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October 21, 1939 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1939-10-21

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

THE 'MIC IIGAN JYAIJY

iopher-Buekeye Batile Heads Big Ten GamesToday

f+ _____ _ _.

No rthwestern Meets Wisconsin;
I[ndiatna Favored Over Illinois

Replaces Kodros

InresTake Leading Players
From Freshm-an Grid Practices

U-

NtreiJDame To Face Nav~y
llefoe Selout Crow

third straight Western Conference
crown. The Gophers were held to a
13 to 13 deadlock by Purdue in their
opener last week.
Game time is 2 _p m., (CST).

MINE4IOQLS, Oct. 20.--(A)-1
Two powerful football m~achines-
Obhio State a~nd, Minnesot :,--will dis-
play their wyakes in a ,Western Con-
ference game before 55,000 fans in
Memorial Stadium here tomorrow.
It will be.the, fourlth time the two
schools; have mzet on. the gridiron with
Mininesota holding a two to one edge.
Minnesota also~ is protecting a record
of ,,not leaving been dlefeated in a
Conference game, at homne since 1932.
Still remaning to be ,answered is a
questionof just n~ow powerful is
Minnesota's representative, seeking a

Wha~t. makJes champions? With
spirit, samna tamorand
drive. Nith cate it's breed-
poise.
Stakls, too, have their cham-
exp~ensive places. But. not hard
to; :find for Afll nl atrons! For
i~cr sea erve.,t, the Allenel
is a champion ... . fromn chamn-
pion cattle, and, certifiedlby, the
U.S. Government to be unsur-
passedl in quality, flavor, an~d
downright godness.
Butdoqn't talke ou~r word for it
com~e in today and sn
your teeth into one of these
delicious steaks and you'll. find
ou.t . fr yors~relf why the~y're
ch~ampions !
THE~

i

EVANSTON, Ill., Oct. 20.-(/')-The
football teams of Northwestern and
Wisconsin, each smarting under two
defeats this season, come together at
Dyche Stadiu.m tomorrow iin a game
vital to .the Big Ten title hopes of
each school.
Northwestern, ,.,which, will enter the
Igame a slight favorite, has lost to
Oklahoma and Ohio State while in its
last t wo starts Wisconsin bowed to
fTexas and Indiana. , Pefcat by Ohio
Mtate died $orthwesten's Wes-
tern Conference title chance and Wis-
consin's slim chance at .the~$ig Ten
crown :were hut by Indiaa's victory.
Paul Soper was slated to start at
left .hlf. for Northwestern ;but Bill
Dae Correvont was expected to see
plenty of ati~n. Spie, 4O000 fans
were epected to watch :the game,
scheduled to start at 2 _p n. (ST).
CHAMPAIGNl, Oct. 20.-(JP)-
Indiana's, Hoosiers, who haven't won
a lootPall game ,t Illinois in 40 years,
will be "favored to break that long
famine in Memorial Stadium to-
morrow.
The Hoosiers, victorious last week
Over :Wisconsin as Illinois. bowed to
Southern California, have been ,mov-
ing in high gear with a running game
luilt round ,Clee ;Maddox and Joe
~Tfi and. the pssing of" Harold
Illinois' lineup may see several
sophomor'es. in action. Some 25,000
§pectators ,were expected: to witness
the game, s, eujed~fpr.,2p.m. ( ST).
CLEVELANID, Oct. 20.-V)-On-
rus'hing Notre Dqaeand challeng-
ing Navy worked out tody inGCeve-
lz d Stadixum <before 0 000Q seats
wvhich toxnorrow wvill hold a capacity
cr4,id.
Bth Elmler Layden,,head coach for
the "FIighting Irish," and i,ijor ,Em-
ry :E. (Swe-l6) aon, frog-voiced
Nayy mentor, declined to 'astound
anyone by predicting victory. They
fi~gued, :pullicly .at; least, that it
:would be as. close .as Dorn Qn a cob.
Larson looked. over his ,unbeaten
,l~jt ;ted hopefuls and pulled Lou
, a D, 1440 .pounds of whiling der-
vyish from Prestonburg, Ky., out of
the; bag I.o fill .the quarterbacking11,pono aly sige.te iig
1.n1unm ett fWood.
1emetnber~lng how the Irsh escaped
by ra cat's ,whi,ker apginstf Purdue,
Ge rgia 'Tech and Southern Metho-
ds-NotreDI~4,'ne tone the first two
by thiree points, theast by only one
-.Layden.observed:
'1We've got to be ,right ;up on our
toes al the time or :they'll run us
out ito ".fake ,Erie-anti r f they ..ever
g.et us on water we're licked.
"Three of the ~fie touchdowns
against us phis season have been on
breaks-and I "don't thinlk , t ey ll
occu.r all through :the seasQn.
4 swered ;Larson, whose Middies
*toppled Wyilliapn and *r and Vir-
ginia :before lst week's scoreless tie
with Dartmouth :
"WJe did 't come down .hre to be
,a doormat."
N7avy has never been a Ntre Dame
dormat, ,but has ,takens only three
and, lost nine against the ;Irish.

With Arehie - odros, ,Wohigan's
captain and center, out with an
infected arn, Bob Ingalls, sopho-
more pivot man, will probably be
in the startin~g lineup today when
the Wolverines meet the Chicago
, aroorns ill the Windy City. 110r-
ace Tinker having recovered from*
hi ijuries wvill also be available
for thiv ccnti r berth.
Spartan .F'reshme n
Win.1Opener, .13 0Y
,EAST LANSING, Oct. ""0. -VP'-
M4ichigan State College's freshman
football team won its first game of
the, season .today, defeating Michi-
gan Normal frosh 13. to 0.
A passing combination, Dick Lippe
of Lansing to Mike Miketinac of
Hermansville brought scores for the
Spartans in the second and fourth
quarters, although the, first, marker
was obtained by, Pete Ripinaster of
Grand Rapids after Miketinac was
clown on the one-yard line.
Two kicks for point by Maro Miller,
Lansing fullback, connected only
once.

By WVOOPY BLOCK
A six letter word related: to foot-
baall, meaning disconsolation, sorrow,
heart-break,.-pain" and .discomfort is
the harmless looking bit of'.English,
r, JTURY. For, in this short ,but p0-
tent piece of literature is the bane of
every football _field in- the country.:
The =thorn. in the side of potential
champions. Coach Wlyally Weber has
felt its none too gentle prick already
this: season while attempting to find
enoujgh. able bodied gridders to have
an :honest to goodness scrimmage
.with his freshman squad.
The lineup of the freshman hos-
pital.:brigade reads as. follows:
At the ends: Well, we can't help the
medical profession much at this posi-
tion, for',boys like Rudy Sineica of
Chicago aind Bill Steele from: Detroit
don't seem to bruise easily.
At the taddles: Hmrm, no 'damnage
here as yet. We'll have to wait for
further developments. Big Rudy
Sengel the' Louisville, Ky., -star, is
more than holding .his own, as is
:Blarry. Anderson and Pete Gifitlis, 111
nois hopefuls.
At the ,<guards: Can you hear the
rnackd of pads, the rip of cleats?
'That spells trouble, -and it came in
1Mg doses to Weber's guards.
IGeorge. Hldebrandt, the Kiski. flash
fro . Hamburg, N. is out with seven
stitches over his right eye. . An-
other. pill hard to swallow was the
loss of t he outstandiing :guar'd. can-

Hubbell Signs Contract
NEW YORK, Oct. 20.-VPA)-Receipt
of a signed contract for the 1940
season 'from Carl Hubbell, veteran
Giant southpaw, was, announced -to-
dlay ,by club officials. Hubbell, who
won 11 and lost nine games last sea-
son, signed for considerably less
than the $22,000 he was paid for this
year's work.

VI

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SERGEI

RAC MANF

TUESDAY, OCTOEER 24 .

. . 8:30 ph..

, ,

ll

l26E. Hron

P~hone 42411

r

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EM1~JISON GIIL
.~."
and Jhis-orchestra
will be playing at ;the NEW
I it l:1 \)AI Nil T PznoA

ii

r

r , U.

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To be f ollowved by:
Monday, November 6
FRITZ KREISLER......
Monday, November 13
ALEXANDER KIPNIS . .

.~VIOLINIST
. BASS

,L..i

Monday, November 27
NEW YORK PHILHARMONIC
SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
John Barbiroill, Conductor
Monday, December 4
JUSSI BJOERLING..........
'Thursday, December 14

I

TENOR

BOSTON SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA
Sergei Koussevitzky, Conductor
Monday, January 15
KIRSTEN FLAGSTAD............SOPRANO
Thursday, January 25
ROBERT VIROVAI..............VIOLINIST
Wednesday, February 14

BARTL ETT AND ROBERTSON.
Wednesday, March 6
ARTUR RUBINSTEIN....

. PIANISTS
*PIANIST

I

SEASON TICKETS.. $12.00 - $10.00 - $8.00
SINGLE CONCERTS $ 2.5 0 - $2.00- $1.50- $1.00

EII I

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