THE MICHRIGAN DAILY
WE 1)N -SDAY, MARCH 9. 192T
g , . .,
Pon
0.20 =
nrn~e ITRACK MARKS EXPECTED'
TW TO FAL IN CNEENCE
FAIiBELL LL. ONERNC
ml in flINDfJR RACES SATURDAYa
i~ RU ~I EY I Th prme is not far distant when
-reen possessors of Big Ten indoor
WAGE DIFFEI
RENCE ONLY $500 lT iAT1WR COMMENTS ON( BIG TEN CAGE RACE MAY END
U', ,D SPUTED TITLE WON I I O EO DPSTO
BY WOLVERINE QUINTET _IN _TIEFOR__SECOND __POSITIN
\ "Yeswe ozrour first urndisput ed {i se4)lstIndiia a 1id Purdu~te hae situation appears unlikely.
k Big 'In ibasketballl title, but it was a 1'Change For Riinnerup Place Last season's qtuadruti'e tie foi fCr_"i
pb otg ard fight,'' was the comment (place may lbe iui lic itt ldlby a four-
!of Coach Ediwin J. M1ather yesterday By Clarence EIdelson cornered knot among the also-raii
!aternoon in the mnidst of the moaving Only Coach E. J. Mather's Wolverine this season if the followNintg hypothet-
z ~picture cameras whicl' worked over- five and the erratic Chicago quintet ical situation comes to pass. If the
F F ; ~time in takinga film of' the firstar definitely assured of undisputed Ducey's HoosersmeandatheHawkrewi
f rli~~~chi an basikeitball sc r.-d ee owl positions as the hectic Big TnbsA ensHoiradteHwswl
azr rndspuerlclrznporrlri. ;ketball race is wearily wearing it- from the Cardinals, Iowa, Wisconsin,
y ? Coach Mather characterized the self- out, even the cellar position being; Ohio, and Illinois wvill all share the
Iowsa. dame a1s the hardest fought of disputed by the Gophers and Wildcats. same place, even the exact posit ion
the entire season and remark~ed that Northwestern, Minnesota, and Ill- still being in doubt, with a rerd
it was, perhaps, the roughest game of, nois are the other three squads which of seven victories and five defeats.
- j basketball he had seen since coming have completed their schedules, but Chicago must face the Blolermalk r>,
f to the Conference in 1919 as Wol- even the ultimate standing of the the only relief being that only one por-
;:.::.:;":;:::verne mentor. Even the 25-24 battle latter team is dependent upon the out - sition hangs in the balance, that of
r >w ith Illinois earlier in the year in come of the remaining enrconters, Coach Latnbert's couirt men. A victory
Yost field hause fails to compare with Indiana and Pur due are dIeadlocked } for Purdue, which seems lprOlblnlei,
y !~the H xvkeye tilt as a hard fought in second place with eight wvins and will earn that quintet at least a share
game, in the Skipper's estimation. three losses, but either may be top-( of the second berth, while if Ohio
Fewv Titles Are ('leur pled from that position after meetingI repeats against the Indiana team, Pur-.
Michrigan's clear title is the fourth Ohio and Chicago, respectively. To add due will have the unique honor or
;won by any Conference team in the funrthrer confusion, Wisconsin, by 1oi(linzg alln undisputed p~lace, becsi 'cs
eight Iteadtoa lr years, the Skzipper has beenj trouncing Iowva, may join the lpair tealiinlgoy of hsoldlinrg don
r '~ Coach here. Chicago was the absolute from the Hoosier state, if both of 'the runner-up position to the Michiigau-
rrr monarch in 1919-1920, and after Wis- these latter are dlefeated, although this leaders.
f' / cousin had tied Pur due in 1921, the
.: ,:.Xy; r , , :. :" . , ( '.tIBoilermakers g in d the top rung of t llilllllilillllllilllll.111Ilil~lfll1Ii~E1 ~~~llllll'.
:, r" ~t : i ~e chamnio ushipr ladder thse follow-
:; :y f'r .",' r. ing year with eight. wins and one loss. .
Followinsg this, the Conference direc-=
tors t aimed to the round1 robin system j
theri "Babe " will rtt'eive $70,000 av 'year for iof' play, whereby each ' earn plays I
be ing 'his services with the \ ankeer; nuderi twelve cotests with six different
or' a ;his new thr'ee~ year contract,. Presidiit !quinte~cts eanch year. I RE-
1 a s ! C o l i g g t n n n a l s m f 7 5 - ; T h i r t e a u d e1h i s s t m-
The 000 for four years vithourt a contract. resulted in a tie between Iowa and=
Wisconsin with 11 victories each. This
FD-was Sam Barry's first year as Iowa w
E 4 '' 1 i';: is oc.In19392 Illinois, Wiscon--
Tl WEKsnand Chicago tied for first with2 That milk is an essential food product: Its
Y9/ i ' it;tiwins and four losses, the same
NG a (Friday
WRESTLING- -Conference meet i record as that of Michigan, Indiana, value to you depends uponi your wisesBelec- ,-
Purdue, and Iowa last season. Ohio
TRIAtCiag-InrelmnrenceI State won alone two years ago. tion of a good dairy company.
-Jack TRAC - Idoor onfeenceChambers' Finish Remarkable 2-
-jak i meet at Evanston - Prelimin- "Probably n ihgncpanee
mid be aries. noMciaIapanee
i has finished his career in such a re-
con- FENCING and GYMNASTICS- ina'bewya i at di
a Tex I Coniference meet at Chicago- I Chambers Monday night," according to I2- Dial 4101 -
I h'IPreliminaries. I the Skipper. Chambers' work was phe - ,2
wvhom HCE-inst s ih nomenal and without him Michigan's2-
iga atWinsor On.;evening. title victory would have been impos-
I I sible. "Captain Chambers has played2=
I Saturday I remarkable ball during his last, four2-
Demp- WRESTLING-Conference meet ({ or five gamnes and has proved him-=
ring( at Chicago-Finals. ' self to be one of the best guards seen ~"j TN
:ev- TRACK - Indoor Conference in the Conference," Mather said. = AN N ARBOR DAIRY
s theJ meet at Evanston-Finals. j In reference to his selection of2-
7title FENCING andf GYMNASTICS Chambers on the second all-Confer-2
ed to-; -Conference meet at Chicago- ence teani, Coach Mather said, "I
~a f~ Finals. ° oul hardly put three of my ownII - "The Home of Pure Milk"
oa fi HOCKEY-Minnesota vs. Mich- ( men on the team though I really fel tI.:
mater igan at Wirdsor, Ont.; evening, they all deserved it." =2
ve felt _____________________ (Continued on Page Seven)
comet ____- - °t11111111111111111111111lilllIIIIIIIIllilitlllIII nnIII___lltl____-1t
It
1Considering wit-,es as a bas s.
is little pr'eference betw eeu
President of the United States
base ball player--that is a good
ball player like "Babe" Ruth.
RICK ARD PLEAS
~rr-WITDME
RETURN TO RI
(By Asisociat-d Press)
LOS ANGELES, March 8-
Dempsey saidl today that lie wou
ready to fight any heavyweight
tender this summer with whon
Rickard wants to match him, anm
it makes little difference to him
he meets.
NEW YORK, March 8-Jack I
sey's decision to return to the
in an attempt to win back the h:
weight championship, "cam plete
last link in the chain of 1927
aspirants," Tex Rickard declare
day.
"I am tickled to death to he
Dempsey's decision," the pro;
told the Associated Press. "I hav
all along that he would try to
back, but while the doubt has e,
many at' my plans have been i.
air. I can now go ahead and con
the program with the assurance
all the contenders will have a c:
to 'battle for the 'right to face
Tunney.
xisted
hi the
nplete
e that
Jhance
Gen1e
I
CORD A PORTABLES
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Phone 4744 1111' South University Ave. Phone 474
1~t1
Spe cial Steak Di ne s
Tender, juicy steaks-broiled just to the right T. And
your, favorite potatoes-plus hot Parker House rolls--
at 50c and 55c.
A Nightily Special at Bill and Mertl's.
Hot. Parker House Rolls
:fresh Vegetable Saa
Choice
Sinall Steak
Special Sirloin Steak
French Fried - Mashed - American Fried
Coffee - MilkI
50C
Beef Tenderloin Steak on Toast, 55c
W"% r z n c A Sl ff.0 TI P 9 C
Not a chance of
that lead-like, foggy
' feeling even during
early Spring--if you
{/i /make a daily habit
of Shredded Wheat.
That's one reason
Swhy this prince of
whole wheat cereals
graces the training
tables of so many
'colleges and schools.
Carefully separated, com-
pletely cleaned, perfectly
shredded, and thoroughly
cooked whole wheat grains
- that's all there is to
1
SPRING SUITS
and TOP COATS
in tan and brown
FYFES
CHARING CROSS
-at-
ten dollars
Thompson &Pitts
110~7 SOUTH UNIVERSITY
I
II ..,---. II
FPln PItitc Vnl%7Pn1tiW ht13114 fLlrltrif
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