,.r . T LE MLC HJ :.AN DAILY. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1928 .7 rl I t, DO- OU'r. ¢ VARSITY SEASON CLOSES I T THRILLING COME BACK SCHEDULE MARKED BY HARD FOUGHT GAMES Basketball Squad Prepared For Michigan State Game IOWA GRID STARSI o rriTVr(ii iIT ATWOLVERINE HARRIERS onn inAn nr 1IT, 5S WIN'. season Officially Over After Bust Given Tonight By Detroit Aluixinae Grid VARSITY UPSETS DOPE While the 1928 ' Michigan grid team will not officially disband un- til after the annual Grid Bust which will be tendered the Varsity squad and coaches Saturday night at the Hotel Statler in Detroit, the spectacular Iowa game last Satur- day rang down the curtain on what has been. one of the most in- teresting and unusual, although not the most profitable seasons ex- perienced by a Wolverine eleven in some time.I Unprofitable both from the per- centage and scoring standpoints, the 1928 season has been featured by an unusual number of hard- fought and well played games. It has witnessed the climb of an ad- mittedly 'green' team imbued with remarkable fighting qualities from the very bottom of the heap to a place that commands the respect of every other school in the Big Ten. Illini Fall First The Wolverines 'killed their first giant' on Nov. 3, when the un- beaten Illini invaded the new sta- dium for the first time and were repulsed after a desperate battle, 3-0. This was the first time that the Zuppkemen had been defeated in two years and it remains the only reverse sustained by the pres- ent champions during 1928. I Another high-light of the season just closed was the colorful Navy contest in which Michigan gave another remarkable exhibition of her fighting qualities by coming back in the second half to register a touchdown after an uninterrupt. ed march .of ,miore, than 60 yards down the field to knot the score at 6-all and thus tie the con- querors of Penn, and the team that later handed the powerful Prince- ton eleven its only setback of the year. Iowa Game Upset But perhaps the greatest achievement of the 1928 aggrega- tion was the performance that closed the season, the defeat of the! Iowa team which was in line to win the Cnference title until two' weeks before the hotly contested' title race ended. Considering the facts that the Conference football teams as a whole have been much strongerI. this year year than usual, as is at- tested by the complexity of the championship race, and that the coaching staff was forced to de- velop an eleven from practically unexperienced material, the show- ing 'of the Wolverines has been commendable indeed.3 Three Regulars At Start 1 With only three 1927 regulars in the lineup, the Wolves opened the season with the veteran Ohio Wes- leyan team after three weeks of preliminary drill and were defeated 57-7' Director Fielding H. Yost termed thecBattling Bishops the mostformidable opponent a Mich- igan team had ever encountered in an opener. The Ohioans went through a very difficult schedule including Syracuse without a de- feat until last week when they lost a 7-6 decision to Wittenberg. 3 Pat Page brought the strongest combination that Indiana has boasted in recent years to Ann Arbor for the first Conference tilt and the Hoosiers annexed a 6-01 victory over the Wolverines in a bitterly contested battle. Wisconsin Defeats Wolves Wisconsin, a title contender un- til the final game of the year with Minnesota, downed Michigan for the first time in over a score of years in the closing minute of an impressive contest to hand the Wolves their fourth successive de- feat and thereby establish a record for straight losses. The Badgers were the last team to win at Michigan's expense, how- ever, and the lasiz four games saw (Continued on Page Seven) MAKE FASTSHIFT tYIJ1. I Itit UUI I TO BASKETBALL FIRST HOCKEY SSION IOWA CITY, Ia., Nov. 27.-Quick transfer from the football gridiron -- to the basketball court was accom- Seven Veterans As Well As Men Of plished by six University of Iowa Known Ability Report To athletes who will report for cage, Coach Lowrey drill Monday afternoon. Some forty-eight hours after the YEARLINGS MAY DE WEAKN gun shot ended the Iowa-Michigan I football game, those half dozen men remodeled their tactics to con- Coach Lowrey outlined the open-I form to basketball ethics. Coach ing program of the hockey season; Sam Barry has never before had as to the seventy candidates for thy many football men on his court varsity and freshmen hockey, squad. teams at the first meeting of the Mike Farroh, Michigan City, Ind., hckey squad in the Union Monday and Lawrence Reedquist, Ottumwa, g. Of the seventy players at are the two football first team men the meeting only about twelve who will bid for basketball fame. we tryouts for the freshmen Farroh, a 180-pounder, starred as a squads. blocking halfback on the Hawkeye While this seems, to point to a eleven, and in basketball is a fast weak yearlng team, it also gives guard. Reedquist, the sophomore an indication of the potential right end, also is a guard of skill. strength of the Varsity, as com- From kicking goals after touch- pared to the turnout last year down, Irving Nelson, Omaha, Neb., when a little more than half this will shift to making field goals number appeared for early prac- from the basketball floor. Nelson tice. The quantity and quality of is one of the finest sophomore for- material available for the hockey ward prospects. Two other foot- team makes it appear that this ball men who will play forward year's team should be one of the this winter are Paul Cummins, best in the history of Michigan. Cedar Rapids, member of the un- Seven Veterans Back beaten reserve football squad; and Seven veterans returning from George Rogge, Ida Grove, crack de- last year will give the squad valu- fensive end on the "B" team. able experience as well as furnish- Seward C. Leeka, Independence, ing considerable power and drive. Mo., will press Captain Francis In addition to these there are sev- Wilcox for the regular center posi- eral new men reporting this season tion. Leeka played halfback on the whose known ability has given reserve team. Coach Lowrey cause to be well sat- The Hawkeye basketball team, sified with the turnout at the first which has been drilling since Nov. meeting. 13, will open its season against The chief worry of Coach Lowrey South Dakota on the Iowa floor, was dispelled when it was found Dec. 8. that there were four goal tenders among the candidates. Due to losses last year the hockey horizon SENIOR LITS DEFEAT at Michigan was left barren of goal JUNIOR ENGINEERS TO tenders and as far as was known WTnone were about to appear, but WIN SPEEDBALL TITL from these four candidates Coach Lowrey hopes to develope at least The Inter-class speedball cham- one capable player. pionship rests this year with the Freshman Squad Small Senior literary class by virtue of Little is known as to the ability their 3-1 win over the Junior en- of the freshmen reporting for the gineering class. yearling squad and nothing can be The champions, whose personel definitely said until the candidates was composed of speedball stars are given a chance to show their from Sigma Alpha Mu and Theta wares in the ice after the opening Chi fraternities, played a first class of the Coliseum next week. brand of ball throughout the entire HQckey practice will begin on the tournament, climaxing their efforts night after theaformal opening of with a well deserved win over the new rink at the Coliseum ac- the Engineers. cording to Coach Lowrey. As far as In the consolation flight, the is known now the opening will take Sophomore literary class won a place not earlier than next Mon- close game from the Freshmen day because of delays in the test- Lits, giving them third place rating ing of the miles of pipe in the in the struggle. plant and possible readjustments This was the first season that the which may have to be made fol- Intramural department has seen lowing the test. fit to conduct this tournament by a straight elimination' process. The SOUTH BEND.-Ten games, the results this year however have majority of them on foreign grid- proved successful enough to in- irons, have been arranged for dicate that the system will be used Knute Rockne's Notre Dame team next year also. next fall. MISTAKEIN GOUNTING ' - Through an error in the scoring, Michigan was only given a tie for fourth place in the Big Ten cross D'Anna Wins First And Ruskin country meet, at Madison last Takes Second To Give Class Saturday, whereas the Wolverines Of '31 Lowest Total actually placed third behind In-- diana and Ohio State. Benson, the fPfthESS RT W N fifth Michigan man to finish, who took twenty-sixth place, was omit- ted from the scoring, Aubrey in After having been kicked around forty-first position being counted for a year or so as the underdogs as the last Wolverine entry. of the campus, the Sophomore Lits The feat of finishing ahead of pulled a surprise yesterday and such strong teams as Iowa, Wiscon- crashed into the winning column, sin, and':Illinois gives the 1928 when D'Anna, their entry in the Michigan team rank among the Inter-class cross-country meet, best ever turned out by Coach Far-- completed the three mile course in rell. Despite the loss of their 16:02 ehead of the rest of the: captain, Ted Wuerfel, who was un- field. able to compete due to an injured D'Anna, who was running his knee, the Wolverines came through second race in as many days, took to score 98 points for third place. the lead from the start and crossedj Randolph Monroe ran a good the finish line some 16 minutes race to finish among the leaders in later with no one having made a fifth position. Austin captured serious bid for his place during the fifteenth place, while Jesson was entire race. seventeenth, Grunow twenty- Ruskin Takes Second fourth, and Benson twenty-sixth. Ruskin also '31 Lit, who finished Dave Abbott, Illini star, set a fourth in the All-Campus race on new record for the five-mile Monday, came in second yesterday course, 26 minutes and 42 seconds, giving the sophomores the lowest, in spite of the cold weather. Mar- total of points and also the firstf tin of Purdue, Fields of Indiana win they have had since they en- and Anderson of Minnesota were tered the University and became the other runners to precede Mon- known as the class of '31 Lit. roe across the finish line. With the Intramural depart- Michigan scored 98 points in ment's method of scoring, D'Anna's gaining third place. Indiana an- winning alone would not have nexed the title, while Ohio State brought victory to his class in the was second with a total of 71. The event, but necessitated Ruskin's, Wisconsin harriers, who defeated who was the only other entry from the Wolverines in a dual meet, the class, finishing somewhere near were fourth at 110 points, while the head of the list, in order to in- Iowa, one of the favorites, took sure victory for their class. fifth with 112 points. '31 Architecture's Second HELDTO FOURT IBY Ur I U1IUiL LI I FOURTH ANNUAL |AT BADGER COACH .u CLINIC TO MEETSATE INIRST TILT (Special ToThe Daily) MADISON, Wis., Nov. 27.-The fourth annual Coaching Clinic of Veenkcr Directs Tentative Varsity the University of Wisconsin will be1 Five In Ing Scrimmage held here on Friday and Saturday,' Against Reserves Dec. 14 and 15. These dates were announced today by Fred Evans of TOUGItI GAMES SC EDULED the Badger athletic department who is in charge of the meeting. With Michigan's first encounter Three years ago the plan was of the season, a tilt with the ex- conceived, whereby Wisconsin en- I perienced Michigan State team, less tertained all of the high school and I than ten days away, Coach Veen- 'minor college coaches of the state ker sent a tentative Varsity five at a w e e k - e n d convocation. through a long scrimmage yester- Speeches and demonstrations were day afternoon, eight men seeing given by individuals on the athletic action on the first team during the staff, with no charge to those phys- two twenty-minute halves. ical education directors and Coach Veenker, withW one of the coaches attending. stiffest cards ever scheduled for a Each year the Clinic has grown in popularity until at the 1927 ses- sion a record attendance of 131 was realized. Evans anticipates a great- er turnout next month, however, and plans are being made to take care of 400 men at the Friday night supper and round-table discussion. Glenn Thistlethwaite's lecture on "Team Play and Organization" will I be one of the features, coming on the heels of the Badgers' success- ful football season. George Little will speak on "Intramural Ath- letics as an Aid to Better Athletic Teams," a subject upon which he is exceptionally well versed. The guests will witness the Wis- consin varsity cage team in scrim-I mage, followed by a basketball dis- cussion by the well-known short- pass coach, Dr. Walter E. Meanwell. Coaches Jones, Lowman and Stein- auer are scheduled to outline- phases of their particular sports; track, baseball and swimming. Art Masley will have as his sub-1 ject, "Corrective Gymnastics in the High Schools," while Robt. Nohr will explain the ideal physical edu- cation system for the smaller' school. The other speakers will be L. B. Allison, Tom Lieb and Bill Fallon, who will discuss football technique and training methods. Subscribe for the Michiganensian now. It costs only $4.00, the course in the first position. 4 This afternoon at 4:30 the All- Freshman cross-country harriersI will meet over the same course. Michigan teAm, in prospect, is faced with the problem of finding two men to replace Captain Harrigan and Oosterbaan, who scored more than half of the total points dur- ing the past season. The three of last year's regulars available for the team, Captain McCoy, Orwig, and Chapman, re- sumed their places at guard, for- ward and center respectively on the first five, while Rose, a letterman from last year, filled the forward position opposite Orwig, and Bar- ley, a 1928 squad member, was at the other guard post. Truslcowski, a veteran of two year's ago, and Kanitz and Myron, two members of last year's "B" team, were also inserted into the Varsity lineup. The Varsity squad, strengthened by the addition of three men from the Varsity football squad, Captain McCoy, Orwig, and Truskowski, and several members of other of the grid teams, who reported for the first time early this week, now numbers 26. The Maize and Blue basketball schedule for 1928-29 includes sev- eral hard early season engage- ments with eastern fives, besides home and home engagements with six of the Conference teams. The Spartans will bring a strong team here .for the first game of the season on Dec. 7, made up of the same five regulars who played for Michigan State last year. The Pennsylvania five, holder of the Eastern Intercollegiate cham- pionship, will provide the Wolver- (Continued on Page Seven) T c I I f ' l ; I ] It !3 JESS HAWLEY AGAINST CHANGE IN GRIDIRON RULES FOR NEXT YEARI However O'Brien in finishing third gave the class of '31A, second place in the meet,. while Conger's placing fifth enabled the Freshman Lits to capture third honors. T)'cmAnnn' v±Iinry w~uiea lor n 1 D)Anna's victory was a clear cut (By Associated Press) one and deserved. It was this di- CHICAGO, Nov. 27.-Jess Haw-' minutive runner whose last mo- ley, Dartmouth College coach, be- ment sprint all but carried him lieves the present football rules are I over the line, the winner in last ;o good they should not be altered. l week's Inter-fraternity meet. Mon- "Leave the rules alone," Hawley day of this week he tried again in said. "They are fine as they are, the All-Campus race, and though both from the spectators' angle, lowering his time of the previous that of the players and the I week by about a minute, he fell coaches." short again by inches to complete Let the ParrOt Make You Feel at -y HOme on STREET Thanksgiving Day. Special Turkey Dinner with trimmings $1.50 ~ Served from 12 to 8 SPECIAL DANCE MUSIC -- . . . .. z,._ .. . ,. r Prerequ--isite FOR THE PAN-HELLENIC BALL FORMAL ATTIRE May we show you the correct Tuxedo and Accessories, the I7O,.L N1ARK RE6AU.S.PAT QIT eive5 rlhh WeAre Thankful to the many students, both men and women, of the University. We feel we owe a debt of gratitude for our past success, and hope by constantly respecting your demands, to be even better able to serve you. WALES Six ways 10.00 Seasonal Shoes Ensemble of which conveys a distinctive air of discrimination. The Tuxedo *4O DOWNTOWN SHOP S I U