THE MICHIGAN DAILY . ............a1_Y ITY SQUAD TO HOLD TIIIRD J Ri f Tr 'h o )h Le) e a 14 rimi To Tean ons lln m the ,noon his p: Limr )n of io xt mes. Yest en w PfAIr PITT PANTHERS WILLI VERI E LDUFWIE STRESS Bc(N AND "a SARN DY ~ji II~NI~OPEN SEAS ON TODAY R D~hWS NWITH THIEL COLLEGE CHAR ING AS SEASON OPENER DRAWS NEAR F"" PE Se PITTSBURGH, Pa., Sept. 29.-- mage Today will: Have Much - Final arrangements are nearing3 do With Opening Line-ups BASEBALL SCORES completion for the. opening Pittl For Next Saturday Fo AuPanther tussle with Thiel College1 IIAmerican League ( in the Pittsburgh stadium this Sat- XS RECEIVE PUNTS.I: .New York .401 300 02 1-1 11 2 urday. Detroit .. . .100 000 203- 6 9 40 Although the initial game for the ms representing the two divi- Pipgrass and Bengough; Gib- i Panther gridders has always been of the Varsity football squad son and Hargraves. regarded as a warift-up tilt, Coach Leet in the third scrimmage )Wash.....100100 010-3 7 3 Sutherland expects a relative hard year at 4:00 o'clock this aft- St. Louis...200 00101x-4 8 0 jtest from Coach Holleran and his 1 on the Ferry field gridiron. Braxton and Ruel; Crowder Sutherland is still in doubt con- ractice tilt will probably, be and Manion. cerning his starting lineup. Ray portant factor in the selec- IjI Montgomery, Wheeling, W. Va., boy, f the teams that will face I National League may be moved over to the center WesleyCan and Mount Union hicago .k . .01020 003-7 -13 0 position, and Charles Tulley, also Saturday i:the ninYrk.. 2 2-14 of Wheeling, brought up from the j ay in e opening Bush and Hartnett; Benton j second team to fill Montgomery's1 I Hogan. I place at left tackle. Coach Suther- erday's drill for the group of~( Boston ......200 100 000 000 000 ( land will not announce his varsity vorking on Ferry field under - 3 11 2,1 eleven until game time Saturday. ipervision of Coaches Yost',St. Louis 000 002 001 000 007 n, Cappon and Veenker con- Lou ' 0 TULANE UNIVERSITY. - Mem- largely'of a long practice in: I -10 10 1 I bers of the Aero club plan to form ig and charging. Capponand.| Alexander and Wilson; R. a party to welcome Ruth Elder on er instructed the ends and Smith and Spohrer. I the occasion of her visit to New of the backs in the art of jOrleans this week. I SVAN WIE MEETS TARS. HURD IN SEMI - FOREL FINALS AT HOT SPRINGS IHOT SPRINGS, Va., Sept. 29,- Bergelin, Ward, Ahlstrom Among Entries Who Will Make Bids For Championship Nineteen years ago Mrs. Dorothy Campbell Hurd of Philadelphia, 'e su iema sted oekin enke me c ir was a golf celebrity, champion of TO PLAY AT WASHETENAW the United States, Great Britain3 and Canada. Miss Virginia Van Entries in the annual all-campus Wie, of Chicago, was waiting to golf tourney will begin play next, celebrate her first birthday, still Tuesday over the Washtenaw some six months distant. course in an effort to qualify for the university championship flight.!Ta h hlaepi oa Indications arethat the field will three times American champion, be one of the strongest ever to found the way to her fourth title compete in the tournament. blocked in the semi-final round Johnny Bergelin, captain of the by Miss Van Wie. The veteran Varsity golf team, Dave Ward, still possessed her remarkable vi-I former Michigan amateur cham- tality and skill, while Miss Vanl pion, and Art Ahlstrom, 1928 letter- Wie plays a game well worthy of man, will be among the contest- an American champion. ants. Goodwin, Hobart, and Liv- Glenna Collett, the Providence ingston all should make serious girl hits a golf ball like a man and bids for the title. Among the fresh- putts with a delicate touch, op- men Lenfesting, Pruyn, Calhoun, posed Mrs. George H. Stetson, of and Whyte appear to have the best Philadelphia, in the lower bracket. oppotrunity to share the honors. Miss Collett is seeking her third! Three days, beginning Tuesday, title, while Mrs. Stetson would will be allowed the contestants to hold the honor for a second time qualify. The 16 low scores for 36 should she win the championship. holes will compete in the cham- pionship flight. The qualifiers will then engage in match play over intramuralDepartme 18 holes until the finals are re- ceived. The two finalists will then SixS meet in a 36-hole match for the title. To the winner will go a tiophy With the beginning of the new presented by the Athletic associa-!year the intramural department is tion. Addison Connor, the win- launching a program which is per last fall, will not defend his destined to be crowded with activi- title, due to graduation. Two other ties as' never before in its history. golf veterans were lost in June with The completition of the new In- the department of Al Vyse and tramural building will serve to Ralph Cole. bring about the realization of the The Washtenaw layout is consid- department motto "every man in ered one of the best courses iq athletics." Michigan. Its great length, over Notices have been sent to the 6,700 yards, makes the par 72 a:;fraternities announcing the sports difficult figure to achieve. The in which competition will be held Michigan amateur championship this year. Speedball will be the was held over the course in 1927. 1 first sport to be run off on the fall I uoci ng ouL icomingtackles, rhile Wieman showed his linesmen- ow to charge in and stop the unner. In thle meantime, Coach Yost, as working with his corps of tickers at the other end of the eld. Bator, Holmes, Rich, Straub, nd- Simerall all- took,. turns at. unting, while Straub also concen- ated on receiving punts. Draveling Turns Punter During the afternoon's workout oach Yost noticed that Leo raveling, end candidate who has een out of the heavy work for the ast two weeks with an injured houlder, was getting off some long unts. After a few instructions ncerning his form in kicking, ravelingtook a regular turn with le other kickers and sent a num- er of 50-yard punts spiraling :wn. the field. Signal practice closed the day's orkout with Draveling and Corn- all, ends; Cragin and Williams, ickles; Pommerening and Steinke, iards; Brown, center; Straub, uarter; Rich and Bator, halves; nd Gembis, full, comprising one am. Truskowski and Orwig, ids; Poorman and Kubicek, ckles; Gitman and Poe, guards; ovard, center; Holmes at quarter; very and Dansby at halves, and ozer, full, formed the other out- The Red: squad concentrated its forts on blocking and; tackling, id- the practice closed with a rimmage near the goal lines. Big Ten Coaches Drop Fundamentals. To Practice On Advance Formations With Big Ten football squads nearing the completion of their second week of practice, most of. the Conference grid mentors have relegated- drills on fundamentals and tackling and blocking to the background to make room for scrimmages, signals practice, and long workouts on forward passing formations. Pat Page, entering upon his third year at Indiana, seems just about set to spring a real surprise with 19 of his 25 lettermen returning for service. "Rags" Mathews, a veter- an guard who was accorded high honors at the close of the 1927 season, will be back directing his team's defense, and should be among the best linemen in the Cenference. The Hoosier mentor's most serious difficulty seems to be picking two teams to meet Wabash and Indiana State in the double- header at Bloomington today. At least three coaches have de- voted two or more practice sessions to the perfection of an aerial at- tack. Coach Spears sent the Gop- her gridmen through two long drills in forward passing offense and defense, and uncovered at least several good prospects. Norgaard, sophomore end, appeared the class of the receivers, snaring several long tossed for good gains against Varsity, while Hovde, veteran quar- ter, ntercepted a number of passes for long runs. With Westphal and Kirk still ineligible, the present Minnesota first string backfield consists of Nazurki at fullback, Brockemeyer and Burdick at the halves.and Hovde calling signals. Coach Phelan of Purdue also un- covered a star pass receiver in the person of Bill Woerner diminutive end, at the same time temporarily losing Leon Hutton, veteran Purdue wingman, who is in the hospital with an infected foot. The first team held a long signal practice on plays to be used against DePauw in the opening game a week from to- day. The Wildcats have been going through long drills . under Coach Hanley in an effort to bolster last year's weak aerial: attack and to find a mate for Tommy Verdell, veteran end. Four sophomores, Oliphant, Egbert, Baker, and Woodworth appear the most likely candidates for the other wing po- sition, though there is a possibility that Rut Walters, basketball and track star, who has been showing well at one of the flanks, may add his speed to the Purple line. l r. t 1 n L t r. t t e 6 c v -, MILLER 6 - nt Will Include rogramFor This Fall program. After that will come dual swimming, handball, cross country, wrestling and water polo. All entries must be made before October 1. The intramural department is also conducting the tests for can- didates for Sigma Delta Psi, na- tional honorary athletic fraternity!' These tests ,will be held on the track Monday, Tuesday and Wed- nesday afternoons from 4 to 5:30, under the direction of Claude Snarey. Thirty-two Michigan men have passed the requirements for this fraternity. CHICAGO HOPES DASHED (Continued from Page One) yield. The Hugmen regained the lead and broke the back of the Athletic drive by taking three out of four to run their season record against hte challenge to, sixteen victories and only 6 defeats. Whlie the Yankees were clinch- ing the flag by trouncing Detroit 11 to 6, the Giants sank to two full games behind the Cardinals in the National circuit. The ornery Cubs were responsible since they upset New York 7 to 5 while the' St. Louis club was going, through a 15-inning struggle with the lowly Braves. Trottled effectively for 14 long innings, the Cardinal war clubs broke loose with a roar in the last evertime frame and before the bodies of the Braves team were re- covered the league leaders had tal- lied seven runs to win the long game, 10 to 3. The veteran Alex- ander hurled for the onrushing Cards and was nicked for 11 safe- ties, one more than the victors ac- cumulated off Smith, the Boston moundsman. While not eliminated from the race, the chances of the Giants pulling out ahead are now slight. Bush proved to be an obstacle to the New York clubbers while the ace of the Giants staff, Benton, was not good enough to stop the Cubs. Betty B. Pinkston of Detroit, win- ner of the high diving contest at the Amsterdam Olympiad, has re- turned to the United States with the champion American team. .. ; . th-hminAeia em ... f e + WU1E&COMPAHY Jor men c S ince 1f4 Trench Coats - $8 A rubberized waterproof coat as practical as a slicker $10 Our famous "Big Ten" coat, a genuine cravenetted gaberdine $15 Fine gaberdines with rubber- . I ized and flannel linings t $20 , An extra fine lined gaberdine $27.50 De Luxe gaberdine with detachable wool lining, slicker interlined, 1