SUNDA Y FEATURE SECTION All, iri i t t tttl SECTION TWO Lint i . .. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, APRIL 3, 1921 PRICE 4 en 'The Wolverine Meets The Be .alifornzans. Claim Strong, Track Squad VETERAN QUARTET FORMS NUCLEUS OF COAST TEAM M,'i 11 liOii 1111PlilillilTl liii1111111 I lii1 1liTAiINi1llIlilIll liii1lii liii lii 1 1liii1Ilii liii1liiiI ii ill I 1ll liliiillllIllilL SCOACH::ACTION ::CAPTAIN West To Si H ichigan Track A FARRELL TAKES FIFTEEN STARS ON TRIP T( COAST (By M. F. York) (Sporting Editor, The Daily Californian) California will send against Michi- gan and Stanford this year the best balanced team that has ever repre- sented the -Blue and Gold in the last decade. Weak in but two events, few in Berkeley have ever seen a better' team. With the opening of the season, California's 'upporters were' dubious. Few saw possibilities of the track team duplicating the feat of the foot- ball team in gaining nation-wide re- cognition. But as the season, pro- gressed and the men rounded into form the work of Coach Christie was in evidence. Comparatively unheard of men last year became stars over- night. Experienced Quartet . In the fold at the openings of the season were Captain Sprott, Majors, Hendrixson, and Henderson, all of whom went East with the team last year. Merchant and Captain Peter- son, the other members of the team were not back. In addition to these men were those men from the fresh- man team and' the other members of the Varsity squad of 1920. Sprott has rounded into form rapid- ly and a week ago stepped over. the mile in 4:27. In the half he is good for 1:58 easily and has done better. The surprise in the distances has come from Dorr, Mejia, and Saunders however. Dorr, unheard of before this year, in the meet against the Olympic Club covered the eight laps in 9:48:4 and winning from Hunter, a member of the American Olympic team. Mejig broke the tape a fifth of a second behind Sprott running the. mile in 4:27. Saunders won the 880" in 1:58:4. Hutchinson, always a fair sprinter, hs developed into one of the speed- iest men on the coast. In the same meet ie stepped 100 in :10 fiat. Fol- lowing up in the 220, he was officially credited with 21:3 but three watches caught him at 21:1, one at 21:2, and the fifth at 21:3. Muller, Field Star In the field events Muller, a member of the American Olympic team,. is starring. He clears the bar in the high jump at close to 6:3 and can go 23 feet in the broad jump. Majors is heaving the shot around 43 and 44 feet and is good for 160 in the javelin. Norris has done 12 'feet 4. inches in, the pole, vault. In but two events is the Blue and Gold team weak and these are tthe two hurdle races. California has failed to develop 'a hurdler since BUTLER WINS; WETZEL SECOND Special Food And Water For Track Team On Western Trip "Aqua Pura" From Ann Arbor Wells Only, to be Tasted by Wolverines; Sixteen Day Trip Including Visit to Grand Canyon Planne d by Athletes (By John MeManis) Fifteen Michigan athletes m teen Californians on the cinde Saturday, April 9, at Berkeley most talked of intersectiona meet of the year. Some of t runners, jumpers and weight collegiate America are on the that will compete over the Bri * tders~, deCalifornia's strength in th froni the 100 yard dash to t mile run, give the far wester a little the edge in the pre-m dictions. But Michigan is ni foe-, and while no -members team that left Friday are ov dent, all expect the best aiad meet of the year. The.Wolveri strong in the weights, and in o event, the running high jump, : any glaring weakness. Ca presents a more well rounde and one, that will score hea every contest. - Predicts Close Meet A careful consideration of tl parative strength of both tea the basis of what the various E have already accomplished, the meet look close enough the mile relay may decide the If this is the case, one of t t ~races in years -should develop, CAPTAIN BUTLER Michigan and California posse ter' milesfar above the usual ,,. G OD O D DA S arSimmons and Dosch of I GiUU OLD DAYS ~Iare both 10 second men in .- yard dash, as is Hutchinson SR I BY IS IGold and' Blue. These two N men, with the possible add "TUT'S" FAMOUS = Captain Butler, will be entere XLEDtER 220 yard dash, and will probe pose Hutchinson and Arkley. By Jack Dakin ini h li]h (By Thornton W. Sargent Jr.) COACH FARRELL SHAW'S HISTORY I OF UNIVERSITY PRONOUNC- ED INTERESTING AND 2 = HELPFUL (By S. T. B.) Late last year from the presses of the Harcourt, Brace and Howe Pub- lishing company came a book which is at once the most interesting and the most usefulj for reference pur- poses of any which have been written about the University of Michigan. Wilfred Shaw, general sejretary of the alumni association, is its uthor; and its title "The University of Mich- igan." The first copies of the book came off the press just before the Christ- Michigan's track team, which left here gloriously Friday night on an invasion of the Pacific Coast where the University of California cinder squad will be met, has a 16-day trip mapped out, which will take the Wol- verines to San Francisco, Los Ange- les, and the Grand Canyon. The squad with its fifteen members, Coach Farrell, and Manager Dick Fischer, leaving Chicago yesterday morning on the Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul are now speeding their way through Wyoming after depart- ing fron! Omaha about 1 o'clock this morning. In their Pullman, which is practically a special car for only in case there is overflow from other cars will any other people be put in, the team has every convenience. Thirty gallons of special water were ordered for the trip, for Steve doesn't want his men hurt any by a change of drinking water. Special Eats Prescribed Before the departure, complete and, elaborate 'preparations for the trip were made by the Athletic associa- tion. Even the meals which are being served the squad were prescribed. For breakfast en route the men may eat orange, grape fruit, or prunes, some from the stringent diet. Early Tuesday morning about 6 o'clock the team passes into Ogden on the Union Pacific, and from there after a half hour stop the train con- tinues on the Southern Pacific for Berkeley, where they arrive at 7:40 o'clock Tuesday morning after ap- proximately 80 hours of constant travel. California is making preparations for the care, of the team, which will have four days to work out under the balmy Pacific sun, before the meet. Except for a week in Ann Arbor this will constitute practically all the workout the Wolverines will have on the cinders, and with the handicap of the climate change, it will put Michigan at quite a disadvantage. See Sights on Return After the meet next Saturday the Wolverines leave Sunday morning for Los Angeles on the Southern Pa- cific, arriving in the picture city the same evening. The Wolverines, led by Captain Larry Butler, will be given a day to galvant around with the movie queens, and look over Venice, Long Beach, and the other centers of attraction. From here the Michigan team takes a special Pullman on the Santa Fe and in Arizona they are sidetracked for a day's inspection of. the Grand Canyon, where Steve Far- rell plans to 'ut his broad jumpers through a severe workout. Wesbrook and Gruikshank were both laying even money' before leaving that they could clear the Canyon with five feet to spare. After the Grand Canyon the team continues on the Santa Fe through New Mexico, Colorado, Kansas, Mis- souri, et cetera, arriving in Ann Ar- bor at 5 o'clock Friday, April 16, when: many of the men will begin inte sive work on making up a week of miused school. SS u tb ( Mit iti d iab I ..l* 1, t baked apple, oatmeal, cereals, dry mas sale vacation, and since which the volume that time, the Etas had, and toast, graham muffins, ~eggs, milk or weak tea. On the menu for luncheon the praise which has been accorded are: Fish, steaks, roast beef, mutton, Mr. Shaw, both journalistically and lamb chops or chicken; macaroni, personally, should in some part repay vegetables such as peas, spinach, or him for the momentous task which he other greens; rice or potatoes (the has' accomplished so- well in his book. potatoes, should -be baked or boiled, Intere.sting Account never fried), dessert such as ice cream Perhaps the greatest featute of or pudding; milk or tea; toast. For "The University of Michigan" from dinner the men may have: soup, oc- the popular viewpoint is that it is casionally green salad, meats as one of the most interesting accounts above cited, potatoes -as above, peas, ever writteil of the building of a great carrots or other vegetables; toast; institution. Mr. Shaw has presented desserts as above, weak tea, milk or his facts not in the dry, uninteresting cocoa. No coffee, pie, cheese wil be form so often assumed by historians, permitted, although on the return trip but in a manner which makes the the men will be permitted to change book read almost like fiction. Mr. Shaw has his topic well in mind,-it is doubtful if anyone could have been PASSING THE BUCK--O[ found who would have been better qualified to have written a history of Whatever malcontents and fault-- r r i r 3 r n a } a V. %R., Pattengill, .05; Bob Clancy, 15; T. S. Hammond, .25, and so on ad infinitum * * * They form only a number of thick, old-fashioned, musty ledgers whose pages are filled with name after name and item after item. Yet these dull appearing volumes constitute a strik- ing if obscure monument to student integrity in that period that can only be described by the trite phrase, "good old days." A decade and more ago "Tut's" was the popular State street eating place. -Mr. Tuthill never refused credit to any one. All he 'required was that the student sign his name with the amount of the purchase in one of these huge account books. But a cursory glance through the brown pages will convey the impres- sion that. the signer of his name in one of "Tut's" bpoks must have been conscious of a pretty strong moral obligation. Stories are still current of alumni who, long after graduation, remeMbered their account and mailed "Tut" a check for his due. A day after he died in 1912, one long overdue $20 note arrived from an alumnus who could not rest easy till"'his bill was paid. Just as seemingly.- unimportant documents may threw the most as- tounding light upon certain periods of early American history, so do these: archives bear mute testimony to the spirit of that era in student life when: turtle-neck sweaters, bulldogs, and "point-a-minute" football teams were in vogue-an epoch that while it may live enshrined in the hearts of count- less alumni, is fast becoming ancient history to the present day collegian. 111, IJL i~d. A 'a.' t U .U We UUU Ie l rlua g 21 and 3-5 seconds this year, w Michigan has had little opportu to practice over thi - distance. two -teams seem eqdally strong these two races, with the winner cided by the breaks. The quarter mile should be one the best races of the meet, as it bring together the best 440 man the middle west in Larry Butler, the -premier middle distance run in the far west in the person of B drixscn, who has beaten 50 secc twice this season. Count on Two' Places Michigan will run Butler, Wel and probably Forbes in this race. Maize and Blue should account at least two places, but until the is completed, there is no way to what these places will be. Saunders and Sprott of Califor and Burkholder and Burns of M igan have all run the half mile aro 1:58, which makes the picking o winner difficult. The Bear lea Sprott, was second' in the Gonfere half mile race here last spring, w Meehan I of Notre Dame won, t 1:54'. Dorr of California on' the time t he has made in meets this year, : few seconds faster than Freebo who will be the lone Michigan ei in the two mile. The western run has gone the race in 9:48. Grouping the two hurdle ra Michigan appears .to have an ex lent opportunity to make up some the points lost in dashes and ri Cruikshank should be equal to f in both of these races, pressed HeDry of California in the highs (Continued on Page Four) relay team that so sensation- defeated Illinois last year and he meet is intact. Sprott, Saxby, erson, *Iendrixson, and McDon- >rm a quintet from which a g team can be chosen. Hendrix- vho has' stared in the quarter- or two years, setting the inter- iate record for the year last , is .the strong ian of the team, red closely by Henderson and onald. the face of this it now appears' 'alifornia has little to fear from >rd and should be able to meet gan on even or better terms. I4 the Uiyversity than Mr. Shaw.' His1 close association with the Alumni of the 'University and his present posi- tion as general secretary of the Alumni Association easily qualify him for such' a task. Yet the book is filled with material which only tireless search could have sought out and the. (Continued on Page Three) } finders may say of the present order, econgmically or socially, they can offer no rebuttal to the argument of the development of the modern game of "passing the buck," or trying to put something over on the next fel- low. It is an art, if by art we mean per- fection. High up in diplomatic circles I LDART T AT WORK they play the game with as much skill and evince as much enthusiasm over it as do college students in "slipping one over on the prof." The only dif- ference is that the silk-hatters,. when they find themselves in a ticklish situ- ation which requires delicate hand- ling, find a way out by appointing committees and sub-committees, and (Continued on Page Four) SPECIAL PRICES ON EMORY BOOKS ALL THIS WEEK 0 R A_ H A M S