'AIR; PRKCB- CHANGE I it i~an &t ASSOCI. ANRE~f DAY ANDRE '" SERTI No. 175 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, SUNDAY, MAY 28, 1922 PRICE _ _ ___.__- - _ _ . m . . i AWARlDED CEMEDAL R fECORD VEN ANNUALLY FOR AS SCHOLAR AND ATHLETE 101 DS HONORS E MAJOR SPORTS nber of Family to ic Distinction in University Gainl ATHLETIC REVIEW ON SALE MONDAY Giving a complete survey of all lines of athletic activity covered dur- ing the past year on the campus, in- tramural, interclass, and the informal teams as well as Varsity teams, the Michigan Athletic Review, the first atempt of its kind, will appear on sale for the first time tomorrow at the Michigan - Wisconsin baseball game. The booklet is combined pictorial review and annual of the athletic sea- son containing 48 pages in which are 94 pictures of various teams, team captains, coaches, athletic directors, yell masters and all other officials. The book is finished in yellow cover the Ferry field gates. In anticipation of the future of Michigan's othletics is the page given over to the new Fery field house which is soon to be built. It contains a large picture of the structure with a detailed description giving specifi- cations and the main features of which it will boast. Pictures of Coach Yost the various Varsity teams and captains, the "M" club, Athletic association, and other organizations and men connected in some way with Michigans athletics make up a part of the book. EDITORSA9THLETE'S RHECEIVE AWARDS obert J. Dunne, '24L, has been rded the Conference medal, an or which is annually bestowed on man in' each of the Western Con- ace schools for his combined ex- nce as a scholar and an athlete. winning recognition as an athlete1 ke" is the third member of his .ly who has achieved distinction) his branch of activity. His broth- Edward, who graduated in '09, e his name as an athlete in base- and played during his last year rst baseman on the Varsity team. brother Maurice, who graduated i the Law school in '17, played e years as end on the Varsity foot- team and also played on the base- team. )uke" in getting the Conference al has been awarded this honor after making an excellent record thietics. He was this year's cap- of the Varsity football team, and ed on the team for four years, eby receiving four "M's." He has ed on the Varsity basketball team years, thus .winning two more ." He has also won three "M's" 'ack for his service in that branch thletics. In addition to his work the University, "Duke" attended last Olympic games in the penath- ad" Wieman won the Conference al last year, and Carl Johnson it the year before last. BEL CGALLS MEETING ON DORMITORIES CORPORATION ul Goebel, '23E, 'chairman of the rgraduate committee of the Dor- ries corporation, which has been nized for the purpose of erecting 's dormitories in Ann Arbor, has d a meeting of all students who re to solicit subscriptions for the rtaking during the , summerl ths, to be held at 7 o'clock Wed-- .ay night in the upper reading i of the Union. ie Dormitories corporation is cap- ed at $1,000,000 and its promoters ct to sell the greater part of the k to Michigan alumni. The plan o employ University students as smen for the stock during vaca- MICHI6AN' DiAMOND MEN ONE 5TEHEBBB6TNPNAT9T BLNNSWEAK MAROON TE MICHIGAN'S NEW PROPOSED FIELD HOUSE, WHICH WILL BE ONE OF THE BEST ATHLETIC STRUCTURES OF ITS KIND IN THE COUNTRY WHEN COMPLETED. NEW FIELD HOUSE TRACK MEET ENDS TO COMPARE WIT H WITH TWO SCHOOLS BEST IN COUNTRYTIED FOR FIRS'T FERRY FIELD BUILDING WILL DETROIT NORTHWESTERN, EAST- PROVIDE FOR ALL TYPES ERN, GET 21 POINTS EACH; OF SPORTS NORTHERN THIRD ACTIVITY ROOM WILL BARNUM WITH THREE CONTAIN 12,500 SEATS FIRSTS IS HIGH MAN Comletiono StructureMayEnable -- omleio of trure ay E Fast Time Made by High School Run- Michigan to Hold Big Ten ners in Annual Field Indoor Meet Classic With the completion of the new Detroit Northwestern and Detroit proposed field house, for which con- Eastern high schools track teams tied tracts have recently been let, Michi- Efst placehin thes22ndkannualtUe- gnfor first place in the 22nd annual Un- plants in the country. The preset iversity of Michigan interscholastic track meet held on Ferry field yester- facilities together with the new fieldd hous wil oferfaciitis fr eeryday afternoon with a total of 21 points house will offer, facilities for every aic.DtotNrhr a hr type of outdoor and indoor sport rec- withe.9 eoits ognized in the Conference, and will with 19 points. Journalists Join Concludle \ Conference; with Track Men at Banquet 1 - YOST AND BRUMIII PRESENT WINNERS WITH TROPHIES Addresses by W. J. Ottaway, of Port Huron, President Marion L. Burton, Robert Frost, ex-Ambassador William G. Sharpe, Lee .A White of Detroit, E. G. Burrows of the journalism de- partmnent, and Brewster P. Campbell, retiring managing editor of The Mich- igan Daily, comprised the program of the Michigan Interscholastic Press association's meeting yesterday morn-. ing. Officers of the association .who had been elected the day before were announced, as were the faculty ad- visers. James G.* Frey, '22, who acted as chairman of the meeting, first intro- duced William J. Ottaway, president of the Press club, who greeted 'the delegates to the convention briefly. President Burton was next intro- duced, and also extended a 'warm welcome to the editors. He described the University's aims for a greater Michigan, and wished the association- all success at the conference. Robert Frost addressed the onvention next. Upon invitation, -he read one of his poems, "The Code." W. G. Sharp Speaks William Graves Sharp, former a"i- bassador to France, and a United .(Continlied on Page Ten) A LITTLE CO-OPERATION PLEASE Although a section was reserved for seniors in the grandstand at Saturday's baseball game on Ferry field, individual- faculty members of the Board in Control of Athletics have taken a stand as opposed to the Student Council's action in re- serving seats for the fourth-year men, and have issued an unofficial statement that no block will be permitted for seniors at tomorrow's contest. The reason given is that such a move "has always been against the policy of the Board". But the council still has a plan. The Student council firmly believes that, as the representative student governing body of the Uni- versity, it has the right to say whether the under- classes shall give way for seniors, and is con- vinced that the student body is united in its will- ingness to give precedence to them. The council therefore will set off a block of seats for seniors, wearing caps and gowns or carrying canes, at to- morrow's contest. The section will not be reserved; it will merely be marked, and Student councilmren will be on hand to request the underclasses not to occupy that block of seats. No one will be for- bidden to take places in the senior section; but all others except seniors will.be asked not to. The council believes that, since the seniors want a section of their own, they should have it, and that. the rest of the campus will be more than willing to co-operate in leaving place for them until five minutes before the game starts. offer ample room for indoor practices. With an eight-lap to the mile track' ta 75 yard straightway, several basketball courts, and provisions for' indoor football and baseball practic- es, the building will be sufficient to handle all indoor Varsity and fresh- man athletics. It will romove these sports from Waterman gymnasium, which will be freer to accommodate gymnastic classes and intramural ac- tivities. Holds 12,500 Seats The main activity room of the build- ing will be 300 by 160 feet with space entirely clear of obstructions to a height of 63 feet. The size of this room will correspond exactly to the dimensions of a football field. Seats for 12,500 will be provided. There will be locker and shower facilities for 4,200 in the building. Of- fices of the Athlietic association, tick- et offices, store rooms and drying rooms are included in the plans. The building in which the main room and the showers and minor rooms are lo- cated will be 342 by 160 feet. With the completion of the building it is possible that Michigan could hold the, Big Ten indoor meet at Ann Ar- bor. Heretofore, only Northwestern has had adequate facilities for the ac, commodation of the big track event. Will Aid Athletics The field house will aidsgreatly in, the development of athletics here, ac- cording to Coach Fielding H. Yost. He pointed out that the building would provide ample room for the five months of athletics that must be con- ducted indoors, and give conditions1 that are similar to those outdoors In, good weather. Football practice can be held at night, and it will be possible to avoid the handicap of ghost balls and light flares when the darkness falls. Signal drills can easily be run off in the eve- ning and in inclement weather. The field house will provide ample room for basketball exhibitions. With a seating capacity five times greater than that at Waterma gymasium, there will be no future difficulty in handling the crowd. Track WillBenefit Coaches Steve Farrell and Ray Fish- er are the two mentors most pleased with the new building. In the I111- nois Relays and Indoor Conference meets, the Varsity track teams have always been hanlicapped by going di- rectly from the boards to the dirt. With this handicap removed there is every reason to believe that the in- door teams will make better show- ings at the meets. Baseball also suffered from the in- ability to leave the boards of Water- man gymnasium until a short time before the Southern trip each year. In the new field house it will be possi- ble to almost duplicate outdor condi- tions, and by the time of the South- ern invasion, Varsity nines will be in The meet was featured by excep- tionally close competition especially among the teams from the Detroit' schools. Including Hamtramck and' Highland Park among the Detroit dis- trict, these schools scored a majority of the- points in the meet. Allegan placed fourth with 16 points and was pressed hard by Parkers- burg, W. Va., who had a- total of 15, points. Following Parkersburg was Highland Park with 14 and Saginaw Eastern with 11 1-5. Other schools failed to score 10 points iu the Meet. Barnum Stars The outstanding star of the meetr was Barnum of Parkersburg, W. Va. This athlete counted three firsts for a total of 15 poihts making him the high point man of the meet. Hester of Detroit Northern, and Pritchard of Allegan, were men who helped greatly in raising the score f their team. Perhaps the most thrilling event of the meet was the relay race won by Detroit Northern. The time of the winning quartet was 1:33 1-5 which ties the scholastic record for the Ferry field track. The final standing of the schools; who placed men- in the meet is as fol- -lows: Detroit Northern 21, Detroit Eastern 21, Detroit Northern 19, Al- legan 16 1-5, Parkersburg, W. Va. 15, 'Highland Park 14, Saginaw Eastern? 11 1-5, Lansing 6, Detroit Cass Tech 6, Muskegon 5 1-5, Mount Clemens 5, Detroit Central 4 1-5, Ann Arbor 4, Grand Rapids Central 3, Owosso 3, Clearfield, Pa. 2, Hamtramck 2, Battle Creek 2, Saginaw Arthur Hill 2, Terre HIaute Garfield 1 1-5, Toledo Scott 1, Sturgis 1. Other scheels efitated failed to place. SUM [ARY Summary of the events is as fol- lows: Javelin throw - First, Barnum, Parkersburg, W. Va., second, Brumm, Muskegon; third, Chatman, Detroit Northwestern; fourth, Skogland, De- )troit Northwestern. Distance, 144 feet, 8 inches. Broad jump-First, Pritchard, Alle- gan; second,- Meyers, Detroit Cass Tech; third, Marigold, Detroit East- ern; fourth, Mowrey, Highland Park Distance, 21 feet, 3 1-2 inches. Relay-First, Detroit Northern, Bar- low, Caplan, Turpin, Hester; second, Detroit Northwestern; third, Lansing; ifourth, Toledo Scott. Time, 1:38 1-5. (Continued on Page Five) ichligan iggles Win Meet East Lansing, May 27.--The Mich- igan Aggles were easy winners in the annual state Intercollegiate track and field meet at M. A. C. this after- noon, leading the field of -eight col- SENIOR LIT NOTICE Programs and announcements ' will be distributed from the booth in University hall fromh2 1 to 4 o'clock Monday afternoon. j J. M. STEDMAN, Chairman Program Committee. SERVICE MEN TO Will Observe Memorial Day With Full Servicea on Ferry Field HUTCHINS OR COOLET TO BE SPEAKER AT EXERCISES Service men of the University and Ann Arbor will celebrate Memorial day in a combined parade and mem- orial service on Ferry field, according to announcement made yesterday. The participants from the Univer- sity will fall in at 9 o'clock Tuesday tmorning at Hill auditorium,, whence they 'will proceed to the soldiers' mon- ument downtown, and will be joined there by the down town contingent. The entire parade will then proceed to Ferry field, where a short ceremony will be held, including a flag raising and a volley by the R. 0. T. C., as well as a. short speech by either Pres- ident-emeritus Harry B. Hutchins or Dean Mortimer E. Cooley. As planned, the parade will prob- ably be one of the largest ever held here on a similar occasion. In addi- tion to the University and down town service- men, the national guard unit and the University R. 0. -T. C. will help swell the ranks. A special de- tachment will be formed for service men not in uniform. Music will be furnished by the Varstiy band and by the R. 0. T. C. band, which will meet between Natural Science and Chem- istry buildings at 8:45 o'clock Tues- day morning, with the possible addi- tion of the Masonic band. Major Ar- thur, of the R. O. T. C., will command the entire detachment. Detailed announcement will be made later regarding the definite meeting places of the seveal sec- tions of service men. CAIFORNIA- WINS IN INTERCOLLEGIATE MEET, Cambridge, Mans., May 1l,-Athletic honors winged westward today when the University of California again won the 46th annual track and field championship games of the intercol- legiate association of America, by a score of 40 1-2 points. Competing in the Harvard stadium against 30 colleges, including their greatest rival, Stanford university, well balanced combination from Berk- /eley rolled up a total 9 1-2 points larg- er than that scored by Princeton in second place and 14 more than Stan- ford, which finished third. Cornell, nine times winnr of the titular games, was fourth with 21 1-2 points, and the University of Pennsyl- vania was fifth with 16 points. Fol- lowing the Quakers came Harvard with 14; Penn State, 11; Layfayette, 10; Yale, 8 1-2; Columbia, 2; Dart- mouth, 7 1-2; and nine other colleges with scattering totals. TENNIS MEN FAIL TO REACH TOURNEY FINALS Chicago, May 27.-Nelson Myers of Illinois is the Conference tennis singles champion; and Frankenstein and Stagg of Chicago are :doubles champions. The Illinois player de- feated Henry Norton of Minnesota in the final round 5-7, 8-6, 6-2, 6-4. The mnatch was a battle of wits, between' two excellent back court players. Although Michigans players flled to reach the inals in either singles or doubles, the showing of the Mich- Igan teamn as a whole was by far' bet- SHULTZ PITCHES MASTERFUL BALL; GETS STRONG SUPPORT SHACKLEFORD SCORES YEAR'S LONGEST HOMER Fishier's Men Face Powerful Badger Nine Monday; Final Game With Ohio Saturday Outplaying Chicago in every de- partment of the game yesterday aft- ernoon Michigan's Varsity baseball nine advanced another notch closer to the championship by shutting out the Maroons 5 to 0. Neither team scored in the first two innings, but Michigan drew first blood in the third when the Wolverines scored two runs on a base on balls, two errors and some poor baIeball on the part of the Maroons. Roby led off the inning with a walk. Dick Shultz hit to Dixon, the Maroon hurl- er, who tried to catch Roby going to second. Dixon's throw was high and both Roby and Shultz were safe with nobody out. Uteritz laid down a beau- tiful sacrifice and both Roby and Shultz advanced a base. Wimbles hit to Torkle, who fumbled the ball be- tween first base and home, and while he was recovering the sphere, Roby and Shultz trotted across the plate with two runs which were enough to win the game. Shultz Hits Well Michigan counted again in the fourth frame when Paper led off with a single. Kipke followed with an infield scratch, advancing* Mike to second base. Roby hit to Fedor, who fielded the play in time to force Paper at third, Kipke advancing to second on the out. Shultz contributed to his own victory by hitting safely, scoring Kipke with the third Wolverine tally. Neither side threatened in the fifth, but it was in this frame the Wolver- ines hit safely three times but were deprived of any runs by some fast playing on the part of the Maroons. Paper led off with a single and ad- vanced to second when Kipke hit safely. Roby laid down a beautiful bunt which advanced both runners, Paper stopping at third and Kipke go- ing to second. Shultz then hit his second t singleof the game, a short fly which escaped the Chicago left field- er. Paper stayed on third, expecting the Maroon gardner to catch the fly, When the ball fell a few feet in front of the left fielder, Paper tore for home but the throw from Schultz to Yard- ley beat him by a fraction of a second and he was called out.Uteritz ended the inning a minute later by flying out to Curtis. Shackleford Gets Homer In the seventh inning Fisher's meh, scored their last two runs when Shac- kleford hit the longest home run of the year, driving Knode home ahead of him. Knode was passed after one man was out. Ernie Vick hit to Curtis, who chose to throw out Ernie at first base instead of trying for Knode at second. Bob then pulled the best steal of the day by going to third while Dixon was winding up. Shackleford then gave the crowd a treat by slamming out a long drive which went over the center fielder's head and rolled nearly to the tennis courts. Shack made the entire cir- cuit and easily beat the throw home. To Shultz goes the credit for the victory, for he held the Maroons at bay in every inning, while fast work by his mates kept the Midway lads from looking dangerous when they got men on bases. Neither nine played a brilliant game, but the Wolverines lookedtbetter thangIn any contest since the Illinois game early in the year. One accident marred the con- test. Fedor, Chicago short stop, was hit below the right eye by a foul tip from his own bat In the sixth inning and was carried from the field unon- scious. The injury is not as serious as it first appeared and the Maroon athlete will not lose the sight of his eye.- Three. stitches were taken' in the wound. At 4 o'clock Monday afternoon the Wolverines meet Wisconsin on Ferry field. Victory over the Badgers Mon- day and Ohio State next Satjurday will insure Fisher's men of the Confer- ence diamond championship. The Badgers have one of the best nines In the Big Ten and with Captain Pad- dock hurling for them, they are cer- tamn to be one of the strongest teams ter than that of any other team.. Mer- Michigan has had kel and Reindel both reached the Fisher has not ann semi-final round and were eliminat- for Monday, but h ed Saturday morning by Myers and Elliott, Liverance a to me