U SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1931 "'THE MICHIGAN DAILY JvzxclL Tim _ _- PAGE THR~E Junior Varsity Encounters Olivet Eleven Today CHANGE IN INEUP EXPECTED TO ADD NECESSARY PUNCH Courtright Shifts Two Former Tackles, One Guard to Backfield Berths. LAST HOME APPEARANCE Truskowski Will Use Wolverine System of Attack Against Michigan Jayvees. While Michigan's gridiron war- riors are tackling theIllini today, Coach Ray Courtright's Junior Var- sity eleven will be making its sec- ond and last home appearance of the season this afternoon when it encounters Olivet college on Ferry field at 2 o'clock. As is the usual case with "B" team games admis- sion will be free. When the Jayvees take the field this afternoon their lineup will be; quite different from that in previ- ous games this fall as Coach Court- right is attempting to find a com- bination that will put plenty of punch into the attack. In today's experiment the Jayvee mentor will have two former tackles and one guard in the backfield with Lindsay in an effort to outdo the contingent from Olivet. Tackles in Backfield. Miller and McGuire are formerI tackles who will go into the game today as ball carriers along with Meldman who has heretofore been working as a guard. Lindsay will round out the backfield as director of the offensive. With this plan in opera tion such backs as Bremen, Tillotson, Stinespring and Hayes will be left on the sidelines. The last meeting of the Wolver- ines and Olivet was in 1894 when the Ann-Arbor ">c,lads trounced the Congregationalist team, 48 to 0. In t renewing its rela- tionsthis fall the Maize and Blue will be running up against a system . of football very similar to their own, as Joe Trus- kowski, a former athlete and cap- tain of the 1929 Truskowski eleven at Michi- gan, is tutoring the grid team at Olivet. Even though the "B" team will be encountering an eleven that is well drilled in the famous Michigan system of the gridiron, Coach Ray Courtright is hopeful that the shift in the lineup will provide the win- ning drive that was lacking in the Ohio game last week. Another point in favor of the Wolves is the fact that they will all be out to win to- day after bowing to the Buckeye Juniors, 6 to 0. The Michigan forward wall will be composed of Hazen at left end; Clohset, left tackle; Savage, left guard; Winston, center; Singer, at right guard; McGrath or Damm, right tackle; and Stone, right end. In the backfield there will be Liid- say at quarter; Bob Miller, left half; McGuire, right half; and Meldman, fullback. . With this lineup the Jayvees. will have the same forward line with the exception of Conover at right guard which proved itself so effect- ive on both offense and defense last week, and with the change in the backfield the ball carriers should be able to come through when they are within scoring range. Plan to Organize Archery Club Here Owing to the interest shown here in archery during the past few years, an archery club will be formed under the leadership of Dr. Lyman. All those inter- ested are requested to meet at the Yost Field House, Sunday at three o'clock, and bring their equipment, as there will be a practice then. A scarlet crimson rose, having heart shaped petals, has been pat- ented. The patent was the second for a plant issued by the patent office. Michigan's Second Generation Gridders Are Handicapped by Traditions of Their Fathers 'Heston Was Greatest Western Halfback,' Said Camp of Heston, Sr. By Wilbur J. Myers Never in Michigan's gridiron his- tory have the names of the heroes of yesterday been so much in prom- inence as they have auring the present season, names which are a part of the very tradition of the institution, but which are again in the headlines only because a second generation is attempting to repeat that tradition. Under a rather glaring light of continual newspaper publicity, the Heston boys, Jack and Willie, and the junior Yost have faced the dif- ficult task of living up to the bril- liant reputations surrounding the names they bear. The constant comparisons in the press shouting forth the ableness of their fathers have proved an almost insurmount- able -barrier to any -native talent which the boys may possess. Only last week, Willie Heston, the elder of the two brothers, turned in his uniform after three years of vai effort td "make" the Varsity. He could not repeat. Jack, however, appears to be well on the road to a name of his own. This Heston tradition begins ..back in the early Y« part of the cen- tury when Field- ing H. was just <: coming into his own as one of the o u t s t a n d i n g coaches in t h e country. It was' the era of Yost's famous point-a- minute t e a m s and Heston, sen- ior, was one of Heston t h e outstanding that the West has produced. Heavy, thick-set, and fast, he could use . either arm in warding off tacklers, and he ran with great speed and power. Even when a man seized him there was a fair chance that Heston, with his speed and weight, would tear loose, whereas when he had an opportunity to get his man in front of him, his deadly straight- arm would bowl the tackler over. He was specially strong on playsI just off tackle, but he could buck the line with immense vigor, also." Of Schultz, he said, "Adolph Schultz, a center on the Michigan team was, everything considered, probably the best center that ever played the game. Big, strong, and fast, he combined all the defensive and offensive qualities of the best linesman with the speed, sure tack- ling, and intuition as to what to JoN v P IHsro do on the instant that are winning qualities of the defensive back. In halfbacks in the country. The grid addition to this, his passing was game was young at ,the time and excellent, as he had plenty of had but a short while before it at- ,speed for his kicker, steadiness for d bhis quarter, and ability to pass in tamed any similarity to the pres- directions other than in a straight ent mode. - line which made him specially val- Writing in 1909, just twenty years -uable in certain formation plays." after he had published his first All-Time, All-American. All-American football team in a Camp named on that team other lowly sheet known as "The Week's men whose names are now inscrib- Sport," the late Walter Camp, ed in football's hall of fame. Hin- dean of all sports writers, brought key and Shevlin of Yale were out his "All-American Team of named as ends on that team of A ll-Americans," t h e champion teams; Fish of Harvard and De- gridders of all time.. Named on witt of Princeton were selected as that team were Heston and Adolph tackles; Hare of Pennsylvania and "Germany" Schultz from Michigan, Hefflefinger of Yale were the a signal honor for this far west- guards; with Schultz as pivot man. ern university. Walter Eckersall of Chicago receiv- This Heston! ed the honor of being the quarter- "Heston of the University of back of all quarterbacks; with Hes- Michigan," said Camp in his "rea- ton and Weekes of Columbia at the sons why," was the star halfback halves and Coy of Yale at fullback. WILDCAT-BCKEYES CLAIM SPOTLIGHT Indiana Plays Chicago, Iowa Meets Gophers, in Big Ten Contests. Northwestern will open its title drive against Ohio State at Colum- bus today. This is the first game against a Big Ten team for the Wildcats and it ought to be their hardest. Their skyscraper backfield, aver- aging six feet two inches, include Rentner, Olson, Meenan, and Pot- ter. Rentner and Olson are suffer- ing from minor hurts but both ex- pect to be able to start today. Ohio's convincing victory o v e r Michigan last Saturday has added interest to the game from the spectators standpoint. Title at Stake. The leadership of the Conference hangs on this contest as the .Wild- cats are aiming for their second consecutive title. However their backfield must function at its best defensively as their line has not come up to expectations and Cri- tics. are looking for Ohio State's forward wall to outplay them. Indiana has a squad of sopho- mores and veterans with a power- ful passing attack to hurl at Chi- cago today. The Hoosiers will be at full strength for the engagement with the return of Sabik who is their brilliant sophomore passer. Maroons Out to Win. Chicago is expected to rely on the aerial game too, if Indiana can stop their running attack. With the advantage of having Pat Page, former Indiana coach, teach them the Hoosier formations, the Ma- roons should put up a good battle. The game is a tossup. Iowa is journeying to Minnesota with new plays doped to trick the home team into its third straight defeat at the hands of the Hawk- eyes. To score a touchdown would be a new sensation for the 1931 Iowa eleven as it did not get in- side of Indiana's 8-yard line last week. The Gophers were idle last week and have used the two weeks to prepare for this game. Jack Man- ders, 205-pound plunger, and 'My Ubl, clever sophomore halfback are expected to furnish most of the offense for Minnesota. Two veter- an ends, Robinson and Teeter, will have a chance to receive a lot of passes from Ubl and they ought to beat Iowa for the first time in three years. Badgers go East. Wisconsin is in the East for the first time since 1899 today against Pennsylvania. The Cardinals have a flashing Hawaiian field general in Mickey McGuire and John Schneller, whom M i k e Hanley scouting for Penn, pronOnced last Saturday as one of the greatest fullbacks he had seen in years. Charles Goldenberg, 190-pound back, is Coach Thistlethwaite's choice for the all-important block. ing post in the Cardinal backfield. Wisconsin is unusually strong this season as manifest in the Pur- due game last week but is stronger than ever too. Wisconsin is tarted on a winning streak and ought to extend i't today. TODAY'S GAMES BIG TEN Michigan at Illinois. Indiana at Chicago. Iowa at Minnesota. Northwestern at Ohio State. WEST Pennsylvania at Wisconsin. Georgetown at Michigan State. Pittsburgh at Notre Dame. Case at Akron. Adrian at Allegheny. Beloit at Carroll. Ohio U at Cincinnati. Monmouth at Cornell college. Findlay at Detroit City. Alma at Hillsdale. Missouri at Iowa State. Albion at Kalamazoo. Central Teachers at Ypsi. State Normal. Olivet at Michigan "B." Kansas at Nebraska. Oregon at North Dakota. Otterbien at Ohio Northern. Miami at Ohio Wesleyan. East Purdue at Carnegie Tech. Navy at Princeton. Army at Yale. Penn State at Syracuse. Williams at Columbia. Niagara at Alfred. Wesleyan at Amherst. Maine at Bates. Marquette at Boston College. Colby at Bowdoin. Lehigh at Brown. Gettysburg at Bucknell. Clarkson at Buffalo. Labanon Valley at Dartmouth. Drake at Fordham. Texas at Harvard. Rutgers at Holy Cross. W. & J. at Lafayette. Colgate at New York U. Coastguard at Rhode Island. F. & M. at Swathmore. Connecticut Aggies at Tufts. New Hampshire at Vermont. SOUTH Swanee at Alabama. Alabama Poly at Florida. Vanderbilt at Georgia. St. Johns at Johns Hopkins. V. P. I. at Kentucky. Tennessee at North Carolina. Furman at Ogelthorpe. Southwestern at Mississippi. Baylor at Texas A. & M. Georgia Tech at Tulane. Maryland at V. M. I. Virginia at Washington & Lee. FAR WEST Rice at Arizona. Southern California at Califor- nia. California (L. A.) at Pomona. Gonzaga at St. Mary's. Stanford at Washington. Pacific U at Whitman. Utah Aggies at Wyoming. ,1 I HOWELL, BOS WORHTH Freshman Pair Set 11:32 Mark in Cross Country; Lead Field of 31. Racing stride to stride for the last half mile, Rod Howell and Bos- worth tied for first place in the freshman cross country run yester- day in the excellent time of 11:32 for the two miles. Stamping them- selves as potential Varsity material, the two led a field of 31 starters over the two-mile grind, leading the others from the start. Heath, who finished third, was 40 yards behind the winners at the finish, although he started a des- perate sprint some 200 yards from the tape. McMillan, who has led most of the previous trials, was unable to run. Starting the two mile grind, the 31 starters stayed well bunched to the half-mile marker, when Howell, Bosworth, Heath, Taft, and Whack- er began to forge ahead, running even at the mile. Rounding the south end of the stadium, Bosworth, Howell and Heath were in the lead, but as the trio passed the mile and a half marker, Heath began to slip behind, while the other two ran side by side to the finish. Heath, finishing third, was timed in 11:41; Chef followed him in 11:53, closely followed by Wacker in 11:54 and one-half. Taft steamed in at 12:01 to take sixth place. MONDAY'S SPEEDBALL GAMES 4:15-Theta Xi vs. Alpha Kap- pa Lambda. Delta Upsilon vs. Delta Sigma Phi. Phi Kappa Psi vs. Sigma Al- pha Mu. 5:15-Beta Sigma Psi vs. Delta Kappa Epsilon. Delta Alpha Epsilon vs. Beta Theta Pi. Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Hermi- tage. GRAVEL KILLINS GRAVEL COMPANY Telephone 7112 P'RFSORS FALL 'SPORTS END' SOONI NOTRE DAME FAVORED OVER PITT; ARMY GIVEN EDGE IN ELI BA T TLE) Faculty Tennis, Golf Sometime During Week. to Close Next Faculty sports on the Intramural fall calendar are moving along, es- pecially in the golf tourney which is reaching the quarter-finals. Con- tinued good weather and consci- entous endeavor to play off the matches should bring these two meets to a conclusion in the next week or so. Cissell and Niehuss of the cham- pionship flight have both reached the quarter and are paired for. their next match. In the first flight two matches have yet to be played before the quarters; Hardy vs. Cus- tis and Coursey vs. Eddy. The sec- ond flight has Darling in the quar- ter brace and Wilson to play Ris- key in the round before. Of the field of eight in the facul- ty tennis meet six have met and three players have advanced each way in the double elimination. Johnstone defeated Michaels, Gear- hart took the measure of Brass- field, and Angell won his match with Thompson. McClusky and Dorsey still have a first round match to be played off to get every- one moving one way or the other. PRACTICE STARTS 'IN VOLLE YBALL Volleyball as the second event on the inter-fraternity Intramural competition will be drawn up in the form of a tournament this com- ing week. Entries for the houses in this number close today at 6 p. m. Alpha Kappa Lambda, last year's winner, is entered again and will defend its title against a strong field. The A.K.L.'s are definitely out for a repetition of last season's rec- ord and hope to add the trophy to their lists. Teams will be put into leagues of five each as formerly to deter- mine the various league -winners. These winners will then play in a championship series until the final title honors have been decided. The card will be drawn up to have 12 teams going into action every night of play. Harvard, Dartmouth, Tulane, Picked to Win Games by Big Scores. By Brian W. Jones Now that the little game of "kicking over the dope bucket" is well under way among major col- lege elevens of the country it ap- pears, to be a hopeless task to ven- ture any predictions regarding to- day's games. However, here goes. Just remember your guess is as good as ours. Yale and Army will attempt to break a deadlock of a year's stand- ing when they clash at the Yale Bowl in the biggest game on the Eastern card. Despite Army's loss to Harvard last week, we look for them to turn back the sons of "old Eli." New York U. should have lit- tle trouble with Colgate and Navy looks to have the nod over Prince-I ton by at least two touchdowns. Harvard Looks a Winner. Harvard and Fordham appear to be too strong for their intersection- al rivals Texas and Drake respec- tively. Brown should win handily from Lehigh, while we see nothing but a trouncing in sight for Rut- gers in their battle with Holy Cross. The "Big Green" from Dartmouth should easily defeat Lebanon Val- ley. Despite "Hunk" Anderson's pes- simism, we look for Notre Dame to take Pittsburgh in its stride. Mis- souri should be able to handle Iowa State, by at least the two touch- down, margin of last year or more. M. S. C. Out For Blood. . Coach Crowley's Michigan State boys will be out to avenge the one point loss suffered last year at the hands, of Georgetown and from our seat it looks as though they should -k I turn the trick handily. DePauw looks good enough to down their old intersectional rival Boston U., but not by the decisive score pf 22-7 registered last season. On the West coast California will be out to avenge the terrific 74-0 drubbing suffered last year at the hands of Southern California, but Howard Jones' boys seem to have hit their stride again and look to be a little too hot to handle. Stan- ford should have a hard tussle with Washington State, but once again the cards appear to be stacked in their favor. Kansas-Nebraska to Act. In the Southwest Kansas is prim- ed to turn the tables on Nebraska and atone for the 16-0 defeat of last year. We look for them to win by a close score. Texas A. & M. should win handily from Baylor. In the South Tulane should wal- lop Georgia Tech. by at least the 28-0. count of last season. The Georgia-Vanderbilt battle appears to be a toss-up, but we give a slight edge to Dan McGugin's boys. Alabama is once more too strong for Sewanee, while Tennessee has too much stuff for North Carolina. Boston Symphony Orchestra Serge Koussevitzky Bright Spot 802 Packard TODAY, 5:30 to 7:30 SOUP BROILED 3IRLOIN STEAKS PORK CHOPS, JELLY LAMB CHOPS, PIES MASHED POTATOES TOMATOES, BUTTERED BEETS CABBAGE SLAW 35c EN AVANT over forward AA A ^ A 2 And His Band of .s 111 Player's i S n. . --_....__ _______r__ _. Steak Dinners TONIGHT Will appear in the Choral Union Series in Hill Auditorium TITL V n orr Vm7 Q - 1 IN I l 11