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December 13, 1925 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1925-12-13

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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'"Y' T I" It N'T T. T Ti"ti A x T T^w A' T ' i p

11HE-ICHVI(-IGAN DAILY SUNL
MAN CLBS HARIES EEC

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CCHES SETTL Entire Varsity I
Five Hail
RULES QESTIOIFrom Michigan
Oathlerinig Votes To Retain Dribble; All the members of Coach Mather's
Favor Player About To five that started against the Ohio Wes-
Shoot leyan basketball team in Yost field
house last night gained their prep ex-
MORE THAN 250 ATTEND perience in the high schools of the
state of Mlichigan.
Officials and coaches from high Two of the members, Ilarrigan and
schools throughout the state held the Cherry, were teammates on the Grand
second annual meeting of the Mich- Rapids Union school./ Red Cherry,
igan high school athletic association stellar guard and forward of the
yesterday afternoon at the field house. Michigan team for the past two years,
According to Mr. Thompson, state h played three years in high school and
director of interscholastic athletics, .laypti thdeeseamsin higscholyand
more than 250 were present, includ- I captained i ebi h in senr y
ing, representatives from Kalamazoo, filled Red's shoes and captained the
Alma, Mt. Pleasant, Ypsilanti, and m in 1922-23
other colleges. tea'
The purpose of the meeting was to Doyle, captain of this season's team,
discuss basketball rules for 1925-26, played basketball at Kalamazoo dur-
to decide upon their interpretation, ing his prep school dlays. Schroeder,
and to discuss officiating technique. a new man on the squad this year,
It was decided that the association was a star basketball player at Battle
should go on record as being against Creek, while Chambers, a letter man
the proposed elimination or limiting from the 1924 Michigan team, gained
of the dribble. This resolution is to fame on the high school courts at
be sent to the joint rules committee. Niles.
In general, the Conference rulings Grand Rapids and Detroit have the
were ratified, exceptions to cover var- largest representation of prep stars
ious floor conditions being subjected on the Varsity team. The two Kuen-
to the different coaches' discretion, zel cousins, Frank and Walter, Cherry,
the official acting arbitrarily in case and Harrigan all hail from Grand
of dispute. lRapids, giving the ftrniture city a
The representative counsel of high total of four. Detroit claims the
schools which met Friday and yester- largest number, Line, and Ginn, form-
day at the Union, discussed and pass- er Detroit Western high school stars,
er o' eligibility and tournament Jim Martin, with -one year's experi-
rules. ence on the Detroit city college team,
The eight semester system, which Bo Molenda and Sammy Babcock, com-
provides that an athlete shall only posing the Detroit delegation. Oos-'
compete eight semesters, instead of terbaan of Muskegon, Hutzel of Ann
the present nine, was heartily endors- Arbor, Davis, of Flint and Reece of
ed. This ruling will take effect next Jackson are the other Michigan men
year. It was further decided that on Mather's squad.
there, shall be no break between the New Jersey ranks first among the
seventh and eighth semesters. A play- foreign states, yielding two players.
er may not drop, out of school a sem- Joe Kruger and Rasnick, played two
,ster, and be eligible on his return. ears together at Central high school
The plan in this case was to do away of Newark. Gawne of Cleveand, Pet-
with the common practice of athletes .e of Huntington, Id., and Mogaridge
dropping out of school in order to re-of anTchnChi ana
turn fot an extra season of foot-
ball. among the out of state men.
Discussion grew rather heated con-!
cerning the procedure in case a tech -Vlrfrl nriirn
nical foul w as called on a team w ith aOeDo aJou . M ny c a heVn
a personal foul. Many cpoaches in.-t
sisted that should the first try forC
point fail, the offended team should be
ball in before the second free throw.
It was finally voted that should the EA ST LANSING, Mich.,aDec. 12.-
first throw fail, the ball will be de- Rollin D. Kiefaber of Lansing, has
lared dead and the second throw taken charge of the Michigan State
follow immediately. ' college swimming squad. The new
A player in the act of shooting for coach was a member of the 1922 col-
the basket is to be given complete lege team and has spent several years
protection, the two throwepenalty be- instructing swimmers at camps and
ing endorsed from any spot on the schools.
floor should he be, fouled. - Kiefaber appeared in swimming
competition for the first time at the
. Blair academy in New Jersey where
Onto State G id he captained the team during his last
S rie year. le has served as swimming in-
structor at Michigan Y. M. C. A.
l camps and served as swimming in-
COLUMBUS, 0., Dec. 12.-Nichols, structor at the Saginaw Y. M. C. A.
Corrill, and Wendler, all Varsity "o" for two years also coaching the high
men on Ohio State's 1925 eleven, have school teams.
been declared ineligible for further lie won the state Y. M. C. A. fancy
varsity competition. The men were diving championship at Grand Rapids
found playing in a professional game in 1924 and acted as swimming in-
at Springfield, Ohio. structor at the Grand Hotel swimming
In Nichol's case it will make no dif- pool at Mackinaw Island for two sum-
t'FT~i(P_ i.R IlP r15C l m~i #ni r{c z n, ers.

,_ _

Mg p||| CLB ETR Dongshots Start s | H 0110E EC ET
'' ,ULUSW IM LEEVictorious RallyIG LLL
IAIA.UU SWM MEET~BIGG CATI

Freshman Track Candidates
To Start Practice Tonorrow
After looking over the freshman event in the intercholastics last June.
gym classes for the past three weeks, Distance men have been practicing
Coach Hoyt has t;he names of moreunder Coach Frnass at the field
than 190 candidates for the freshman house 'for the past few weeks. Lowery

Five Already Entered And Others Are
Expeetod; Many Individual }
Stars To Compete
SELL SEATS TOMORROW
With five teams and a host of un-
attached swimmers already entered,
and the entry blanks expected from:
two other clubs tomorrow, competi-!
tion should prove keen in the Michi-
gan A. A. U. junior championship {
meet which will be held here Thurs-
day night in the Union pool.
The Detroit Athletic club, the De-
troit Y. M. C. A., the Detroit Women's
Aquatic club, the Detroit Women's,
club, and the local Y. M. C. A. have
filed their entries, and it is expected
that the Detroit Yacht club and the
Women's Swimming association will
enter teams. A number of individual
state champions have entered and un-
der the rules of the A. A. U. must,
appear unless prevented from doing
so by sickness.I
In addition to the regular races,
there will be exhibition diving from
the high diving board and a water
polo lgame between Coach Mann's;
regulars and a pickup team which will
be chosen by Coach Mann from the i
freshman and men not eligible for!
Varsity competition.A
Mrs. Vonnie Malcolmson, of Detroit,
a member of the 1920 Olympic team,
will give an exhibition of high diving
from the high platform, besides com- 1
peting in the regular women's div-f
ing events.
Other women swimmers of note who
have entered the meet are Miss "Ed-
die" Cranage, Michigan free style
champion; Miss Evelyn Rice, State A.
A. U. diving and breaststroke cham-
pion; Mrs. Evelyn Fehr Armstrong,
state middle distance champion; Miss
Edith Fehr, Michigan A. A. U. Junior
ch'ampioni high board diver, who placed
second place in the national meet.
The Union will put 200 reserved1
seats on sale tomorrow at one dollar
each and standing room will be plac-
ed on sale the night of the meet at
fifty cents. Ladies will be admitted
to the meet.
STATE COLLEGE, Pa.- Kenneth
R. Weston, Allentown, Pa., has been
elected captain of the 1926 Pennsyl-
vania State college football team. He
is a junior and plays at right end.

Was First Michigan Man To Finish In
Conference Meet, Taking 1
Eighth Place

WON IN URBANA MEET

Clayton B. Briggs, '27, was elected
captain of the 1926 cross country
team yesterday morning at a meeting
of the squad, held after the team
photograph had been taken. All men
who ran in the Conference meet voted
for the captaincy.
Briggs was the first man to finish
for Michigan in this fall's Conference
run, taking eighth place.;
In the first dual meet of the season
against the Badgers, Briggs tookf
seventh place, being the third Wolver-
ine to finish. In the Michigan State
meet the newly elected captain finish-
ed in a triple tie for first place with
Reinke and Hornberger, two of his
teammates.
His greatest feat of the season was
in the triangular meet with Illinois
and Ohio at Urbana. In this race
Briggs took the individual honors lead-
ing the field in excellent time.
Last year Briggs was one of the
outstanding harrier men on Coach I
Farrell's squad. He finished in the
first 15 men in the annual Conferencel
run besides taking top honors in thef
dual meets. Briggs is -the holder of
two Varsity letters in cross country.k

track team who wiill begin practice at'
the field house tomorrow.
The coach states that the material
this year is not above the average and
asks that every man who is in his
first year on the campus, and has
ability or inclination in track and
field events to report to him any after-
noon next week at the field house.
The freshman track squad of this
year can boast of two sprinters above
the ordinary in Shugrue, of Loyolaj
academy, Chicago, and Freese of SiouxI
Falls, South Dakota.
As yet no quarter milers of im-
portajmce -have reported, but in the
half mile, the coach has Monroe, who!
won his numerals in cross country,
and La Monte who has an enviable'
high school record.
The men in the hurdles show the;
most promise in recent years. Kinney [
of Detroit, who won the hurdle eventj
in the interscholastic last spring, and
Thayer, a product of the high schools
of Venice, Calif., and sent here by
Vandervoort, of football fame, have
the most promising advance records.
The freshman team is well fortified,
in the weight events with Carlson of
Detroit Northwestern and Martin of
Ovid. The' former athlete won his
Scoring was a little heavier in foot-'
ball circles this fall tha'n in 1924.
There were 16 teams which passed
the 200 mark, while the University of
Washington eleven, champion of the
Pacific Coast Conference, ran up the
record total of 459 points in 11 games.

of Chicago looks to be the best miler,
and La Monte and Wuerfel are the
outstanding men in the two miles.
The latter was the winner of this
year's yearling cross country meet.
ERNIE NEVERS'TO PLAY
PRO FOOTBALL, REPORT
(By the Associated Press)
SAN FRANCISCO, De. 12.--
The Examiner says today that
f 9Ernie Nevers, captain of Stan-
ford's 1925 football team and vir-
tually unanimous choice for a -
Pacific Coast fullback,phas signed
a contract by telegraph with a
group of Jacksonville, Fla, capi-
talists to join the ranks of pro
fessionalstall as captain o
an all-star aggregation which
will oppose "Red" Grange and
his Chicago Bears. Nevers will
receive a consideration in excess
Toof $50,000.
The giant blond will leave San
Francisco Dec. 19 for Jacksons,
vide, the Examiner article says,
and will captain the professional
team which will meet "Red"
Grange's Bears in that city on
Jan. 2.
Other games included in the
contract are to be played at At-
lanta, Miami, Los ,Angeles and
San Francisco.
Contests at New \York city and
other points are being arranged.

PARIS.-Andre Beaunier, critic
novelist, is dead.

and

mE.,...

Ed Cliambers

Who scored two 10""g shots in the
closing minutes of last night's open-
ing encounter with Ohio Wesleyan,
thereby aiding considerably in bring-
ing victory to the Wolverines Both
baskets came in rapid succession, and
were of the sensational variety.
Chambers scored four goals from.

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the floor during the entire contest, and
accounted for a free throw, giving him
a total of nine points tlie second high-
est total scored by the Maize and Blue
players. Frank Harrigan led with six
baskets and four fouls for a total of
16 points.

U

is

11

711 N. University Ave. Next to AreAde Theatre -
,,,EE.* E

u cile, as nenas compietedais af-j
loted three years of football and does
not coinpete in any other bi7anch of
sport.'
Wendler and Gorrill had also com-1
peted three years on the gridiron, but
were considered likely baseball pros-!
pects.
The U. of D. will meet Notre Dame
on the gridiron next year.

J MANAGERIAL TRYOUTS
Second semester freshmen and
sophomores wishing to try out
for assistant intramural manag-
er should report at once to the
Intramural office.

U

r #-
e _-
- -
- WU~. £4.A IL ALA~..Z5
-_U-
ThosaI11hem
- GoldmandBros.
of thm 2
U-#
o-
Goldmn Brs, -

I

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1s
$4 gift for you
A straight twenty per cent
discount on all suits, tux-
edos and blues excepted.
An additional ten per cent
discount on all overcoats
(already greatly reduced).
Ten-twelve-fifteen dollars,

For smokers---Remoliter,
an electric lighter for
tobacco. Very attractively
made. For use on desk or
smoking stand. Priced $5

gifts well worth accepting.
For a limited time only

I

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