THE MICHIGAN DAILY ..-- -- -- _ - PACE, S MuH . i. n +tlA1iY#Wreu }aCH MAYv..SHIFT BASKETBA TRYOUT , REPORT FOR PRACTICE Two V4erars Included Among 3 ) en Aspiring To Regiuhr BeMhs On l 1higati Quintet- WILL CUT SQUAD SOON Under Coach Edwin J. Mather's guidance, 35 candidates for the Var- sity basketball team are practicing four times a week on the Yost field house court. These pre-season ses- sions are held every Monday, Tues- day, Wenesday and Thursday nights. Only two veterans, McCoy and Schroeder, are included among the 35 aspirants for the cage team. Both these players won their letters last year. Oosterbaan and Harrigan, lettermen from the 1927 team, and Nyland and Whittle, AMA winners, are expected to report at the end of the foot,11 season. There are several promising sopho- mores on the present squad that is try- ing out. Raber and Chapman have shown well on the 'court as have Lovell and Slagle. There will be sev- eral positions open this year as four , lettermen, Chambers, Petrie, ,Martin and Truskowski are lost to the 1928 team. Chambers graduated, Petrie and Martin have completed three years of competition, while Truskowski has 1 left school. These early season drills are being devoted chiefly to fundamentals. The candidates are being taught the rudi- ments of offense and defense. Only a few scrimmages have been held. Coach Mather expects to cut the number of playrs next week. No captain has as yet been elected for the 1928 team, but it is probable that a choice will be mde before the first game of the season. A" centl WILDCAT RUNNERS Jone DISAPPOINT COACH pilot (Cbntinued from Page Six.) Ca: season, five Irish runners breasting forge the tape before the frst Purple clad back harrier. agre It is probable that the Northwestern Conn team, like Iowa, has been slow in thr'o rounding into its best running form kick and may prove mre formidable when Gran the runners hit their regular mid-sea- Ya son stride. The team was noticeably sider weakened by the absence of Jimmy when Orchard shortly before the Notre Dame thica meet, but even the loss of this veteran Cam hardly offsets the 15-41 loss to a team habit that had been badly beaten by Illinois expe the week before. Yale Coach Hill has one of the largest Harv Varsity squads in the Conference from certa which to select his team. Four vet- E erans from the 1926 outfit Orchard, E Moreing, Johnson, and Gorby, form team tie nucleus for this year's team. seaso Orchard, the outstanding of these vet- erans, was uhable to run against the On Notre Dame team and may not be Who available for some time. Moreing is the most promising of the remaining trio, and was the first Northwestern runner to place in the meet with the Irish. Johnson and Gorby are both in their third year of cross country competition and both placed among the first 10 runners In the Notre Dame meet. Ernie Peters is the outstanding of the new candidates and with addi- tional experience promises to be a dependable performer. At present he is rated with the fastest man on the squad and placed seventh against the Irish. Cleaver and Wolfe are also likely looking sophomore candidates, the latter placing among the first 10 in the dual meet with Notre Dame. YALE'S QUADRUPLE MENACE I' 'E 1L TIS THIS MICH INBAKFILP X0!!1 AD ETIIN4AK3M t %T3P iT 1 . IV O RN (Continued from Page Six.) j with a lossibilit y of Miller's appear- ig. D~el Whittle, the man who filled in like a veteran at llinois, and Fuller will uindnollbtedly sec service at some WANTED-Ticket for New York NOTICE'E-- NOTICE-WXe deliver lbetw(en the( hours of 9:30 and 11:30 m. Pirun 1t Delivery. Bai recue Iin. Phone 1481. IAIr E.o75c . Expert Work t-Ragge dy Ann Beauty1 ShOp. Beside thel Den. 1Phone 7561 =40, 41 In the line two battles continue to _eiete --.-oe-- -- rage. Ileston wants Nyland's jO)b at SPECIAL is to Chicago game. LealV- right end; the same goes for I Horri- ing Friday night. Round trip,. $7.75. gan in relation to Pomnmerening's Call Jim Garrad, 3818. 39, .10 right to play left tackle. Otherwise C E next best thing to being at the the team will be the same with Ooster- Michigan-Chicago game is to see it baan, Palmeroli, Bovard, Baer and at the Gridgraph. Every play and (ahel fiinishinig out the line. player shown. Saturday, at 2:15. Michigan has seen enough of Stagg'sk newest trick plays to know some- NOTICE-Don't miss th Michigan- thing about them by this time, but Chicago game. Gridgraph shows much depends on how the Maroon every play. Doors open at 2:15. ouarterback calls them. Chicago's --- -----_-- plays are perhaps the most deceptive GRIDRAPH will show the hist oric the Wolverines will see all year, and Michigan-Chicago game, Saturday, mat t~~rd~ Ohin wa4 sty charry of! at 2:15. FolkRENT ioRl RENT--Nicely furnished sunny room. Teachers, gradualte students, urses, Ori isiniess people. Quiet us. Steam heat. Dial 8544. 422 F:. Washington. 39, ,40, 41, 42 POR RENT--Large room, study ad- joining; located on bus line; aromage. Very reasonable. 1120 Lin- coln. I'hone 5862. 39, 40, 41 FORl REN'T-even-room housento prcivatIe fa nuily, t wo rooms rentedl to gruadmite women. Address Box 10, Michigan Daily. 40, 411 FOR SALEI EV ENINC ,Cown, Chiffon, Velvet. Worn once. Dial 9710. WAINTEI WANTED---Five Uickets for Navy aine. Need not be together. Phone 9519. 1344 Cedd ,s Avenue. 38, 39, 40 C'A.\li 'BEALL Electric Stove. airi mat- Ijess, beds, davenport, settee, rockers, library table, dining table. Phone 3236. 40, 41, 42 EX1PERIENCED harber to take care of patients. Apply Dept. of Nursing Office, Univ. Hospital. 38, 39, 40 WANTED-Ticket for New York Theatre Guild Production, Nov. 24. Call Vniv. 166, or evenings, Dial 936O~39, 40, 4t LOFT LOST-Cameo Brooch on Nov. 1, $5.00 reward. Call 5043 or 1330 Volland. 39, 40 41 LOST-Dark grey topcoat. Please re- turn to 1315 Washtenaw. Phone 9187. 39, 40, 41 LOST-Well-worn Buxton keytainer. Sunday evening, either on Detroit Ave., Burns Park Bus, or at Burns Park. Reward. Dial 4849 evenings. 40 LOST-Green-gold Eversharp Wahl pencil, in or near postoflice in Ar- cade. Return to 508 Thompson. Reward. 40, 41 LOST--Tan purse, containing money and $10 check. Somewhere between Freeman's Dining Room and En- gineer' s Arch. Return, S. E. Moir, 1328 Washtenaw. 40 LOST--Long gray topcoat, gloves in pocket. Reward. Phone Wiener at 3540. 40, 41, 42 LOST-Small gold nugget pin. Re- ward. Box 11, Michigan Daily. MISCELLANEOUS PRIVATE LESSONS in German and French. Address J. G. Moskoftian, P. 0. Box 272, Ann Arbor, 36, 37, 38, 39, 40, 41 WANTED-Four tickets to the Navy game in pairs. Call Ahn, at 22491. 40 WATDTretcktIo hcg fast Szatur -(ay no ws s ca ) them that the Buckeye ends were often pulled back of the line on defense. The Wolverines, for their part, are sure to have the entire assortment of fakes at the top of the old "bag 'o tricks" for that stolid Maroon defense must be dazzled or nothing happens. Antomobiling in Argentina is having a boom. TEI most thrilling wiy to see the Mlichiganl-C hic ago ganmle is aIt 111e Cridgraph, Saturday, 2:15. MORE people hoarse tfrom y -llg, more loss of wVeighI~t Iron xcte ment at the Gridgraph than any place in town. Don't miss the Mich- igan-Chicago game there Saturday, at 2:15. WANTED-Three game. Phone Ave. tickets for Chicago 9589. 1346 Geddes 40 Bruce Caldwell. "new" kind of football player re- HERE'S NOTED 2-0 y developed by Coach T.A.D. CONTEST OF 1905 s now serving his last year as at Old Eli. (Continued from Page Six.) ldwell has made the Yale alumni raging, Chicago finally being forced et the immortal Ted Coy of "way to play from the Maroon 12 yard when times," for it is comnmonly line. Chicago's end, had a belt equipp- ed at New Haven, that staid old ed with two handles, to which Eck- ecticuit town, that Caldwell canI ersall would attach himself while in w passes like Bonnie Friedman, possession of the ball, then to b like Jim Thorpe, run like Red pulled over the scrimmage line. Parry ge, and plunge like John Thomas.- violated the rule requiring the player le's halfback is certain to be con- who had received the ball on direct ed by the "experts" of football pass from center to cross the line 5 a it comes time to select the my- yards out from the pivot man, and l all-American teams, for Walter Chicago was penalized to the 1 yard p seems to have made it almost al- t for the surviving all-American After another exchange in which rts to choose a Yale mnan. If IChicago was aided by the wind, Eck- beats Maryland, Princeton, ar d ersall punted from 53 yard line be- ard, Caldwell will be almost a hind , the goal. Stuart, instead of inity. grounding the ball to receive posses- TROIT-Detroit Cougars hockey sion of it on the 20 yard line, started will carry only 12 players this to run it out but was hit by Art Bo- )n. denoch before emerging from the end zone and downed behind the line for e hundred and seventy-seven in the safety and the winning two points 's Who are claimed by Illinois. by Captain Marc Catlin. Collegiate Clothes Shop ,- f ..._ , -- r (/ J , r J i . 1 i i r ti . , Just Arrived! BEA MAN WiI i 0 -"d ss C as singcle breaste'd fifty inches long, designed 4 to Wild's specifications Drop in try on a coat or two and look around. -4 $50to $7QQ A sturdy shoe of Imported Scotch grain. All sizes in stock. i= $10 00 ON STATE STREET .. .......... . ............ ............._.._._ _-_.----_-------- - -- - --- a --- I t ,0 S mar/ ', , ' ( 'f I I r! i~ ,1 ' f .1 ,,- -- , ~ i ' _, t { y e i I_ . . 4 f +(( 1 r u Oxford Gray Overcoats A new shipment of' Oxford Gray overcoats, breasted, 50 inches smartly cut, and just you want. single long, what Some students taking a Shakespeare course might figure this Brutus shoe as treacherous 'cause of its name. The kind of shoe that'll stick you in the back -or foot. No sir! The Brutus is a soft andfriendly shoe. Why you can walk all over it ands it won't complain. W h e n you're out for a stroll there'll be no rub or pinch- ing so that you'll have to look down and say 'Et tu Brute.' We thought you'd like this info on easy shoes-what, with the president and re- gents standin' stern and rock-bound on the auto sit- uation. You get all this ease and style too, for ten sesterces. I 11 SPECIALLY TAILORED SUITS $40 and $45 with extra pants free 11 THE SKY IS THE- I MIT-IN QUALITY t ' Corp°'4 ' ihc have exlraordinary value. They give you c ' y Lhat is uexceljed at astoundingly low prices. We offer you a suit, specially tailored at the best college shops, in a wide assortment of patterns, cut with the new short coats and rolled lapels, featuring two pairs of wide, well cut trousers, a' prices that surprise you. -The Last Word in Furnishings- Shiurts Ties Socks Pajamas Gloves 1 I III it Ii - II