THE MICHIGAN DAILY ... - IT ,. _._.,_.- ,, ,, ,.. , flli ;6 1M I \' !J N . I II . , , ! _ T, I, U!)1! - _ _ I; V IF" I tr A I 1 . , n 1 6 1 ________...__________ I_. . SMITH INVITED TO DEIS MOINES MEET 't'rack ('aptail Has Opportunity to Ac- company Relay Team Which- {xoes to Drake Carnival WOULD RUN IN 220-YARD DASH "Hal" Smith, captain of the Maize and Blue track team, has received an invitation to take part in a special, feature race in the Drake relays, to be held in Des Moines April 22. The race, a 220-yard dash, will be an added attraction to the present list of events. The fastest speed merchants in the west have been asked to take part in the event, and because of the nature of the competition, it is prob- able that the fleetest collection of men this side of the Appalachians will be brought together in this feature. Smith will undoubtedly accept the invitation tendered him by the officials of the meet. If so, he will join Coach Farrell and the men who will represent Michigan in' the big western carnival. 6OLF MEN TRY TO GET BETTER FACILITIES FOR 1916 SEASON RIFLE TEAM LEAS IN CLASS 0 COMPETITION Slump Alone Can Beat Michigan of High Honors; Now 12 Points Ahead NAME MEM BERS OF Homer, Lokker, McClintock and Cart- wright Win Places; Miller and Hammond Share Honors ANNOUNCE SECOND TEAM MEN sons ago, post-mortems to the shape of an alI-campus team are in order. The consensus of opinion among those who have followed the game during the past season seems to be that there is a pretty definite campus team among the teams which survived the second round. altnough the second team might be picked from many of the first round teams. There seems to be but one logical candidate for position of right for- Out ity, gives him this place beyond any possibility of dispute. Lokker, of the J-law five, has been selected as Homer's running mate at forwla. There was almost a toss-up betweii Lokker and Hickey, of the architects, for this honor, but since both men were about equal as far as aggressive- ness goes, and because Lokker was far superior in fighting ability, he was picked for the place. When it came to selecting an all-campus center, there seemed to be a pretty definite division of opinion concerning Miller, of the soph lits, and Hammond, of the archi- tects. For right guard,. the logical man seemed to be McClintock, of the fresh lits, and for left guard, Cart- wright, of the architects, was chosen without a dissenting vote. Because Hickey, or the architects, was rather in the dark when it came to picking the first team, he has been definitely placed as right forward on the second five, and Brown, of the soph lits, chosen as left forward. For cen- er on the second team, Cardinal, of the fresh dents, doubtlessly deserves the place. For the guai'ding positions on the second team, Hanish, of the fresh lits, and Brown, of the J-laws, have clear titles. Michigan's claim to the class "B" championship will soon be founded upon fact, for reports from Washing- ton show that the Wolverines bested Notre Dame by a 987-984 score, as well as trimming Princeton to the tune of 992-985. Michigan now leads class "B" by 12 points and only a miserable slump can cheat her out of the championship title. This week's match is with the Oklahoma Aggies, and according to the brand of marks- manship that this team has been show- ing, Michigan should have a walk- away. So far the team total against Oklahoma is 985, and because there are yet three men to shoot, the total ought to be raised to 988, which will assure the title. The match against the Notre Dame team in detail follows: Michigan -ward, Homer, of the forester quintet, Now that the basketball tourney being the man. Homer's style of for 1916 is a thing of the past, accord- playing-clean, quick, and aggressive, ing to a precedent created a few sea- together with his basket-shooting abil- A SECRET IS SOMETHING That there is no fun in until you tell it to the-other fellow-he in turn gets his fun out of it in the same good old way and after that it ceases to be a secret-from which it just naturally follows that "there ain't no such animal" since a secret is something that is not. A. H. A. A. K. MacNaughton............199 13. Cutting ................. 199 P. Nicholson ................ 197 C. Wilcoxen...............196 C. Simons .................. 196 THE RENELLEN HOSPIC E A PLACE OF DISTINCTIVE SERVICE Ask Use of Ann Arbor Club During Both Spring :end Fall LinksI Prospects for a successful golf sea- son this year are more favorable than ever before. The University of Michi- gan Golft association has presented a petition to the Ann Arbor Golf club requesting permission to admit more members and also asking for longer use of the links. The University or- ganization is desirous of securing the links both in spring and in fall in- stead of only during the spring as heretofore, and as against a limit of 20 members in former seasons, the association would like to have at least 35 members this year. The petition has been presented at a meeting of the board of directors, but it is not known yet what action they have taken on the request. Se- retary-treasurer Tapping of the Uni- versity association is hopeful that fa- vorable action will be secured on the petition. Three tournaments have already been planned by the association. The tourneys will consist of an individual handicap, a campus championship round, and a team handfiap as an in- terclass affair. These touraments will be staged after the spring holidays. Ed. Palmer, '17, president of this year's association, won the campus championship last year. Several close rounds were held and it is expected that the present season wl surpass the former one in point of interest as well as in point of talent competing. Men who have the opportunity and who expect to enter the association a are advised to get as much practice as possible during the vacation in or- der to make a good showing against the keen competition anticipated. Men who are desirous of obtaining membership in the association should apply as early as possible, as the num- her of members will be limited and the authorities are expecting a large num- her of applicants. The association has the active sup- port and cooperation of the intramural department this year and that fact is expected to add materially to the success of the season. HOLD W4 E STLlNG SEMi-FINALS We'de Meets hIerwine in Heavyweight Class; Reider Grapples With Baker 7 The last of the semi-final matches in the wrestling tournament will be staged this afternoon in the wrestling room of Waterman gym at which time R. F. Weske will meet F. N. Kerwine in the heavyweight class and F. D. Reider will grapple with R. R. Baker in the lightweight division. Considerable interest is being shown in the former match as this is Weske's first appearance on thle mat this sea-t son, while Kerwine has already dem- onstrated his ability by throwing Ray- mond in 2 minutes, 52 seconds. How- ever, in view of the former's excel- lent showing of last year when he gave Reimann such a hard tussle in the championship round, critics are already picking.the husky football star as the winner in today's fray. Team total.................9V7 -Notre 1Dame M. Joyce......................198 L. Vogel.....................197 E. Carroll ......................196 H. Rivas .............. ....196 .. Young.......... ............ 196 Team total.................984 Yale upset all dope by grabbing the weekly high score with a total of 989 points to her credit, and dope was further jumbled up when Maine and Idaho, teams seldom in the lime-light, were tied for second place with 988 points apiece. Michigan, with 987 points, is tied for fourth place. The scores of the class "B" teams in match 11 are as follows: Yale...........................989 Mainet.. .......................988 Idaho..............988 Michigan ................. .....987 Princeton........................987 Wisconsin............986 Notre Dame.....................984 Worcestert ... 982 Kansas State .................. 979 Nebraska......................979 Arizona............970 Oklahoma Aggies.............961 CCSQQAD TO ELECT CAPTAIN 31 Mein Who Won Letters to Meet Wednesday Evening According to the unusually large number of men who won their C. C. C. letters on the cross country squad this year, the Wolverine squad should be a world-beater next season. All the men who won their letters this season, to the number of 31, will meet in the trophy room of Waterman gym- nasium tomorrow evening at 7:15 o'clock for the purpose of electing a captain and officers for the coming year. At this meeting, ex-Captain "Eddie" Carroll will present to the letter winners their certificates of merit. The list of those who won their letters last season follows: H. L. Car- roll, C. G. Coit, H. A. Donnelly, H. A. Denne, G. B. Fox, H. Foster, C. E. Fuess, J. Herihy, H. M. Harsha, E. M. Hoerner, J. V. Kuivinen, G. Murphy, T. R. Maynard, G. R. Matteson, H. Nowlen, W. H-. Price, M. Putnan, E. L. Price, T C. Trelfa, L. H.Tuttle, W. L. Underwood, K. *W. Vance, F. L. Walters, L. E. Waterbury, A. K. Strauss, J. W. Comloquoy. F. E. Beck- er, D. E. Marsh, H. S. Hatch, F. L. Young, L. Cantor. NeCGraw Drops Jim Thorpe from giants Beaumont, Tex., April 3. - Jim Thorpe, noted Indian athlete, was to- lay released by Manager McGraw of the New York Giants, to the Milwaukee club of the American Association. This is the third season that McGraw has tried Thorpe out and found him lack- ing as a major leaguer. Weak hitting caused his failure to stick with the Giants. For First Class Bicycle Repairing Go to Switzers Hardware. t-fri-sat Is very decidedly something that is and what is more it is, because you like it and tell your friends about it--after all it is what you think of us and say of us and not what we may think and say of ourselves, that really counts. We serve the finest .ne dollar dinner in the city and this is no secret-- they all say so and we admit it. C,2 i. Varsity Fifty Five styles NHEREVER there are young men who know and appreciate real style in clothes, that heading will get some I I enthusiasm. It's like a "college yell" started on the campus; it gets the fellows together fast. - Hart Schaffner & Marx never did anything better than design- ing the. Varsity Fifty Five styles. The name continues from one season to an- other; but the models change. There are several of them for spring that are particularly lively; and we can show them to you any day you say the word. c " . h: { _, .. . 1 t + , , i .... i 'I i; 1 $18 and upward. $25 is a good easy price. * Lutz ClothinMg Store The Home of Hart SChaffner & MarX -Clothes r f lid,- .f - S.Y.. ;r,- i. ., .® 6 -- (kjrriz.t !a' ~cJ - . . .. .