1932 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ridders Drill On FsPractice For Maroon En ounter Kipke Stresses Blocking As Fay, Borgman, Star Injured Players Appear In Uniform; Petoskey, Regeezi Place Kick Wistert Outstanding Mentor Denies Rumors That He Will Not Start First Team Saturday Fundamentals were the order of the day in Michigan's football work- out yeste'rday afternoon. Over half of the practice period was devoted to a strenuous blocking drill with prac- tically every man on the squad tak- ing part. Dater in the day the substitutes and an eleven largely composed of "" team men ran through an of- fensive scrimmage against the Var- sity. Wolverine Half Stars As 'Money' Punter Jones To Play Winders, Gopher Fullback Sprains In Filmned Pro . Ankle In Practice Tilt In Spring oMINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 8.-(A)-One of the Big Ten's leading contenders Outstanding Golfer Will foll-America honors, Big Jack Mners, of Minnesota, was a cas- Compete In Tourney ualty in the student health service With Professionals today, with the possibility that he might not get into the Wisconsin game next Saturday, and probably NEW YORK, Nov. 8.--Bobby Jones will be handicapped against Michi- stands ready now to become one of gan. the boys and to renounce completely Manders severely sprained his left i ankle during pass practice yesterday. whatever idea he had of 'retaining The big fullback collided with Carl his amateur status. If present plans Tengler, a reserve player. Knocked carry through Bobby will lend his down, Manders had to be aided to name to a real pro golf enterprise! the training quarters and from there next spring. to the health service. It has been learned by the New The ankle injury was the second mishap of the season for Manders. York World-Telegram that the .a- In early practice he injured his knee mous Atlantan, greatest golfer of all and it handicapped his activities time, is planning to compete in a so- with the Gophers in their first three called 'championship-of-the-world" games. tournament to be promoted in Au- Tengler will take Manders' place gusta, Ga., next March. with the regulars for the rest of the He will play against Gene Sarazen, practice sessions before Minnesota present holder of the British and leaves Thursday night for Madison, United States Open titles; Olin Du- Wis. Whether Manders will get into tra, United States pro champion, and the game with the Badgers will de- C. Ross Somerville, the Canadian who ! pend upon his response to treatments won the American amateur chain- for the injury. 3 In the blocking drill Stanley Fay and Bill Borgman, the latter a sub- stitute guard, showed up to the best advantage. Coach Harry Kipke definitely de- nied rumors that he would start his second team against Chicago, and the manner in which he drove the regulars bore out his word. Whitey Wistert, at tackle, was the outstanding lineman of the offen- sive practice, while Herm Everhardus and Harry New- man showed up as the best of the ball carriers. The yearlings of- fered stern oppo- sition to the on- ::slaught of the ex- perienced b a c k - field, and with the /is T- regulars and Jay- v e e s alternating ball, the frosh managed to hold. On one occasion the Varsity failed to carry the ball from the five-yard line over the goal in four plays. Although Ted Petoskey, John Re- geczi, Johnny Kowalik, and Cecil Cantrill were in uniform and attend- ed the practice, none of the men took part in the regular drill. Petoskey and Regeczi practiced place kicing, however. The men who started the. crii- mage against the freshmen. were Ward and Cox at ends, Wistert and Autin at tackles, Baird' and BOrg- nan at guards, with the lattergiv-. ing way to Savage, Bernard at cen- ter and a backfield composed of Fay, Newman, Everhardus and Oliver. Basketeers S t a r t Work Outs On New Field House Floor Basketball activities have been transferred. from the Intramural bulding, where practice has been held during the last month, to Yost Field House. Coach "Cappy" Cappon with his squad of 20 aspirants con- menced workouts on the new floor last night with a scrimmage. The huge Field House floor upon which all the home games will be played was erected during the past week-end and is now in good shape for the caning season. The team, practicing upon its regular floor, should round into shape in speedier fashion. With the opening game of the sea- son less than a month away, inten- sive work on fundamentals has been discarded in favor of regular scrim- mages. The team is pointing to the opening game, Dec. 5, wvith Western State Teachers' College here. The loss of Captain Norman Dan- iels and Henry Weiss of last year's quintet is bound to be felt by the Varsity this year. Coach Cappon is butilding his team around Captain' De'orest Eveland, Bob Petrie, Ed Barner, Ivan Williamson, ,nd Ray Albenhof, of last year's regulars. Petoskey, Allen, and Wistert are men who received numerals a year ago and are expected to make strong bids this season. Promising sopho- mores are Don Black, Canton, O.; Al Plummer, Wabash, Ind.; Russell Oliver, Pontiac, and Jack Teitel- baim, Chicago. FRESHMAN FENCING Tryouts for Freshman fencing can see me at 4 p. in. today, at the Waterman Gymnasium. Coach John Johnstone Herman Everhardus, Michigan halfback, has a reputation as a "money punter," which means that he gets off his longest spirals when they will do the most good. The Kalamazoo boy has saved two foot- ball games for the Wolverines with two long punts. The first came in the Wisconsin game last fall. With the score 0-0, the Wolverines took the ball on downs on their one-yard line. Everhardus had to kick from the far side of the end zone. His punt sailed far down the field and out of bounds on the Wisconsin 32-yard line. It was a 67-yard gain for the Maize and Blue and changed the whole course of the game, which Michigan won by 16 to 0. By JOHN THOMAS. pionship at Baltimore early in Sep- tember, if present plans carry through. Picture Promotion The moving picture firm with which Jones is under contract is said to be promoting the match, which will be filmed throughout-the first time in history that a full record of a 72-hole match has ever been re- corded., At present it is known that the principals for the match are being questioned as to their willingness to compete. If enough money is offered it is expected that Sarazen and Dutra will take part, but it is considered quite unlikely in golf circles that Somerville, a wealthy amateur, would endanger his status by lending his name to the enterprise. Jones recently signed a contract with the moving picture firm that' will promote the match for a series of six shorts. He will start working on them on Jan. 28, and is expected to be finished early in March. The s y n t h e t i c "championship-of-the- world"' match will aid in the bally- hoo of Bobby's new series of instruc- tive pictures. A Real Pro Now Although he resigned his amateur status when he signed his first movie' contract two years ago, this new plan of competing against professional stars for actual gain is the first overt move Jones has made toward accept- ing rating as a pro. Outside of his movie work and hisI connection as an official and club designer with a prominent sporting goods house, Bobby has shown no in- terest in pro golf competition. He has held himself aloof, competed in ex- hibition matches only for charity and has never accepted a penny for such services. To here Saturday. Captain Birney is the Wildcats To Rally blocking halfback of the team, and is one of the most dangerous inter- Strength For N. D.; Terence runners in the Conference. Plan To Stake All CHICAGO, Nov. 8.-(A')-North- Former Ch a m s, western today started rallying its football strength for one big win or Renew Old Rivalry bust venture against Notre Dame at South Bend Saturday. IOWA CITY, Nov. 7.---(8pecial)- Beaten three times and tied OnlCC Vers when University of Iowa foot- in its own league, Northwestern finds 1 b all plaen nre rdid Purd a ft m itself in an everything to gain andball players regarded Purdue teams nothing to lose spot, and coach Dick as courageous but almost certain vic- Hanley has decided to shoot the tims appear to have slipped into the works, to rescue something from a realm of forgotten things. bad season. Notre Dame, back in It was only a decade ago that Iowa winning stride after losing to Pitt in r the undefeated Big Ten defending the biggest upset in years, figures the champion, turned the Purdue game IWildcats feel that a triumph will at Iowa City into a fall track meet, atone for other disappointments, and adding up almost a point per minute. is preparing accordingly.mA Purdue eleven of quite another Hanley let his regulars o yester- calibre comes to Iowa stadium Sat- day, but ordered them out for a big urday, with the entire situation ex- week of practice starting today. Roy ; actly reversed. Unbeaten this year Auguston probably will be the quar- sharer of the 1931 championship, the terback, and Al Kawal, who held the Boilermakers are welded into one c post until last Saturday, will be tried the nation's finest teams, while Iows at guard. Coach Hunk Anderson is yet without a conference victory countered by sending John Robinson this season. to center, demoting Kitty Gorman On paper, the game already be- and Ben Alexander to the second and longs to the engineers from Lafay- third teams respectively, and moving ette, with the precision backfield of Capt. Paul I-lost back to end on the Harstmann, Purvis, Heckel and Par- first team. .donner which has averaged 41/ yards Purdue, the runner-up in the con- on each attempt, and the line led by ference standing, got an afternoon Moss, distance punter and pass- off and will go to no extra trouble grabber, and Captain Oehler, rival for Iowa, in spite of the Hawkeyes' of Captain Magnussen at center. improved showing against Nebraska last Saturday. FRESHMAN TENNIS The customary Monday rest was All men interested in trying out missing in most camps. Wisconsin for the Freshriian tennis squad scrimmaged yesterday, while Minne- should see me today at 4:15 p. m., sota, the Badgers' next foe, drilled at the Waterman Gym. on defense. Coach John Johnstone E HAVE BEEN asked several times if politics on the campus .split up the team as it did on the Buckeye campus: It has not. Charlie Bernard, defeated candidate for Jun- ior Class president was earnestly con- gratulating Whitey Wistert, treas- urer-elect, in the locker room the other day, while Herm Everhardus, last year's sophomore class president looked on. Mr. Stagg was the first ath- letic director in the world to ac- quire faculty status, receiving such an appointment in 1892. Unlike most coaches, his tenure has not depended on winning teams and he has always been safe from the emotional out- bursts of alumni. As a member of- Chicago's faculty, he is subject to retirement at the age of 70. Actual retirement age is at BENNIE OOSTERBAAN pulled the 65 but he was permitted to be reap- smartest play that "Navy Bill" pointed for five more years. Ingram, coach of California, has ever Mr. Stagg has never given any rea- seen, he allows. The play came after son for the inference that the retire- Navy had been held for three downs ment was a "stunning surprise," nor in the 1925 game. A Navy back any kind of surprise. He knew the dropped back to kick, but didn't get retirement regulation and that it the ball away. Oosterbaan, coming would operate in his case as in all in fast, took the ball off the kicker's others, he never doubted. toe, held it and scampered for the Last January he and President touchdown. Coach Ingram said that Hutchins opened the conversa- any other player would have been tions relative to his retirement content to block the kick but only and the proposal which Coach Oosterbaan could have caught it. Stagg accepted was made by him *-*4*' ,, The Finest Clothes Ever Made THE FAMOUS CLOTHCRAFT CLOTHES i i i STAGG AGAINST YOST. Chicago against Michigan. This has flash- ed across the sport pages for 12 years since Yost came here. The Stagg- Yost rivalry is one of the great Mid-! west parallels to the Harvard-Yale contest in the East. Both Stagg and Yost coached teams that made their rivalry out- standing in the Middle-West for years and as both demanded good character in and clean sportsmanship of their men, a friendship that was as close as the rivalry was strong sprang up between them. BECAUSE OF THE NEWS stories' relating to the retirement of Amos Alonzo Stagg from the position he has held for forty-one years at Chicago as professor and chairman of the department of physical cul- ture and athletics, as director of ath- letics, and head football coach, con- tained serious misstatements of fact, we are going to point out the truth according to a memorandum from the Department of Public Relations at Chicago. on April 4. The announcement was made early in the football season so as to eliminate the pos- sibility that an announcement in December might follow an un- successful season. Upon retirement he will receive an allowance of $3,000, and will serve as chairman of the committee on inter- collegiate athletics, the salary of which when added to the above fig- ure, will be equal to his present sal- ary. However he may resign to coach somewhere else if he wishes. t Nf.: . h /)e J-, - J , E! 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