L THE MICHIGAN DAILY FI :DA . l~ ; I1A Jt 1it , PT! , ,5.. FIS/OV"OPCKTNE FOE I ArTF AT ....... i SEEN IN BERLENBACH SHARKEY GORirfiJ IL BO SCHEDUL EANEDF BEST CR10 RECORDc :a;t Man, Michigan Coach, Schedules astern School, With Record Of 38 Fourteen Regular Meets 'ins, Has Best Mark Of Any s Year Teami Over Loig Period ENTERED IN A. A. U. MEE'l Fourteen regular swimming meets have been scheduled by Matt Mann, Varsity coach, for the remainder of the season, according to an announce- ment made yesterday. The following meets have been ai- ranged: Dec. 4, Fourth State A. A. U. meet at Detroit Athletic club; Dec. 9, Fifth State A. A. U. meet at Union pool; Jan. 15, Sixth State A. A. U. meet at Detroit Yacht club; Jan. 22, Seventh State A. A. U. meet at Detroit Athletic club, or dual meet with Chi- cago university at Chicago; Jan. 29, Indiana at Ann Arbor; Feb. 12, Michi- gan at Madison; Feb. 19, Last State A. A. U. meet at Detroit Yacht club; Feb. 26, Northwestern university at Ann Arlyor; March 5,. Minnesota at Ann Arbor, (tentative); March 13, Michigan at Iowa; March 25-26, Con- ference meet at Urbana; April 1, Na- tional collegiate meet at Iowa. In the meet to be held Saturday, the Michigan swimmers have been en- tered in only two of the six events carded on the program, the junior 50- yard event, and the 10-yard opei free style. In the 50-yard event, Walker, Be- ment, Batter, Hubbell, Seager, Reif and Hosner have been listed, while Capt. Samson, Darnall and Seager will compete in the 100-yard race. Senior low board diving for men, high board diving (10 feet) and 100-1 yard senior free style for women, and 220-yard junior free style, both fOr women, complete the list of events. Following this, in the meet De em- her 10, at the Union, 10 events will be held for champion swimmers, mn, women and children. Of these races,j seven, three for men, 'and four for women, are regular A. A. U. champion- ship events. NE E YORK--New York Americans and'; Chi=:ao Black Hawks battled to a 2-2 tie with twenty minutes over- tintein a National Hockey Laague game. Varsity letters were awarded to 22 members of the football squad of the U Iiversity of Detroit Wednesday. T.,enty-ii\' freshmen were awarded1 n umerais, MICHIGAN SECOND (By Associated Press) NEW YORK, Dec. 2.-By finishing their 1926 season with a clean slate of nine victories, the only unblemished record in the east, Lafayette's power-! ful gridiron forces have rounded outj the most consistent five-year per- forniance of any major college in the country.I This was revealed today by an analysis of competition among lead- s ing teams in all sections. The ana- lysis shows Cornell to have the most powerful scoring machine of any considered and Michigan to have the best defensive record. Lafayette's record of 38 victories, 4 defeats, and 3 ties in this five- year stretch places it only slightly ahead of Michigan, which in turn is only one percentage point in front i Knute Rockne's Hoosiers. Alabama, fourth on the list and far ahead of all southern contenders for national honors, has the best rec- ord of any team over the last three years, during which it has been de- feated once-by Centre in 1924. TEAM W LT P OP Pet Lafayette ......38 4 3 953 200 .905 Michigan......34 4 1 906 120 .895 Notre Dame ...42 5 2 1199 208 .894{ Alabama .......40 6 2 1351 210 8701 Ramblers Work Out NUMBER OF FRESHMAN BASKET ML At U. Of CANDIDATES REDUCED B L At U f Arizona'._ _ _ _ (By Associated Press) I Freshman basketball candidates Schuman. Schullr, Twere cut from 60 to less than 35 last all of whom have emonter TUSCON, Ariz., Dec. 2. - Knute night by Coach Ray Fisher, who feels .jdefensive ability and arE capable o Rockne plans to send an eleven that the squad must be reduced to going down the court ;eisionally Cain t ULivrsitgefs Sothrn ieasonable proportions before being with the offense. California at Los Angeles Saturday removed to the field house next ,week. Several members a' th1 freshman down," he alinounced okl his arrival es Few good forwards are numbered football squad have reported for prac- dhere last night with a squad of more in the list of yearlings, while there tice recently and will be"iven an op- than 30 players. has been a rather ^abundant crop of portunity to-show their ;erth r the The Notre Dame Mentor will send guards and centers. Among the pivot basketball floor. Th, entir s uad will his men through two practce sessiona men, Taylor, Magran and Raber have be taken to tie field honsi FmPid to on the University of Arizona field here been showing well in the nightly be drilled in the fumdamenltal. - today. Rockne said hi, team was not scrimmages at Waterman gynnasium. When Coach Fiswr reoe hi- I at its best because of injuries to five All three are well over six feet u squad to the field house h:: M om.., men including Parasien, first string height and possess the necessary tit will alternate practis with I. quarterback. Although Parasien's in- qualifications of a good center. How- Varsity petters; oe Usiii tee l juries may confine _him to the bench ever, with the lack of forwards, the house court in the atirnOon on O Saturday, Mayer, right guard and need of transferring one of these men day and in the evening on the neui Maxwell, right end, were expected to to the latter position is becoming more I day, and vice versa. be in shape to st~'t the game, evident. ___ All of the men appeared in fine Amnong the aspirants for the guard Princeton and Cornell have recently spirits and Rockne said he expected positions five men seem to have out- signed contracts for a two-year agree- the rest here today from the long train classed the field. These are Baum, ment on track meets. ride would do much to restore the drive, missing last week when his team was defeated by Carnegie Tech. I Rockne will leave for Los Angeles 1 tonight and the team will entrain to- morrow morning for the day's journey to the coast. 1 "Y~ 3 1 Y h . ~ U TA I. When Paul Berlenbach and Jack Sharkey meet each other in a pro- posed bout soon, it will mark the first 3 important heavyweight match of any l importance since Gene Tunney won the heavyweight crown from Jack Dempsey. Jack Sharkey is the man who recently burst the myth surround- ing Harry Wills, and Paul Berlenbach was always a prominent figure in the heavyweight division before his grad- ! uation into the legitimate heavyweight - class several months ago. Berlenbach has spent the last fewj months in building up his weight to' that of the average heavy, this after proving conclusively in the light heavyweight ranks that he is a ter- rific puncher, a fair boxer, and the "go-getter" type that the fans like. Easterncritics dubbed Berlenbach the "Astoria Assassin" when the As- toria lad began knocking out his many opponents one after another. In 1925, after knocking out Mike McTigue toI win the light heavyweight crown, Ber- Tnbach flattened Jimmy Slattery,. pride of Buffalo and called a second Jim Corbett, and then preceded to winj over Jack Delaney. He later, however, lost the title to Delaney. If the battle occurs-and it is almost assured that it will-it will be a slug- ging match, and ought to be a remark- able one. Incidentally the engage- ment between Berlenbach and Sharkey will be the first of a series of indoor shows to be run in view of selecting a logical opponent for Gene Tunney, the king of the heavies, in a bout to be held late in the summer of next year.- NOMN Okl.-nint r.rinl Army..........34 W. Virginia ....39 Syraeise.......37 Cornell ........32 Stanford.......