WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1935 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Varsity Holds Defensive Drill AgainstFrosh Red And Blue Plays Gain Against Wolverines In Practice Session Penn Band To Come Coach Harmon's Men Will Show Varied And Strong Attack Saturday, With three successive victories to their credit, Coach Harry Kipke's Wolverines now face the toughest half of their schedule and yesterday were put through a long defensive drill against the freshmen in an ef- fort to be ready for the Homecoming invasion of a powerful Pennsylvania team Saturday. Using Penn plays, the freshmen repeatedly gained against the Var- sity in the first part of the session but at the end Kipke's grid machine, which at present tops the Big Ten, was solving the Penn attack. How- ever, the Quaker offense as used by Coach Harmon's first string team is far different from that used by the freshmen in that Harmon has perhaps the most perfectly balanced team in the East running the plays. Use Warner System Penn uses a form of the Warner single wing back formation and from Coach Ray Courtright's charts of three Penn games seems to have a wide variety of plays for use here. A hard running backfield composed of Murray at quarter, Elverson and Warwick at the halves and Kurlish at full will be hard to stop as all four are excellent ball carriers. Not only that, all four are top notch blockers and are most adept at tak- ing out interference. Wide end sweeps constitute a large part of the Quaker offense with Warwick, a University of Pennsylvania's 96 piece band will add to the color and gala atmosphere of the Mich- igan Stadium Saturday when Penn and Michigan meet in the 1935 Homecoming game. The band will arrive in Ann Arbor at 11 a.m. Friday with the team. It 11 Brilliant Play Wins Berth For Sophomore The HOT STOVE - By BILL REED 1! 11 _ 11 _!i 1' '1 A NEW STORY, which a super- ficial investigation attributes to Bennie Oosterbaan, was making the rounds at football practice yesterday. John Henry, the story goes, was a willing, if not distinguished substitute on one of Coach Yost's early teams. After keeping his area of the bench warm game after game, one chill autumn day the eager Henry finally was given a call by the Old Man. Jumping up and running on the field, poor John pulled up short and fell to the ground in front of the referee. He had pulled muscles in both legs in his sprint, and was car- ried off the field. Which was considerably less for- tunate than the fate of Ernie John- son, whom the Michigan squad is calling "the man who came out of the dog house." Ernie was sent in Saturday against Columbia primarily for one play, to kick off, and was left in long enough to show that he could play a real game of football at end, climaxing it by taking a pass from Bill Renner for Michigan's third touchdown. An enterprising, and not to say in- trepid, young woman reporter for The Daily enlivened grid practice yesterday. Assigned by the society editor to define the type of female which appeals to the Varsity squad, her questions brought forth a var- iety of answers. Not to anticipate anything she may write or to reverse her ap- proach in any way, the general implication in her interviews was that Chris Everhardus was the type of Varsity football player which most intrigued the Michi- gan co-ed. Which may or may not be a distinction. Yesterday appeared to be discovery day for Chuck Hoyt. Each person to return to football practice from Ferry Field, where the track men were working out, reported a new and sensational find by the coach. Re- ported were sensational discoveries in the javelin, discus, and sprints. Hoyt, never over enthusiastic, would be very pleased if he could report such a discovery in the high jump and says little of his other "finds." 14 Teams To Enter Grind Which Will Be Run Over Golf Course The Intramural Sports Department stages its annual fraternity cross country meet at 5:15 p.m. today. The race will start at the Field House and will continue out over the golf course, ending back at the starting point, a total distance of two miles. All fraternities are eligible to en- ter the contest. They may enter as many men in the event as they wish. The first three men placing for each house will determine the meet score, the lowest total point tally winning first honor. Last year's meet saw Phi Kappa Psi's harrier squad cop the honors. Clayt Brelford ran second, Devine, third, and Steve Mason scored a fifth to give The Phi Kappa Psi house the victory over a fine field of long di's- tance runners. There are 14 fraternities ready to take to the course today. They are: Phi Kappa Psi, Theta Xi, Pi Lambda Psi, Psi Upsilon, Alpha Omega, Alpha Delta Phi, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Beta Delta. Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Beta Delta, Delta Upsilon, Theta Chi, Alpha Kap- pa Lambda, Kappa Nu, Phi Sigma Delta, and Sigma Chi also have teams entered. --Associated Press Photo. An untried sophomore, Tuffy Thompson (above), performed bril- liantly for Minnesota against Northwestern and as a result got a steady job on the Gopher eleven. Thompson, a halfback, is consid- erably smaller than most Minnesota players, weighing only 168 pounds. I-M Sports Volleyball Delta Upsilon Kappa Sigma Kappa Nu 2 Theta Xi 2 Delta Upsilon Kappa Sigma 10 2 3 2 Phi Alpha Kappa 0 Phi Kappa Sigma 0 Sigma Alpha Mu 0 Phi Sigma Delta 0 PhiKappaSigma 0 Phi Lambda Kappa 0 Theta Xi 0 2 Sigma Alpha Mu 0 Detroit Ping Pong Club Wins Over Union Team An all-star team of Detroit ping pong players defeated the Union's pick of table tennisstars three out of five matches last Saturday at the Griswold Sport Shop. The point score was tied up going into the double matches but Stan and Harvey Davis, Detroit brother combination, beat Bob Lahey and Magee to cinch the match. The scores were 21-17 and 21-18. Kappa Nu 2 Phi Sigma Delta IF iI CLOTHING OF VALUE AND DISTINCTION SINCE 1848 P I Ii HORRIBLE SUSPICION.. 1I