SUNDAY FEATURE SECTION SUPPLEMENT FEATURES THEATRES MUSIC LITERARY (Z P X[IF tOdatl FtYi titjl3 SECTION TWO VOL. XXXI. No. 76. ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, JANUARY 16, 1921 PRICE FIVE CENTS STEVE FARRELL TRACK COACH Many Laud Record Of Trackster MOAXLEY, GILL, FITZPATRICK, ROCKNE, DONOVAN, AGREE (By Ben Sherwood) Illuminating indeed are the answers that have been received from prom- inent track coaches in response to re- quests for "inside" dope on "Steve" Farrell, Michigan's track coach. It is probable that the former prowess of "Steve" is not realized at a passing glance as one sees him glaring criti- cally at a perspiring miler making the rounds of the track in Wateman gym. Not only in regards to the ability of this man as a coach but also, and almost more so, have these different coaches dwelt on his former record as the peer of American runners in lengths from 100 yards to a half mile. John F. Moakley, coach at Cornell, is especially strong in his praise of "Steve." He writes: "We have been friends for nearly 35 years and re- ceived our track education in the pio- neer days when track athletics were first introduced into this country. Best Runner of Day "Steve was the best all round run- ner of his day, as well as being un- equalled as a jumper. He ,was the mainstay of the world renowned hose team from Natick whose members have become -the greatest track. coaches and athletic trainers in Amer- ica. His running mates on that team were the late 'Mike' Murphy, Keene Fitzpatrick, Pooch Donovan, and Johnnie Mack. "I had an opportunity to test my speed against 'Steve' on one occasion in an open race held in Boston and I will never forget how badly he defeat- ed the field in that race. "I always considered 'Steve' the greatest runner America ever pro- duced from 100 yards to half a mile. Since he entered the college ranks as a coach he has impressed me greatly not alone for his knowledge of track athletics but equally so for the fine condition of his teams in all their im- portant engagements." The high regard in which our coach is held by his colleagues in the fur- therance of the sport is shown when Harry Gill, coach at Illinois, says: Understands Men "In his younger days he was one of the greatest athletes in the game. He not only demonstrated his prowess in this country but also in the Sheffield handicaps in England. Since taking up coaching he has become one of the best known and most successful track and field coaches in this country. He understands men, knows every angle of the game and can still demonstrate nearly every event on the program. Any team that figures on winning a conference meet has to figure on beat- ing Steve. "Further, good sportsmanship and Steve are synonomous. I have never known him to stand for anything but the best in the game. He is a credit to the sport and Michigan may well feel proud to have him in charge of her track and field teams."! It has been said that the beauty of the compliments that are paid with such sincerity to Steve is that some of the men are the ones that contested him for the supremacy of the turf in the days when he did the running him- self. Keene Fitzpatrick, coach at Princeton, says: "I have known Steve Farrell for the past 35 years and can not speak too highly of his ability as a track coach, in fact he is ranked as one of the best in the country. Thirty years ago he was one of the fastestf (Continued on Page Three) TRACK LEADERS OF THEIR DAY' Was Famous Track Star; Now Called Greatest Jttentor Ll PRODUCED TEAMS THAT GAVE MICIIWAN FOREMOST POSITION AMONG CINDER PATH CONTENDERS; CAME HERE FROM OHIO STATE UNIVERSITY (By Bob Angell) Coach Steve Farrell, of the Michigan track team, has made a record in his eight years at the University of Michigan of which he and every Michigan man has a right to be proud. During this period Steve has never failed to turn out a good team, while in at least four seasons his squads have ranked among the best in the country. Coming here from Ohio State in 1913 where he had been track coach f and football trainer, he jumped right into his new position and filled it with great credit right from the start. Hap Half was captain of the team that year and "was one of the four men to break the two-mile relay record in- doors at the Penn Relay carnival, with a mark of 8 minutes fiat. Jimmy Craig in the hurdles, ani Kohler in the weights, were other brilliant per- formers that season. The Wolverines finished third in the Eastern Inter- collegiates that spring thus establishing themselves as one of the best bal- anced teams in the United States. The following year the team was not so well-balanced, but Steve devel- oped some bright individual stars. Bond, Smith and Seward formed a great dash trio and swept everything before them in the short distances every time they stepped upon the track. Michigan finished second in the two: this place. He gives unstintedly of mile relay at Philadelphia. - t his time and effort to the turning out Aile relyats h ldel phia.rntdof good track teams and he is never A hard schedule confronted the 1915 too busy or too hurried to give one of team which had but a small number his candidates needed attention. of veterans. However, the record fror Moreover he is an exponent of clean the year was a creditable, one, for } - sportsmanship through and through Michigan won all the dual meets in and will not tolerate "dirty work". on which she competed, and Hal Smith artw o ny of himy Kn gained immortal fame by winning both the part of any of his men. Kindly, gaied immrtan f-ae bys wiin th efficient, and reserved one might call athe 220 and 100-yard dashes in the him, although once in a long while he Eastern Intercollegiates. Eddie Car- will forget himself longenough to tell roll copped third in the mile at theof his experiences on the cinders in same meet.thp AIl,, - - - - - - - - - - Coach Farrell and two of his protegees, Carl Johnson, he considers the best man he has ever turned out; Eddie the middle, was his best miler. '20, at the left, Carroll, '17, in AN APPRECIATION To Coach Steve Farrell Michigan owes much. Always since he has filled the position of -track mentor for the Maize and Blue her track men have been regarded as formidable competitors and keen sportsmen. The first they have gained from the tutelage of Farrell, the Coach. The second has been instilled in them by their personal contact with Steve the Man. As a star athlete in his younger days he had the repu- tation of always giving, to every race, the best lie had in him. This reputation he has worthily upheld in his work in Waterman gymnasium. To Steve Farrell Michigan owes much. i s { s E f E4 I I .I I Early Fo) Track (By Thornton W. Sargent, Jr.) Early season prospects are giving! Coach Steve Farrell ample grounds for1 thinking that Michigan will have a good track team this year-perhaps not one that will bring home the Con- ference or Intercollegiate champion- ships but one that will be well up in the final reckoning and one that will make her rivals work to win a dual meet. Michigan's competitors this year will be strong, especially Illinois, last year's champions, and Wisconsin, who last year boasted a cinder outfit which could defeat practically all comers in a dual contest. Both of these schools have the majority of their veterans back, and their freshman material last year was excellent. Ohio State alsoI recasts Prosp, 1 ects havoc with Wolverine track squads, last year being no exception, and in- juries in depriving the coach of Cap- tain Johnson and Losch put the big- gest crimp of all in the Michigan championship aspirations in 1920. 1 This season may prove no excep- tion, for at the present time several of Steve's most promising youngsters are{ encountering scholastic trouble, and f unless they pick up in their work, Michigan may be deprived of a num-' ber of sure point winners. Despite these possible troubles Steve and Captain Larry Butler are working' their men hard in an effort to put out a winning track team. Since early December Waterman gym has been filled with veterans, last year's fresh- men, and real freshmen who are en- i NOT FOOTBALL BUT "STU DY9" SXYS COACH YOST TO SPORT WRITERS (By Bob Angell) "Don't you think you sport writers are inclined to lose sight of the fact that thesprimary reason for a college is study, and not football " Such was the state- ment made by Coach Yost at a "Big Ten" smoker in Pittsburgh not long ago. The "grand old man" of Michigan football has here put a query which is pertinent in the extreme but which one would hardly expect to hear from a gridiron mentor. He continues: "The general public seems to fail to realize that football is merely a by-product of our universi- ties, colleges and schools, a mere side issue, intended to provide recreation and diversion for the student bodies, and is not the sole aim and issue of these institutions. "Football is all right-in its place. It is a grand game, and we who have been practicing it most of our lives and love it, know better than anyonel can tell how great it is. But we must not lose our sense of proportion. It is primarily a recreation of college and school students-into which the competitive spirit has entered as it Record Relay Team Nineteen sixteen was a banner sea- son. The two-mile relay team equalled the world's record when it defeated the Cornell squad in a dual race in 7 minutes, 56 3-5 seconds. Smith and Carroll were again big point winners for Michigan, the latter beating no less a maxi than Johnny Overton of Yale in the Eastern Intercollegiates. The outdoor season was cancelled in 1917 owing to the declaration of war, although prospects were again bright' for a good year. Carl Johnson came to the fore in 1918 and was largely re- sponsible for Michigan's sweeping vic- tories in every meet in which she com-' peted. Both indoor and outdoor Con- ference titles went to the Wolverines and Carl took the broad jump in the Penn Relays. Critics admitted that Michigan was undoubtedly one of the two or three best in the country in that season. History repeated itself in 1919, the Wolverines making a clean sweep in the West.. Although Carl Johnson was the main cog in the machine he was by no means the whole team. The Michigan squad was a well-balanced one which all its opponents had good reason to fear. Johnson scored 20 points in the Outdoor Conference in 1919-four firsts. Ie ow ddays. It would be hard to find a man bet- ter qualified for his position than is Steve. Before his three years' of serv- ice at Ohio, his seven years at Maine (Continued on page Three) DIAGONAL DIGEST (By E. B. M.) The fellow who said Michigan is sleeping must have happened into U-Hall auditorium one Wednesday about an hour or so after lunch. It is a regrettable fact that the Rain- bow Revue took in more pate receipts than gate receipts. It's whispered around that a magnet was used by the manager to separate slugs and two and one-half cent pieces from the vast heap of coins piled near the footlights. The throwing propensities of the Wuerth audiences have scared the Ma- jestic management from installing vaudeville. Were they justified? One of the eccentric dancers blocked a terrible egg and immediately waxed strong. The concertina player in the Revue forgot his monkey. Some absent-minded farmer forgot that the screen had been lowered and hit Blanche Sweet directly in the chest with a left-over tomato. She had to have a fade out to get cleaned up. KNOW YOUR CAMPUS Approximately $9,976.11 worth of unsmoked tobacco is deposited annu- ally in the form of cigarette butts, on the local lawn. Note:-For quantity the Ec building wins, but try the Natural Science doorway for length. has prospects, which season, cause their cern. Meets Diffi However, before Ste any other teams, his have to overcome the nents of all-eligibili For years eligibility b may, late in the deavoring to round themselves into opponents con- shape for a vigorous year on the track. There is promising material among [culty these candidates. Some of the men ve's outfit meets look exceptionally good for this early men will first i the year, and although there is no e greatest oppo- way of telling what they will develop tv and injuries. into outdoors, Coach Farrell is hoping Injuries Interfere Although things looked particularlyj rosy for the 1920 season, things did not pan out as well as hoped. An in- jury to Carl Johnson at the end of the indoor season incapacitated him for further competition until the Olympic tryouts, so that the team finished the year with but a mediocre record. So much for the accomplishments of the teams which Steve Farrell has coached. There is no doubt that the' Michigan mentor has had good mate-i rial but that is by no means the wholel story. The Wolverines have received1 extraordinarily good coaching. Steve is rated as one of the top-notchers in his profession and he well deserves has been playing 1 has in no other American sport, (Continued on Page Four) it is (Continued on Page Three) i GRAHAM'S Both Ends of the Diagonal Walk Two Stores - - One Policy SATISFACTION GRAHAM'S Both Ends of the Diagonal Walk -0