THE MICHIGAN DAILY. I, /F 4,J 1l 1p J- r r I FW9 Il ; 11 III ,r .r HI it 1 Y I : ., P TRAKMEE IMT 85 ENTU RNTS en Expect to Win Event f Two to One Odds Them in Numbers ~,T j 5 RUNNERSI With 85 candidates, two-thirds of them first year men, entered for the annual fresh-soph cinder meet this1 afternoon, everything is in readiness for the starting gun of the opening athletic clash between the two classes in all-campus sports. While there are a number of second1 year men who did not apply their sig- natures to the entry sheet who are" capable of adding their quota of points to the total of the 1918 men, yet the sophomores .are not in the least dis- coura.ged over the fact that the new men will outnumber them 2 to 1 throughout the meet. Ineligibility has made its ravages felt in the ranks of the sophs as well, cutting off many points that would otherwise have been theirs practically before the meet was under way. As usual the largest number of men signed up is for the short sprint across the gym floor, the freshmen entering 15 for this event,' while seven second year men have put their names upon the sheet. Entries for the other num- bers on today's program are equally dividild 'wept is the 40-yard hurdles, where the name of Warner alone rep- resents the second year men. The meet should develjp some hot competition for the honors in almost every event with the exception of the shot pit and bigb jump, which are al- re:4dy practically conceded to the wearers of the red and white toque. Firs-, second and third place men will receive points in each of the events excePt tho relay. Varsity track men will be in charge of the meet. which will begin promptly at 2:30 o'clocl . The entries in the different events follow Shot put: Sophomores -Edwards, Walls, Smith, Boyd; Freshmen-Good- rich, MceClintock, Shields.- High jump: Sophomores-Simmons. Halstead, Frley; Freshmen -- Haigh TRACK MEET FORCES BASEBALL PRACTICE TO MAKE A SHIFT Coach lJundgren to Arrive on Monday; Captain Labadie Confident; Practice at Ten Owing to the track meet between the freshmen and sophomores this aft- ernoon, Captain Labadie announced yesterday that today's baseball prac- tice would be staged in the gym in thet morning at 10:00 o'clock. Captain Labadie stated yesterda # that he was considerably pleased with{ the showing made by the men thus far and that he believed Michigan, would make a strong bidefor baseball1 honors despite the big loss suffered by graduation last June.- This morning's workout will prob- ably, be the lastP before Coach Lund- gren arrives to assume control. The1 baseball coach is expected Monday morning, and Monday afternoon a gen- eral call will be issued. MTICHIGAN RIFLEMEN TIE FOR IIWH SCORE AGAINST ARIZONA iccNaughtoii and Mason Draw for Best Score in Long Distance Shoot McNaughton and Mason, of the local rifle team, tied for highest score in the long distance shoot against the team representing the University of Arizona, eaZ4h scoring 198 out of a possibie 200. Three other members of the team were within one of this mark, Wilcoxen, Cutting and Jeffrey each making 197. The total score of the five high men was 98i, while all the team with the exception of one came within the 190 mari. The next contest which the Michigan rifle team will enter begins next week with the Mississippi Agri- ,- ltural .C-llege representation. The score of the team in the Arizona mate was as follows: McNaughton ................ ...198 Mason.............. . .....198 Wilcoxen... . . 197 Gutting ....,...................... 197 Jeffrey... . .. ...... . 197 NO TRACK MEETS TO BE HELD IN GYM THIS YEAR Fresh-Mophi Affair to Be fHeld This Afternoon Will Be Only Chance to See Indoor Meet While no definite announcement of this year's track schedule has been t made by the athletic association, it is generally understood that no inter-: collegiate meets will be held in Wat- erman gymnasium this year. This condition is asserted to be due to the fact that the attendance at meets in the gym is limited to 500, which is3 practically only one-twelfth of the student body. tI has been utterly impossible to devise a system whereby the 3000 to 5000 stud4nts who have wanted . to attend the best meets could be admit- ted with acommodations for only 500,' and a great deal of dissatisfaction has resulted on the campus among those who have been so unfortunate as to fail to be numbered among the lucky ones. The athletic association has doubtless been prompted by this state of affairs to entirely eliminate intercollegiate indoor track meets at home. The Fresh-Soph meet which is to be held in Waterman gymnasium at 2:30 o'clock this afternoon will be the only opportunity of the student body to ob- serve an indoor track meet. The clash this afternoon is entirely a class af- fair, but both the first and- second year men have the material to make things interesting for their opponents. Inasmuch as this is to be the only home indoor meet, it has been decided to permit members of all classes on the campus to attend, up to the 500 limit. Quite a number of tickets still remain at the athletic office for this event, and may be obtained up to 12:00 o'clock today in exchange for athletic coupon No. 1L. In case the 500 limit has not been reached at the start of the meet, athletic books will admit at the gymnasium this afternoon. SE CURE G LASS MANUFACTURER FOR TWO ANN ARBOR LECTURES MICHIGAN MILER LOOKS LIKE " GOD BET IN EASTERN MEET ..,r . THE DAMLYS Last Year's Winner Gone. Race Should lie eltween Windgale of o(r- nell and Carroll INSIDE STUFF Without fear of contradiction one One of the prettiest races at the is safe in opining that swimming is eastern intercollegiates this spring a clean sport.-The Chicago Record- promises to be the mile event, and one Herald. of the chief contestants will be a Michigan runner. The following was overheard in the McKenzie of Princeton; last year's visitor's gallery over at the gym yes- winner, has graduated, while Win- terday afternoon. dagle of Cornell and Carroll of Michi- Explaining Escort-There's Blink, gan, the second and third place men the famous runner, down there. respectivelx, will return. In addition The Fair One--Oh tell me, how far to these men, Overton of Yale looms can he run? up as the probable dark horse. Moakley, down at Ithaca, has al- Ty Cobb, the king of base-stealers ready taken Windagle in charge and as well as the premier athlete in al- is grooming the speedy Cornellian for most all of the departments of base- the mile. McKenzie barely nosed out ball, says that it is much simpler and the Big Red contestant last year, while easier to steal third than it is second. "Eddia" Carroll was right on Win- Ty has stolen both of them often dagle's heels at the tape. enough to know and his opinion car- Overton was the selection for All- ries considerable weight. American cross-country man, and John Mack, the Yale coach, has about However, there is another class of decided to work the Blue distance star ball players who insist that third is at the mile. Overton has tried the the harder of the two bases to steal, two-mile event and he ran a wonderful as you've got to get all the way to race against Hoffmire and Potter' of second before you even get the chance Cornell at the big eastern meet, al- to try for third. though Potter beat him. Overton is really at his best in the Captain Arthur Milburn of the Yale' mile, the event that he ran in "prep" baseball team was one of the five school. He has negotiated the half in men from this institution who were better than 1 minute 58 seconds, and declared ineligible, and yet he has has the endurance to finish, as was been unanimously elected baseball proved by the handy fashion in which captain again. he raced home ahead of the field in When told of the action of the team, the cross-country championships. With the officers of the athletic association this combination of speed and strength, texpressed considerable surprise. The Coach Mack at Yale believes that his members of the team were silent upon man will make a strong bid for hon- the subject and it looks as though .he ors in the mile this year and may New Haven nine will be captained nose out Carroll and Windagle. . by an inactive member of the squad. "Eddie" Carroll ought to have a wonderful year, and should be in the Oliphant, the Army football star pink of condition by the time the who was occupying a place on Camp's eastern intercollegiates are due. Re- first All-American eleven according cently Carroll ran a half mile at to the latest revision, has won a place Coach Farrell's request and although on the Army basketball five, and is he was talking to "Steve" some of the playing a stellar game according to time he finished in 2 minates 6 sec- eastern reports. onds. which is excellent time for so In addition to being a star on the early in the season. Carroll has run gridiron and courts, Oliphant is a under 4:25 on several occasions, and crack baseball player and down at if he shows the steady improvement Purdue, the college he attended be- over last ye s form which he did fore going to the Army, they are still in 1915 over his freshman year, he shooting at some of the track records may run under 4:20 before the season is over. 100 Report for Cornell Baseball Nine There are many who are anxious to see Carroll take a fling at Hanavan's Ithaca, N. Y., Feb. 18.-About one Michigan gymnasium record of 4 min- hundred baseball candidates have re-. utes 21 2-5 seconds before the men ported to head Coach Sharpe of thl, go outdoors. Cornell Team. They have been di _ vided into suqads and will report in PROF. C. 1. ADAMS RETURNS shifts every day until March 1, when FROM CHINA TO RESUME WORK a cut will be made. Although ew PORTOSCOPE that he established. Otherwise, he is of little value his school in athletics! Columbia University advocates oi plete faculty control of intercoli ate athletics. They state that n than half of the colleges of the co try are with them in this attempt purify collegiate sports. A new record was set in training ticity when Wellborn Mayock, jui in the University of California, fw for seven days with a resulting of 16 pounds in order to get him in condition to start the track sea: He is considered one of the n promising quarter-milers in the w Y t 1 t When the captain of the Universi of Pennsylvania baseball squad i sued his first call for baseball cand dates last week, 111 men reported f .practice. This is the largest numb that has ever turnell out for a Penn nine. An increase of $5,500 over la year's profits is shown in the repo of the athletic association of Prin( ton university. The net revenue of t season of 1914-15 amounts -to $1 129.72 and this was made up entire from the receipts from foot-ball, bas ball and hockey games, these spor being the only self-supporting on of the year. Other sports required a propriations from the general fu for their support. Freshmen spoi cost the university $3,348, with pra tically no class receipts to cover i Howard Jones, for two years he coach at Yale, has signed a contra to take charge of the football hop; of the University of Iowa for the ne five years. Jones, first football ,coa at Yale to receive a salary for h services, produced the Yale tea which played all apponents off the feet in 1908, and did not allow a tea to get within the Blues' 30-yard l: The new coach intends to give t Hawkeyes their first taste of al-ye football, and will issue the first c for candidates about March 1 Team total............. .. Curtiss ......................... Clarks ....,. ...... ....... McIntyre................... Parshall.................. Simons..... ............... 987 196 196 195 191 189 t 1 3 i Pole vaule: Sophomores - Clarkr. Goodspeed, Scott; Freshmen - Wong Casteel, Onerati. 35-yard dash: Sophomores-Scofield, Page, Edwards, Jones, Baer, E. L Ziegler, Erley; Freshmen - Parke Hewlett, Wong, Maag, Comloquoy. Zoellin, Berkowitz, Strenfert, Millar Hrabak, Jones, Mendsen, Shields, Mac-* Millan, Spitler 40-yard hurdles: Sophomores-War- ner; Freshmen-Zoellin, .3ruch, Hew. lett, McClintock. Onerato. 880-yard run: Sophomores--Madison, Kruger, Hatch, Wolf; Freshmen-Tut- tle, Fox, Jaeger, Snow, Russell. Mile run: Sophomores-Dennee, Mee- han, Galloway, Horner; Freshmen - Fuess, Comloquoy. Herlihy, Nowlen, Maynard. 440-yard dash: Sophomores - Sco- field, Hardell; Freshmen-HorT, An- derson, McClintock, Garlock, Sayles. 2-lap relay: Sophomores-Page, Sco- field, Foster, Fischer, Hardell; Fresh- men-Parks, Matthews, Hewlett, Horr, Ehinger, Maag,. .Y ORE(AON AVGGlE$ WILL NOT MEET MICIGAN AGG1hES TNEXT YEA R HOCKEY TEAMS RESUME PLAYN WITH THREE MATCHES TODAY Combined Senior and Junior Engineers Meet Fresh Lits in Opener of. Big Day's Play With the return of the icy weather the hockey men will resume activ- ities in the penat Weinberg's, three matches being scheduled for play this afternoon. From now on the program will regularly consist of two games a day during the week, and three matches will be run off on Saturdays, thus enabling the completion of the schedule, before the close of the play- ing season. The fresh lits will meet the com- bined senior and junior engineers at 2:00 o'clock this afternoon in the first game of the day, and this match will be followed at 3:00 o'clock by the clash between the science team and the ag- Dr. E. C. Sullivan, of the Corning Glass Works, of Corning, N. Y., will deliver two lectures here March 2. The first talk will be given in the after- noon before the March meeting of the local section of the American Chemi- cal society. In the evening, a talk of more popular appeal, to which the public is to be invited, will be deliver- ed under the combined auspices of the Alchemist and Phi Lambda Upsilon so- cieties. Doctor Sullivan is the man mainly responsible for the new "Pyrex" glass- ware which has becolme almost indis- pensable in chemical laboratories, as well as of great usefulness in the kitchen. Its great appeal is its prop- erty of withstanding high degrees of temperature. Both talks will probably be on some phase of glass manufacture, the sub- jects of which are to be announced later. i 1 r i i f s i Prof. Henry C. Adams, of the eco- nomics department, has recently re- turned from China where he has been arranging an accounting system for the railroads of that country. Professor Adams arrived in Ann Ar- bor yesterday, and in the afternoon de- livered his first lecture of the year be- fore his class in political economy. Patronize Daily Advertizers. ** men were asked to report today, only a few of the Varsity men have so1 far come out. Coach John Hoyle ex- plained this by saying that the oars- men were waiting to hear from thebr -xaminations to learn if they are eli- gible. Unless fate has been unkind. Hoyle expects to have seven men from last year's eight out for the Varsity this year. Patronize Michigan Daily Advertiz. ers. . ** ioucy Will Help Coach at Wisconsii Cambridge, Mass., Feb. 18.-Ernes W. Soucy, end on the Harvard foot ball team of last year, tonight said that he had agreed to assist Dr. Pau Withington, a former Harvard ath lete, in coaching the eleven at th University of Wisconsin next fall. H added that no agreement would b signed until after the close of the college year. It is understood tha R. S. C. King and John Doherty, bot Crimson backfield players of the pas season, also will join the Wisconsi coaching corps. The Michigan Daily for the rest o year-$1.50 * Patronize Daily Advertizers. . East Lansing, Mich., Feb. 18.-No op- portunity is likely to be afforded the Michigan Aggies in 1916 to even up with the Oregon Aggies for the whal- ing which they received at the hands of the westerners last fall. Nego- tiations looking to a game this com- ing season have come to naught a second time as a result of a conflict in dates. An effort was made to book the Ore- gonians for an engagement here No- vember 11, but this has fallen through. Oregon wants a game here O'ctober 28, but as this is the week immediately following the Michigan game, Coach Macklin is loath to take on such a customer as the westerners so soon following the Farmers' biggest game. Ten cents rents a good Eastman ko- dak, any size you want. Lyndon's 719 gregation representing the combined senior and junior lits. The day's pro- gram will close with the game be- tween the laws and the soph lits, scheduled to start at 4:00 o'clock. It has been arranged that in case of badsweather the schedule will be resumed as soon as the ice forms, and the games will be taken up where the program left off. The afternoon games will begin at 4:00 o'clock and at 4:45 o'clock.bThe first game for Monday will be between the fresh lits and the fresh engineers, and the second match will bring together the soph engi- neers and the combined senior and junior engineers. Coach McGinnis expects to finish the program as it was originally out- lined if the games are doubled up and are played off on time, and for this reason it will be necessary to have every team in the pen at the time ap- pointed for the playing off of the scheduled game. If the contestants expect to win their numerals it will be necessary for them to avoid holding up the schedule and the forfeiture of games. THREAD-BARE THEORIES VERSUS POTENTIAL PRACTICE The spindle-shanked scientist can tell you to a fraction ,of a knits eyebrow just how many carbo-hydrates, proteins and albuminoids it takes to make a balanced ration--we know forwe've had more than a smattering of that stuff ourselves. A man may teach these things but THE RENELLEN A PLACE OF DISTINCTIVE SERVICE HOSPICE Is a place he can always come to after the lecture and be sure of getting practical cookery in a square meal that will not distress digestion, trifle with his theory, muddle his mind or wrangle with his walletoski. Every day we are working to make this "A place of distinc- tive service."