THE MICHIGAN DAILY SA '3 i -, . zoo oom IAI Rom > s. . caum1inm uuu i r"+"' 4 lA i x . ,. .. .. _ CKS9 IWONDERFUL LEAP bbard Jumps 21 Feet 11 Inches in Practice For First Time on Ferry Field ACTICE EASY AS MEN REST FOR TRIALS THIS MORNING 3ubbard, the Wolverine star jump- and hurdler made a remarkable 'formance yesterday when he jump- 24 feet 11 inches. This is the best np he has made on Ferry field and arly shows that he is a possibility a future world record holder. He k but two jumps,. the first was 24 t 6 inches and on the second one stepped over or his jump would ve been 25 feet 3 inches. Hubbard ms to have considerable difficulty not fouling by overstepping his :eoff. [here was little activity yesterday most of Coach Farrell's best per- mers were resting for the trials that 1 be held this moring from 10:30, 11:30 o'clock. If the weather is d it is possible that the half milers 11 have four men that will be able place in a'time under two minutes. ssibilities rfor the four mile relay m also lodk good with Isbell, Day- and Bowen going along in fine UEbAI. made their appearance, due to partic- Gpation in other sports and scholastic difficulties. UNDERWARM SNramrI Its SPORT SNAP SHOTS b tt fit' American League, .. . ..3 8 . ....5..... 11 Detroit . St. Louis 21 11 Coach Little Inaugurates New System of Dividing Men for Spring' Training MENTOR PLANS SCRIMMAGES I FOR PRACTICAL INSTRUCTIONI Pillette and Woodall; VanGilder ands Severeid. Washington . ....... Philadelphia ........... Hollingsworth, Russell Heimach and Perkins. 2 10 6 4, and R Chicago.............5 Cleveland............8 11. 9. Id Ted Blankenship, Connelly, Schalk; Metivier, Morton, and Neill. Aspirants for the 1923 footballj 4! squad received a good dose of spring 2 training yesterday afternoon when as- uel; sistant Coach Little and his assistants C put themi through a stiff drill underI a blazing sun on Ferry field. More than 100 men are. turning outI and for practices every day, many of them making their appearance for the first time since their entrance into the IUniversity. A large number of men 1 from last season's reserve squad who U I have been working out in WatermanI and gymnasium during the winter months are in fine shape and the long period of conditioning which has marked. ev-1 ery other spring training period willi E be displaced by practical gridiron 1 work. _ . The 55 entrants in the fraternity horscshoe tournament have been di vided into nine leagues as follows:I league 1,Delta Alpha Epsilon, Nu Sig- ma Nu, Phi Delta Chi, Alpha Sigma Phi, Lambda Chi Alpha, Delta Sigma Phi; league 2, Alpha Tau Omega, Al- pha Chi Rho, Alpha Kappa Kappa, Delta Sigma Delta, Thetw Delta Chi, Phi Delta Phi; league 3, Beta Theta Pi, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Alpha Del- ta, Theta Chi, Delta Tau Upsilon, Kap- pa Nu-; league 4, Delta Tau Delta, Chi Phi, Alpha Rho Chi, Kappa Sigma,, Delta Theta Phi, Sigma Phi Epsilon; league 5, Phi Sigma Kappa, Delta Kap- pa Epsilon, Chi Psi, Xi Psi Phi, Kap- pa Beta Psi, Delta Upsilon; league 6, Hermitage, Phi Chi, Delta Sigma Pi, Phi Sigma Delta, Theta Xi, Alpha Delta Phi; league 7, Delta Chi, Phi Beta Delta, Phi Delta Theta, Phi-Kap- pa Sigma, Tau Delta Phi, Acacia; league 8, Phi Kappa Tau, Phi Epsilon Pi, Tau Epsilon Phi, Sigma Nu, Sig- ma Chi, Phi Mu Alpha; league 9, Cyg- nus, Peers, Trigon, Phi Kappa Psi, Psi Upsilon, Beta Phi Delta, Masona.. Boston. .......... New York . ........... Percy and Devormer; Schang. 3 5 4 12 Ho'yt National, League New York .. ....... 2 8 Boston................9 13 Bentley and Gaston; Genewich Gowdy. 11 and Philadelphia............8 14 3 Brooklyn .............7 13 4 Weinert, Winters and Henline; Schriver, Schreiber, Decatur and Hungling. n the field events yesterday after- mn there was some work but the 'formers did not exert themselves any large extent but continued their rk for correct form anpd not for tances. Landowski looks to be the t man inathe Javelin with a rec- throw of 172 feet. ENNIS SQ AD TO GET INITIAL CUT 'receding the first cut of the Var- y tennis squad, which will be made ight, will be two practice sessions, s morning and this afternoon, and men who have not yet played >uld report for the morning session. 'ollowing are the men who are re- ested to be on hand for the morning Ltice: Kline, Merkel, Rorick, nchez, Zemon, Jerome, Gregory, Se- 1, Appel, Hames, Riley, Hodgeman, rber, Wright, Fox, Walbridge, Grei- , Hartwell, Tracy, Corbett, Up- n, and Mildner. All others who i report are asked to do so. Rig Ten Standings Pittsburgh...... ...11 12 Chicago ..............12 15 Glazner and Schmidt; Dumovich. Hartnett. St. Louis .. ....... 2 8 Cincinnati.............10 18 Pertica and Clemens; Luque Hargrave. 2' 4 and 3, 21 and loi ago wv .2 .1 liana .. ........ stern......... 1 0 0 0 0 0 L 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 0' Pct' 1.00 1.000 1.000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 Following is the tist of studentR members with playing rights at the Ann Arbor Golf club. They will ,call at the athletic offices in the Press building this morning and receive their cards before playing any more on the course. Student members are not permitted to invite friends onto the course. All candidates fbr the Varsity golf team are urged to get. out and work hard every way as the first match of the season is with North- western university on May 4. Players should leave scores with the attend- ant . at. the club house immediately upon completing their practice. The student memberships at the, 'Ann 'Arbor Golf club are limited to 30 each year and that number has al- ready been reached. The Washtenaw Country club, located on the Packard street road, maintains a nine. hole course on which all students may se-, cure playing rights by the day for their practice: Alexander, J.; Barry, J. H.; Block, E. A.; Benedict, C. A.; Bronson, D. C.; Crosby, M.'S.; Flarshein, W. M;. Fee- ly, F J.; Gehring, W. E.; Goodspeed, W. S.; Hettrick, W. E.; Jeffries, E. J.; Kaufman, H E.; Krause, P. C.; Kearns, Divide Squadl An entirely new system of spring! training has been adopted by ther coaches this year. The entire squad is divided up into three parts, candidates! being assigned to the different sec- I tions according to ther ability. Thet first division under the supervision of Coach Little. is composed of players who are regarded as likely candidates for first'string positions next fall and little time is being spent in drillingI them in the fundametnals of the game.I In former years the entire squad has been, put through, several weeks, of rudimentary trainingmuch to the dis- I gust of the older players who had gone' through the same thing several times before but inauguration of the new system will allow individual players to advance in their training as fastI as they prove themselves able. The second and third sections are made up of the more recent additions to the squad who are not proficient in blocking, tackling, and other funda- mental parts of the game.aThese sec- tions' are' in charge of Paul Goebel,1 Doug Roby, and Cappon, all members of last season's squad. As fast as, the men in the second and third di-] visions appear ready they are put in Coach Little's section to be drilled in the more advanced parts of the game. At present there are more than 40 men in the first section. New Tourney Plan As a result of the new system the football tournament which has clos- ed the last two spring training seasons will probably be displaced by a tourn- ament between different squads of players picked by the coaches as suit- able opponents. Competition between various individual players will, as a result, give way to group competition in the. actual -football games. By. the end of next week scrimmages will be started as part of the training program. Forward passing and punt- ing will be stressed in the , scrub games although a few line plays will be used to add variety. By the time the heavier work begins it is expect- ed that several members of last year's eleven will be out in uniforms. UpI to the present time only two first1 string men, Steele and Neisch, haveI Because of the shortness of the sea- son and the fact that several tourna- ments have been arranged for the class and independent teams it has been de- cided to give two weeks to the play- ing of the league games in. the fra- ternity horseshoe tournament. These matches may be played on the Intra- mural courts or the two teams sched- uled to play may decide their match on a court of their own choosing, so long as all results are reported prom- ptly at the Intramural office. Following is the schedule for Mon- day, April 23: 3 o'clock, Delta Alpha Epsilon vs. Nu Sigma Nu, Phi Delta Chi vs. Alpha Sigma Phi, Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Delta Sigma Phi, Alpha Tau Omega vs. Alpha Chi Rho, Alpha Kap- pa Kappa vs. Delta Sigma Delta; at 4:30 o'clock, Theta Delta Chi vs. Phi Delta Phi, Beta Theta Pi vs. Phi Gam- ma Delta, Phi Alpha Delta vs. Theta Chi, Kappa Nu vs. Delta Tau Upsilon,, Delta Tau Delta vs. Chi Phi; at 7 o'- clock, Kappa Sigma vs. Alpha Rho Chi, Delta Theta Phi vs Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phi Sigma Kappa vs. Delta Kappa Ep- silon, Chi Psi Xi vs. Xi Psi Phi, Kap- pa Beta Psi vs. Delta Upsilon. By Jack Keene Even Dempsey himself could do noth-e Just why some critics should argue ing with Greb in several workoutst that Gibbons, Harry Greb and other with the big gloves. men of their weight are too small to' Battling Levinsky, a light heavy- figure in the heavyweight activities weight, used toubeatup the giants of is beyond 'us.,I the ring without turning a hair, al- It is strange that the idea that a though he never could do much with few pounds makes an impossible han- a man his own size. Levinsky finally dicap should still prevail. Every time. grew too smart to tackle the little this argument comes up those who fellows. He knew that as long as favor the chances of the smaller men he stuck o battling giants he couldt cite certain well known cases where; not go wrong. the smaller man has triumphed. Dempsey always has said that thet Attention is called to the fact that only men he respects are the fast1 little Charlie Mitchell knocked down little fellows who weigh less than Jolln L. Sullivan in one bout and made himself. Their speed puzzles him to him agree to a draw in another; that a great extent. It took him four Fitzsimmons, a middleweight, won the rounds to make Carpentier quit andt heavyweight title and had no trouble he was almost knocked out by the beating most of the giants of the fragile Frenchman. Jess Willard, who, ring; that Joe Waltcott, the welter- outweighs Carpentier by eighty or weight, knocked down Joe Choynski ninety pounds, was virtually knocked and other heavyweights. out in one round by Dempsey. The Those were all exceptional men, and giant never had a ghost of a chance their cases proved nothing one way or at any stage of the proceedings. Little the other. It is the general average Carpentier came within an ace of1 that really counts in such matters. The winning. Yet all Carpentier has is general average shows that when two speed and a right hand wallop. He heavyweights of. the same amount of knows nothing about the real science1 ability are matched the superior speed of boxing.I of the lighter man is the deciding fac- tor. This has been so all the way through ring history, and instances. of it can be seen any night in the THREE-SIJED0EVENTS week.T The latest case was the surprise Joe TO Lohman, an unknown 170 pounder FEATUE EUSIR! handed the highly touted Floyd John- son, 192 pounds, at Grand Rapids re- cently. Johnson, who is fairly fast vARSITYCREW RnACanbxES itl.bttr ha h and can box a little better than the average big fellow, had been plaster- New York, April 20.-This year's1 ing the various third raters he met college rowing program in' the east with the greatest of ease. Lohman reveals a marked trend toward trian- was the smallest man he has encoun- gular races instead of dual events. tered. Lohman h d the speed that Five of the eleven major varsity con-, goes with 170 pounds, and his speed tests scheduledvbetween April 21 and was enough to offset Johnson's great- June 28 are three-cornered affairs. er height, weight and' strenth. i They promise to develop some of the, Lohmans not a wonder and it is most interesting competition in recent possible that he never will amount to years. anything. It was Just a' case of too The first triangular event is the much speed for Johnson. Childs Cup race at Philadelphia, April All the big fellows have met with 28, when Columbia, Pennsylvania, and experiences similar to that of John- Princeton renew their old rivalry. The son. Big Jess Willard, when at his date is earlier this year than usual. best, was thrashed by little Gunboat One week later, Yale, Pennsylvania, Smith and. Tom McMahon. Jack and Columbia will meet on the Hous- Dempsey was beaten by Willie Meehan, atonic River at Derby, Conn., in their a stocky little fellow. Bill Brennan, first triangular event. This race will Bartley Madden, Charles Weinert, Joe . Cox and Billy Miske,, all of whom out- weighed Iarry reb by many pounds, were easily defeated by the Pittsburg- er, who verges on the middleweight ASK FOR limit. Greb is not a great fighter. He can't hit and he can't box, but he has plenty of speed and that is all he needsL to make the heavyweights look cheap. Tuesday's schedule will see the'fol- lowing matches: 3 o'clock, Hermitage vs. Phi Chi, Delta Sigma P! vs. Phi Sigma Delta, Theta Xi vs. Alpha Delta Phi, Delta Chi vs. Phi Beta Delta, Phi, Delta Theta vs. Phi Kappa Sigma; 4:30 o'clock, Tau Delta Phi vs. Aca- cia, Phi Kappa Tau vs. Phi Epsilon Pi, Tau Epsilon Phi vs. Sigma Nu, Sigma Chi vs. Phi Mu Alpha, Cygnus vs. Peers; 7 o'clock, Trigon vs. Phi Kp- pa Psi, Psi Upsilon vs. Bets. Phi D~el- ta, Nu Sigma Nu vs. Phi Delta C hi, Alpha Sigma Phi vs. Lambda Chii Al- I pha, Delta Sigma Phi vs. Delta Al- pha Epsilon. Any irregularitiestin this schedule. should he reported to the Intramural office today. All games that cannot be held at the scheduled time due tc unavoidable circumstances will be played on Monday and Tuesday, May 8 and 9, before the eliminations begin Intramural assistants will be at the Intramural courts inside of the run, ning track south of Waterman gym*- I nasium each day 'and will furnish shoes and all other material necessary ( for the games. } r } } 1 :' 3 a Stan ford University California nesota........... o State........... THE NEW CHOCOLATE MALTED DRINK be repeated in the next two years, un- der 4 three-year agreement by the colleges to scrap their former dual races and substitute the three-crew event on the "home and home" bas- is. On the same date as the Yale-Penn- Columbia brush, Harvard, Navy, and Princeton will get together on Lake Carnegie at Princeton. The fourth and fifth three-cornered regattas are scheduled for May 19. Navy, Syracuse and Pennsylvania will row at Annapolis, while Cornell, Princeton and Yale race on Lake Cay- uga. Ithaca. If Princeton bests Hr- Vard May 5, the latter event will set- tle the crown for the Big Three ri- als-Princeton, Harvard and Yale. If Princeton loses in both, it will remain for the Yale-Harvard classic June 22, on the Thames River at New London, to decide the question of supremacy. May 19 also is the date for two dual events on the Harlem River at New York-one between Columbia and Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the other between the 150-pound crews of Columbia and Pennsylvania. The opening race of the season, April 21, is a dual race between Penn- sylvania and the Navy on the Severn river. A week later, M. I. T. crosses blades with the midshipmen at Anna- polis. Second crews of the M. I. T. and Harvard are slated to meet on -the Charles river May 12. On the eani9 date an interesting mnterscholastic race among leading eastern "prep' and high school crews is scheduled at New Haven. Harvard and Cornell will seek su- premacy on the Charles river May 26 and four days later the Crimson's150- pound eight will meet the lightweight Yale boat at Derby for the first time. Several college teams will enter the American Henley regatta on the Schuylkill river, Philadelphia, May 20. Princeton already has entered three .crews, junior, third varsity and 150- pound eights., The intercollegiate regatta on the Hudson at Poughkeepsie, June 28, will furnish the climax of the rowing season. The redoubtable Navy eight, which closed its brilliant career by winning the championship for the sec- ond consecutive time last June, will not be represented this year but the competition promises to be none the less keen. W MaiNaam moss E5n et um W GOLFERS' NOTICE [ All students will be barred j from playing golf on the Wash- I tenaw Country club links tomor- I row as 18:of the 27 holes on the " course are being top-dressed and I reseeded. Everybody will be al- lowed to play on the following Sundays, as it is expected that all necessary repairs on the links will be completed within I the next few days. I A. J. WHITMIRE, Chairman, I Grounds Committee. Summer Quarter, 1923 Tuesday, 19 June, to Saturday, 1 September Second half begins 26 July Opportunities to work for higher degrees and the A. B. degree in the oceanic climate of the San Francisco peninsuia. Courses in the regular aca- demic and scientific bras. hes. and in law. Information from Office 7. STANFORD UNIVERSITY California AND BE SATISFIED i S C Probably :r0 per cent of Michigan freshmen have never played Billiards hbe- U- fore coming to Ann Arbor. 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