DROPFARMER coln Advices Say Corhuskers Are Willing to Take on Wol- verines 3HIGAN WOULD NOT PLAY ON DATE REFUSED TO M. A. C. ir Year Rule at East Lansing Causes Difficulties Leading to Reports rord has reached Ann Arbor from coln, Nebraska, to the effect that University of Nebraska is .willing ancel her game against the Michi- Aggies on the 27th of October play the University of Michigan Dead. hen interviewed upon the subject erday Mr. Bartelme said: [ know of no such offer or arrang- Lt Michigan would not accept a ewhich was taken away from M. . as this wouldn't be fair to the mers. If we should play Nebras- .t will be some other time than the r of October.' 'he reason assigned for the desire :he part of the Nebraskans to can- their game with the Aggies is the that the Aggies will have four r men on their team next season uding Captain Vandervoort and rterback Huebel. The report stat- hat Nebraska authorities will in- upon the observance of Missouri ey or western conference eligibil- rules and in either case four year fwould be absolutely debarred. It ns. to be the belief at Nebraska the Aggies will not consent to e stipulations and if the Farmers :, they want the University of higan booked in the Farmers' e. seems to be understood in Lin- that if the Nebraskans and Wol- nes do negotiate for a contest it be a two year agreement, where- the Michiganders will play in eoln in 1918, this year's game be- played on Ferry field. ebraska is bound by the Missouri ey eligibility rules and it will be of the question for the Cornhusk- to play the Aggies if the latter in- upon using their four year men. contract with the Farmers will e to be cancelled in this case, even igh Michigan is not scheduled. The ent Nebraska-Michigan Agiricul- 1 college contract is a two-year ement and unless the eligibility s is cleared up satisfactorily both es will be allowed to go by the cds. hletic Director Bartelme's words :he subject yesterday would seem adicate that the Cornhuskers and verines will not get together on 27th, even if M. A. C. is dropped. all probability his stand on the stion is merely one of "fair play" he Aggies. As he explained, Mich- t doesn't want to figure as the on for the East Lansing institu- losing any desirable bookings ch they have made and Nebraska get no encouragement from here. he does take up the eligibility tlon with the Farmers it will not ecause she has the assurance of a 6lgan game on that date if the r contract is repudiated. 1UNT MAY SUCCEED DOBIE rersity of Washington's Unbeaten Coach May Not Add - to Record amors from the far west have it Coach Gilmore Dobie, the un- ,en mentor of the University of hington, may be succeeded by ide J. Hunt of. Carleton college, iesota. Dobie has established a ag of 45 straight victories since his at as the head strategist of the ier state institution, and any coach follows him in that position will e a record to equal which would ry the German military staff. unt has himself been unbeaten dur- the past three years at Carleton his teams have run up a total of points as against opponents' 20. team defeated Chicago last season a 7-0 score in an early game. ther Hunt will be the next mentor Vashington is still unconfirmed. mer Illinois Captain Is Honored iampaign, Jan. 9.-Mike Mason, iois ex-captain of the track team, been chosen by the Boston Herald All-American two-miler for the r1916. tention Class Cane Committees- have samples-Wagner & Co., A S 9-10 * * * COAChING POSITIO * N St. Louis, Jan. 9. - William Edmunds, athletic director of Washington University of this city has announced that he will resign his position. Big Bill stated that he has re- ceived an offer to coach at an eastern institution but that it was his present intention to pass up the coaching game for the present at least and to en- ter the Harvard medical school next fall. Edmunds is a former University of Michigan football star. He will continue in his present capacity of athletic di- rector at Washington Univer- sity until the end of the present year. * * * * .* * * * * * - * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * ful whether there are very many who have ever won four. Oliphant won four "P's" at Purdue and he possesses a string of sweaters that could clothe the German standing army. Hockey isn't a . new sport to the all-around athlete either, as he played several years in high school and captained the team one season. Harvard Will Play 31 Baseball Games Cambridge, Jan. 9.-Harvard will play 31 baseball games this season, 12 of which are to be staged away from home. Tufts, one of the Crimson's strongest opponents last year, has been dropped and a date left open for Princeton in case of a tie. Syracuse has displaced Holy Cross on the chart. Dartmouth and Brown to Meet on Grid Hanover, Jan. 9.-Dartmouth and Brown will get together for a grid- iron clash in 1917 for the first time since 1906. Tufts, Princeton and Penn- sylvania are also headliners on the schedule for the coming season. Ten games will comprise the list booked. I Hanover, Jan. 9.-The Dartmouth basketball team lost three out of four games played on its recent holiday trip. The College of the City of New York was the only institution to be de- feated by the Green during the trip. The Michigan Daily for service. R 1 Say, Fellows' Here is the One Big- gest Opportunity of the New Year to Buy VARSITY TO BE STRONG ON DASHES THIS YEAR O'Brien, Schofield and Zoellin Should Make FastTrio in Sprints Michigan should be particularly well fortified in indoor short sprints during the coming track season, even though the Wolverines lost the fast- est collegiate man in American last spring. Material to crowd into the breach when the 50-yard dash is megaphoned to the dressing rooms has not swamped Coach Farrell with the ptess of .num- bers as yet, but a few instances of great speed at short distances stand out most conspicuously. Especially is this true in a trio of instances. Obie O'Brien, Le Scofield, and Fritz Zoellin are the Varsity athletes in question who have sufficient of the "swift" to warm any pair of track slip- pers down the half century stretch, the new Wolverine gym indoor dis- tance t'o be used this season. In running a distance of this kind, one thing stands out as a great as- set to leading the field to the wire- a fast getaway. Obie stands out among the foremost in college at guessing the time when the hammer will come Into close harmony with the cartridge, and profiting thereby. Many were the occasions last winter when he and Smith beat it down the stretch side by side, with one leading on one trial, the other in the next. Hardy of Notre Dame was the only man in indoor meets last year to con- quer either of the Michigan men in fast time, who is a likely contender against the Wolverines this season. Scofield gave both-last year's leader and O'Brien an excellent chance to display their speed last year, and should become even more proficient at taming the timers' watches before he lines up at the tape against any foes. Zoellin is possibly a better hurdler than a sprinter. But the blond sopho- more isn't distanced in the fastest kind of going. He too, should be found im- proved if allowed to run in the sprints this season. Others exhibited ability to pile the cinders high last spring and between halves of the Washington game last November, and undoubtedly will be heard of as the present season prog- resses. Oliphant to Try for Fifth Sport Hockey to Be New Branch for Army Star; Has Letters in Four Branches West Point, N. Y., Jan. 9.-Elmer Oliphant will try to win his "A" in a fifth sport this winter. Oliphant is the only athlete who has ever won his "A" in four branches of the Army sports and now he is de- termined to win a .fifth. Oliphant has been awarded his letter in football, track, baseball and basketball and this year he will try for the hockey seven. Hockey is the only sport left and the gridiron star has announced his in- tention of winning a berth on the Army team if possible. Elmer reported to the basketball team this winter and was counted upon as a regular on the courts, but he fids that basketball and hockey conflict, so for the present basket- ball will be passed up and he will de- vote his energies to hockey. If Oliphant wins his "A" with the hockey team he may establish a new record, for it is doubtful whether any athlete at any college has ever won letters in five different sports from a single institution. In fact, it is doubt- I~\ A / Men's Clothes. Our Annual Clearance Sale is on, and new low prices have gone into effect on our entire line of Men's High Grade Suits and Overcoats. Copyright Hart Schaffner & Marx Reductions on Hats Caps Angora Vests Stiff Cuff Shirts and Sweaters Our Unchanging. Policy demands that all goods .must be sold in the season for which they were bought, and sold they will be. Former Prices $12.50 to $30 Sale Prices $10 $16 12 18 20 , 13.60 14.40 22.'40 You have often heard it said: "They have good goods at Lutz's." There's a world of significance in that simple phrase. It's only another way of saying that this store's merchandise gives perfect satisfaction, because it's Right -in every sense. LUTZ CLOTHING STORE Main Street "That Young Men's Shop" e advertising columns of n Daily in order to reach Ann Arbor's buyers. the the r , A .-- ---I .. s ,. HAVE YOUR Made at this time of the year be- ~T f. I fl 4||| s