LY, NOV. 4, 19,6O THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TIMLER Kipke Gives Varsity New Plays To Dazzle Quakers Saturday 1 I .f Cooper Dons Uniform, Jogs Around Track Kipke Stresses Laterals; Hook, S ithers Share, Passing Duties A innesota Penalty Northwestern, Was Foreshadowed Iniu-_ Flasl by Varsity Flanker c 1( Faced with the task of protecting an unbeaten intersectional record dating back to 1926, Coach Harry Kipke gave his squad some new plays to work on during yesterday's drill for Saturday's Pennsylvania game in an effort to develop a varied running attack featuring laterals which will* be combined with a vastly improved passing offense. In order to safe- guard from further injuries, Coach Kipke said that he will continue his plan of light workouts. , Cooper Dons Uniform. Although unable to take part in the practice session, Bob Cooper donned a uniform for the first time since his injury last Wednesday and jogged around the field. Although not in uniform another injured Wolverine, Fred Janke watched the drill from the sidelines. Janke suffered a bad shoulder injury in the Minnesota game which forced him out of com- petition for the rest of the season.( With Johnny Smithers and Wally Hook sharing the passing duties and Stark Ritchie doing most of the ball carrying, the Varsity showed plenty of spirit and snap in running through the new plays. Danny Smick put on a fine exhibition of pass receiving when he snagged several of Smith- ers' long heaves for fine catches.t Stress Speedi Stressing speed and ball handling, the backs managed to toss the ball around with plenty of zip on the va- rious deceptive lateral formations. The Varsity lineup was the same as yesterday's with Capt. Matt Patanelli and Smick, ends, Ed Greenwald and Jim Lincoln at the tackle positions, Fred Ziem and Jesse Garber, guards and Joe Rinaldi, center. In the back- field Bill Barclay was at quarter with Ritchie and Smithers, halves and Ced Sweet, fullback. Hook alternated with Ritchie at the running halfback post. Don Siegel, regular right tackle, was again kept out of the drill to give his injured right knee more chance to heal. Elmer Gedeon, re- serve end, did not take part in the practice session due to an old stom- ach ailment. However, George Mar- zonie, guard, again returned to ac- tive work after being hampered by a bruised hip. Large Alumni Group To See Quaker Game When Michigan plays at Pennsyl- vania this Saturday for the first time since 1917 they will have as support- ers not only the Band and those stu- dents who follow the team on trips but also alumni from nearly all the eastern Atlantic states. Friday evening, according to T. Hawley Tapping, alumni secretary, the Alumni Association of Philadel- phia is staging a reunion banquet at the Hotel Benjamin Franklin at which from 200 to 300 prominent alumni are expected to attend. This group will include former Michigan athletes and students from New York, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, West Vir- ginia, Michigan, and other states. Speakers at the banquet will be Athletic Director Fielding H. Yost, Coach Harry G. Kipke, President Emory J. Hyde of the Association, Ar- thur W. Kohler and Tapping. Be- v tween speeches the Varsity band will play. This banquet makes the first one held in Philadelphia of national pro- minence since 1926 when one of the most elaborate and formal alumni dinners was held. Some of the former Varsity stars expected are Johnny Muehlenbach, former All-America, Jimmy Baird, '95 varsity football captain, Walter Ben- nett, '98 Varsity captain, Paul Ma- goffer, '07, captain, Elmer Hardell, '17 tackle, William Cole, '02 football star, Fred Norcross, '05 captain, Her- man Nyland '26, Ed Russell, '32 track captain and a host of others. ......._ .. - In Michigan Game topners natec The penalty that knocked the high- Bation riding Minnesota football team out of the national title came as no Wildcats Given 142 Points surprise to the Michigan gridders. When the Wolverines took on the To Minnesota's 371 By Gophers at Minneapolis several weeks Vote Of Experts ago they encountered plenty of dif- ficulty with the Minnesota linemen NEW YORK, Nov. 2.-V)-In a who seemed to be using their hands battle of ballots almost as fiercely too freely. The feeling was that if fought as their struggle in the mud the officials had been watching for at Evanston, Northwestern displaced it, they would have had opportunity Minnesota today as the No. 1 college enough ito call penalties for illegal team in the national football ranking use of the hands. poll conducted by the Associated The Purdue scout who watched the Press. game got wind of this fact and when Majority support was swayed by the Boilermakers went to Minnea- the Wildcats 6-0 triumph ' that polis the next week they warned the snapped the Gopher's winning streak officials who worked the Purdue-Min- tmv cn w n :i nesota game. As a result the Goph- ers were penalized nine times and lost 135 yards for breaking this rule alone. Last Saturday at Dyche Stadium in Chicago big Ed Widseth, Minnesota; tackle, was caught in the act of slug- ging a Northwestern lineman and the Gophers were penalized 13 yards to the one-yard line and incidentally' were penalized right out of their third straight national championship. ' Matey Cops Futurity; Wins Pimlico Prize BALTIMORE, Nov. 3.-(P)-Walter M. Jeffords' Matey took the mile and a sixteenth Pimlico Futurity, worth, $25,300 net to the winner, today. Cal- umet Farm's Privileged, which fin- ished a neck ahead of the Jefford's colt, was disqualified. Second place went to Col. E. R.r Bradley's Brooklyn; third to Billion-I aire, another Bradley colt, and fourth to Bomar Stable's Yellow Tulip. t rUL manUy e p~eFU s ppa UIt~~y W e satisfied as to Northwestern's super- iority, all things considered, and voted their opinions accordingly. As one expressed it: "Without taking anything away from Northwestern, I still think Minnesota is the better club." Notwithstanding the mixture of sentiment, 31 of the 43 contributors to this week's poll rated Northwest- ern at the top of their "first ten" to give the Wildcats a total of 412 points. Ten experts rated Minnesota No. 1, with the Gophers taking second place The rankings, with points (scored on 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis): 1. Northwestern 412. 2. Minnesota 371. 3. Fordham. 227. 4. Marquette 212. 5. Pittsburgh 191. 6. Washington 181. 7. Louisiana State 168. 8. Nebraska 165. 9. Santa Clara 145. 10. Tulane 93. Townsend, Houdini Of Cagers, Goes Berserk On I-41 Courtsi 4~ei By RAY GOODMAN ing and slapping the ball around like All last season while we were cov- a handball player. I ering Michigan. basketball games we The receivers, however, were defi- a were criticized for overplaying John nitely "off" with the exception of t Townsend at the expense of the rest Johnny Gee who looks like a different of the team. Everyone admitted that person from the Johnny Gee of the h past. Herm Fishman and Dick Long, f John was the best player, that they the two guards, were having a bad o had ever seen on a Michigan team, night with the top on the basket I but still they felt that he was being every time they took a shot. overplayed. Eddie Payne, the little forward that Well, the least we could do was 1 Cappy has inserted in the empty for- try to correct this fault and so we ward spot to work in speed, still hasn't I made the attempt. The attempt was absorbed the fundamentals of the a flop, it was just no go. So this year Michigan system. He was breaking we're not going to try it again. This from the back line too often and tied fact has been made more and more up the play under the basket. How- apparent in the last week since Cappy ever, Payne has been working with Cpappon has started to scrimmage J the Varsity only a scant week and his Varsity cagers down at the In- can hardly be expected to have tramural Gym. learned everything in such a short Today John Townsend is better time. than he ever was before. He is the Anyway, the whole story was Houdini of basketball and there isn't Townsend. When there wasn't any any question about it. The rest of opening he made one and when his the papers may not know it but to- playmates were missing he was all day he's the best collegiate basketball over the backboard waiting to push player in the country. them in. Perhaps there is just something If you're smart you'll go down to about the I-M floors that makes the I-M gym one of these nights and him look so good. Somehow there watch him. Usually he tightens up isn't any strain there and John just and plays more conservative ball when he gets into the Field House. lets himself go and the results are hh amazing. Monday night he went through a short 25-minute offensive scrimmage, five minutes short of a regulation half, hit 16 out of 24 shots Shake the cit for 32 points and put on one of the most amazing passing exhibitions' fromiYour fee that we've ever seen. ii He was really a magician during those 25 minutes and a basketball is a lot more difficult to handle than a deck of cards. It was a case of 'now you see it, and now you don't. It's very difficult to describe the manner in which he was throwing the passes. Instead of finding his re- ceivers with his eyes he seemed to be using his ears and even his sense of touch. He seldom looked in the same direction as the ball and he was hook- . Settle down inapairofourW T UX EDOES Midnight Blue or Black of Reversed Calf. Sporty, s Custom Tailored completely comfortable. Deta nn n original British tradition. BE Nelson Is Nominated As Best Punt Blocker CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Nov. 3.-(R)- Illinois nominates Ken Nelson, Illini nd, as the champion punt blocker When Nelson blocked a punt to give Illinois its winning touchdown against Michigan Saturday, it was .he seventh time in three years. During the three years, Nelson has blocked two against Southern Cali- ornia; two against Northwestern and one against Ohio State, Army and Michigan each YOU CAN'T CHEW OFF THE MOUTHPIECE I I -: Elmer Gedeon, tall flanker of the Varsity grid squad and one of the best pass receivers on the team, will undoubtedly see service Satur- day against the powerful Pennsyl- vania eleven. Gedeon snared one of Johnny Smithers' long heaves for a 15-yard gain on the first play after his substitution in the Illinois game. y }.. Wildcats' Victory Paces Underdogs In this season of startling grid up- sets where so many top-notch teams have been beaten that there is hardly a contender left for the honor of carrying the colors of the East against the West in the Rose Bowl game, one team - Minnesota - had remained invincible and last Saturday Coach Benny Bierman's Gopher powerhouse went the way of all the great teams and lost to Northwestern. 6-0. For 21 straight games, the Norse- men from Minnesota dominated the gridiron world and were odds on fa- vorites to repeat as national cham- pions this year despite all the pessi- mistic predictions made by Coach Bierman. Just a week ago, the Gophers had silenced their critics by romping over Purdue, touted 'as one of the strongest teams in the Big Ten. by an overwhelming 33-0 score. Toth Comes Through But Coach Lynn Waldorf and his Wildcats refused to be overawed by Gopher power and Steve Toth plunged over the goal line for the touchdown that ended Minnesota's domination of the nation's football and which virtually assured North- western of the Big Ten championship and a strong claim for the national title. In the East, a game Harvard team that had not scored on Princeton in 16 years, took the ball on its own 14-yard line after intercepting a pass in the closing minutes of the fray and marched 86 yards to score a touch- down, kick the extra point and tie the Tigers, who were rated as 10-to-1 favorites, by a 14-14 score. Yale's hopes for an unbeaten season were also shattered Saturday when Dartmouth 'doggedly protected an; SPEDDI NG QUALITY WORK POPULAR PRICES MICHIGANENSIAN PHOTOGRAPH ER early lead to emerge on the long end of an 11-7 count before a crowd of 60,000 partisan rooters. It wasn't until half way through the fourth period with Dartmouthl leading 11-0 that the Eli's got their offensive clicking but then with half- back Humphrey throwing the passes Yale scored one touchdown and took the ball to Dartmouth's two-yard stripe for a first down with 30 sec- onds left to play.Humphrey then tried to fool the fast charging Dart- mouth line with a wide end run but was stopped short of the goal and the game ended. Boston Ties State Coach Charlie Bachman's Michigan State team, heavy favorites to avenge last year's upset defeat at the hands of Boston College were forced to con- tent themselves with a 13-13 tie. 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