1 1 l L ,T-7 1711 f.1I1 SOPH ENGINEERS PALERFELD WILL BE I CONYERTED INTO RINK! i Two Interclass Teams Battle to Draw for 'Second Time; Final Count Stands 3 to 3 BAD FUMBLES PROVE COSTLY Another check was thrown in the way of the fight for numerals in inter- class football yesterday afternoon, when the fresh lits and soph engineers played another tie game, the second deadlock between the two teams. The score was 3-3. Near the end of the first half the anvil pounders started a march down the field which nearly resulted in a touchdown, but the period ended be- fore they could push the ball across. Several times the yearlings held their opponents for downs, but they suf- fered losses by fumbles at critical mo- ments. Middleditch brought the boilermak- ers' score in the first half, when he drop-kicked goal from the 15-yard line. Funk tied the score in the second half by drop-kicking goal from the 20-yard line. The teams lined up as follows: Soph engineers-Parr, I.e.; Paden, l.t.; Nyman and Sommers, l.g.; Ren- wick, C.; Pettyjohn, r.g.; Cooper and Martins, r.t.; Bigger, r.e.; Storrer, q.; Zoellin, l.h.; Middleditch. r.h.; Gar- rett, f.b. Fresh lits--Edwards, I.e.; Schmok, L.t.; Campbell, l.g.; Bornstein, c.; Gil- lespie, r.g.; Fralick, r.t.; Funk, r.e.; Kerr, q.; Kane, l.h.; Merrifield, r.h.; Anderson, f.b. CORNELL FOOTBALL TEAM IS IN FIRST CLASS CONDITION Ithaca, N. Y., Nov. 28.-The Cornell football squad has left for Atlantic City on its way to Philadelphia to play Pennsylvania on Thanksgiving day. The Ithacans worked out yesterday at the seashore resort, and will not go to Philadelphia until an hour before the game. The Cornell team is in fine shape, Dr. Sharpe said today. The eleven has rounded into form rapidly in the last ten days and is expected to play a much better game against Pennsyl- vania than it did against Michigan. The coaches picked the following squad for the trip: Ends, Eckley, Ryerson, Zander, Mc- Cormick, Eilenberger; tackles, Gillies, Jewett, Dixon, Sutton. Taylor; guards, Miller, Anderson, Bard, Tilley; centers, Carey, Brown; quarterback, Shiverick; halfbacks, Speed, Hoffman, Haucke, Vanhorn, Benedict; fullbacks, Mueller and Fischer. Two Years' Gym Work at Akron Begining with the fall term, two years' work.in the gymnasium will be required of all students at the Akron (0.) University. The physical depart- ment work of. the college has been completely reorganized and students will all be required to take the strength tests before being allowed to compete in athletics. The standard for football has been fixed at 600, and for basketball at 500. The latter figure has also been fixed for baseball and track men to be made before they be- gin practice for places on the teams. Ice Skating Will Be Featured at Wom- en's Athletic Grounds as Soon as Weather Permits The glad hand of welcome will be extended to old King Winter the in- stant be blows into town by the city of Ann Arbor. The athletic depart- ment of the Women's league will also stand in the receiving line, and school children and college students will hail his approach. Part of Palmer field is to be turned into a skating rink free to everybody as long as skating lasts, and college women will have an opportunity to learn the hitherto unknown mysteries of ice hockey, and there is a fine pros- pect for real tobogganing down the Belser street hill and across the ice on the field below. The' work of bank- ing 'up the rink has already been be- gun and it is hoped that it can be flooded before the first hard freeze. The southern and lower part of Pal- mer field has long been under the eye of the athletic department as eminently suitable for a skating rink, but the difficulties in the way of securing the necessary flooding have seemed insur- mountable. However, the city of Ann Arbor steps to the fore with its plans for a chain of skating parks and gladly assumes the construction and main- tenance of the rink in return for the use of the property. The field is about 100 yards long by 60 yards wide, and from its splendid location and accessibility from the campus ought to prove extremely pop- ular. Tobogganing is still problemat- ical, but if the demand is sufficient the natural advantages for it will no doubt be developed. The location is very nearly ideal, and the absence of ::ail- road- tracks adds safety to its other attractions. Yale's Wrestling Dates Are Announced New York, Nov. 28.-Yale's wrestling team will have its first intercollegiate meet on Feb. 10, when it comes to this city to meet the Columbia wrestlers. It will meet Pennsylvania on the mat at New Haven, Feb. 17; Annapolis ata Annapolis on Feb. 24; will participate in the New England intercollegiate; match at Boston on March 3, and will wind up its season with its bouts with Princeton on March 10, at Princeton.s SIX DAYS UNTIL 31 ICHIGA NE NSIAN SUBSCRIPTION CANPAIGON. SAVE 10 CENTS , l f II&II5' 55g.10 and Julian Rol) Tommy Hughitt played a game with the Youngstown Patricians, profes- sional football eleven, last Sunday and the Youngstown Vindicator comes through with the following effusion anent Tommy's work: "You have seen the famous Jim Thorpe of Carlisle, Julian of the Mich- igan Aggies, Red Wilkinson of Syra- cuse, Ghee of Dartmouth, Russell of Pennsylvania, Mattern of Minnesota, Whitacre of Indiana, Fitzgerald of Notre Dame, and a dozen other ex- ceptionally bright Tungstens of the gridiron world, now take a slant at a regular headliner and the best ex- ponent of the autumn game that Mich- igan has ever produced, Mr. Tommy Hughitt-not very large; not very rough; but 150 pounds of brawn and nerve, guided by a set of football brains that make him an almost ir- resistible power on the marked field. "Hughitt made his debut, before a small Youngstown audience yesterday; in the difficult pilot position on the Patrician team, and he almost defeated the Washington Vigilants himself. He kicks like a Brickley, runs equally as good if not better than Thorpe in his palmiest days, and without stomach trouble; handles a team like an engi- neer, and is everywhere on defense, the kind of defense that defends. That's Tommy Hughitt, only the king's Eng- lish doesn't lend itself to the necessary warping to give the diminutive Michi- gan star all that is coming to him. Guess Tommy's Pretty Good. "Canton can have her Thorpe, Soucy, Julian, Wilkinson, and Ghee; Massillon can have her Dorias, Lambert, Fitz- gerald, and any others she can garner, but with Tommy Hughitt and a couple of others as good, the Patricians can make any professional football team in the land look like a gang of novices. That comes a little closer to measuring Tommy's worth. He's a star of the first rank-either on offense or de- fense-and he knows how to play foot- ball. "Hughitt awed a crowd of about 3,000 fans yesterday. They went right where he wanted them to go, and when entrusted with the ball he picked openings and wiggled through for big gains. On kicking field goals, he sends the ball away like a rifle shot, while on defense he tackles deadly and true, and his victims go down for keeps. "It's no wonder Coach Hurry-Up Yost waxed enthusiastic over his kid. It's no surprise that this same Yost placed Hughitt on the all-Michigan a Thorpe, hee, led into One Wan~ ILLII eleven, ror arter the little pit of worx he did there-and it's a cinch he would be better with a well-drilled team- Hughitt is the neatest and classiest bit of football goods displayed in Youngs- town since the game became an epi- demic.," MICHIGAN WOMEN ARE TAKING BIG INTEREST IN BASKETBALL Prospects for some cracking good games of girls' basketball this winter are exceptionally bright just now. Last week, the first week of practice, brought out greater material both in quantity and quality, than has been seen on Barbour gym floor in several years. More than a hundred girls are out and the coaches have been forced to form four sections, whereas, two were sufficient to handle the entire squad last season. The freshman division has already been cut down to three teams, and the upper-classmen will no doubt receive the same treatment be- fore Christmas. Hence the lively com- petition of these early practices, when the survival of the fittest is determin- ing the make-up of the winter squad. The sophs and juniors held a spirit- ed session today and did some pretty good tossing. The floor was a trifle crowded with its 32 aspirants jostling one another, but the afternoon's work nevertheless, showed where some of the best pla. ers of the squad are to come from. In addition to the excel- lent material which these classes have possessed, some promising players have been discovered among the girlsi entering the University this year. Teams will not be picked until the be- ginning of the next semester, but there4 is no danger of interest flagging if thef present rivalry for positions continues. Try our turkey dinner Thursday- 40c. The Grill (under Huston's). 29-30 Senate Council Will Consider Cali- fornia Trip for South Africans Tomorrow PLAYERS PETITION FOR TRIP Agitation over the proposal of Le- land Stanford University's rugby team to play a similar team from Michigan in California during Christmas vaca- tion has resulted in calling a special meeting of the senate council of the University for tomorrow to consider the question. Some time ago dispatches from Los Angeles stated that an effort was be- ing made to bring a team representing the University to the coast for games. At that time nothing definite could be learned in Ann Arbor whether the in- vitation would be accepted or rejected. Petition has been made by a num- ber of South African students in 'favor of the trip to the council. Most of the men from South Africa played on the same team before entering school here. These men want to make the west- ern trip, meeting a number of coast schools where rugby and not football as it is played in eastern colleges is the major sport in the fall season. Whether the council will accede to the petitions of the men and let them rep- resent the University in the west dur- ing the holidays is to be the subject of the special meeting. Macline of S. P. Lockwood Wrecked The machine of S. P. Lockwood, 800 Oxford ,road, was wrecked in a collis- ion Saturday night ith an automobile driven by Dr. W. S. Moore, 601 Swift street. The accident occurred on Lib- erty street. Neither of the men suf- fered and injuries. SIX DAYS UNTIL 1ICHIGANENSIAN SUBSCRIPTION CAMPAIGN. SAVE 50 CENTS FISHER SAXAPHONE PARTY. MICHIGAN UNION, FRIDAY 'NIG I)ECEMBER FIRST. TICKETS 7 CENTS, AT TIE UNION Try a Michigan Daily Want Ad. 5 l bs. Candy for a THOUGHT. We will give five pounds of For the best verse of six lines or a verse I in parody on Poe's Raven, Recommending It. 3 l bs. for second best. Post by mail, sealed t, £Metta Cafe Ebanksgtvintg ]Dinner $1.00 envelope, CLOSING DATE DEC. 7 Ox Tail Soup Chicken Patties Committe from stu- 1 Chilled Celery dent publications Sweet Pickles I will give the deci- GYM SUITS Roast Turkey, Cranberries, Roast Young Suckling Pig, Baked Apples sion. Mashed Potatoes Peas Buy a Gym Suit that is especially made up Candied Sweet Potatoes Hubbard Squash Home Made Rolls for Michigan Students. is correct. The cut and style GET, BUSY Complete Suit $2.00 Shirt, Pants, Shoes and Supporter. Gym Supplies of all Kinds. Asparagus Salad Mince Pie Frozen Eggnog Roman Punch Pumpkin Pie Wafers Apple Pie Assorted Cake I Cafe Noir Music BUSY DEEP GEO. J. MOE 711 N. VUniveraity AVe. PLEASE RESERVE TABLES IN ADVANCE Sport Shop 1 ' . . __________________________________ U U I BE THANKFUL We have too many ready-made O'coats in stock and reason we have placed our entire ready-made stock on one week at the following reduced prices. for that Sale for $22.oo reduced to $19.oo $20.0o reduced to $17.oo $18.0o reduced to $15.oo ° 'J 'i < I _; i. . - t j f , - -- / - .;1 r ' ' . .. , _r " -'i1 I U ." ,, r h I n } ^i t I .. _.._ - .:: I and several odd sizes at $12.00 while they last. We will re- serve a coat for you on payment of $5.00. These garments are made in the new pinch backs and narrow field full of style, and the tailoriag is eqt wear coat up to $25.00. shoulders, chester- ual to any ready-to, I I Jl . K. Malcolm THE LIBERTY 604 E. LIBERTY ST. THE MALCOLM ographs Twelve Delighted Friends Studio 319 E. Huron