i Y II=. 1VY1'...1 Yl4.sfilV 1..x.1-11L f VL I, e ti , , ' 4 ,, t - a'. dC'. . cs ire t t ARS RETURNIN U I JIMMY WATKINS, FORMER WOLVERINE FULLBACK, TO ASSIST WITH COACHING JOINS TOMMY HUGHITT IN OLP) GUARD REUNION ON FERRY FIELD REDDEN AND CARPELL TO COME Possibility of Wet Field Raises Penn's Hopes; Forwards Will be Dangerous Jimmy Watkins is the latest of the old guard to arrive in the Michigan football camp. This makes two of the veterans on hand to assist in whipping the Maize and Blue eleven into shape for the final fray of the season as "Tommy" Hughitt dropped into Ann Arbor a couple of days ago. Watkins was one of the stars of a decade ago and is rated by Coach Yost as one of the finest football players that has ever been turned out at Michigan. Tom- my Hughitt is of too recent graduation to need further introduction. Every fall the fag end of the season sees half a dozen of Yost's former foot- ball pupils back on Ferry field assist- ing in bringing the Michigan eleven into shape for the big home game of the year. Two of the former stars have al- ready dropped into the city and more are expected. Redden invariably comes back to help Coach Yost while Carpell and Pattengill will probably turn up this week to assist the Maize and Blue squad as much as they can. Light Workout Yesterday Coach Yost let the men off with the lightest sort of a workout yesterday afternoon, due to a considerable extent to the character of the weather. The snow made the going bad and the coach did not want to take a chance on any injuries. The team did not perform on the big field, but galloped hround on one of the numerous pas- tures on the southern part of the big playground. Yost had his punters practicing kicking into the wind and with the gale that was blowing yesterday they had all the opposition that they want- ed. All of the Varsity boosters were hoisting punts squarely into the teeth of the wind so that they might be accustomed to this sort of thing if the -occasion arose on Saturday. Three years ago when Michigan played Penn- sylvania on Ferry field, the contest was staged in a snow storm and a strong wind was blowing all after- noon. Incidentally many of the football followers have been speculating upon the way a wet field would affect the game. Will Pennsylvania suffer more or will it be the Wolverines with their forward passing? Wet Field Worries It seems certain that a wet day would seriously handicap the Michigan eleven for the forward pass has al- most pecome an important factor in Michigan's offense. To throw a wet if it is a wet day, it will put a differ- ent complexion upon matt--rs in gen- eral. Also, a wet day will hnder Sparks. Sparks needs a firm footing and dry soil. This youiister's work in handling punts was counted upon to assist materially, but much of his ef- ficiency will be impaired if it is a bad day. And His Name Is Lead K indly Light Pitbi~ng Ariiy, Brown-i, (Xdgate, aid ship Tangle m A1' Niel..r 1 UA YE MAT C4I 1) Light, front monicker Lead Kindly, W en those eminent gentlemm--tie has alternated at quarter and fullback members o th rules committeed since he showed so well in the open- e ide oen game, little did ing 3-0 victory of Penn against West ; 1i t e ights tl Virginia. wouldcbring uponWalterCamnp, Jaies irgma atomnn ot er noted authori- Until the last quarter of the mal- e O, a treating Pittsburg handed out to the .O.t. .l Red and Blue, Light was considered t t the situation is in aj as the regular pivot of the Quakers. h I he Army isics o Folwell sent Jimmy Bryant into the o o note in eas s fray at this stage and Bryant did so ome through the resent eason with well that he has been running the arel record. The Cadets have sivet team of late. Light has been holding he short end of decisive scores to op- down the fullback's job in good shape uonents on very occasion this season. ever since, playing until the psycholog- he Olilhart-Vidal combination has woitstoo1 al Opposition which has ot n sent against it. ::,.::::. Pittsburg is the team which seems to have the best claim next to the "athrs. The Snoky City squad has 1.anished all adversaries, sone of Coy, or before him, Willie Heston. Olihant can kick, he can lit the line, airt the ends, is adept on either end of the forward pass, and has a head which has asserted itself more than Once. le alone is practically respon- sible for the standing which the Army occupies today. But the Navy is a coming team. If the Annapolis crew can stop Oliphant, they are conceded better than an even chance. And many who claim to be versed in the realms of football come forward with the statement that the Middies have more than a remote chance to do this very thing. JENOINEERS LOSE TO SOPHS Second , Year Boilerniakers Put Over Teuelbdev and Win, 7-0 In a weird sort of game yesterday afternoon, the sophomore engineers defeated the juniors of that department with a score of 7 to 0. The class of '18 could place only nine men on the field, but this undersized organization played good football and through a successful pass to Russel nearly tied the score, the ball being on the sopho- more two-yard line when the game. ended. Neither side was able to hold onto the slippery pigskin and the con- test was replete with fumbles. It seemed especially difficult to handle punts and the kicking team usually re- covered the ball. The touchdown for the second year men came in the first half through the efforts of Garrett after a series of end runs and line plunges. This team threatened to score again as the whistle blew, ending the first half. Middleditch and Garrett carried the ball for sophomore gains. Russel and Cherry of the '18 squad played a strong game, the former being equally good on offense and defense. The lineup: Sophomores-Paige, L.e.; Parr, L.t.; Sommers, Nyman, I.g.; Renwick, c.; Pettyjohn, r.g.; Paden, r.t.; Martins, r.e.; Storrer, q.; Zoellen, I.h.; Middleditch, r.h.; Garrett, f.b. Juniors -Routier, l.e.; Healy, I.t.- l.g.; Tattersahl, c.; Morency, r.g.-r.t.; Cherry, r.e.; Dudley, q.; Hughes, l.h.; tussel, r.h.; Mittlesdorf, f.b. Touchdown - Garrett. Goal from to achdown--Middleditch. If its artistic Nvall paper you want, go to C. Ti. Major & Co. Phone 237. 5-16 FIRST ROUND Of CLASS FUOTBLLLEGUE OVER Eight Teams Remain for Second Flight; Schedule to Be An- nouneed in a Few Days After the defeat of the seniors by the juniors in the literary department game yesterday afternoon and the de- feat of the juniors at the hands of the sophomores in the engineering con- test the interclass series is ready to enter upon the second round. Until the present time everything has been uncertain in this series, due to the unusual number of tie games played. The seniors and juniors of the literary college have played three ties before the decision was reached yesterday afternoon. The following teams remain for the second round: First division, freshman laws, medics, senioreengineers, and the Junior lits. Second division- Junior lawss, dents, sophomors en- gineers, and the fresh lits. The schedule is not made out as yet but will be published in The Daily as soon as it is ready. As many of the games as possible will probably be played off Saturday morning. Snow Greets Green Team at Hanover Hanover, N. H., Nov. 15.-Alumni O al was covered with an inch of snow today, and Coach Cavanaugh or- dered practice in the baseball cage for the Dartmouth football squad. RIFLE CLUB SENDS OUT CALL FOR EW EMERS NEXT WEEK The Rifle club will launch a mem- bership campaign sometimes next week. Last year the team won the championship of Class "B," and this year they will contend for the Class "A" trophy, which M. A. C. captured last year with an almost perfect score. Other contenders for this prize are Washington University and Norwich, both of whom gave the Farmers a hard fight last year. Captain Schoepfle, McIntyre, Bate- man, Cutting, and Nicholson are the only men back from last year's ag- gregation, so that there is an urgent need for new material. It will be necessary for the team to do some tall hustling if they expect to take a fall out of the Farmers. Practice will be started as soon as Waterman gymnasium is available. The Rifle club expects to have a regu- lation range built in the basement of the building. Championship HockT yame Postowned On account of the snowstorm and the extremely poor condition of the field, the final game of the women's hockey series between the freshman and sophomore teams was not played yesterday afternoon. The contest will be staged tomorrow afternoon instead, and the finals in archery will take place at that time also. ical moment when Berry has been rushed into the fray to pull off some long end runs and broken field dashes. This is the former freshman star's first season on the Varsity. He is an all around offensive and defensive player, a good broken field twister, and line plunger of note. With Bryant, Derr, Williams, and the rushing Berry he has proved a necessary cog in the backfield. Light is 20 years of age, and balances the beam at 162 pounds. He will be seen under number 11 on Ferry field Saturday. J-LITS SUCCEED IN DOWNING SENIORS IN FOURTH STRUGGLE Brown and Sichermerhorn Score Touchdowns for Winners; '17 Wra Nar "naOam hemn by extremauely comfortable and decisive scores. But Warner's menc fell down badly in one instance, and :o is generally considered suffcient. T'hey beat the weak Navy team but 20-19. Possibly the Panthers had been instructed to progress through the game uider wraps, but such does not cob the Xfnay of their due, and takes away much of the credit Pitt mighi have gotten from a decirv victory. 0. S. V. aad Nde ihwestern i West Beside the Army and Pitt, Ohio State and poor Northwestern are the only two real contenders in the hunt. Neither are likely to be recognized when all the precincts are in and the official recounts are made. Neither plays an eastern school, and none o: the western schools which they have faced have been seen in competition with the sunrise teams with the ex ception of Indiana and Illinois which Tufts and Colgate walloped. And for1 the past few years gridiron statistics have been more or less wobbly in re- gard to score comparisons. With Thanksgiving but little morel than two weeks away the standing of the leading gridiron crews of the country look strangely similar to the American lhague race of last June and July, when all but the Athletics had practically even chances of copping a share of the world's series lucre. "Tufts heat Ilarvard early in the season 7-3, and Yale has had just about the same success, or failure i you will, as have the Blue teams of the past few years. Harvard's alibi, if columns of correspondent's reports and efforts are of any value, is that the game was but a practice fray for the Crimson. Princeton might have straightened out the whole muddle last Saturday by conquering the Cam- bridge men, but they did not. Author- ities have consented to count Prince- ton out of the running, unless other unlooked for calamities enter the scene during the remainder of the season. Pennsylvania has been kicked around quite a little this season, in fact all the eastern schools have suf- fered the same fate. Harvard licked Cornell 23-0 and the Red team slipped the Wolverines the short end of a 23- 20 score last Saturday. Michigan had her chance to cop the big ribbon but lost it when they seemingly had it in their possession. The Wolverines still must be regarded as neck and nuch contenders if they wallop Pennsy by a comfortable count, provided the Quak- ers turn the tables and walk away with the long end in their annual clash with the Ithacans. Small Colleges Must be Counted Of the smaller colleges in the east Colgate, Tufts and Brown all hae records which cannot be denied. If these three, or any one of them, win the remaining games of their schedule astern critics may be faced with the riecessity of placing one of them on the pinnacle. But this is rather unlikely because the teams of Yale, Harvard, Princeton, and Cornell have without exception been regarded as the lead- ers since the new style of football first was introduced. The leading team of the east today -the Army-may straighten out this whole muddle by coming through with: a clear schedule for the balance of the mason. In Oliphant, the West Point- -rs have probably the leading half- back of the country. The former Pur- iue star is blessed in goodly propor- tions with nearly everything which goes to mae up a football star of the very first water. It is extremely doubtful if he has been equalled since the days .of Ted CLARION 2j in. LENOX 2j in. Two heights in the new COLLAR I5c Each GEO. P. IDE & 09., akers. TROY. N. V. 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The Funan ofYouth i 3 , 1 9 7 3 ball is next to impossible, even for ien'nver ' n""'u the Michigan artists, and the old army game would have to be staged almost After tieing the senior lits in three exclusively. If this is the case, with former games, the junior lits at last the strong defense that Pennsylvania settled the dispute by defeating the boasts, the Quakers would seem to near-grads by a 15 to 0 score yester- have an edge. day afternoon. Playing was hard on According to reports from Philadel- the snow covered field, and most of phia, in the last two games that Penn- the work was loose, but Brown, of the sylvania has played, just two first junior team, managed to make several downs have been registered against long gains on passes from Adrianse. the Quakers by rushing in the two With a nine-man team the seniors games combined. Lafayette scored one started a come-back near the end of first down by rushing and one first play, but could come no nearer than down was all that Dartmouth was able 20 yards from the junior goal. At to gather. This shows that Penusy's other times the ball always was in widely heralded defense is not a paper sehior territory. Brown started the proposition entirely. In these two scoring when he grabbed a 30-yard games only three additional first pass on the goal line. Schermerhorn downs were made by the use of the added another touchdown in the sec- pass, which shows rather conclusive- ond half, running 25 yards off right ly that Coach Folwell has built up a tackle. Reem drop-kicked a goal from defense that is just about the peer of the 15-yard line near the end of the anything in the country. second period, but failed in both at- Dartmouth has gained consistently tempts to kick goal after the touch- against every team she has played this downs. year, Dartmouth gained against Jenkins, one of the nine senior lit Princeton did so without much trouble, warriors, was kicked in the face dur- but Pennsylvania was a different pro- ing a desperate scrimmage, and left position. the game at the beginning of the last Michigan's forward passing has been half. so good this year that the Wolverines Senior lits-Burge, I.e.; Kerwin, l.g.; were confident that they could advance Weisberg, c.; Tuck, r.g.; Muzzy, r.t.; the ball by this method if the Penn- Jenkins, r.e.; Grylls, .; Adams, I.h.;1 sylvania line checked Maulbetsch, but Talbot, r.h.; Hopkinson, f.b. Junior lits-Brown, I.e.; Giessing, l.t.; Pence BOXING. and Woodward, l.g.; Motulsky, c.; Ed- Private lessons. Work will start im- wards and Buchanan, r.g.; Hollenbeck, mediately. See instructor at Dr. May's r.t.; sears and Bolt, r.e:; Wellford, q.; office, Waterman gymnasium, for Schumacher and Schermerhorn, U.h.; terms, etc. 0. S. Westerman. tt. Adrianse, r.h.; Reem, f.b. Corner Liberty and State ,re Chapter Three of Gloria s Romance Another chapter of the y - A7 million-dollar Rupert Hughes film novel, Gloria's Romance, is Pre inida byerelie here. Bewitching Billie t? i ~Presented by George Kleine, B1,09d*1arransMent with F. ZicafS"d,1a. e e. switching B l r $pporte by HENRYKOLKER Burke is shown in magnifi- A MOTION PICTUE NOVELYM MR* cent gowns, amid new sur- roundings, entangled in more unusual adventures. Gloria's Romance is unfolding like a fairy tale. Mystery, love and A7, hate begin to make their presence felt. The story grows more absorbingly interesting with each new chapter. The production is elab- orate, the acting superb. You can't afford to miss it. See chapter three, with a full synopsis of what has gone before. BEGINNING AT THE ARCADE THEA RE Regular Five Reel Feature Program in Addition Admission 15e -- . i