PACE SIX .THE MICHIGAN DAILY' WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1927 COMPLETE 1928 WOLVERINE FOOTBALL SCHEDULE MICHIGAN WILL PLAY EIGHT GRIDCONTESTS Indiana And Michigan State College Added To List Of Opponents Of 1928 Grid Team CARD FIVE BIG TEN GAMES With the booking of Indiana on Oct. 13 and Michigan State college on Nov. 17 for games in the Michigan stadium, the University of Michigan football schedule for 1928 is now complete. The scheduling of Indiana will give the Wolverines five West- ern Conference games next year. Indiana's last appearance against Michigan was in 1925 when the Maize and Blue gridders, with Friedman and Oosterbaan playing the star roles, buried the Hoosier eleven under an avalanche of touchdowns, 63 to 0. State To Play Here Nov. 17 The Michigan State team will come to Ann Arbor next year later than it has during the past seasons, appear- ing here on the third Saturday of November and just one week before the season is terminated for the Mich- igan team. With the addition of Indiana and Michigan State to the 1928 schedule, Michigan will face eight opponents, on the gridiron. Ohio Wesleyan will open the season at Ann Arbor on Oct. 6, followed a week later by Indi- ana. Ohio State is carded for Oct. 20 at Columbus, and on Oct. 27 and Nov. 3, Michigan will play Wisconsin and Illinois, respectively, in the new Mich- igan bowl. On Nov. 10 Michigan will go to Baltimore to face the Navy. Michigan State will be met- a week later, and on Nov. 24 the Wolverines will end the season with Iowa at Ann Arbor. To Play Harvard In 1929-30 Now that Harvard has been defin- itely added to the Michigan slate, the 1929 and 1930 schedules are for the most part complete. That the 1929 and 1930 schedules are by no means easy ones is realised when one glanc- es at the cards drawn for the Maize and Blue for those two seasons. In 1929, Ohio State, Iowa, and Har- vard will be the major attractions at Ann Arbor, with the Wolverines play- ing away at Minnesota, Illinois, and Purdue. Such an array or opponents would cause the least timorous of coaches to manifest some fear. The following season, 1930, there; will be four big attractions at Mich gal stadium. Minnesota, Illinois, Pur- due, and Chicago. will come here for games, while Michigan will oppose Ohio State, Iowa, and Harvard on their respective battlegrounds. DARTMOUTH HALFBACK LEADS ALL PP TDWL O EASTERN GRID SCORERS FOR 1927 UI iCG nSAhILNO .~..:.:.:....................... PLAY IN STATE GAME DOPING THE DOPE INTRAMURAL WRECTOR SELECTEDFOR0OFFIC Mitchell Is President Of Conference Directors Association; Berg Named Yice-President An Capt. Benny Oosterbaan Will Attend tion Annual Football Bust Given res By Detroit Alumni be AUall. MATRER WILL CUT SQUAD By Herbert E. Tedder 4ueer things are these "all" teams. unorthodox choices. d the Rockne-Warner-Jones Coali- n is no less queer than any of the The question no, t of them-in fact it might seven be the black sh ranked among the strangest of Eckersall's select! w is eep ions - who will on Walter due to ap- pear Sunday? This coaching triumvirate did ntcnfitnn to ine18 ti d pesv- Benny Oosterbaan will not play not.see ltUven Lo 111 against Michigan State Saturday en men who have received almost night in the opening game on Michi- gan's basketball schedule on account failing to mention two of them, Charlesworth of Yale and Ras- of the annual football bust given for kowski of Ohio State, center and tlie 1927gt trati .te yste iIetr tackle, respectively, on any of the Whittle of the cage team are ( .ae to first three teams. appear at the .banquet, while Harri- Ts gan and Nylad h te tal The coaches' first team backfield gar, n a n n d, the ' other fool, l . coincided exactly with that of (/rant- Scott of Yale and Born of Army gained second team end berths while Dowd of W. and J. and Sprague of Army were placed at tackles. Wright of Washington and Hanson of Minne- sota were named guards on either side of Reitsch of Illinois to round out the second eleven. Little mention has been to Dowd and Wright while the same may be said of Stanford guard chosen for team honors. given much Post, third men on Loacn Matner s team, win re a z l T C f t c 1 T c K l 1 1 main in Ann Arbor for the game.I Michigan's cage team will be cut to about 20 players today by Coach Ed- win J. Mather, in preparation for the Michigan State game Saturday. Re- duction in the size of the squad will facilitate the easier handling of the team, and will give the coaches an opportunity to devote more individual attention to the players. Lineup Still Uncertain The five men to start against the Spartans will be chosen from the following group: McCoy, Harrigan, Nyland, Gawne, Schroeder, Kanitz, Raber, Single, Rose, and Chapman. Any one of these players is likely to see action against Michigan State. Oosterbaan, Harrigan, McCoy, and' Schroeder are the four lettermen on the present squad. All these players saw regular service last season. Three reserves, Nyland, Gawne, and Whit- tl, remain from the 1927 team. With these men as a nucleus Coach Mather has assembled a strong squad. Offensive drill occupied the players' yesterday afternoon. The guards were also instructed in breaking up passes under the basket by Coaches Kipke and Veenker. Harrigan displayed the remarkable footwork that featured his playing last year. Teamed with Nyland and Raber he kept the de- fense busy in endeavoring to break up scoring plays. ITHICA-Dudley Nelson, end from Cleveland Heights, has been selected to captain the Cornell grid team in 1928. land Rice, consisting of Welch, Cagle, Drury, and Joesting but Welch was placed at quarter instead of half, changing places with Drury. Oosterbaan, unanimous end se- lection, was given Nash of Georg- ia as a teammate at flank, and Smith of Notre Dame was at guard. These were the same as Rice's but here the similarity ends. While Charlesworth was put back of Bettencourt, Reitsch, and Rouse at center, Yale received more than com- pensatory recognition in having two of her linemen honored. Webster, leader of the Eli, was placed at guard while his team- mate, the little recognized Quar- rier, was named at tackle. It seems as if there must be a black sheep on each and every all- American selection this season. Rice had Crane of Illinois and Smith of Penn; Evans had Kerns of Pitt and Flanagan of Notre Name; now comes Quarrier and several other somewhat Besides the criminal omission of4 Charlesworth and Raskowski from any mention, Rockne, Warner, and Jones failed to honor Gilbert andl Baer of the Wolverine team. One explanation of this may be found, perhaps, in the fact that none of the men selecting this team saw Michigan in action this year. McPhail of Dartmouth, Flanagan of Notre Dame, Presnell, of Nebraska, and Miles of Princeton formed the second team backfield of this team while Connor of N. Y. U., Hunt of Texas A. and M., Almquist of Minne- sota and Hoffman of Stanford finished the list of backs honored. These are commendable choices but there are omissions that can not be understood here-as else- where. Marsters, Spears, and Roepke are such. ... .. .. .. .. .... .. .. .. .. .. .. INCREASE SCOPE OF BODY Elmer D. Mitchell, director of in- tramural sports here, was elected president of the Intramural Directors association for a term of two years at thet recent coaches' meeting held at Chicago. George Berg, director of in- tramural sports at the University of Wisconsin, was elected vice-president and Dr. C. C. Molander, director of intramural athletics at the University of Chicago, was elected secretary and treasurer. Heretofore, the Intramural Direc- tors association has been exclusively for members of the Big Ten. At the recent meeting it was decided to al- low any university or college in the United States to be elected to mem- bership if they expressed a desire to participate. This innovation will make the Directors association a nation wide organization. The annual interfraternity wrestl- ing meet opened Monday night with 116 entries which is the largegt num- ber of men ever to compete in a meet of this kind. Seven weights of the eight were run off, the unlimited class being the only group that did not compete. Out of the 116 entries who wrestled in the first round, 70 remain for further competition. Phi Lambda Kappa won the inter- fraternity handball championship by defeating Phi Beta Delta, last year's winners, 2-1. This meet entitles the winners to 75 points oa the activities chart, and in addition they will re- ceive a trophy. I Miles Lane. - Sensational Dartmouth backfield ace who leads all other Eastern gridmen for 1927 scoring honors by a wide margin. Teamed with Marsters, sophomore find of Big Green team, Lane formed what was recognized as the greatest pair of halfbacks in Eastern grid circles. 'MOST SPORTS WRITERS HONOR THREE MICHIGAN GRID STARS ON TEAMS With the present mania for selecting mythical all-star teams by the foot- ball authorities 'and sport scribes, it is interesting to note wherein the writers agree on certain players while on others there is a wide di- vergence of opinion. Those men, iypon whom all the experts agree, probably are more deserving of positions on the mythcal teams than those who are chosen by only one or two writers. The Mchigan selections on various all-Conference teams follow: Walter Eckersall's - Oosterbaan, Baer and Gilbert. United Press-Oosterbaan, Ba-er and Gilbert. Red Grange's - Oosterbaan, Baer and Gilbert. Warren Brown's-Oosterbaan, Baer and Gilbert. Daily Iowan--Oosterbaan, Baer and Gilbert. Daily Illini-Oosterbaan and Baer. -Ohio State Lantern.- Oosterbaan, Baer and Gilbert. University of Iowa Coaches -Oost- erbaan, Baer and Gilbert. Michigan Daily-Oosterbaan, Baer, and Gilbert. Billy Evans'-Oosterbaan, Baer, and Gilbert. Harry Costello's-Oosterbaan, Baer and Gilbert. Big Ten Coaches-Oosterbaan, Baer and Gilbert. CAMBRIDGE- Arthur French, halfback, has been named captain the Crimson team for next season. HAWKEYES ADOPT PLAN FOR TWO GRID TEAMS FOR 1928 ENCOUNTERS (By Associated Press)I CHICAGO, Dec. 6-The two-teamf football system, long talked of .both in the Western conference and in other sections, is to become a reality in the Big Ten next fall, with Michi- gan taking the initiative. Iowa also has announced definite plans for a second team. Fielding H. Yost, director of ath- letics, and Dr. Clarence C. Little, President of Michigan, have announc- ed that games for the second Michi- gan team are being sought among bothoconference and non-Conference schools. As most conference teams have completed their 1928 schedules, and none has yet indicated any intention to follow the Michigan system, the two teams will be rated astfirst and second for the 1928 season, the Mich- igan authorities said, but eventually they are to be developed into two squads of equal power. S'ooner or later all the Big Ten schools will have at least a partial schedule for a second team, in the opinion o; Major J'ohn L. Griffith, ath- letic com ihissioner of the conference, for all the coaches and athletic di- rectors voted favorably on the sec- ond team plan when it was proposed last May. Some of the schools may try it out for only a game or two next fall, to see whether it works, Major Griffith said, but he felt that the in- centive it would give to larger num- ber of boys to come out for football would make the plai a, success. .."............. .................... HOCKEY CANDIDATES All candidates for the Varsity hockey team are requested to meet promptly at 7:30 o'clock tonight in room 306 at the Un- ion. W. G. Thilelman, Manager H The Social Season is Just Opening Up I There is still time to have your dinner jacket put in order- before you go home. I I Altering of Tuxedos a specialty t 7 a of ATLANTA-Centenary college ot Shreveport, Ga., is seeking a grid game with Nebraska next year. MADISON--Badger yearling swim- mers will compete in four telegraphic meets this season. ~j. 3 y' *t A Full Line of Whitehouse & Hardy Models On Display At GUY WOOLFOLK 336 South State Street Exclusive Lasts and Patterns Designed and Sold Only by WHITqEHUSE & HARDYmc BROADWAY AT 4TH STREEI 84 BROADWAY 144 WEST 42 "STREET METROPOLITAN OPERA HOUSE BUILDING AT WALL STREET KNICKERBQCKER BUILDING PHILADELPHIA-1511 CHESTNUT STREET ......................:1 OPEN EVENINGS MARK'S-THE TAILOR 105 S. 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