THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY,( GIVEN DRILL ON FORWARD SPASS 11111# 1 1111lltl t [11 " ' " " " " " " " " " " " " " " " " " ' " " ' " " " " " ""t t' " " " " " " " " ""ttga t yEEtlf t E1111 tt[ - Y GRID B T S a"U By Morris Quinni-I When Coach Glen Thistleth- sive practice to improve their waite's Badgers invade the Wolver- open field running. Wisconsin Will Have ine lair Saturday afternoon it will Two Trial Cross-C be the sixteenth encounter between j It was announced Monday by This Fa the Wisconsin and Michigan grid Harry Tillotson, business manager teams, and this long gridiron his- of the athletic association that TEN RUNNERS tory extends over a period of 36 seats are still available for theI_ T O D GPHER LINEMAN DRAWSPLAUDITS Advantage Of .ountry Meets ;.< WOLVERINE HAP RI ERS UILL MEET BADGERS Victories Over Mount Union And Ohio State Add Confidehce For Badger Clash a ON SQUAD years. game Saturday. The Wolverines hold a de- cided edge over their Badger rivals in the series, having won 12 of the 15 games played thus far, while the contest of 1920 resulted in a tie. In the first meeting between these two old rivals, Michigan was returned the victor by a 10-6 count.; That was in 1892, but Wisconsin more than evened the score in 1893, winning 34-18 and again in 1899, when the score was 17-5. Badger supremacy ended in 1922, when Wisconsin won her last victory over a Michigan team, 17-6. Stncethat time the Maize and Blue gridmnen have always been on the long end of the score. It is likewise interesting to note that Wisconsin has never scored al shutout in a game with Michigan, while the Wolves have turned the trick seven times. Four of the blanks issued by Maize and Blue outfits have been consecutive, ex- tending since 1924. After being rather abruptly jarred in his title quest last Saturday when Purdue held, the Badgers to a tie score, C o a c h Glen Thistlethwaite lpromises se v e r al drastic changes in the lineup that will face the Wilverines this week end. Present indircations seem to point to a capacity crowd of 72,040 in the permanent seat- ing section, but if there is aE greater demand for tickets, the temporary seats will be made available. Michigan's third straight loss of the season to Ohio State Saturday equalled the formi ncrecord for con- secutive reverses which dates from 1915, when the Wolverines dropped three in a row before playing a scoreless tie with Pennsylvania. Unless the Wolves make good in their attempt to come back against Wisconsin, a new rec- ord of consecutive set-backs will be established. The leanest of Michigan's lean years was 1915 when the Wolver- ines lost to State 24-0; Syracuse, 14-7; Cornell, 34-7; and ended the season by playing a scoreless tie with Pennsylvania. Other years in the Maize and Blue grid history that fall in this category are 1899, 1900, 1910, 1911, and 1916. Having completed four weeks of preliminary drill with three mile trial run against the freshman cross-country team Saturday,' Coach Steve Farrell's Wolverine harriers are turning their attention1 this week to the task of preparing1 for the initial dual aneet of the' year Saturday morning with Wis- consin. The Badgers will have the ad- vantage of two trial meets this fall before they encountered their first Conference, while Coach Farrell's charges have confined their effortsI to weekly trial runs and the Var- sity-freshman meet of last week. A victory over Notre Dame in the first neet of the season two weeks ago, stamps the Cardinal harriers as a title con again this season. Last November the Wisconsin team annexed its fifth consecutive Con- ference cross-country champion- ship after going through its dual meet season without suffering a single reverse. While the Badger coach lost a pair of capable veterans in Petaja and Bulamore, he has two experi- enced. men as a nucleus for this year's team in Burges and Fink, both of whom finished fairly welll up in the last in the Big Ten meet last fall. The remainder of the invading teams will be composed of seven of the most promising sophomores on the Varsity squad, Moe, Wixen, Dil- ley, Fulsom, Hoffman, O'Cock, and Schroder. Coach Farrell has selected the first 10 Varsity men to cross the1 finish line in the meet with the freshman Saturday to represent Michigan in the initial engage- ment of the 1928 season. Of this number eight were numbered among the members of the Varsity squad last fall. Captain Ted Wuerfel, who led the field to the tape in the three mile run Saturday, negotiated the dis-1 tance in 18:55 which is considered remarkable time, as the athletes{ were forced to run on roads that were heavy with mud. This is :22 faster than the time made a year ago over the same course in dryI weather.- In addition to Wuerfel, Michigan' (Continued on Page 7) . Ii While the exact makeup of the c team will be held secret until the inen, take the field Saturday after- I noon, the Wisconsin coach is de- termined to remedy the glaring weaknesses uncovered in the game] with the Boilermakers. Although continued rainsI threatened to halt Monday's outdoor practice, Coach Tom l Lieb spent a long time in drill- ing his linemen in blocking and charging, while the backs were sent through an inten-E DEFEAT STALKS MAJOR ELEVENS The first of the one-time Big Three to fall this season, Harvard. lost to a superior Army eleven, 15-0, last Saturday. The Cadets profited by Crimson misplays, while Cagel and Murrell gained ground l consistently. Princeton kept its goal line uncrossed by trouncing Lehigh, 47-0, while Yale, headed by Johnny Garvey, smothered Brown, 32-14. Dartmouth won from Columbia, 21-7, despite the fact that Al Mars- ters, star back, watched the game, from the sidelines. Navy scored its initial victory in four games when Lloyd brought the Middies a 6-0 victory over Duke. Pennsylvania avenged last year's defeat by down- ing Penn State, 14-0, Paul Scull running 74 yards for one of the scores. Capt. George Gibson Steller Minnesota tackle who willj lead his team against one of the. most formidable Big Ten outfits Saturday when the Gophers meet Iowa. Unfavorable Weather Retards All Campus Tennis Tournaments Play in the fall All-Campus ten- nis tournament has been exceed- ingly slow this year due to the inclement weather conditions. Sin-, gles have moved along with great- er rapidity than the doubles though, three of the quarter final- ists already having been deter- mined. In the doubles a much smaller' draw has been recorded and the intramural solons are not so con- cerned. Two matches have yet to be played in this tourney to even the teams up. Riendell, Cole, Brace, Fishkin, and Duxendury have reached the fourth round in the singles com- petition and are awaiting the re- sults of the more slothful com- petitors. In the quarter final matches Reindell, will meet the winner of the Kimball-Hipsh en- counter, Fishkin meets the win- ner of the Roethke-Gudelsky match, Dusenburz will cross rackets with either Beal of Ryan, while Brace will play Cole. In the singles, Brace, Riendel, and Fishkin seem the ranking fa- vorites and unless one, of these (Continued on Page 7) DRILL ON TRICK PLAYS Michigan's Junior Varsity, vic- tors over the Ohio State reserves last Saturday by a 3-0 score, will attempt to gain their second Con- ference win when they invade Camp Randall field this Saturday to meet the Wisconsin "B" eleven while the Varsity plays host to the first string Badgers in the Stadium. The Maize and Blue reserves have won two games and lost one so far this year, meeting defeat in the hands of the strong Michigan State Normal squad, 25-3. Mount Union lost to the "B" team, 14-0, while a field goal by Hughes in the final period gave the Junior Var- sity a 3-0 victory over the Buckeye reserves in a hard fought battle last Saturday. The "B" team will be handicap- ped by the loss of Sherwood, star center, who has beenrtransfered to the " A" squad. Sherwood was a large factor in the success of the Wolverine line smashing attack, which gained the Wolverines 10 first downs against Ohio while the' Buckeyes were forced to be content with two, one of which was made through the air. Ohio's attack was completely stopped by the Wolverines, the Buckeyes being unable to gain through the line, while of 19 passes tried, the Scarlet and Gray com- pleted but one, four being ipter- cepted. The Junior Varsity spent yester- day's practice period scrimmag- ing the freshman first and second elevens, taking the ball on offense against the yearlings. The lineup was the same as that of last Satur- day with the exception of the cen- ter position, where Cook replaced the absent Sherwood. Although held to almost no gain during the first part of the scrim- mage, the "B" team's attack finally started functioning, and a series of line plays intermixed with passes drove the freshmen up and down the field. Coaches Courtwright and Brown paid special attention to trick for- mations of the Reserves, which were gone through several times. Is F 1 . t; Fall Sports Appare For those morning or twilight r .i d e s, our Riding Breeches are the finished touch to a perfect ensemble. $6and$7 KNIT SPORT SHIRTS warm and not bulky in three plain colors- $5 GOLF HOSE AND KNICKERS priced reasonably and a goodly stock of each come in flC~WJNITCtWJM ~T-TC~P