PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDA S Y, DECE I DER J, 1135 \ r BARSS ARRNGES HOCEYSCHEDULE Wolverines To Play Ten Games, Eight Of Which Will Be Played With Wisconsin And Minnesota. OPEN WITH M.S.C. HERE Coach Barss, Varsity hockey coach, has arranged a schedule for the Wol- verines that calls for ten games, eight of which will be played with two Conference schools. The Maize and Blue hockey team will open its 1926 schedule Jan. 23, meeting the Michigan State aggrega- tion in the new ice arena here. The following week the Michigan team will journey to Lansing to play a return engagement with the State school. The opening Conference game will be held here against the University of Wisconsin, Feb. 12-13. Coach Barss has arranged to have the Minnesota team visit Ann Arbor the following week, playing two games Feb. 19-20. Michigan will make a long trip at the close of the season to Wisconsin and Minnesota, meeting the Badgers at Madison Feb. 26-27, and the Goph- ers at Minneapolis March 1-2. The first four games have been ar- ranged to be played in Ann Arbor in order to allow for unfavorable weath- er conditions which have caused the postponement of the scheduled games on several occasions in the past. The northern states have favorable hockey weather usually at the close of Febru- ary and the first of March, consequent-, { ly Coach Barss has arranged his, schedule accordingly. Work on the ice arena here is be- ing rushed, and will undoubtedly be completed before the opening game. The ice will depend on the weather this winter, but it is planned to in- stall an artificial ice plant next year. COREL sAA*LISTS 2 CAGE GAES FOR 196 ITHACA, Dec. 8.-The varsity bas- ketball schedule, containing 20 games, was announced to-day by the Cornell university athletic association. Of this total ten contests are with Inter- collegiate League teams. The team is slated for games on the Christmas vacation trip with Ohio State, Pittsburgh, Buffalo and Roches- ter, opening on Dec. 30 at Columbus, 0. The complete schedule follows: Dec. 13, Hobart at Geneva; 30, Ohio State at Columbus; 31, Pittsburgh at Pittsburgh. Jan. 1, Buffalo at Buffalo; 2, Rochester at Rochester; 6, Syracuse at Ithaca; 9, Rochester at Othaca; 13, Villa Nova at Ithaca; 16, Columbia at New York; 20, Syracuse at Syracuse; 23, Princeton at Ithaca. Feb. 6, Penn- sylvania at Ithaca; 9, St. Lawrence at Ithaca; 13, Dartmouth at Hanover; 17,1 Columbia at Ithaca; 20, Pennsylvania at Philadelphia; 21, Princeton at Princeton. March 6, Yale at Ithaca; 10, Dartmouth at Ithaca; 16, Yale at New Haven. TOLjEDO, 0. -Charles D. "Casey" Stengel, veteran National league out- fielder and president and manager of the Worcester club of the Eastern league last season, has been appointed manager of the Toledo club of the American association, Pres. Joseph D. O'Brien, announced today. Stengel will resign as head of the Worcester club, O'Brien said. WASHINGTON. - The Bell Tele-, phone Co. of Pennsylvania today asked the Interstate Commerce com- mission to sell for $668,488 certain of its properties in Erie and adjoin- ing Pennsylvania cities to the Mu- tual Telephone Co. CHICAGO.-Chicago will play Flor- ida in the opening game of the foot ball season, Oct. 2, .here next year. Maryland will play Chicago here the following Saturday. For every article for sale, there is1 h buyer. Reach him thru Classifieds. MANAGERIAL TRYOUTS Second semester freshmen and sophomores wishing to try out for assistant intramural manag- er should report at once to the S Intramural office. 4 THE PRESS BOX A MTO BE HELD. HERE DEC. 17 By Jacques O'Grady Oct. 30--Naty Baltimore, Md. Coach Yost created quite a sensa-' Nov. fl-WVisensin here tion at the annual football Bust held OV. at-0110 St-Me Volunitas, 0io in Detroit Monday night when he an- Ni;. 2C-3iunnesota :wjnneaiohs nounced that Michigan's 1926 grid. schedule had been completed with the Clifford Keen, Michigan's recently booking of a contest with Oklahoma acquired wrestling coach, is a former A. and M. college. The game will i Oklahoma A. and M. athlete, playing open the Wolverine season at Ferryj on the football eleven under Maul- field on Oct. 2, with Michigan State betsch. Keen will assist with football college playing the second game at next fall, although it is not yet known Ann Arbor on Oct. 9. in just. what capacity. Mann Gains Permission To Hold Junior Championship An(I Four Open Evens Four The contest with the Oklahoma eleven will evoke considerable inter- est among Michigan students andj alumni as the head football coach at the western school is none other than John F. Maulbetsch, Michigan's great fullback in 1914, 15 and 16. "llaulie,", as the former star was known as an undergraduate, first attracted nation- wide interest when he smashed the famous larvard line of 1914. to pieces by his Iie~rce plunges. Walter Vamp phaced Maul ibseb. on his all-American team in that year, but the fulfbaack also played .great football the next two years, leading tie eleven in his senior year. With Michigan facing both Okla- homa and Wisconsin Yost will have to match wits with two former protegesl next season. George Little, now at Wisconsin, received his major league coaching experience under Yost, and Maulbetsch played under Yost, and it will be interesting to see how the vet- eran coach will fare. Coach Yost stated yesterday that there was little likelihood of Michiganl arranging a football encounter with Northwestern next year as the con- tract withMinnesota has already been signed. Many papers yesterday car-. ried the story that Minnesota has suggested a change to the Northwest- ern officials whereby the Purple would meet Indiana but once, and Michigan would meet Minnesota but once, thus making room for Northwestern on the Wolverine slate. Coach Yost has not been approached on the matter as yet. The comleted 1926 schedule now stands as follows: Oct. 2-Oklahoma A. and N here Oct. 9-Mich. State college here Oct. 16-Minnesota here Oct. 23-Illinois here' The new - restling coach is in dire need of some heavyweights on the mat squad, and is makingi a caref~tIl search of the campus for mater.Wrestling is a new sport here, I t is destined to take its plaees i Qa jor sport before long- iow 'e , ftir -students must nani- fest greater spirit than has been shownIin: the past if the sport is to prosper. Wrestling is one of the four sports at Iowa that was self-supporting last year. The Missouri Valley conference recently made the sport a major one, as the students have shown consider- able interest, both in supplying ma- terial and in attending the matches. Tad Wieman, Varsity line coach, has ordered all of the football line candidates for next year to report to the wrestling coach, and this action should b olpster the depleted heavy- weight ranks. But Coach Keen is anxious to carry a large squad and any students, regardless of weight, who possess any desire to attempt the sport are urged to see Coach Keen at the field house any afternoon. Hockey is another minor sport that was launched with wrestling, tennis, 'golf and swimufing four years ago, when the new minor sports program too effect, but hockey has already won a high place for itself in Michigan ath- letics. Coach Barss hastcalled a meeting of candidates at the Union tonight, and plans to startgtraining activities next week, although actual work on the new rink will not take place until after the Christmas holidays. Al- though the schedule has been an- nounced, Coach Barss is still trying VARSITY TEAM ENTERED Coach Matt Mann, of the Varsity swimming team, has secured the con- sent of the Michigan A. A. U. to hold four junior championship events and four open events at a meet to be held, here Dec. 17, at the Union pool. The championship events will be 50 yard - free style and 150 yard back- stroke for men and and 100 yards, breaststroke and 100 yards back- stroke for women. In the open events there will be three handicap events for men participants and an event for women. The events open to men swimmers are the 50 yard breast- stroke, 220 yard free style, and the 25 yard free style. There will be low board diving for women, each con- testant exhibiting six dives of their, own choosing.I The meet will be run under the rules of the Michigan Amateur Ath-1 letic union and all participants must be registered and in good standing.! The junior events will be open to all those who have never won a junior championship in these events, with the winners being awarded championship medals. In the open events, gold, sil- ver, and bronze medals will be awarded. Coach Mann will probably enter thej majority of his team in the meet, and several freshmen and men not affiliated. with the Varsity squad intend to enter the meet unattached. As yet it is not known just how stiff the outside com- petition will be but ,Ae Detroit Ath- letic club and Yacht clubs are ex- pected' to enter their full teams and invitations have been mailed to the leading swimmers in the state not affiliated with competing clubs urging them to attend the meet here. to book two games with Assumption HOCKEY MEETING All those interested in hockey are urged to report at 7 o'- clock tonight inrroom 304 of the Union. COACH BARSS. BASKETBAL TININ DRA'S EXPERIENCED MEND BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Dec. 8.- Of the many athletic games participated in by university men, which branch of sports shows the greatest number of experienced men? From figures compiled by the indi- ana university athletic department on freshmen reporting for basketball and football, basketball players have two to one edge over football men. Indiana university's athletic mate- rial comes almost exclusively from the Hoosier state. Few who make the basketball teams reside outside of In- diana. High schools in this state par- ticipating in basketball number ap- proximately 750 while only 88 take part in football. Of the 110 men who reported for football last September, only 58 had i ever played on a high school team. Coach Max Lorber reports that of the 126 freshmen court candidates, every one has had from two to four years' experience on a high school team. Several have been all-state selections. Coach Lorber has found difficulty in cutting his yearling basketball squad down to a working number. "Many of our court men have been under good coaches and are familiar with the fundamentals of basketball and are in splendid shape for college playing. They know how to train and are more alert to the college'style of play, than football candidates are; I Ibelieve," says the Indiana freshman mentor. j Everyone of the 18 varsity men re- maining on the Indiana university basketball team hail from the state of Indiana. On the gridiron squad this fall were five men from out-of-state. UTICA, N. Y.- Dick Harlow, foot PRELIMS OF ERA TERNITY S WIM MEET HELD, FINALS T HURSDA Y Phi Kappa Psi and Beta Theta Pil led the field in the five preliminary and three final events held in the in-1 terfraternity swimming meet at the Union pool yesterday. The finals will be held Thursday. Due to a lack of entries in three! races, the 200 yard straight relay, the 150 yard medley relay, and the .220 yard free style, the finals were decided, in a single heat. Phi Kappa Psi was the winner in both relays, while Wag-' ner, Phi Kappa Sigma, took first place in the furlong. Wagner, Phi Kappa Sigma, was thef individual star of the meet with a first in the 220 yard swim in the fast time of 2:52 3-5, besides qualifying in the 100 yard free style. Summaries-finals: 200 yard relay-Phi Kappa Psi, first; Kappa Delta Rho, second; Phi Sigma Delta, third; Phi Kappa, fourth. Time 1:56 1-5. 150 yard medley relay-Phi Kappa Psi, first; Sigma Alpha Mu, second. Time 1:55. 220 yard free style-Wagner, Phi Kappa Sigma, first; Christy, Sigma Phi, second; Staub, Kappa Delta Rho, third; Phi Kappa Psi, fourth. Time 2:52 3-5. Qualifiers for finals: Back ;stroke-Orr, Phi Kappa Psi; Lewy, Zeta Beta; Tau; Warrick, Beta Theta Pi; Parker, Acacia. Breast stroke-Knapp, Delta Upsi- Ion; Minsel, Beta Theta Pi; Leonard, Sigma Phi; Robinson, Sigma Alpha Mu. 50 yard free style-Lloyd, Beta The- ta Pi; Rogers, Phi Kappa Psi; Warn- shuis, Sigma Phi; Burnham, Phi Kap- pa Psi. 100 yard free style-Williams, Beta Theta Pi; Shelt, Zeta Beta Tau; Wag- ner, 'Phi Kappa Sigma; Wiener, Zeta Beta Tau. Diving-Lasser and Desenberg, Phi. Sigma Delta; Warnshuis, Sig'ma Phi; Richardson, Theta Chi; Orr, Phi Kap- pa Psi; Warrick, Beta Theta Pi. MARQUETTE. - W. H. Porter of Lansing, has been elected chairman of the State Prison commission. r1 e Inc. ALEXANDER has a Good Selection of Slippers for your Approval. college, of Canada, one,. of the best ball coach at Colgate university since hockey teams in coll giate circles. 1923, has signed a contract to coach I the etr aydclee eleven, MEMPHIS.-The Southern associa- according to word receivedherefromI tion hereafter will award -a cash prize Baltimore. It is understood that he of $500 to the player adjudged by the will report at Westminster, Md., where eight official scorers as the most val- Western Maryland college is located, uable to his team. next spring. State Street Oler Calkins' .._..... I ~ ___________ { _, ', . ..._ "-. j b ', - , . F ; - .:. Y I 10 t fiT GLOVES! In both light and dark shades. Real values. 7.j. .t .' .e; fr:7.. j ;: . Lined, $2-$6 "That's a clean, neat, intelligent piece of work" THE professor continues, "Perhaps other papers were equally intelligent, but theirmerit was obscured by illegible penmanship. everybody would learn to use a portable typewriter, it would save your time and mine and relieve me from the drudgery of reading longhand." Neat, legible, typewritten manuscri p eeps fhe "profs" in perfect "reading humor." A d perfect "reading humor" tends to mean better marks. Then too, a writing machine for your personal use is helpful in compiling your notes, and in writing those letters home. The New Remington Portable is preferred ,by students because it is the lightest, smallest, and most compact of all standard keyboard portables. .We Will gladly show you this machine and ex- plain our easy payment plan. Unlined, $1-50-$5 A fine assortment of socks in, both plain and fancy styles. $.75-$1.50 Price, complete with case, $60 Geo. S. Register 604 E. )Iadison St. Ann Arbor, Mich. Student Representative The Mayer-Schairer 112 S. Main St. Anti Arbor, Mich. THE REMINGTON TYPEWRITER CO DETROIT, IffI. 0 White Broadcloth' or Fancy SHIRTS $1.50 $4 Or Neckties in the latest pat- terns, and in excellent ma- terials. U,,,OON U *MOuNION U _.. Sjr SKATE OUTFITS A Complete Line of Canadian Auto Skates. ti , _ . , m! - m i i i