THE MICHIGAN DAILY_ VARSITY TO BATTLE td a A .a F " yex fl AT COLUMI I JURIES DEPLETE RENGTH OF B'S R GAME TODAY . .. Michigan Harriers Will Open Season This Morni DIMINUTIVE BACK OF JAYVEE SQUAD tinespring, W. Heston, Renner Lost to Juniors Through Injuries. TEAMS RATED EVEN indsay Slated for Quarterback Post; Schmidt to Fill Fullback Berth. While the Michigan Varsity is itertaining Ohio State's regulars day, the junior varsity team will urney to Columbus to do battle ith the Buckeye seconds in their vn lair. Twenty-one men left st night with Coach Courtright ir the annual affair with the tra- .tional foe. Last minute announcement yes- rday made it clear that the serv- es of Stinespring, Willie Heston, nd Renner would be lost to the- tuad this week-end due to injur- s. They will not make the trip. Injuries Hurt Wolves. While .Courtright will not have squad equaling in strength that hich upset Western State here £st Saturday, 19-0, he will have a tuch snappier selection of grid ten than the team which battled he Bucks to a scoreless tie last ear on the Ferry field gridiron uring a raging snow storm. Kipke keeping the best/talent here in he 36 men he has selected to adorn he Stadium benches. Ohio State B's" had the misfortune, but not, ny attached discredit, of dropping heir opening game to Michigan 'ormal last week, 27-0. Lindsay will be given the job of iloting the team today in an effort o turn in a win. He will receive ble support in the back field from remen and Hayes at the halves nd Herb Schmidt at full. Savage, Conover at Guards. The probable Lineup along the orward wall will include Kelley nd Stone on the flanks, Clohset nd Damm at the tackles, with onover and Savage in the guard ositions. Winston, will handle the a who are making the Shick, center; Sikken- .dman, guards; Miller, nd MaGuire, tackles; Hazen, ends; Childs; Although the Buckeye took a beating from the Ypsi team, they will be no such pushover for the Maize and Blue youngsters. As far as all advance dope is concerned, the two elevens appear to be on a par as far as actual strength is concerned. The two lines match up fairly even as to weight and both have power in the backfield. Schmidt Highly Rated. Schmidt, the Michigan fullback, should add several good gains' to the Wolves' total yardage before the game is over. He showed to ad- vantage in the Mt. Pleasant game, scoring one touchdown, despite his habit of carrying the ball directly in front of him in such a manner that opposing backs can easily re- move the, ball. CRUCIAL CONTESTS FEATURE GRID CARD Expect Harvard-Army to Wage) Great Aerial Duel; Notre Dame Meets Drake. HRRYP F STYV5PR/NQG Harry Stinespring, tiny backfield threat of the Michigan jayvees, whose injuries will keep him out of the game with Ohio State reserves at Columbus, although he may make the trip with his teammates. WILDCAT, HIAG .0 TACKLE OUSIER Northwestern Plays California, Maroons to Meet Yale at Chicago. Chicago will be the scene of two intersectional grid classics this af- ternoon when its two representa- tives, Northwestern and the Ma- roons, in the Big Ten play host to both the east and far west. Coach Dick Hanley's Wildcats will meet the University of California at Los Angeles in Dyche stadium, while Stagg's team will encounter Yale on the Midway. The University of Wisconsin will engage Noble Kizer's Purdue eleven in Madison in one of the two Con- ference contests outside of the Wolverine-Buckeye battle. Indiana wilf oppose the University of Iowa at Iowa City in the other all Big Ten game. Bob Zuppks Illini will have an easy day meeting Bradley on the Urbana field. Minnesota is the only member of the Conference having an open date. Chicago Optimistic. A spirit, of optimism prevails on the Chicago campus, according to press dispatches. On edge for the game, Chicago, by holding Michi- gan to a 13 to 7 score here last Sat- urday, is confident that the Mid- west will add another Eastern rival to its list. A large part of the en- thusiasm is due to the new plays which Stagg has handed out in- volving a strong passing attack. University of California at Los Angeles will have one of the strongest elevens in its history when it makes its first eastern ap- pearance. The game wltn the Bru- ins is also the first encounter of the Wildcats with a Pacific coast con- ference team. U. C. L. A. has a strong aggregation boasting a first string line which is almost an equal With Northwestern's in weight, but which will undoubtedly not meas- ure up to the Purple in reserve strength. Hanley intends to start his regulars today, using the same lineup with one exception which opened against .Notre Dame last week. Manske will be the excep- tion, starting at left end. Shower of Passes. Purdue will use more forward passes against the Badgers than it has done for a considerable time. The Boilermakers favor the passing attack against any foe, but today they will be trying more heaves than ever because Purdue scouts report that Wisconsin is exception- ally weak on pass defense. How- ever, Coach Thistlewaite has been turning most of his attention dur- ing the past week to this weakness of the Badgers, and when Purdue unloosens its pass attack it may find things quite changed from a week ago. DETROIT Y.M.C.A. ~IS FIRSTOPPONENT Victory Expected in First Cross Country Meet of Season; Veterans Return. Schedule of Season Includes Five Meets; Three Big Ten Opponents. Michigan's second intercollegiate sport of the year will officially open today when the Detroit Y. M. C. A.'s cross-country runners invade Ferry field to race Chuck Hoyt's varsity team. The contest will be- gin at eleven o'clock this morning at Ferry field and will be run over the three-mile course laid out last year, but ending at Ferry field again instead of the University1 golf course. In spite of the foot- ball game in the afternoon, a crowd is expected to be on hand for the start and for the finish. . Last Year's Men Return. Little is known here of the abil- ity of the Detroit team, but Coach Hoyt has taken no chances and will put out a group of men capable of winning against strong opposition. More than half of the team is com- posed of returning harriers who ran last season in the strong team that gave Michigan State its first cross-country defeat in four years in the second meet of the year, af- ter losing to the more powerful and undefeated .Ypsilanti team by a close score. Men who will run for Michigan are Wolfe, Howell, Hill, Fitzgibbons, McManus, Braden, Darrow, Beden- ik and Ostrander. A sore ankle has been bothering Ostrander several days and if it is not improved he may be kept out of the run. DEA troit will be represented by a smal- ler squad of seven men, Lewis, Mon- roe, Wahrle, Steinborn, White, Kel- ley and Miller. S. J. Farrell will be referee and starter, F. E. Mc- Caffree will be timer, Ken Doherty scorer and H. C. Carver judge of finish. Five Meets to Follow. Next Thursday willbe 'the date of the next cross-country meet when Michigan State Normal will come in an effort to defeat the Var- sity for the third successive year. Michigan State college will be the scene, of the next run October 31, followed by Ohio and IIllinois here on November 7, Wisconsin at Madi- son on November 14, and the West- ern Conference meet at Iowa City the twenty-first. * STURHDAY'S GRID GAMES West. Michigan vs. Ohio St., Ann Arbor. Mich. State vs. Ill. Wes., Lansing. Notre Dame vs. Drake, So. Bend. N'western vs. U. C. L. A. Evanston. Chicago vs. Yale, Chicago. Illinois vs. Bradley, Urbana. Wisconsin vs. Purdue, Madison. Iowa vs. Indiana, Iowa City. East. Cornell vs. Princeton, Ithaca. Columbia vs. Dartmouth, N. Y. Brown vs. Tufts, Providence. Fordham vs. Holy Cross, N. Y. N. Y. U. vs. Rutgers, New York. Boston Coll vs. V. Nova, Boston. Syracuse vs. Florida, Syracuse. Penn. vs. Lehigh, Philadelphia. Army vs. Harvard, West Point. Navy vs. Delaware, Annapolis. W. Maryland vs. W. & J., Hamil- ton. South. W. Va. vs. W. & Lee, Charleston. Ga. Tech. vs. Ala. Poly., Atlanta. Texas vs. Oklahoma, Dallas. Tulane vs. Vanderbilt, Nashville. Tenn. vs. Alabama, Knoxville.' Far West. Olympia Club vs. S. Clara, San F. S. Calif. vs. Oregon, Los Angeles. Stanford vs. Ore. Agg., Palo Alto. Washington vs. Idaho, Seattle. Wash. State vs. Calif., Portland. The Southern Michigan Hockey League will probably remain as a six-team circuit during the coming season. EN AVANT ever forward A ^ LINKSMEN ATTAIN SEMI-FINAL ROUND Two Yearlings, Two Freshmen to Meet in Links Duels. Match play in the championship flight of the All-Campus Golf tour- nament progressed yesterday to the semi-final round, with O'Brien defeating Dayton, eight and six. for the opportunity of playing Russ Oliver. In the lower bracket of the con- test, Fischer, a sophomore, and the outstanding player of the campus, is to meet Heiser in the other semi- final match. Fischer is the holder of the rec- ord for the University course. Thus, the next to the last round of the tourney finds two sophomores, Fischer and O'Brien, opposing two freshmen, Oliver and Heiser, with all indications pointing to closely contested matches. Although the St. Louis Cardinals, who swept to their second consecu- tive National League pennant last season, possessed the outstanding talent in the senior loop the teams that followed the Red Birds were- not devoid of good ball players. The scrappy New York Giants had a good year with Fred Fitz- simmons, big pitcher enjoying a winning season. Freddy Lindstrom was sent to right-field and did quite well while Johnny Vergez, former Pacific Coast star, who re- placed Lindstrom at the hot cor- ner fielded capably but never reached his full stride at bat. Rog- ers Hornsby's ,Chmago Cubs boast- ed a good pitching staff but the Vergez, Coast Sensation, to Find 'Batting Eye With New York. BRANDT, KLEIN, AND LINDSTROM OUTSTANDING IN SENIOR CIRCUIT .... ......, ...r .... .. r- __ Fails r . IF THE INFORMATION YOU YOU WANT / YOUR DESIRE IS LOCATED PICTURE ON TO THE LEFT SIDE team failed to develop full batting povvr. At Brooklyn at veteran team fin- ished in the first division after. a poor start. O'Doul secured from the Phillies during the winter was slow in reaching his hitting ability and Herman's slugging, though hard' dropped off. Three veteran pitchers: Shaute, Heimach, and Quinn, trying for comebacks, had a fair amount of success. The Phil- adelphia Phillies uncovered a slug- ging outfielder in Buzz Arlett, rook- ie from the west and Chick Klein hit as powerful as before. Jumbo Elliott, big southpaw, worked hard and won nearly twenty games. The Pittsburgh Pirates and the Cincinnati Reds were big disap- ppoi tments. Silas Johnson, youth- ful Redleg hurler, lost twenty games to show promise. APPEAR IN OF THIS THE Prep School Pals to Become Rivals in Today's Conti Two old friends will become als this afternoon when the verines face Ohio 'State. Tom uels, veteran tackle of the I and Blue's right forward wall face his old friend and teams Junius Ferrall. who this year the gap at left end for State vacant by All-American W Fesler. Samuels and Ferrall playe the same side of the' line for ton-McKinley high school d two seasons. This afternoon, a safe bet that old memori shoulder-to shoulder line ph preparatory school will be, fo time, totally discarded, and player will block, or perhaps t the other just as hard as if had never seen each other b AD! 193 IC HIGANENSIAN xrStamm, STOP AT OURT OFFICE ITHE PRESSBULDING Once again, this afternoon, old sectional and intersectional rival- ries will be resumed on college gridirons throughout the country With the early season pushovers pretty well accounted for, the ma- jor elevens of the country are turn- ing to the more serious part of the grid campaign. .In the east, the Harvard-Army game holds the spotlight of inter- est in what is expected to be a great aerial dual. Cornell is con- ceded at least an even chance to down the once defeated Princeton Tiger. Dartmouth should have lit- tle difficulty in disposing of Colum- bia, while Brown, because of its fine showing against Princeton lasL week, has the dopesters vote in its contest with Tufts. The Holy Cross-Fordham game is about a toss-up. Syracuse will be hosts to the University of Florida in the biggest intersectional duel on the eastern card. Two powerful machines repre- senting Tulane and Vanderbilt will. provide the feature contest on thej Anda=W PURCHASE YOUR SENIOR PICTURE RECEIPT MAKE £UUm enAN APPOINTMENT WITH ONE OF THESE the will bring together S. California and Oregon. The Trojans after a slow start found themselves last Saturday and will be a hard team for anyone to beat from now on. Stanford will entertain the Oregon Aggies, while the Golden Bears will tackle the Washington State Hus- kies. Washington should have lit- Official 1932 Michiganensan DI, inr 4Ehgv .a S