TH MICH-IGAN DTA T PREDAY. OCTOOM 24, 1930 s. a 1 7a - - -.------V - -r e- d OE COX IBANI[1 QUARTET OF NOTRE DAME ( llX d ll ll~ll~BRUNT OF PITT PAN Kipke Unlikely to Use This Triog Unless Substitutes Fail I to Perform Well. 1 g BACKFIELD UNCHANGEDx Coach Harry Kipke sent his Maize and Blue gridmen through another" 'f secret d rill period yesterday after- noon for the next to last time before they face the Illini pigskin toters Saturday. The Varsity went through r the usual workout on Ferry Field F SEE ACTION TOMORROw RIDDERS BEARING S AACK TOMORROWI Ga aRJD U. an gi ha IV, fl no a s03 Sir by Joe Russell. In the 15 games which Michigan nd Illinois have waged on the ridiron since 1898, the Wolverines ave won 10 while the Illini have alked off the field victorious after ve of them. Strangely enough one of. the battles have ended in tie. The winner of the game to- orrow will break a tie which has xisted since 1919 since each of the hools have won five set-tos apiece Lnce that year. The Indians have the advant- until 4:30 when they retired to the Field House, evidently for a chalk talk. The injuries that had been report- ed may, not prove serious enough to keep the men out of the game altogether, but surely out of the starting line-up. Auer will be re- leased from the hospital today with a recommendation from the doctor that he does not play. Cox's case rests in the hands of the trainers who take him in hand tomorrow and what they report will decide whether he sees action or not. Dan- iels seems to be in good enough condition to be pressed into service- if it proves necessary tomorrow. j Substitutes to Start. The men that will start in the vacated positions, Williams, Hozer, and Purdum, are ill equally as goodI nern, although Hozer may prove1 ,hort on the re- :;..ceiving end ofI x ?asses, and the Dpening line - up will be a strong -ne. The danger for Michigan will lie in the fact1 that the reservec strength is not allt La Jeunesse that the c o a c h would like it to be. > The remainder of the line will be Samuels at tackle with his hand ready for rough work, Cornwell ata one guard, and La Jeunesse holdinga down the place left open by shiftig Stan Hozer to end. La Jeunesse has n been on the field with the Varsity R other times and he starts with the t probability that he will continue for f the greater part of the game. Backfield Unchanged. The backfield will not be changed h with Newman, Simrall, Wheeler and Huds'on forming a fasi, brainy, and tough combination to worry the Ill- inois football squad. This bunch is expected to tear the Suckers' line d defense up for another Wolverine victory since the showing that the two teams made last week. Michi- gan mopped up Ohio State who has no mediocre team, and Illinois took a beating from Northwestern when the Wildcats were supposed to be weakened. The Orange and Blue team will arrive today sometime in the morn- ing and are expected to drill in the stadium before noon. Then they will withdraw to Ypsilanti until just before the game. THENEW $750 v .. Ax, tS d 01 v cQ xv''Sn ED.'F h\ ur wyrw n k " . . JOE SA\/ .1 r, '. .{-.. .. ...may a s' 1 iw.YS - ! wr Track Team Lacks Broad, Hi - jumpers Lack of outstanding material in the jumps, both high and broad,I seems to be the main difficulty that Coach Chuck Hoyt is encountering in the molding of the Varsity track team for the coming season. Several men are working out every night in the events, but as yet they have evidenced no out- standing ability. Keller, Willson, Noyes, and Clark are out at present in the hi-jumps. Van Aiken and Cox will also be available after the grid season is over. These two are, considered the best prospects at. present. A call for material in these events has been issued by Coach Hoyt. Among the other men who are training for the weight events is William Marshall who was a mem- ber of the frosh squad two years ago. Marshall can heave the shot around 43 feet at present. Brooks who took second place in the Con- ference last year is also putting in some training time. Hurdle men who have reported thus far are Eggleston, Haefele, Blumenfeld, and Jackson. They are practicing two nights per week in the field house. age in points in these games however. Frank Steketete won the game in 1921 with a place- kick and Benny Friedman re- peated this feat again in 1924. Joe Gembis defeated Ilinois in 1928 via the same route when his educated toe booted the ball between the posts, just before Frosty Petcrs bounce7 a long place-kick off the bar for what would have been the tEicig score had the kick been an inch longer. Illinois has yet to make a place-kick against the Wolv- crines. Not since 1924 when Red Grange ran wild to lead his team to a 39-14 win has either team been able to pile up more than 14 points, and both times it has been the eleven from Champaign which has counted twice from the field and added both points after touch- down. However in 1926 the Maize and Blue rolled up 13 points to nothing for Illinois. The 39 points which Illinois accumulated in 1924 is the highest score which either team has made in the annual game,j although Michigan won 33-0 in 1905 and Illinois took a 29-7 deci- sion in 1919. Not a man who started the Illinois - Michigan game last year will be in the opening li up at thie kick-off tomorrow, although several of the men who are slated to start played in the 14-0 win which Zuppke's team took last year. Yanushus, Root, Robinson, Chattin, and Evans in the backfield and Schumacher, Hills, Bodman, and Huddelston on the line were subs last season and saw service in the Michigan game. However the Illinois sophomores of last year were sent around the Big Ten with the B team to gain (Continued on Page 7) Evenly Matched Junior Elevens Expected to Engage in Close Tilt. THIRD BIG TEN CONTEST Michigan's Junior Varsity foot- ball team, with a record of one vic- tory and one tie in its two Con- ference games to date, left for Champaign at 9 o'clock last night for its third Big Ten battle of the season tomorrow this time with the strong "B" team of Illinois. As both the Illini and Wolverine reserve elevens boast victories over last year's champions, the Indiana Cubs, a close battle is expected to result when the two teams clash. Michigan's margin of victory over the Hoosiers was a little less than that of the Suckers, however; the Wolverines gaining a 10-7 victory, while the Illini Reserves beat the same team, 12-7. Michigan will enter the game I with only one injury to any mem- ber of the squad. Frisk, a veteran tackle, still feels the effects of his injury of several weeks ago, but it is expected that he will be able to play a part against the Illnois team, even if it is not for the whole game. The rest of the team is in first class condition for the Illini tilt, and their condition may be a telling factor in the outcome of the game. The same line-up that faced Ohio State is likely to be called upon to (Continued on Page Seven.) MONROt LUNCH Corner Monroe and Oakland Your Neighborhood Restaurant Dinner 40c and 50c ENTRIES TO CLOSE Wisconsin Prepares FOR CLASS TEAMS forStiff Contest As a result of the ianterest and I With Boilermakers keen competition displayed in 1en r interclass athletics last year, the Intramural department is antici- J.ic cl to The ihaily) pating another successful season MADISON, Wis., Oct. 23.-Realiz- alngthislineiling that in Purdue Wisconsin will winners in class sports last yearl face a team that is famed for its wners meJuiosEgpers. yeaI ability to grasp scoring opportuni- were the Junior Engineers, ties at the very start, Coach Glen Tpeedball is the first activity Thistlethwaite is devoting consider- listed on this season's programme, able time to defensive preparation with play scheduled to start on for the game with the Boilermakers. October 28.Thus far six teams IBadger scouts have reported that haversignedup. RenTzvou rsxCteu Purdue is an alert team, not unlike ha-ye signed up: Rendezvouis Club, the eleven that won the conference '34 Lit, under the management of title last fall. Messner; Senior Lits, Klivans, man- The Boilermakers have earned a ager; Frosh Lits, Arnheim, man- reputation for rapid-fire scoring be- ager; Frosh Physical Eds, Armi- fore the game is many minutes old. ~ger;In 1928, the Boilermakers rushed shaw, manager; Soph Lits, Epps, over two touchdowns in succession manager; and Soph Engineers, early in the first quarter at Lafay- Redniss, manager. Many more ette, catching the Cardinal team by teams are expected to sign up be- surprise. Wisconsin had all it could r " __t - 1 L, n When Coach Knute Rockne's Irish eleven invades the Pitt Sta- dium tomorrow to take on the Pitt Panthers, sporting enthusiasts from all sections of the country willj focus their attention on this con- test as one of the outstanding grid encounters of the 1930 season. Frank Carideo, Rambler veteran. will pilot his team and Brill and Savoldi will be given an opportun- ity to show their wares in the line of spinners, reverses, line smashes, and criss-cross plays. Kosky plays an end position. 1, THE FINEST HUMAN HANDS CAN ACHIEVE II !i II 14 ill P ,W I i on the Campus College men who know what to wear and how to wear it choose Alligator "50"- the new College Coat. , Alligator "50" is a smart double-breasted raglan-long-full- cut-roomy-full-belted, with big I a 1111 1111 III' ti "