OCTOBER 15, 1935 THE MICHIGAN DAiLY ommmmomyna Varsity Holds Light Drill To Polish Attack Oosterbaan Characterizes Wisconsin As Potentially Dangerous Frosh Learn Plays Reserves Hold Lengthy Scrimmage In Which Stabovitz Stars With several outstanding excep- tions, Coach Harry Kipke allowed the Varsity men who beat Indiana, 7-0. Saturday, to take an easy day yester- day when he devoted most of his time to discussing their errors and smooth- ing out several new plays to use against Wisconsin next week. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan, who spent Saturday afternoon, scouting Wisconsin in their tilt with Notre Dame, characterized the Badgers as "a big, heavy team which would be very dangerous if it got started." Wisconsin's lack of speed, however, has been particularly apparent in all three games, but given a lead to de- fend, the Badgers could make it very tough for the opposition, Oosterbaan thought. Oosterbaan Teaches Badger Plays With the Wisconsin plays which he had diagrammed, in his hand during the entire practice session, Ooster- baan spent some time teaching a freshman team the Badger forma- tions so that they can demonstrate them to the Varsity in dummy scrim- make this afternoon. The remainder of the Varsity squad which did not see action Saturday, along with Mike Savage, Earl Meyers, and Jim Lincoln, took part in a lengthy scrimmage' on Ferry Field. Everybody was allowed to get in the game before the afternoon was over, but without a doubt Chet Stabovitz stood out as the best individual per- former of the afternoon. A hard- running, heads-up ball player, Stabo- vitz turned in a stellar performance yesterday when he side-stepped, stiff- armed, and pivoted away from tack- lers time and again as he reeled off consistent gains. Stabovitz is a driv- ing runner who picks his hole and re- fuses to stop because a tackler has a hand on him. His blocking ability was also aptly demonstrated yester- day when he cut down three would- b tacklers to clear a touchdown path for one of his teammates. The injury jinx which has been pursuing the Wolverines relentlessly since the beginning of practice, seems still to be very much in evidence. Bob Amrine seriously injured his leg in scrimmage last night. Bill Renner appeared on the field with a very ten- der left finger and a sore throat. X- rays showed no fracture to be pres- ent in the hand, however, as had been feared earlier, but big Bud Hanshue will be out of uniform for several weeks with the twisted knee which forced him out of the Indiana game. Everhardus To Leave Hospital Chris Everhardus was due to be re- leased from the University Hospital last night. He has been confined there with a slight concussion, and in all probability will be in shape for Wisconsin. The men who are definitely out of the picture as far as the Badgers are concerned are Bob Cooper, who today went back to the hospital with the leg injury which has handicapped him all season. Bob Amrine who also has a bad leg and Fred Ziem whose trouble is the same. Joe Rinaldi was on the field today, but it is very doubtful if he will be in shape to see a great deal of service in Madison. He has been out of uni- form so long that, he is pretty well behind the rest of the squad and Tiny Wright will probably start at center. McMillin, Philosophic In Defeat Compares Football Game To Life By LESTER BRAUSER "When your squad's green, and comparatively untried, you can hard- ly blame it for shortcomings such as it revealed in the game today." Thus, the slight, gray haired Bo MlcMillin philosophically and char- acteristically excused his big Hoosier eleven for its defeat by the Wolver- ines last Saturday. In the dressing room after the game, he was a strik- ing contrast to the coach of a losing team who growls and grumbles over his team's faults. He talked freely and unhesitatingly with newspaper- men, answering every query affably. "Only three seniors in my lineup," the Indiana Mentor commented. "In fact, there are only seven seniors on the entire squad and there were 13 sophomores out of the 35 I brought along today," he added. "My boys made plenty of mistakes today but they will play again and then they will not repeat their er- rors. That is how they'll find life after they have discarded their grid- iron togs for the last time -plenty of lessons they'll learn then from their mistakes. The first mistake means little if it teaches a person Al Agett Averaged Over 14 Yards On Each Play EAST LANSING, Oct. 14.-(/)- Al Agett, the Tennessee reserve back who stole the offensive honors for Michigan State at left halfback in Saturday's game, advanced the ball 119 yards in eight plays, the statisti- cians' records showed today. The average is 14.9 yards on each play. He was not thrown for a loss once. On one play he was trapped behind the line on an attempted pass, but turned what should have been a loss into an eight-yard gain by squirming through a half dozen Kansas line- men. Kurt Warmbein, the regular left half, and Steve Sebo, reserve right half, had poor blocking in front of them most of the day and were thrown for heavy losses. On 12 plays from scrimmage Warmbein gained 37 yards but lost 35 on those in which the Kansas linemen threw him be- hind the line. Sebo carried the ball 13 times, gained 55 yards and lost 29. All prospective freshmen wrest- lers are asked to report to Coach Kelly at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the wrestling room of Waterman Gymnasium. his lesson but if it is repeated it's just too bad," McMillin continued. That is Bo McMillin. He takes his football seriously realizing its main practicability. "Kipke's boys, like mine, lack the necessary experience to land on top of the Big Ten football heap this year. I believe," he added. Coach McMillin was not lacking in praise for the men of the Maize and Blue. He thought that Michigan de- served a heap of credit for its un- expectly fine showing Saturday. Captain Reed Kelso spoke of Mich- igan as a nice well balanced all around team,- and another of his teamates, C. W. Norton, added than he knew as well as the rest of the Indiana team that their considera- tion of Michigan as an outfit to be reckoned with, and not just a "set- up," was well founded, as the score after the game indicated. So Coach Bo McMillin, one of the world's finest gifts to the coaching profession, left Ann Arbor after tast- ing his first licking at the hands of the Michigan Wolverines. He'll probably taste it again just as well as he will make Kipke's men feel the bitterness of defeat but the bitterness will melt away before the power of his fine, clean personality. I-M Sp orts VOLLEYBALL Swim Jude,' 3I~ltMannu~ Matt Mann, Varsity swimming coach, will offer two series of swimming classes for male mem- bers of the faculty beginning Mon- day, October 14 at the Intramural pool. A beginners' class will meet Tuesday and Thursday from 12:15 to 12:45 p m., and a section open to any faculty member will meet Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at the same time. K arpii ski Winis 72 Hole Medal PlayTourney Al Karpinski of Rochester, N. Y. won the 72-hole medal play Univer- sity golf championship when he card- ed a total of 313 strokes to nose out Al Saunders and Chuck Novak who tied for second place with 317 blows each. Bruce Smith was fourth with 322. Karpinski, a sophomore, is a rangy, well built stylist who will undoubted- ly play Varsity golf this year. Saun- ders is a junior who has already had a year of Varsity experience while Smith and Novak are comparatively inexperienced. Prof. Thomas C. Trueblood, coach, announced at the same time that he made public the results of the University tourney, that the fresh- man squad for the coming week would consist of Emery, Novak, Blak- ley, Smith, Evans, Murphy, Zimmer- man, and Griffin. A BRAIN HARASSED BY A PEN THAT RUNS DRY, LOSES ITS Haki Hence Parker Created 102% More Ink Capacity and Visible Ink Supply All ed in their independent students interest- playing volley ball should send entries in to the Intramural * From Harvard to Southern Calfornia Wan ted by More Students That's why thousands of students are ton pump like other sacless pe replacingtheirpresentpenswiththisrev- nothing to render it useless later Than All Other Standard olutionary new Parker Vacumatic with That's why it is guaranteed meet 7rw m le visible ink supply and 102%more of it. cally perfect. Go to any good Sports building immediately. in the Independent Volley league starts Oct. 24. SPEEDBALL Play Ball L I CLl Cl:! l. V(dZVi IGGl.4 Doherty. Call Again Issues For Frosh Talent Fraternity teams will try to apply rushing methods to speedball as the regular schedule is resumed at 5:15 p.m. today. Games scheduled for today are: Theta Xi vs. Psi Upsilon, Phi Beta Delta vs. Sigma Phi Ep- silon, and Chi Psi vs. Sigma Alpha Mu. TOUCH FOOTBALL Students wishing to play touch football should send their entries in to the Intramural building at once. Touch football is becoming more pop- ular every year among students who like to play football but are unable to play on the varsity squad. Fifteen teams have already entered the In- dependent Touch Football League and play will start Oct. 21. Suede and Wool Jackets Coach Ken Doherty has issued a second call for freshman candidates for cross country, javelin, shot put and discus. All who have participat- ed in high school or prep school in any track activity are requested to report to Coach Doherty any after- noon this week at the Yost Field House or at Ferry Field. All Students interested in try- ing out for the Varsity Wrestling team should meet at 8 p.m. tonight at the Michigan Union. The exact room will be designated on the bulletin board. Cliff Keen, Varsity Wrestling Coach. Every time that you write, your Train of Thought flashes along rails more delicate than gossamer. And every petty annoyance-e very distraction-caused by a pen that skips and runs dry in study periods, classes, or exams, ob- structs the track and de- rails the train. WRITES TWO WAYS WITHOUT ADJUSTMENT By holdi"g this mir- acle writer to the light, they can see the ink level -see days ahead if it's running low. It is lami- nated-built tip ring upon ring of shimmering Pearl and Jet--smart, velvet-like, wholly ex- clusive. It contains no rubber sac found in sac-type pens-no scquir t-gun pis- CALKINS-FLETCHER DRUG STORES THREE DEPENDABLE STORES 324 South State 818 South State A $3.50 Hat. thiat looks ike $6-ina Mirror!. If you can tell one of these %3.50 La Salle hats from the %6 article, there's a job waiting For you in the highest hat :ircles. CLOTHING OF VALUE AND DISTINCTION SINCE 1848 Two Ways to Outsmart the Weather 1' III So we keep bringing in these $3.50 hats for $6.00 heads,... md keep worrying about yours. Walk A Few Steps And Save Dollars Tom Corbett YOUNG MEN'S SHOP 116 East Liberty Street .HRI KNOWN AS THE BEST - THE BEST KNOWN with MANHATTANIZED Collar Attached. F RE IS THE NEW Manhattan shirt with the "Manhattanized" collar attached, the soft collar that looks stiff, that stays put, that gives you that well-groomed appearance mny time of the day. It will not wilt -)r wrinkle. There is no starch used. It keeps its place properly on your deck. A product of Manhattan skill znd Manhattan devotion to quality standards. Available in a smart new iclection of fancy patterns as well is white and plain colors. Retails at $1.95 THE DOWNTOWN STORE FOR MICHIGAN MEN WeSene toSeve Aydin' 809 SOUTH MAIN STRLCT SUEDES . . . $5.95 to $10.95 WOOL .....$4.95 to $6.45 Several Styles to choose from. CLOTHES 119 South Main Street L ..I' Two Important Events at Calkizis-Fletcher s DO COME IN Special Exhibit of and have a quiet PERSONAL TALK with C A R L ZEISS MISS MARJORIE MURPHY DRc'vRI E (EXPERT BEAUTY CONSULTANT) Let her tell you about Under the Direction of MR. SM E RAG E I vrbara Qould Special Representative of CARL ZEISS, Inc. Will Be Held in Our Store NEW IRRADIATED SKIN CREAMB! O $2.75 Wednesday, Oct. 16 (TRIAL SIZE $1.25) Featured in This Exhibit Barbara Gould's representative will be here ALL THIS WEEK 9 ZEISS-IKON CAMERAS * BINOCULARS to explain to you Barbara Gould's new Skin Cream which is *' MAGNIFYING GLASSES - and a display of irradiated, with vitalizing, health-giving ultra violet rays! Exceptional ENLARGEMENTS made with It stimulates the tissues to make tired, sluggish skin look smooth and young and unlined. Come in and let her look a Contax Camera. TWEED BALMACCANS Durable, warm, handsome tweed coats in either a plain or reversible coat. Two shades of brown, three of gray and a rich gray-blue. $22.50 - $27.50 $30.00 6e zE ) Ii III 1 w ~ m If