P P. Ms7.io "- ~ -t-7 - ... - :. , .. , """""1. . r , .. ~ , 1 ' ' R + " * fw' t . Z . "' i "'"f , _ ," .... . .. ... Bits of Sport William T. Tilden, 2d, world's ten- 3 champion, will coach the Univer- ' of Pennsylvania tennis team this tson, according to an announcement the university athletic authorities den is a graduate of the university I former intercollegiate champion.' Edouard Roudil, the amateur balk- e champloin of France and conceded be one of the best in the world, has ived in America. He will take part the international amateur 18.2 balk- e championship tournament. which to be held in Philadelphia next nth. rhe famous Iowa State college relay im, which set the national outdoor ord for this event at the Drake re- s last spring, will represent the ast against Penn State, the Eastern ampions, in a special two mile re- race to be run in Madison Square Garden on Feb. 1. Notre, Dame will also send a relay team to this meet. The University of Pennsylvania has accepted the invitation of the Univer- sity of Illinois to send a relay team to its annual indoor meet on March 4 at Urbana, Ill. Coach Robertson has not decided whether he will send a one or two mile relay team. Last year he sent a one mile team and won this event. You'll find many bargains when you read Michigan Daily Ads.-Adv. ENSIAN PHOTOS I 1 Group photographs of campus organisations and classes for the I 1 1922 Michiganensian must be 1 I taken during the month of Jan- 1 ury. Sittings should be ar- I ranged at once. loxing Club To ' Initiate 20 men About 20 candidates will be initiated into membership of the Boxing club at the meeting Thursday evening in the Union. Coach Sullivan recommended practically all of these men for their interest and skill in the art of self de- fense, and their entrance into the Boxing club comes, both as a reward and an incentive, for further activity in the sport. A great deal of interest is being created in the sport this year because of the tournament jphich is to be held the latter part of March. At first it was decided 'to hold the bouts in February, but the pressure of ex- aminations has tended to keep the candidates from getting in proper con- dition to fight the scheduled three rounds. At the present time few of the men are able to find time to devote to this sport bit it is expected that aft- er examinations interest will be at its heighth. If this happens Coach Sul- livan will have a crowd of experienced and inexperienced boxers to train. Sul- livan strongly recommeded that those wishing to take part in the tourpa- ment, should take the training par of ment, should take the training part of the program very seriously. In his estimation, the only thing wrong with college boxing is the lack of initiative on the part of the students to get in the best possible condition for a bout. Sullivan himself is a very conscienci- ous trainer. Hardly a day passes but that he is doing some form of ex- ercise to keep in trim. He starts every day with a regular routine of calisthenics, skipping the rope, run- 1 ning the track and punching the bag.- In addition to this he is at the gym- nasium six days out of the week and every day he is boxing continually with his pupils from 2 to 5:30 o'clock. He is one of the very few boxing instruc- tors in the universities that gives every pupil individual attention. j 'f Typewriters FOR RENT FOR SALE Hamilton Business College State and William St. BA9SKETBALL TEAMI0 SWING AROUND C( Mather Says That Wolverines, Illini and Badgers Are All Evenly Matched KIPKE'S INJURED SHOULDER NOT SERIOUS; BACK IN SOON' Defeated, but far from chestfallen, Coach Mather and his Wolverine bas- ketball men have returned from their disastrous trip to Madison and Ur- bana. Victories in both games were lost by margins as nasow as any whims of fate, only the proverbial breaks determining the winner in both engagements. Teams Evenly Matched "It was a case of evenly matched teams all around," said Coach Math- er yesterday. "It is absolutely im- possible to say that either Wisconsin or Illinois were' better than Michigan, and it is lIkewise impossible to claim that Michigan was superior to either of her opponents. The breaks went against us. That was all." In the overtime battle with Wiscon- sin, Michigan was on the verge of vic- tory in the final 30 seconds when Mil- ler wheeled past Tebell, sending the Badger guard flying into the crowd and, with a clear shot at the basket, failed by a fraction of an inch when his throw fell short. In the overtime period that determined the victor Ceaser, the highly touted Wisconsin forward, escaped the miraculous! guarding of Cappon for an instant, long enough to sink his only success- ful throw of the evening, a long shot from the middle of the floor. Kipkse. urin Unfortunate Again, in the Illinois game, the Wol- verines were off to a six to three lead when Kipke's shoulder was injured after but three minutes of play, Pa- per, who substituted for the fast Mich- igan forward, put up a splendid game, but could not quite equal Kipke's per- formance, with the result that Illinois took the long end of the score. A great feature of this battle was Cap- pon's work In holding "Chuck" Car- ney, famed as the greatest forward in the Conference, to one field goal. Coach Mather is more than optit mistic over the probable outcome of the remaining games of the Big Ten schedule. Kipke, according to the Wolverine mentor, snould be back in the game in another week, long be- fore the next contest is scheduled, and with the return of the speedy lit- tle forward the Michigan team will swing into the mid-season form that has made it spectacular in Confer- ence circles. If^ I xerence games is:_ J t B. F. Ely ........ 6 22 Miller .. ...10 6 Reason. . 3 0 Kipke ........3 0 Rea ............1 0 Cappon..--....1- 0 Paper.......... 0 0 McGregor ... 0 0 Total .......24 28 The record of points the entire season is as Total 34 26 6 6 2 2 0 0 76 Games 4 3 3 4 4 4 1 made during follows: B. Ely ...............26 Miller...............17 Rea ................23 Reason..............19. Kipke................6 Cappon .....................4 McGregor. .......4 Pearman. .2 Whitlock.............2 Birks ................. 0 Paper ................ .0 Piper ................. 0 F. 41 17 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Total 93 51 49 38 10 8 8 4 4 0 0 0 263 MPION 'ETURNS AFTER INFERENCE SCHOOLS The record of points scored in Con- ir^nn n^ ro n ~ :d Total ..............101 61 SCHAEFER AGAIN DEFEATS CO1T , FRENCH UHAI Gilbert's hoCOlates Are Delicious and Always Fresh at The Eberback & Son Co. 200-204 E. Liberty Street Buy your class toques from Daily cdvertisers.-Adv. Try a Daily Want Ad. It pays.-Adv Typewriting Shorthand Penmanship Accounting Secretarial Training Second Semester-Feb. 13th HAMILTON BUSINESS COL. State and'William .ake Schaefer repeated his perform- ance of Tuesday afternoon when he again defeated Roger Conti, the Frenobi champion, in the evening match of 400 points at 18.2 balk line billiards. The champion was playing in usual good form and in 11 innings had defeated Conti 400 to 121. Schaefer made the longest run of the year on the Union tables in his eighth trip to the table. He had clip-' ped off 230 billiards before he failed on a draw shot. While Conti man- aged to score in every inning, he did not play the game that he did in the afternoon match. He appeared tierd and lacked the steadiness which he displayed in the erlier match. Schaaf- er on the other hand improved toward the close and finished the game in top form. His average was 36 1-3 to Conti's 11. Color Tournament Results Announced Games played in the basketball color tournament on Tuesday night resulted as follows: Blue 27, red 10; green 18, yellow 2; purple 18, black 16; brown 18, white 10; orange 11, gray 2. Lost something? A Classified Ad in The Daily will find it for. you.-Adv. flichigan Outdoor Record IsStrong Michigan has defeated each of her Conference opponents more times in any out-of-door sport than they in turn have defeated her. In the records made by the foot- ball, baseball, track and tennis teams it is shown that the Wolverines have the best out-of-door record in the Conference. Ohio Poorest Ohio State presents the poorest out- of-door record against the Maize and Blue, having won but 2 and tied 2 out of the 17 football games, having but won a single baseball game out of 17, and having lost 6 track meets and 2 tennis matches with no wins to coun- terbalance the losses. Chicago, according to the figures, is the most worthy opponent. Her ree- ord shows her to have won 6 out of 17 football games, 19 out of 49 base- ball games, with 1 tied, 3 out of 18 track meets of which Michigan took 14, and 3 out of the 8 tennis matches. illinois Rates Next Illinois has taken 2 out of 6 foot- ball contests, 17 out of 49 baseball contests, tying 2, and 1 out of 4 track meets. The dual track meets alone are listed and the strength of the Illini in the late Conference is not shown by the figures. Minnesota and Wisconsin have shown strong. The Gophers have taken 3 out of 11 gridiron battles and have tied 1, but have lost the 3 baseball games played and the 2 tennis matches scheduled. The Badgers have taken 2 out of 7 football contests, 9 out of 30. baseball games, 1 out of 3 tennis matches, and have suffered 2 defeats in track against the Wolverines. Entire Record Other Conference schools-have-less- er records. The totals efor Michigan are as follows: Football, 56 wins, 20 defeats, 3 tied; baseball, 142 wins, 47 defeats, 3 tied; track, 26 wins, 5 de- feats, 1 tied; tennis, 14 wins, 4 de-. feats. DRAKE RLAYS TO BINS OUT MORE COMPETITION, (By Associated Press) Des Moines, Ia.,' Jan. 18.-- Drake university will entertain a larger number of athletes than ever at the annual Drake relays April 8 and 29, according to . information reaching Athletic Director Kenneth Wilson from heads of athletic bodies at other schools. Drake Pays Expenses Among the reasons for the increas- ed attendance are the facts that the Big Ten Conference has offcially pledged support to the event; that Drake pays the expenses of the neet and prorates the surplus of receipts among the contestants;. and that ad- ditional relay events and field con- tests are shown on this year's pro- gram. As an added attraction athletic au- thorities -at Drake are giving their attention to the. improvement of the relay track in Drake stadium, Al- ready rated as one of 'the fastest tracks In'the West, the contemplated improvements will make it possible to establish new and better records, says Mr. Wilson. West Supports. Own Relays "The fact that Drake will hold the relays on the same date an the Penn relays, means only that the West as. become big enough to support a re- lay of its own," Coach Wilson said. w is SW. 46th St New York i REMOVE THE DANGER Step into either of our offices and look over our Polo Shirts -$2.10 Tuxedo Shirts - 4.20 Sport Suits $28 - 38.50 I FARMERS & MECHANICS BANK 101.10- South Main Street. 30 South State Street (Nickels Arcade) I 324 South State Street I SECOND FLOOR Il ". Auditorium )fday Eve. OS GARLWSHCductor and Pianist IN A BRILLIANT ALL-RUSSIAN PROGRAM, WITH nary 23 The Detroit Symphony