THE MICHIGAN DAILY Heston To Play Next Saturday DespiteInjury Sore Rib Not Enough To Keep Him Out; Petoskey Also Nurses Bruises Contrary to previous statements, Jack Heston, Wolverine halfback, will start against Chicago Saturday. Hes- ton suffered a bruise in'the ribs dur- ing the Ohio game but was out in uniform yesterday and Coach Harry Kipke himself is authority for the statement that the back who per- farmed so brilliantly against the Buckeyes will be rarin' to go against the Maroons at Stagg Field this week. Ted Petoskey, too, has several bruised ribs, but no one even sug- gested that the slashing candidate for an end berth on this year's All- American would not start against Chicago. Team Is Tired The rest of the squad came out of the bruising game in perfect physi- cal condition. They were still tired yesterday and ran signals loggily, taking it easy after a week of ter- rific physical and mental strain. Kipke's job now appears to be to keepkthem onntheir toes for Chica- go and Illinois, then bring them to the peak again for Iowa and Min- nesota. Ray Courtright scouted the Ma- roons Saturday and is drilling a freshman squad on the plays they used. He praised the work of a, young team that is coming along fast and may be a real threat in a few Everhardus Leads In Conference Scoring CHICAGO, Oct. 23-I')-Her- man Everhardus of Michigan held the lead in Big Ten scoring hon- ors today with a total of 41 points. His gallop across Ohio State'sgoal line put him a touchdown ahead of Jay Berwanger, the Maroon sophomore halfback whose stand- ing of 35 points remained un- changed. The complete leading scorers: G Td Pat Fg Tp. Everhardus, Mich 3 Berwanger, Chi ..3 Laws, Iowa......3 Lindberg, Ill.....4 Wetzel, Ohio .....3 Lund, Minn.......4 R. Fisher, Iowa . . .3 Froschauer, Ill. .. .4 Carter, Purdue ...3 Sahlin, Chicago ..3 Ress, Ohio.......3 Smith, Ohio. ..3 Cramer, Ohio ... .3 Crayne, Iowa ... .3 Teyro, Iowa ......3 5 5 0 0 0 0 4 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 41 35 24 24 19 18 16 13 12 12 12 12 12 12 12 e only thing that a scintillating igan attack lacked Saturday an accurate place-kicker and e went about rectifying that de- esterday. Ev- ossible kicker he squad got nce at boot- he ball from mnent. Wa'rd, . from the Defeats Blast Title Hopes Of Grid Favorites Pitt, S. California, Ohio State And Notre Dame Out Of The Running' The National Championship hopes of Notre Dame, Southern California, Pittsburgh and Ohio State were shat- tered Saturday in what was probably the most disastrous football week- end in years. And Michigan now stands at the top of the remaining 1933 champion- ship favorites. Notre Dame was beaten by Carne- gie 'Tech, 7 to 6; Southern Califor- nia was tied, 0 to 0, by Oregon State; Pittsburgh met her Waterloo at the' hands of Minnesota, 7 to 3, and the Buckeyes well, they're back in Col- umbus now nursing their wounds. A crowd of 57,000, the second larg- est in the nation, saw Carnegie Tech capitalize on a break two plays after the kick-off to score a lone touch- down and victory over the Notre Dame Ramblers. John Tobin, play- ing at right half back when Coach Hunk Anderson started, his shock troops, fumbled the opening kick- off on his 26-yard line and it was scooped up by Bernard Burzio, Car- negie guard and outstanding line player of the game. The Tartans lost a yard on one play and on the second play, Beve- vino whipped a bullet pass down the center of the alley to Lewis, who sped over the goal without a single Ramb- ler player touching him. Southern California's s t r i n g of twenty-five successive victories was ended ini Portland, Ore., when the Beavers held the Trojans to a sur- prising scoreless tie. Southern Cal- ifornia was on the offensive most of the time, but failed to penetrate the strong Oregon forward line for any scores. Minnesota gave warning that she would furnish the Wolverines with plenty of opposition when they meet them later in the season, by scoring a surprise 7 to 3 victory over the Pitt Panthers at Minneapolis. The Gophers scored a touchdown before eight minutes were up in the first quarter, and the best Pitt could do was a field goal in the second period. Downpour Aids Purdue In Win Over Maroons Boilermaker Band Floats Away As 14 Hour Rain Floods Playing Field Rain, injuries and two long runs went to cause the downfall of Mich- igan's next opponents, Chicago, in their game last Saturday with Pur- due, 14-0. No game was ever played under worse climatic conditions. It op- ened after a 14 hour downpourthat dotted the gridiron with pools of wa- ter and ended in a blinding rain and electrical storm. Sahlin, Maroon quarter, was kept from the starting lineup because of injuries and saw very little action. Chicago at no time had an oppor- tunity to open up their pass attack because of the rain. Purdue Stops Maroon Backs Zimmer and Berwanger, their two fast backs, were ineffective. Their running plays were usually stopped at the line of scrimmage, and they were kept so deep in their own ter- ritory that they at no stage developed a serious scoring threat. A long run by Carter, Purdue half, and the spectacular play of Purvis resulted in the touchdowns that spelled disaster for Chicago. One account vividly portrayed the weather saying, "The Chicago band, perched on a raft in a lake on the north side of the field, was true to maritime traditions. It tooted brave- ly, although croupily, while the spec- tators were drowning. Nobody knew what became of the Purdue bands- men. When last seen they were floating up and down 57th street be- tween Ellis and University avenues." Varsty.Wrestlers Will Meet At Field Mouse This Evening More than fifty candidates for berths on the Varsity wrestling team have been working out during the past few weeks under the direction of Art Mosier, captain of the team. Coach Cliff Keen, who has been as- sisting with football, will get his first opportunity to size up his ma- terial tonight at Yost Field House where the wrestlers are asked to re- port at 7:30. Keen will continue to devote Tuesdays and Thursdays to coaching the team during the foot- ball season. Four Lettermen Back With only four lettermen back to form a nucleus for this year's team, Keen is starting training earlier than usual. Besides Capt. Mosier, the other three lettermen are John Spo- ,jen, heavyweight, Joe Oakley, 128 pounds, and Jim Landrum, 118 pounds. Only one meet, with a non-con- ference foe, will be held before the holidays. Michigan State will be met right after Christmas and a confer- ence opponent will be scheduled for the first semester. i----- Football Strategy ... John Regeczi... * * IT IS NOT VERY OFTEN that you get two such pianists as Paderewski . and Rachmaninoff together, and it is still more unheard-of that two such artists should get together on the same program to play in competi- tion. But that is analogous to what happened in the Stadium Saturday afternoon. It was a display of football artistry. Plays were perfectly timed almost throughout the afternoon, and both teams displayed superlative blocking and tackling. But it was the genius of Coach Harry Kipke which shone through the entire contest and colored it. Man for man, Ohio State was just about on a par with the Wolverines. But Michigan had Coach Kipke. Kipke had a definite problem. Here was a team with a heavy line, and Michigan had a good running attack. He could depend on the play of his own forwards to keep the Buckeyes from gaining any preposterous amount of yardage from scrimmage, but he could also depend upon Ohio's line to hamper the Wolverines very considerably. Something must be done about that Ohio defense. Now Mr. Kipke knew that Bill Renner was a good passer. He also knew that Ohio knew that Bill Renner was a good passer. In fact, the general idea around Columbus last year before the game was that Renner was a much better passer than Newman, and that Kipke was very mistaken in starting Newman at all. Then Newman threw two passes which won the game. So the Buckeyes' chief worry was Renner's throwing arm, and Coach Kipke knew this. * * * * * RENNER WAS PUT INTO THE GAME as Michigan had the ball around midfield, and he immediately faded back as though to pass. The Ohio defense spread frantically, and John Regeczi hit the line for six yards. The same thing happened several times and then as the Ohio defense started to close, Renner actually did pass. It was just a nightmare to the boys from Columbus. They didn't know what to expect, and Kipke's tricky plays led right down the field to a touchdown. Renner can now be called the "man who came back." Personally, I don't know where he came back from because as far as I am concerned, I don't expect a passer, playing his first game in the rain to complete passes all over the place, especially when his blocking defense is letting in three and four opposing linemen to rush him. That is what happened in the State game and to me, Renner was just as good a passer after the game as he was in practice, which was plenty good. I am not deprecating Renner's part in the game Saturday when I say that he was more use as a threat than an actuality. But that is the way Coach Kipke used him, and circumstances certainly prove that Mr. Kipke showed his usual fine strategy in doing so. THERE WAS NOT A SINGLE PLAYER in the Michigan uniform Satur- day whose performance I would characterize as "disappointing." It was an eleven-man team that beat Ohio, and do not let anybody tell you otherwise. Every single man had his ioment of stardom, and though I per- sonally give the palm to Petoskey, Everhardus and Renner, every man played a whale of a game. There are those who are beginning to run down Regeczi's performance in the line of punting. Just because his average isn't fifty or sixty yards, don't start to ride John Regeczi. To begin with, those kicks out of bounds from midfield to a point out of bounds on the opposition ten- or fifteen- yard line are destructive to a punting average. But they are good football. Furthermore, you will note that Regeczi never gets off a kick which is very bad and is disastrous to Michigan, such as Cramer's punt which went out of bounds after going some nine yards up the gridiron to midfield. It is better to hold yourself down to a conservative forty yards than to register fifty and sixty and then get off a kick like that. Then again Regeczi was being rushed on those punts by a great forward wall, and it is to his credit that he got them off at all in some cases. It takes nerve. You will also note that John's plunging this year is something exceptional, and he is of more use to the team in that line. Say what -By AL N EWMAN- PLAY & BY-PLAY Half of the fraternity speedball tournament has been run off down at Ferry Field and several teams have forged ahead in their respective leagues. Phi Beta Delta, Alpha Ome- ga, Theta Chi, and Phi Kappa Sig- ma are now leading the procession with two games won and none lost. At 5:15 tomorrow, Sigma Nu meets Phi Gamma Delta, and Theta Xi plays Kappa Nu. Speedball is fast gaining popular- ity throughout the nation. Origi- nating at Michigan in the early 1920's in order to give non-varsity men a chance to play basketball, football and soccer all at once, the game caught on in every school in the country and at present is chal- lenging other intramural sports. A rule book has recently been pub- lished by a sporting goods firm ex- plaining the game in its innermost detail. In the independent football league, the Maroons play the Humpty- Dumpties at 4:15, and at 5:15 the D-D's play the Mohawks. A A EN AVANT a *ol, I Burr, Patterson & Auld M4a uI. 't I* f'ra't00I IV Jew Detroit, Michi en & WaKerville, O A A F R A For your convvnince Ann Arbor Store 603 Church St. ANK OAKES . M Speedball Squads Tied For Frat Lead .. THE MICHIGAN DAILY for AN OFFICIAL RECORD OF CAMPUS ACTIVITY Rajkovich Will Be To U. Of DA For $4.25 MAILED i weeks ar- o y7TO ipke wore his - _0 y smile all yesterday afternoon. dark shadows underneath his have almost disappeared, and as greeting correspondents with a fine Monday, don't you ?"-regardless of the fact that ky was heavily overcast and a winter wind blew across the ice gridiron. nny Kowalik, whom Kipke d at guard in a last minute on, came in for the major share pke's praise. The young mentor that every man on the team d excellently and deserved all Kraise in the world, but he d Kowalik and Bill Renner out DETROIT, Oct. 23--(P)-A st er fracture, suffered in Friday n game with Duquesne, will co University of Detroit Titans th vices of Bill Rajkovich for tl of the season. Rajkovich, reserve quarte was caught beneath a pile-i players, but it was not until te day that the extent of his i was learned. you will about Regeczi's kicking; I every time. He's dependable. am still putting my money on him senior guard outplayed s highly touted guards nd was coming out of rning plays like a small alik undoubtedly earned WINTER LEADS NATION In the less limited field of national football, the scoring honors go to Winter. According to an Associated Press compilation, Winter, a star in the backfield at Davis Elkins, has in- dividually accounted for 67 points. The juggernaut eleven representing The second high scorer is only one point ahead of Herman Everhardus, the Maize and Blue Conference lead- er. Ralph Graham of Kansas State, at present on top in the Big Six ,stands second among the nation's scorers with 42 points. CANOES FOR RENT SAU NDERS Foot of Cedar Street on Huron River 1WH4 EN A FELLEIR NEEDS. A FRIE-ND II Named in honor of Glare Briggs, Amer- ica's most lovable cartoonist, BRIGGS Pipe Mixture appeared quietly on the market a few months ago, It seemed to inherit the qualities of the man himself!i Kindly, gentle and extra winning. Without ballyhoo, without blare of trumpets .:. BRIGGS began to sell like sixty!I Each smoker told another smoker, and he told still another. BRIGGS will need no selling talk to sell you. Just try a tin and let it speak for itselfl Zenner, playing in major com- r for the first time, acquitted self nobly. He has come a long since his first few nervous ap- ances this fall, and should keep t on developing," was what Kipke to say about the junior quarter passer extraordinary. rou'll start the second team. nst Chicago won't you?" some- incautiously asked Kipke. He led around, surprised, "What you that idea? The first team s. We're not under-rating any- this year." INSIST ON 32-Oz. - a FULL QUART at 15C (Pius 5c Bottle Deposit) CAVALIER PALE DRY GINGER ALE and LIME RICKEY SOLD AT YOUR FAVORITE STORE -,f I ^ I ' _ A K -, I, / O i ;, /' L H ICKEY- FREEMAN spend more time and effort assembling their fabrics, creating their styles, and tai- loring their clothes than any one we know. But it's cer- -- 1 a_ '" tainly well worth while. We've never seen any one equal the smart, keen-look- ing, youthful stylefulness that they achieve in their Hickey- /, iii / 1 1 / % Freeman Customized You need starch in your diet! Clothes. r Ar . Vi,; ,,, '. _Q 9 s-Rn