYF TOL VER INES DEPART FR FIRST CONFERENCE TEST OlGER TEAK STRENGTHENED BY ADDITIONS, SE WILL URP UfSS FlIAND HBKJL P IE S S LUMP NOTRE DAME BRIOMENTOPLAY OPES TO BREAK MICHIGANWISCONSIN JINX HARBOR MUTUAL FEAR H i IN FEATURE INTERSECTIONAL T NAVY ELEV ILT TQMORROW i Yost, WIeman, Klipke, Brown, Hoyt, And Tillotson Accompany Squad of 34 Players BOVARD, RICH TO START Michigan's football squad, consist- ing of 34 players, left Ann Arbor at 11:42 last night for Madison where they will meet the Wisconsin team. Saturday in their first Conference game of the 1927 season. Fielding H. Yost, director of athlet- ics, Coaches Wieman, Kipke, and Brown, business manager Tillotsonc and trainer Hoyt accompanied the squad in the two special cars which1 carried the team to 'adison. Owing to a Conference ruling which, limits the number of men which mayc be taken to an out of town game, . only 34 men, including six endsi guards, and tackles, seven halfbacks,1 and three centers, quarterbacks, and fullbacks made the trip. Bovard May Startt According to the tentative lineup which Coach Wieman announced onc his departure from Ann Arbor last night, Capt. Oosterbaan and Taylor,1 who was kept out of the Michigan State game because of a wrenched back, will start at ends, Gabel andt Pommerening at tackles, Baer andt Palmeroli in the guard berths, while Bovard may start in his, first Varsity1 game at the pivot position.t Squad Includes 34 The others who are making the1 trip are: end, Boden, Kerr, Nyland, and Heston; tackles, Harrigan, Grin-' nell, Poorman, and Walder; guards,c Poe, Parker, Nicholson, and Meese;1 centers, Schoenfeld ani Thisted;, quarterbacks, Domhoff and McBride; halflacks, Miller, Greenwald, Puckel- wartz, Geistert, and Wlijttle; full- backs, Gembis and Fuller.c The Michigan cars will be trans-t ferred to the C. M. and St. P. roadl at Chicago and will arrive in Madi- son today at 12:30 noon, central time. A short workout will be held at Camp Randall field this afternoon after. which the Wolverines will retire toc their headquarters at the Hotel Lor-I aine until game time.P Following the game, at 8:30, thel Michigan party will leave the Badger1 capital, returning to Ann Arbor at 8 o'clock Sunday morning.r SALEM-Frank Lockhart recently' set a new world's record' traveling 144.2 miles per hour. NEW YORK-Gene Sarazen is pos- sessor of the Metropolitan Profession- al Golfer's association championship. h Sykes And Von Bremer Return To Guard Positions After Enforced Absence of Week WISCONSIN IS CONFIDENT, By Dan Albrecht Sports Editor, The Dally Cardinal MADISON, Wis., Oct. 13-Almost on the eve of their first big game of the season, members of the Wisconsin football team are showing more and more confidence in their ability to .overcome the jinx that has clung to Wisconsin-Michigan engagements on practically every occasion. Though continued bad weather has prevented the squad from practicing outdoors more than twice thus far this week, the men show improvement in practically every department of play. Sykes Returns To Line The line has been strengthened by the addition of Robert S'ykes, a guard, whose eligibility was, for a time, in doubt. George Von Bremer, another guard who was on the injured list, is also back in shape. At Kan- sas, the Badgers were forced to use inexperienced guards, who, though they played well, did not quite equal the performance of the regulars.' In preparation for Michigan's ex- pected assault on the tackles, every tackle candidate on the squad is be- ing put through intensive training. William Ketalaar, a blonde young giant with the rangy build of a nat- ural tackle, stands at the head of the list. Binish, Gottstein, and Boma are other typical battlers who will probabFy get in against the Wolverines. Badger Ends Look Good An unusual number of good ends, excellently coached by Leonard Alli- son, has given Wisconsin almost un- precedented strength at the wings this year. Mike Welch, who made his Big Ten debut against Michigan last year, and Don Cameron, another veteran, have been sitting on the bench most of the time while such youngsters as Ebert Warren, Elmer Davies, Arthur Mansfield, and George Hotchkiss were playing the game as it should be played. At center, John Wilson, who alter- nated with Earl Wilke last year, seems to have dug himself in foiT the season. NEW YORK- Baseball fans paid $783,217.00 to see the recent world series. Both Te nAms Have Profound Reps)d I Fr Each terliei Regatrding Tromo.rro, ' ( annier -l RIVALRY IS TRADITIONAL (By Asso 'etc P e.s) CHICAGO, Oct. 13-The gloomy solof -"Stagg fears Purdlue"- which h y sounded almost every year ju st be- for the Chicago-Purdue football game, now has a variation: "Stag- f rs Purdue" and "Purdue fears Sv gg." F A situation odd in the traditional rivalry of these two schools, h brought about this joint regard forz each other.# Buoyed by its 19 to 0 triumph over Harvard last Saturday, the fightin gb 'enscl Gene Rose Boilermakers have inspired a pro- Ynkee oulfielder, nroved to be a Wisconsin halfback and flashy run- found respect for their gridiron prow- ner, whose forward passing is ex- ess among the other teams of the Big isapointnent to base ball fans in pected to gain much ground for thc 'en. who are hoping for the 1927 the recent worid series. Meusel, who Cardinal eleven when it meets Coach championship. The victory too, has put hit consistently throughout the sea- Elton E. Wieman's Wolverines tomor- the conference championship urge in- son, fell down during the series. At w at Camp Randall field, Madi- to the hearts of Purdue followers arnd at 17 times, he was able to gather son. they fear the first hurdle, which i ms Coach Alonzo Stagg and his Maroon but one run and two hits. LOCKHART AND DE PALMA warriors, may be their undoing. TO COMPETE IN DETROIT . Stagg Is PessimistIc VARSITY TENNIS TEAM CoachStagg, on the other hand, is Wr ESME (S'pecial to The Daily) pessimistic about Chicago's chancesWILMEET RESH DETROIT, Mich., Oct. 12- Frank this year and is experimenting with Lockhart, who is one of California's unknown quantities and qualities Tennis matches are to be held to- representatives in the national dirt which showed poorly in the Oklahoma morrow morning at 9:30 to test the track championship 150-mile test to game and better in the Indiana game strength of the freshmen against the be run here Sunday, recently set a last Saturday. Varsity. Although the freshmen ten- world's record for a mile on the Rock- Coach Phelan of Purdue did not is trials have not yet been complet- ingham Speedway at Salem, N. H. mince words about his fear of Stagg ed, the team has been chosen accord- Franklin, who has won three 100. and his cohorts during yesterday's ing to the way the entries have shown mile races in Michigan and captur- practice. up in practice. ed the 500-mile Indianapolis race in "You are not going to meet Harvard Some of the members of the fresh- 1926, clipped off the mile in 31 1-5 next Saturday," Phelan told his men, men team are sophomores who are seconds or at a she d of 144.2 miles "but you are going to play Chicago, trying out for the first time. The an hour. The old record was held and buck up against the resourceful- lineup is as follows: by Cliff Woodbury and was 145.5 miles ness of the greatest old wizard in the Graham vs. Moore, Elliot vs. Mar- an hour made last July. Woodbury game-Coach Stagg. Forget what has shall, Marsh vs. Schafer, Hammer vs. also has been invited to compete as been done and realize this is some io Kempner, Dusenberry vs. Barton (C), one of Illinois' representatives and (Continued on Page Seven) Swanson vs. Sarnovee, Nelson vs. was a winner of July race here -W~~es~t- Goldsmith, Kramer vs. Brady. akngwineofnuth lyJreee ley; Western Pennsylvania and Ohio, taking second in the June event. k Lawrence Hickson, "Deacon" Litz; at WILLIAMSTOWN- A junior will This race birings together the pick large, Ralph de Palma, George Sou- captain the Williamstown cross-country of the country's dirt track speed de-ter mons, 10 districts' representatives ders. team this fall. have been named as follows: Califor- nia-Frank S. Lockhart, Babe Stapp; Illinois, Cliff Woodbury, Billy Arnold; New York, Ira Vail, Charles F. Gan- op[ NwYok MIra, Vailu Cha F. lyn Goodwin; Indiana, Louie Schneider,jI Charles "Dutch" Bauman; Eastern Pennsylvania, Fred Winai, James F. Gleason; Texas, Fred Frame, Ted Simpson; Colorado, Walter H. High- - NEW YORK. Oct. 1:The lsst hard team as no longer on the short end drill of a strenuous week was i or- i of a aO-1 shot, in his estimation der in eastern footlall caps today. Grooming his charges for Washingtou Final wreparatious were being laid and Lee Saturday and Cornell the in the camn of the Navy for Satur- following week, said that prospects (lay's star battle with Notre 1)ame. '1re encouraging, despite the fact Coach Bill ingraham *'plans only eight places had to be filled when light work toniorrow before taking his the season started, players to Baltimore. Ingraham ex- Penn Meets Penn State\ pects a close, bitterly fought contest Penn brushed up on fundamentals but thinks the middies, if they reach for the Penn State game and Lafay- Y their top form, will hold their own. counter wih West irgia the Mor- "There still remains the danger of gantown. this green and inexperiencedteam .Pittsburgh had to cut its work short l g t o s " r in order to make the jump to Des sMoines, for the tussle with the Drake Yile )dri s in Secret Tad Jones called a secret practice at Yale and ran his men through a long signal drill, and scrimmage in preparation for Brown. Harvard looked better than at any time this season when, tuning up for Holy Cross, it scored three times on a team of ineligible players. Bill Roper regards the Princeton Bulldogs but the Panthers are in good physical condition. Columbia's coaches are grooming two sets of backs for the Colgate game. the Army's preparation for th Davis and Elkins game. 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