SATUR~DAY,. NOV EMER 16, 1935 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 80,000 ToSeeNotre Dame And Army Renew Rivalry Today Irish Favored. In 22nd Game Between Teams Experts Avoid Predicting Winner; Recall Scores In Past Years NEW YORK --Eighty thousand people this afternoon will witness the renewal of football's oldest inter- sectional rivalry when Notre Dame meets the Army at Yankee Stadium. Conquerors of the Scarlet Scourge that is Ohio State, the Irish rate as favorites over the Cadets, although both clubs have been beaten. North- western took the tneasure of the South Bend eleven a week ago at the same time Pittsburgh, beaten itself by the Irisf, was walloping the Army by four touchdowns. It is the 22nd meeting of the two teams, Notre Dame having won 15 games to Army's five. One was tied. The series is the longest uninter- rupted one in either school's history and time has proven that past records mean nothing when the teams clash. 33 Make Trip Coach Elmer Layden, himself an important cog in Notre Dame's slash- ing attack upon the Cadets more than a decade ago, brought a squad of 33 men on the trip. Andy Pilney, whose spectacular play against Ohio State is the marvel of the season, was included but is not expected to be able to play due to the knee in- jury he suffered in the closing min- utes of the Buckeye game. Judging from comparative scores Notre Dame boasts a big edge, but observers have been taught by ex- perience . that the season's earlier exhibitions can count for naught today. . In the worst season that the im- mortal Knute Rockne had in coach- ing the Irish of South Bend, Army was rated far better. That was in 1928 and when the game was over the great Army team had fallen be- fore an inspired Notre Dame eleven, 12-6. The 1929 game will remain long in the memory of the thousands that witnessed it. Highly touted and later accorded national cahmpionship rat- ing,. the Irish found the.Cadets who had been tied once and beaten twice a hard team to beat. The game was not decided until Jack Elder, speedy Irish halfback, intercepted an Army pass practically on his own goal line and ran the length of the field for the only touchdown of the affair. Irish Won In '34 National champions again the next year, Notre Dame beat the Army at Soldier's Field in Chicago by one point when Marchmont Schwartz dashed 50 yards for a score before 110,000 people. A year ago a pow- erful Cadet aggregation fell before the Irish who were supposedly weak and the reverse may occur in this renewal of the series. Layden is expected to start Cari- deo at full, Shakespeare and Wojci- hovski as halfbacks and Fromhart at quarter in his backfield, and if it does not click shove in Gaul at quar- ter, Mike Layden and either Wilkey or Mazziotti at the halves, and Elser at full. It was this system of whole- sale substitutions, reminiscent of the shock troop days in Rockne regime, that wore down the Navy several weeks ago for the Irish and is likely: to prove as effective against the, other service team today.I Ii ____ _____ 1I Big ropher Tackle Ohio State's 'Scarlet Scouroe' Confident Of Win Over Michigan it S ports Of The Day The HOT STOVE -By BILL REED -_ 1, V_ III I' TODAY is apparently a day of de- nials. Beginning with Bennie Oosterbaan, denying any acquaint- ance with the works of Doctor Coue, or that his chant is a novel device tb keep his attention from straying, but nevertheless his "We're gonna beat the Gophers" goes on with mon- otonous regularity. And in politics, a matter made pertinent by the presence in town for the weekend of Senator Vandenberg, the denial is grow- ing in force that Fielding Yost will be made Secretary of War when the Senator reaches the White House, despite the Repub- lican convictions and campaign activities of Michigan's "Old Man." ' Ohio State is the subject of three more denials. A local scribe, whose opinions are highly valued by all who know him, is insistent in his de- nial that the Buckeyes are really the "Scarlet Scourge" as he has substi- tuted the appellation, the "Pink Ele- phants." And at that the scribe is not one who is subject to alcoholic illusions. The Buckeyes themselves are denying the rumor given voice in The New Yorker this week that the cause of their defeat at the hands of Notre Dame was that Governor Davey's hired hands "quit when the whistle blew." Which reference to the economic aspirations of the Buckeyes brings the denial that despite the fact that certain linemen are in danger of fi- nancial straits in view of possible dis- missal from their positions in Co- lumbus, no precautions are being made to protect the referee's coin when he throws it up for the cap- tain's choice before the game next week. And of coure, the most vocifer- ous denial of the day is that which is being made by the en- tire Michigan football squad, "The Gophers won't beat us." The concensus of the sports staff's opinion on today's games: Minnesota (6), Michigan (5). Ohio State (7), Illinois (4). Chicago (7), Indiana (4). Iowa (8), Purdue (3). Northwestern (11), Wisconsin (0). Michigan State (11), Loyola (0). Notre Dame (11), Army (0). Navy (9), Columbia (2). Pennsylvania (8), Penn St. (3). Colgate (7), Syracuse (4). Marquette (7), Temple (4). Southern Methodist (10), Arkansas (1). Texas Christian (11), Texas (0). Alabama (11), Georgia Tech (0). Louisiana St. (11), Georgia (0). Tennessee (8), Vanderbilt (3). North Carolina (10), Duke (1). Washington St. (6), U.S.C. (5). Pittsburgh (6), Nebraska (5). REVOLTA SIGNED CHICAGO, Nov. 15.- (A') -John- ny Revolta, Milwaukee star and national professional golf champion, today signed to work with Sam Parks, Jr., of Pittsburgh, National Open titleholder, on the professional staff of the Miami Biltmore Country Club. Revolta will report within two weeks. Revolta said he planned to com- pete in all the Southwestern tourna- ments. His chief goal, he said, was the capture of the rich Miami Bilt- more Open. Ed Widseth is another bit of evi- dence backing the statement that the Minnesota line will spell trouble for the Wolverine gridders this afternoon when the two contenders for the "Little Brown Jug" meet once more. Widseth, Minnesota Tackle, Is Answer To Coach's Dream Any tackle tipping the scales at 230-pounds, standing about six foot six inches without the aid of his cleat- ed shoes, and capable of racing down under punts ahead of his ends is a welcome gift to any coach. Bernie Bierman. Minnesota mentor, realized that last year and put Ed Widseth, then only a sophomore who lives up to all of these superlatives, into the Varsity line despite the fact that re- turning veterans were his competi- tion. Widseth more than justified Bier- man's choice. To his cool, hard play can be attributed a good part of the Viking's important victories over the Pittsburgh Panthers last year. In the third quarter with the Pitt eleven leading by a slim margin, Wid- seth, after racing down under Lund's punt, changed the whole tenor of the contest by forcing the waiting Panther safetyman to fumble so hard did he hit him. That fumble was re- covered by Frank Larson, the Goph- er's All-American end, and paved the way for the Minnesota victory. That game, which was Widseth's firsu appearance in a major tilt, marked him as a man to be watched. He played a prominent part in the remaining contests in the Minnesota schedule and in the winning of the National title and was picked as one By FRED BUESSER Christened "The Scarlet Scourge"I in one of the greatest waves of build-t up ballyhoo ever launched by a band of hired publicity writers, Ohio State'sf incomparable football team will de-t scend upon Ann Arbor next Saturday1 intent upon slaughtering what they1 believe is a pitifully weak Michigan team. Press releases from Columbus which told spell-binding stories about thet greatest powerhouse ever assembled' in one football camp, and incidentally drew the day's largest football crowd1 to the opening game, were hushedt temporarily after the Buckeyes had trouble beating Kentucky, 19-6. Mowed Down Drake But with the Drake slaughter of the next Saturday when Francis Schmidt sent in his entire squad to trample a small but determined band of Drake gridmen, 85-7, the tempo of the typewriters increased and once again 'little opposition was seen in the path of a national title.' Successive defeats handed to Northwestern and Indiana only served to inflate the Ohio ego to, the bursting point, and "The Ohio State Lantern," student publication, went so far as to say that should Notre Dame defeat Ohio State, Elmer Lay- den could take Knute Rockne's post as the greatest coach of all time and that Notre Dame would be ranked as the leading team in the country. Irish Spoiled Season There followed the greatest and most spectacular gridiron classic of the year when a fighting Irish team led by Andy Pilney came from behind in the last minute of play to outpass, outplay and outthink Ohio State for a spectacular 18-13 victory. Mr. Lay- den didn't claim the title which the 'Lantern' had offered, but he did make the Ohio State Campus, coaches and alumni about the sickest group of individuals ini the country. of the tackles on the All-Conference and the All-Western elevens. The blond Viking lineman, who re- sembles the traditional Norsemen of the Northern Seas, has proven to be more than just another good sopho- more, providing much of the strength that has made the Minnesota forward wall something to cope with and be- ing suggested by many for All-Amer- ican honors. The next Saturday the Chicago Ma- roons, paced by their great triple- threat back, Jay Beranger, rose up from the ground, shook the dust of the under dog from their backs and proceeded to give the arrogant Scar- let Scourge the scare of their young lives -for the first three periods. Chicago led, 13-0 at the half and throughout the third quarter fought desperately to preserve their lead. But the clever Schmidt knew that there were only 27 men on the Chi- cago football squad, so with master- ful strategy he proceeded to run in his stream of reserve footballers, and overpower a completely exhausted Chicago team, 20-13. r 14 LOS ANGELES- Michigan State's Spartans, after their five day trip from East Lansing, were ready today for their game Saturday with Loyola University. Coast experts conceded the Michigan eleven a decided edge. 1. CHICAGO - Welker Cochran, Wil- lie Hoppe and Art Thurnblad con- tinued to lead the three cushion world championship billiard tourna- ment here today. The defending champion, JohnnycLayton, is defi- nitely out of the race. BATTLE CREEK - The state board in control of athletics today gave official sanction to a proposed bout between Joe Louis and Johnny Risk, veteran Cleveland heavyweight. If staged the bout will be late in Jan- uary or the first part of February. DAILY CLASSIFIEDS are good, too! 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