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February 09, 1928 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1928-02-09

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hnrr S T X

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

THURSDAY, rrBRT'.1R7 9. 1 '

1'ACU~ Six TFTURSbAY, P1?~BRTTARY 9, 1928

HOCKEY TEAM

TO

LEAVE

ON NOR THERN

TRIP TODA Y

THREE CARS ENTERED IN TRIALS
ARL FOR SPEED RECORD AT DAYTON
MICHIAN P ck Ira i; Lo< khart will be one f
thri dri{i ivi is who wil attemi)t to

VARSITY CAGES FAIL

Coach Lewery Will Take 11I Players
T1o MAadison And Minneapolis
For Rig rT en iGauies
BADGERS REVEAL P0WER
After playing four games w~it h ni -?
Conference teams the Michigan iocky
squad will leave this afternoon for
Madison, Wis., where it will re-open.
Big Ten competition Friday night in
a game with the Badgers. The Wol-
verine squad, composed of the follow-
ing players, Capt. Maney, Jones, (farl,
Bryant, Fisher, Copeland, Nygord,
Abbott, Marshall, Waldron, and
Joseph and Coach Eddie Lowery will
take the 3:49 train out of Ann Arbor
this afternoon.
The only long trip. that the hockey
team takes during the season is this
one to Wisconsin and Minnesota. The
players will return to Ann Arbor next
Wednesday after finishing the last of
a pair of games against the Gophers
at Minneapolis.
WisConisin IIas New Coac h
The University of Wisconsin sextet,
title hinge on the outcome of any ofI
under a new coach, is the, first teamI
to be met by the Wolverines on their
expedition to the North. The Badger
gameq4 will be played F,1iday sand
Saturday at Madison, and the follow-
ing day Coach Lowrey will take his
squad to Minneapolis for games wii
Minnesota on Monday and Tuesday
of next week.
Michigan's hopes for the Big Ten
title hinge on the outcome of any of
the games to be played during the
next few days. Although the Wolver-
ines fell easy prey to the Gophers inj
a pair of games at Detroit just beforeI
the end of the first semester, the
menace looming before the Michigan
team at present, is Coach,J9hnny Far-
qunar's squad of Badgers. Coach Far-
qunar is listed as one of the highest
priced college hockey coaches in the
country and has done considerable
toward earning his pay by rounding
the Wisconsin sextet into a form that
brought them victory over the Mize-
nesota team-the first time in the his-
tory of Badger-Gopher hockey rivalry
that the Badgers ever won.
Wolverines Improve
Michigan's ice-less sextet has re-
cently been the recipient of an even
break with the weather man and for
the past two weeks has had regular
scrimmages at the Coliseum and with
telling effect on its appearances and
play in the last three games. The de-
feat of Michigan State and the hold-
ing of Marquette to a one point mar-{
gin in the second game shows that
Coach Lowrey's aggregation was
never better prepared.

1 t 'ter Major erave's speed record'
of 20.70 miles per hour. The three
cornered triois will take place on theE
iard rand course at Daytona ,each,
wherl ' -'rae made his record-

iea kn"ern rance in his "Mv
rr S' St .: a ye:ir ago.
T' l1 wo Amer 0n. (Cr:; participa
iig in lh h! will be Lockhart
Lokiart-Satiz 400 horsepower sp
(vial and J. M. ' hite's Triplex, a ('1
of his own const ruction, which wi
he powered by three Liberty engim
evel oi(ng ap'roximalIely 30 hors,
pow'er.
Capt iin Mialcolm Campbell will ei
tIr hi i rit ish-bui "Blue Bird
Xhich develp's 150 horsepower fro
a Napier "Lion" aviation engine a
most entical to ihe engine whh
powered the winning seapliane in t
int to a 0 Schneider Cup raci
last year. Full details of the ei
gine ie not ten divulged, as co
ditions of secrecy have been impose
by tbe Tlritish government. Phot
gn ohs of the car show it to 1
Iwhal e-shaned and fitted with a
anti-skid fin. An unusual feature
the practicallv unbreakable stru
ture of the oil and gasoline tank
which have been specially built.
koekharts Stultz-built car is
pygmy compared t > the Blue Bfr
and the 'riplex, with weight an
' orsepower less than on.0 fifth4
I 10.' i i 0 i'& i' .ldling ''Vystei
8'' (unbeam. Lockhart will deper
on sCienitiic streamlining and le
seited w r i esistance, in the attari
2nnt o' which he has received ti:
aid o. the Army air service, to el
able him to break the record.
SPORT NOTICES

TO DISPLAY TEAMWORKI,
Regulars Reveal Ragged DefenI e AXid
Offense In Practice Tilt
With "Rced" Teanni
OR WIG SHOWS PROMISE
Another mid-week relapse afflinted
the Wolverine cage squad in yester-
day's Practice session, at the field
house, with only two days remaining
before the all-important Purdue tus-
sle.
The apparently regular lineui, nowt
that Orwig seems to have ear: d hist
berth, including Harrigan, Ooster-;
baan, McCoy, and Chapman, flound-I
ered around the court, receivingt
some rude buffeting at the hands off
the "Red" quintet, conmposed of My-
ron, Barley, Rose, Gawne, and Ra-l
her.

:

FIIESIIAN .NOTICE
All freshman physical train-
ing classes and athletic squads
will resume practice today,
Thursday, Feb. 9. Those wishing
to change their classification
should do so at. once.
Dr. George A. May

i
ti,

CETAS HOLDS LEAD TRACKMEN TO LEAVE
IN COURT LEAGiE|r|i L i
--~~-~~A nri ai

n-
d Frank Lockhart
o- ---
he
in RADOER TRACK TEAM
is
ITO, MEETMINST
c- mON I 0T
a1
rd MIAi SON, Feb. 8-Wisconsin's in-
I door track team, champions Ao the
of Westeri Conference last year, will
y go into action next Saturday minus
d the services of nine star performers.
s- Minnesota will test the Cards in the
opening meet. All of these losses will

Reds Retain Lead
After approximately 30 points had
been tallied by the "Reds" the Var-
sity group finaly managed to ft\
some scoring of its own, but the in-
spired olmosition retained the well
earned lead all through the scrim-
mage.,
The trouble was capable of a diag-
nosis of this sort: they broke when
they ought not to have, failed when
they ought to have, guarded poorly
and raggedly, shot even worse, in
short, practically everything was all
wrong.

MI1CHIGAN STAR SIGNS
WITH CINCINNATI REODS
Pete Jablonowski, star pitcher on
the University of Michigan baseball1
team during the 1924, 1925, and 1926
seasons, will be among the Cincinnati
players whom Manager Jack Hend-
ricks will lead to,-the Reds' southern
camp at Orlando, Fla., on Feb. 25I
:or a six-week training period in
preparation for the opening of the Na-
tional league season in April.
Jablonowski, who has just complet-
?d graduation requirements in the
College of Literature, Science, and the
Arts of the University, recently signed
a contract with the Cincinnati clubt
for the 1928 baseball season at a sal-
ary reported to be around the $5,000
figure.
The former Wolverine star, who
figured prominently in the Reds' be-
lated 'spurt in the 1927 National league
race, is highly regarded by Manager
Jack Hendricks. The Cincy pilot, not
unmindful of Jablonowski's work last
season after reporting to the Cin-
cinnati club from the Eastern league,
is counting on "Jabby" to add con-
siderable strength to the pitching
corps of his club.
Jablonowski's best piece of work in
finishing the sea'son with the Reds
was a 1 to 0 victory over the Pitts-
burgh Pirates, winners of the Na-
tional league pennant. The Pirates
were able to gather only four well-
scattered hits off the delivery of
Jablonowski in this game. In another
notable contest last year, Jablonowski
pitched a no-hit, no-run game against
an Eastern league opponent while
with the Hartford club of that cir-
cuit.
While at Michigan, Jablonowski
was an important factor in the Wol-
verines' annexation of two Big Ten
baseball championships.
TYPEWRITER
R]PAIRING
All nuakes of ma-
chines. Our eq-iip-
ment and personnel
is considered among
the best in the state. The result of
tienty years' careful building.
0. D. MORRI LL
117 Nickels Arcade. Phone 6615.

Beta Theta Pi continues to hold
the lead in the preliminary matches
in interfraternity basketball with 5
wins and no defeats. Phi Sigma Kap-
pa wrested the first position froml
Sigma Alpha Mu in the games on
Tuesday by virtue of a win over the
latter, 23-. Up until Tuesday's con-
test the two teams were tied for first
position in league 10.
The scores of Tuesday's games
follow:
Phi Sigma Delta, 17, Delta Sigma
Delta S.
Sigma Zeta 0, Sigma Phi Epsilon 0.
Phi Kappa Sigma 34, Theta Kap-
pa Nu 1.
Sigma N 0, Sigma Chi 2.
Pi Kappa Alpha 0, Tan Kappa Ep-
silon 2.
Sigma Alpha Mu 9, Phi Sigma Kap-
pa 23.
Phi Beta Delta 0, Alpha Chi Rho 2.
Kappa Delta Rho 7, Chi Phi 12.
Tau Epsilon Rho 31, Phi Kappa
Tau 0.
Xi Psi Phi. 17, Hermitage 14.
Phi Mu Alpha 21, Nu Sigma Nu 0.
Beta Theta Pi 2, Alpha Kappa Psi,
0.
Alpha Delta Phi 15, Alpha Sigma
Phi 19.

Two Mile Relay Teanmt, Hurdler,And
Pole Vaulter Will Compete
In Chicago Events
PELTZER TO RACE DODGE
Coach Stephen J. Farrell and six
members of the Wolverine track
team will entrain at 11:42 o'clock to-
night for Chicago where the men are
scheduled to open the indoor sea-
son tomorrow night by competing in
the annual handicap games which
are staged under the direction of the
Illinois Athletic club.
Relay Event Features
T'he athletes will arrive in Chica-
go tomorrow morning and will spend
the day resting in preparation for
the games which are to be held to-
morrow night at the Riding club.
The men will board the train again
immediately following the meet for
Ann Arbor.
A Michigan team will compete in
the annual two mile invitation uni-
versity relay, one of the feature
(Continued on Page Seven)

IE

Distinc ive

Footwear

Rose
Rose, the

Scores Frequently
diminutive forward on

I
1

1 l

E
t
):
r
t
1

VARSITY BASEBALLI
All men wishing to be candi-
dates for the Varsity baseball
team and who were not mem-
bers of last year's squad are
asked to report at 3:30 o'clock
this afternoon at Yost field
house. Bring your own equip-
them. Ray L. Fisher, Coach. I

be vital to Coach Tom Jones, for the "Red" squad, was one of the
practically every point in the Big outstanding performers of the work-
Ten meets last season was won by out, repeatedly dribbling in to drop
the nine boys who have either grad- easy goals. i
uated or withdrawn from the uni- For the Varsity only Orwig really
versity.. accomplished much of importance.
Seven letter men are training in The promising sophomore candidate,
the gymnasium annex daily to defend who was inserted into the lineup for
the Badgers' title this winter. These the first tim-e against the Kohawks
veterans are Capt. Gil Smith, a on Monday, was conspicuous for his
sprinter; Bullmore and Petaja, dis- ability to follow those attempts at
tance runners; , Kanalz and Stowe, the hoop. Four of his tries were
middle distance men; PahlmeSt, a successful during the first half.
hurler; iand Mayer, a vaulter a The scrimmage was especially. dis-
The former stars who will be sore- C tressing inasmuch as Coach George
ly missed in the Cardinal camp are Veenker had just completed a stren-
ly misse . inutheeCardinal camp ar
ex-captain Chuck McGinnis, probably uous defensive drill.
the greatest all-around performer
ever turned out by Tom Jones, the TIIRCK 1ANAGER1
Zola brothers, Gumbrecht and Payne, I
distance men, Dougan, quarter miler, ( All sophomores and second
Erickson, half miler, Fox in the pole semester freshmen who wish to
vault, and Buechner in the high I tryout for assistant track man-
jump. I agership please report at 3
John Zola and McGinnis wil work o'clock any afternoon this week
with the Wisconsin souad the re- ( at Yost Field house.
mainder of the year in preparation ( Lorne J. Poole, Mgr. I
for competition in the Olympic trials.

The
Cardigan
$10.00d

The new 'sft toe oxford for early
Spring wear. In both black and
tan imported Scotch grains.
911l shoes Ten dollars

,.

BASEBALL MAAGERS
All sophomores and secondI
semester freshmen interested
in trying out for assistant base-
ball managers positions are re-
lquested to report at 3 o'clock I
any afternoon this week at Yost I
field house.
I James G. McKillen, Jr., )lgr.

Nick"els

Arcade

;* 1

II

T",

11

_..f _- i _ "_.._I __ __ _ _ _ __ ._ _ .. ._
S-- - -

I

.J

1928

1928

11

11

TB~ j~yct yXop

I

SPRING

ll

U

Imported and Domestic Woolens

are now

on display for your inspection.

Newer ideas in
NECKWEAR
featuring. plain colors in
eight different shades
and the better patterns
in small figures.

Inquire about
our
Thirty Four and Forty Six Dollar
Suitings
- i
We are showing some wonderful values at
these prices.

i

I

$1.50

$2.00

I

$2.50

4.

Tinker & Company
So. State St. at William St.

GREENWOOD'-4KILGORE

k1 I

I r1l

it

I

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