PAGE TWO THE MICHICAN DAILY SATURDAY, OCTQBER 21, 1916 PAGE TWO SATURDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1916 --w------- AN OUNCE NENT Opening rf Oct. 28 619 Liberty Street E. Main Studios:- 1546 Broadway, New York City Perfection in Portrait Photography BOYS! E i . F, U. of M. Restaurant Good Meals at All Hours Quick and Polite Service 620 East Liberty i . ~ s. P 4 a y :- r _ICHIGAN DA IL Official newspaper at the University of Michigan. Published every morning except Mnay (uring the University year. Entered at the postof~ce at Ann Arbor as scon-class matter. Offices: Ann Arbor Press Building. Sub- scriptions: by carrier, $2.0; by mail, $.0. Wat ad. stations: Qarrys; Students Sup- ply Store; Thc Delta cor. State and Packard. Phones: Business, 96;: Editorial, 2414. John C. B. Parker..........Managing Editor Clarence T. Fishlcigh.......Busines Manager - Conrad N. Churchi...............News Editor Lee E. Joslyn................. City Editor Harold A. Fitzgerald.............Sports Editor I Harold C. L. Jackson......Telegraph Editor Verne F.. Brnett ............. Associate 1,ditor J. F. Camipbell. . .. Assistant Business Manager C. P'hilip Emery... Assistant Bulsiness Mlanager Albert E. hoe... Assistant Business Manager Roseoc lR. Ran. ... Assistant Business Manager Fred 1. Sutter. ... Assistant Business Manager SAT URDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1916 IN CHXRtGE OF THIS ISSUE Editor ..................PE. L. Zeigler Mhanagers--.. E. Iforne, , E. Camp- bell. A'ssistnts-C. W. Reade Carl J. Rash, H. It. Louis, and J. E. Robinson. Michigan welcomed M. A. C. today as a worthy mid-season opponent. In the past the fact that M. A. C. played her football men four years, while Michigan maintained the three-year rule prevented relations with East Lansing from being as brotherly as they might otherwise have been. To- day, however, Coach Sommer brought down a team which could stand up and battle the Yost eleven on even terms. The result of today's game is after all of little permanent importance. The spirit with which the game was played, and the spirit with which the result was accepted, is far greater in its im- port. M. A. C. has done her part in taking on herself the three-year rule and Michigan has already begun to respond in the spirit she showed to- day. It is to be hoped that Michigan's games with M. A. C. may continue, and that the two institutions may outgrow any pettiness of feeling which may have existed in the past. Michigan and M. A. C. elevens will always fight, and no backer of either team will have it otherwise. And Mich- igan and M. A. C. rooting sections will alwaysf ight, in a strictly vocal way. Bit the undercurent 1ffeeling when t 3.11 is o'cr should ;, ono,~ intense ,14airy mu 7ge I l t: 71ih til aiwas gt at u ad i- th iher whole soul back of her great elevens, but she will be broad enough to har- bor no ill will, and will always wel- come M. A. C. as an opponent worthy of a Yost coached team. Nelv Aggie Coach Former Penn Star Michigan met an old opponent on Ferry Field this afternoon in the per- son of Coach Frank Sommer. M. A. C.'s new football coach is an old Pennsyl- vania gridiron star, his last appearance against the Maize and Blue eleven being in the fall of 1909, when he was one of the best line plungers to face the Yost team, in addition to being a fine defensive player. Sommer has made a great reputation as a coach, despite the fact that he was still playing long after many of his coaching rivals graduated to the sidelines. Before coming west to take charge of the Aggies, Sommer spent a year at Mercersburg Academy, two years at Colgate and a year at Villa Nova. In all of these schools he turned out successful elevens, one of his Colgate suads being remembered by followers of eastern football as the best team that college ever turned out. While at Mercersburg Sommer turn- ed out an eleven that beat the Car- lyle Indians, in addition to trimming the freshman elevens from Princeton, Pennsylvania and Pennsylvania State. At Villa Nova, a Sommer-coached team took the measure of the Army. At Coigate, his teams defcated Yale, Syra- cuse and Cornell. M. A. C. is the first western eleven to be coached by the former Quaker backfield star, and today's game was his first real test of the present sea- son. Sommer follows two great coaches at East Lansing, Brewer and Macklin having set a record which will be mighty hard to equal. Sommer has gotten away to a flying start in his early season games, however, and bids air to keep on with his good work in 0e second strongest institution in Michigan. Cornell Retains 54 Men on Squad Dr. Sharpe, coach of Cornell, made the final cut on his squad last Tues- day, retaining 54 players. They are distributed as follows: Nine ends, -Photo by Lyndon Varsity Quarterback Sparks CRO'WD gTODAY EXPECTED TO BRKALLRECORDS Authorities Prepared For One Largest Crowds in History 3f. A. C. Games of the of Interest in Michigan-M. A. C. games 'as been growing with leaps and ;ounds during the past few seasons. Up to 1913 the largest crowd that ever saw these two teams in action was something over 9,000. The follow- ing year the annual scrap was staged in Lansing and all M. A. C. attendance records went by the boards as over 10,000 persons packed themselves into he East Lansing arena before the h blew. Temporary stands had Lain eret dto handle thetunot.n ebi: available o was Pd Lst y 1ar he athletic association ex- pected a much bigger attendance than usual and had prepared to care for au lie Worries N'. A. C. Gridders Among other things that were watched in today's game was M. A. C.'s efforts to check Captain Maulbetsch. In 1914 Maullie was pl aced on near- ly every All-American eleven that was picked, including that of Walter Camp. But the "German Bullet' didn't earn his laurels against the Aggies. The present captain didn't begin those driv- ing charges until later in the season. Last year the East Lansing aggrega- tion stopped the All-American half- back and he didn't gain much ground against them. But this wasn't entirely Maulbetsch's fault. Michigan didn't have the ball long enough at any specific period to give the Demon Dutchman much of a chance. Whenever the present Wol- verine leader was called upon, he usually found anywhere from three to half a dozen tacklers standing square- ly in front of him and coming fast. The Michigan line didn't give the midget a chance to get started. Even Johnny himself canl't do much when two men grab each leg, another climbs up on his shoulders and still another is searching around for an available bit of anatomy to seize. 14,000 people. Fully twenty minutes before the game began this number of persons had passed through the turn- styles on Ferry Field and when the whistle finally sounded, over 19,000' persons were on hand. Both stands were nearly filled and it proved to be one of the biggest crowds that ever saw a game on Ferry Field. The Cor- nell game was the only contest last season that drew more people for the year, something like 21,000 witnessing the triumphant march of the Big Red eleven as they buried Michigan's team. The fact that Cornell had the finest football team in America last year was probably a drawing card, as Michigan's hopes of victory were slight. The early ticket sale for today's FOOT BALL Supplies for Class Teamns Complete Line Prtces h ight COkPLETL GYM SUITS $2 00 GEO. 3 .MOE 'aSPO1T %I3 P" 711 N. Univ. Ave Next to Arcade Theatre game indicate that all Ferry Field rec- ords might be broken, for the call for pasteboards was unusually large dur- ing the first part of the week. Weather conditions are one of the most potent factors in determining the size of a crowd as many people often drive in if conditions are favorable, who other- wise would remain at home. Athletic association authorities stat- ed during the middle of the week that if the weather continued clear and no unforseen obstacles occurred, the chances were that the Michigan at- tendance records night be broken. Interest in Michigan is unusually keen in the Michigan-M. A. C. game and this has been particularly true since the Farmers have started their recent march towards victory. This battle does not figure as nearly an im- portant a content outside of the state as the gamos with Pennsylvania and Cornell later in the season, but within the borders the annual affair is fol- lowed closely. 411111 i l l I Miii ll 111111111 11111111111 = The Campus Favorites BETSY ROSS Home Made Candies Butter Creams Cream Caramels Chocolate Nougats Dipped Nuts Glaced Fruits, etc. For All Special Occasions "THE VICTORS" BOX filled with our own sweets fresh from the case, is the _ perfect gift. The Bet y Ross Slup 600F . Liberty St. Brandegee-Kincaid Clothes We have with us this evening our "College Chap Eton" PERSONAL distinction is like a bee sting -easy to feel, but hard to describe. You need it above all in EVENING DRESS, which is something to look at or laugh at, according to where you buy it. Our "College Chap Eton" shown above, is the latest, the most beautiful and properly Tailored Dress Suit for Ban q u e t in g, Dancing, Wedding-attending or Play- going. 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