THE MICHIGAN DAILY Maroons Highly OptimisticAbout Result Of Game Zimmer And Mendenhall Will Probably Be In The Starting Lineup Today Early Chicago Tricks Score. Score ,Sought To Use All The In The Bag To And Hold Lead By EDWARD W. NICHOLSON (Associate Editor, Chicago Daily Maroon) Chicago, Nov. 11.-(Special)-With i in the best condition it has all season, and an over- n nm desire to win for Coach e hicago football team has ,-opes for a victory over Mich- F aturday afternoon. One of the chief reasons for the tic feeling of the team is the t that they defeated Indiana by a 7 -ore, while the best that the -fines could do against the Hoo- o eke out a 7-0 victory. a¢ returtn to the squad of Pete no and Hugh Mendenhall, star a%, hs 'done a gr at deal to buoy c spirit cf the team. Zimmer, a lunging halfback is regarded as one gre 2te Maroon ball carriers iMcoenha'l, who has been nc early in the season, is a ct defanrye halfback. His work in n , ap pac in the early game S..ea!on bodes ill for the vaunt- di Michigan aerial attack. Make Early Threat oSher fact that has inspirited Windy City eleven is that hey arcatened oscore early it y a-nsx If such an opportunity _ t .itself in Saturday after- t nrounter, Coach Stagg prom- th s boyswill open up their of tickl, and employ every avail oall across the goal line. Once th4 aUle "jooler," in an effort to push the local team has gained the lead the: will play a defensive game, devotin their time to warding off the Mich igan attack. At the annual alumni banque ihursday night the Chicago squat and Coach Stagg were given a roya sendoff by several hundred alumni The team arrived in Ann Arbor Fri day morning, worked out in the sta dium in the aftertaoinARtaoinAAl c, um during the afternoon and spen Friday at Dearborn, Mich. Bir ney to Start Captain Don Birney and Pete Zim ..er will probably start at the half back spots. Pat Page will get th call at fullback, with Vince Sahlin brilliant pass receiver at quarterback Mendenhall will be used for relie aucy in pace of Zimmer. Bill Ma honey, another star halfback will b iv wuu of action due to injuries. Weber Names Phys-Ed Team For Annual Fra Coach Wally Weber has named hi Physical Education football team fo the annual game with the freshma squad, scheduled for 4 p. m. nex Tuesday afternoon. Lack of reserve power will hampe Weber's team. The starting lineu for the Phi-Eds will be Malesavitc and Tomagno at ends, Viergiver an Lahti at tackles. Phillinger an -o, guards, and Jablonowski, cen er. Paulson, Rudness and Nelso are sure starters in the backfielc while either Candy or Springer wi appear in the vacant position. FR OM THlE PRESS BOX By JOHN THOMAS MICHIGAN might eke out a victory Bucknell at WASH. & JEFF. by one touchdown or so or again Wash. & Lee at W. VIRGINIA they may make another Illinois game RUTGERS at Lehigh out of the contest today. It depends Penn State at TEMPLE on whether the Maroons fold up or DETROIT at Villanova not and whether Michigan can get Williams at AMHERST the jump. One good guess is about 20-0 while FAR-WEST another is 7-0. Personally we think WASH. STATE at Washington that the extreme cold will make the Oregon at S. CALIF. team block as never before and if o G S TEaaC F ontana our ends are as good as they are rat- OREGCalif.ON S at STANFORD ed and can turn in Chicago's thrusts, another overwhelming victory is in SOUTHWEST the book. RICE at Texas Aggies * * KANSAS at Missouri BUT few people give Wisconsin Haskell at ST. LOUIS U. much chance against the Goph- SOUTH ers but all of the comparative scores ALABAMA at Georgia Tech. point to a Minnesota victory. Ohio Florida at AUBURN State gets the call over Pennsylvania DUKE at N. Carolina State as does Purdue over Iowa. In this last Tulane at KENTUCKY contest, many may be surprised. Iowaane 3is after that game as never before Sewanee e IatISSisPP while the Boilermakers havethe FurmanEat S. CAROLINA game in the bag, or so they think. TENNESSEE at Vanderbilt Virginia at V. P. I. N THE EAST Syracuse might V. M. I. at Richmond spring an upset over Colgate. Al- * * * though Holy Cross should get the call TED CHAPMAN is Michigan's aver- over Harvard we are picking the lat- age man. Weighing 181 pounds ter. The Catholic school lost their he comes closest to; head coach this week andtthe players the average of 184 rthemselves did not like the change. and his age is 20 We may be foolish but Brown looks which is that of good to us over Columbia. the average age of * * * the squad. ' IN THE SOUTH Tennessee and W i 1 i s W a r d, d Vanderbilt are about equal and aeighing 182 would Kentucky and Tulane will mix in a gain the edge over game that is hard to pick. We fa- Chapy but he is a vor Tennessee, who we think is the year younger, 19, -lass of the South, against Vandy. The squad of 29 Superior punting will probably deter- men weigh 5347 2 CAPMM mine this. Unlike most we are tak- pounds and their ng Kentucky over Tulane. Compara- accumulate age is that of 484 years. tive scores and pre-game facts all Ford, Marcovsky, and Borgman are give the latter the edge but if Ky. only 18 years old while Fay, Shea, - loses we will gladly suffer in per- Kowalik, and Newman are tied at centage. the top of the list being 22 years old " each. . MID-WEST Charley DeBaker is the baby of the e Chicago at MIICHIGAN squad for weight, tipping the scales e MINNESOTA at Wisconsin at 160. Wistert and Bernard are the Y INDIANA at Illinois heaviest men on the squad, weigh- 9 PURDUE at Iowa ing over 212 each. - Northwestern at NOTRE DAME DD SOCIAL NOTES: Buck Yost Pennsylvania at OHIO STATE A Estil Tessmer, ineligibles, an t PITTSBURGH at Nebraska Esi Tehm r, inelle, and d Oklahoma at IOWA STATE Herb Schmidt, injured fullback, were a CARNEGIE TECH at Xavier active at a practice recently passing, i. WASHINGTON U. at Drake drop-kicking and kibitzing. - N. DAKOTA at S. Dakota post- poned-snow, extreme cold) COACH KIPKE was telling Herm - -sEverhardus that he had been i EAST over to his rooming house the other Yale at PRINCETON night and he was not there. "You COLGATE at Syracuse should have come over to the li- - Dartmouth at CORNELL brary," replied Evie, "I had all of - BROWN at Columbia them over there." It seems that sev- , N. Dakota State at ARMY eral members of the squad room in . Holy Cross at HARVARD the same house with Evie and that k. New York U. at FORDHAM Coach Kipke had also tried to locate i NAVAY at Maryland other players in other houses. CUT YOUR is LAUNDRY COSTS )r n Kt er p h d id 1- n I li Better Work For Less Money The unsurpassed quality of our work is a well-known fact, founded on years of satisfac- tory service. discount Cash and Carry V tahi d" I I Varsity Scores Big Ten Standings Cross-Country W in In M eet MICHIGAN ... .4 0 0 1.000 Purdue.........3 0 1 1.000 Minnesota......2 1 0 .666 Regulars Defeat Frosh; Wisconsin ......2 1 1 .666 Boylan Winner Of A1l- Indiana ........1 1 1 .500 Campus Event Ohio State .....1 1 2 .500 Chicago ........1 3 0 .250 By ALBERT H. NEWMAN Illinois.........1 3 0 .250 Undaunted by freezing tempera- Northwestern ...1 3 1 .250 tures and snow flurries, Michigan's Varsity cross-country squad ran a Iowa..........0 3 0 .000 regulation three-mile meet againstConference Games Today the freshmen yesterday afternoon, MChn ern cesGChi sago d and trounced the yearlings despite Michigan vs. Chicago. a handicapas large as two minutes Minnesota vs. Wisconsin and fifteen seconds. Ilowa vs. Purdue. Individual handicapping by Coaches Iiaa vs. Illdno.s Ken Doherty and Chuck Hoyt made Indiana vs. Illinois the event a real contest, although the Wolverine varsity managed to F1 W ater finish its entire roster before the firstay freshman broke the tape.y , MMcM and Archie McMillan of Players the varsity tied for first in the actual Beat Regulars finish although their time of 16:52 was not by any means the lowest. Second was Childs, who finished in In a smashing upset that displayed 17:42. Michigan's stellar trio of Cap- tain Howell, his brother Rod, and Bill convincingly their ability and stra- Hill crossed the line stride for stride tegy the Faculty water polo team in the time of 16:33, the lowest rec- scored a victory over a team com- ord time of theday, although their posed of Freshmen and Varsity swim- ad ftenseb dpackdftwo m inesmers in the Intramural pool yester- and fifteen seconds placed them in day to the tune of 15-8. There were aifothindtrd. ofapproximately thirty players on each SmithnhdStarr ofd thefreshman side, although the losers had a slighi team finished in a dead heat for advantage. fourth, Smith with the time of 16:38 Tdean agwo as he had started even with the best "free-for-all" type with the student varsity men. His performance mark- "te-fispayi" te mt obsrvan ed the second lowest time of the run. team displayg the most observance Frieger, Flynn, and Morgan followed of the rules. It was not infrequen them in quick succession, to see a professor and a freshma Boyla~n Home First engaged in a double headlock under One of the Intramural classics of water the year, the Armistice Day two- The players: Faculty, Hughes, Slos- mile run, was won by Don Boylan, son, Brier, James, Green, Wilson, in the time of 10:3). ince the regu- Hubbs, Russell, Foster, Faigle, Davis, lar two-mile harrier course was Graham, Powers, R. N. Hall, R. B. closed, the distance was estimated, Hall, Kipke, Blott, Mann, Powell, officials explained, and thus it was Cole, Walton. not exact. Varsity-Frosh, Kennedy, Christy, Dave Melniker w a s runner-up Dennison, Sullivan, Brady, McDonald, twelve seconds behind the victor; Howie, Batter, Dersch, Robertsor Walter Simons, W. Lowe, and Fred Williams, Lawrence, Freeman, Por- Rollins took third, fourth and fifth ter, Johnson, Fenske, Renner, Mar- respectively. kus, Thomas, Lewis, and Conklin. By ARTHUR W. CARSTENS c Amos Alonzo Stagg, football coach at Chicago for forty years, who brings his last Maroon team to Ann Arbor today to oppose the champion- ship bound Wolverines, was lauded yesterday in statements made by President Alexander G. Ruthven, Athletic Director Fielding H. Yost and Coach Harry Kipke. The announcement of Stagg's re- tirement at the end of the football season this year came as a surprise to many men connected with Michi- gan athletics who were not cogniz- ant of the ruling in effect at the Uni- versity of Chicago which makes re- tirement compulsory at the age of 70. Pres. Ruthven, who has known the "Grand Old Man" since 1902, when he attended the Summer Session at Chicago, made the following state- ment: "I have known Mr. Stagg for years while in the University of Chi- cago and at Michigan. I have learned to appreciate his effective- ness in training for a better citizen- ship, a task that he has definitely set for himself. Coach Harry Kipkee who, although he never played against a Stagg coached team, has, during the three years he had been head football Swimming Featured On Women's Indoor Card coach, sent two teams against the Staggmen, today's game being the third. Michigan won both .games, 16-0 in 1930 and 13-7 in 1931, the latter being one of the two games that season in which opponents were able to score against the Wolverines' strong defense. Kipke said of Stagg: "His retire- ment will be a loss to the football world. He has been an inspiration not only to players but to the younger coaches as well. His lessons in good sportsmanship will live for many years." Fielding Yost, who by Stagg's re- tirement becomes the dean of Big Ten Athletic directors, made the fol- lowing statement of welcome to the last edition of the Staggmen: "Mich- igan is glad to welcome Coach Stagg today. After a period of 40 years in active competition with football, baseball and track teams coached by Stagg Michigan has learned more and more annually to appreciate his influence for good in intercollegiate athletic competition and in main- taining the friendly relationship be- tween Michigan and Chicago. This entirely friendly relationship could not exist except where there has been leadership of the type and character that Stagg has shown throughout his stay at Chicago." Rutven Yost and Kipke Laud Grand Old Man Of Chicag Arrival of cold weather will take the center of interest inside the first indoor season in women's athletics is booked begins Nov. 28. Swimming will 'be the main feature on the In- tramural card, with bowling and rifle shooting as the other attrac- tions. Interclass games will be held in basketball, and practice will be on the first four afternoons of each week, with Friday reserved for games. Intramural basketball will not start until next semester. Approximately January 24, the an- nual Intramural swimming meet will take place, either in the Intramural or Union pool. A bowling tourna- ment will be run-off in January, and there will be telegraphic shooting matches throughout the season. SAN FRANCISCO--(A')-The Pa- cific Coast League may lower its player limit at its fall conference. EN AVANT overForward AA A AA A Burr, Patterson & Auld Co monufetmrii Fteta,.Itv ,,Jew.iw Detroit, Michigan gi Wetllerville, Ontario A A For your convenience Ann Arbor Store A 603 Church St. FRANK OAKES Mgr. s ss- r : s v ,. -1 Flj if YOU'RE fed up with shirts that SHRINK.... 4 Arrow Shirts. Sanforized- shrunk. They're guaranteed to fit permanently-or your money back. We particu- larly recommend the Trump -a specially woven broad. cloth shirt and, in our esti- oration, the best shirt value you can find anywhere. Only $1.00, $1.55 and $1,95 f1 . A o3 .ti THIS picture will bring back memories to a lot of people of the days when the boys went marching away with flags flying and bands playing. Chesterfields were very popu- 1 a v a - a 1 / s .y1 ( u'-,- ... an . rl i . nf n A P '1 r nL' [? t It was mildness that first at- tracted smokers to Chesterfield. And it's mildness and better taste that is winning new friends for Chesterfield today... all over the country. Next time you're short of c ga.