P'ACE SIX THE MTCHTCA.N DATLY AYEDNESDAY; FEBRUAA' 22, 19?8 TTT TCI'4TCAM fVLATTY 'vva ur I lhE~thAV' 11 LftTAPY 1 .12 i. :7 WOL VERINE RS TO MEET MINNESO TA TEAM jlPHERS S ON'l fl MAJOR LEAGUES SEEK SERVICES CARIllinois Trackmen OF CALDWELL, FORMER YALE ACEO Hold Wide Margin T IIOMBINIONOPPOS[ALB InIndoor Titles NIr'1uith t F r T 't $i i ' 555 (Special to The Daily) PERFORMS WELL M IN PURDUE GAMECJACII ItI FIRST CUTIN SQUAD Thirty-nie Remain On Squad; Furth- er Reduction Of Battery nein Will Be Made Later In Season START BATTING PRACTIGE Of Gr idun ion Lesses SLHqW STRENfiTH IN RELAY I Championship aspirations of Mich- igan's swimming te~gm will meet an severe test tis, ahternoon when Coach Main's squad engages thef University of Minnesota in a dualr meet at Minneapolis. The Gophers have another strong tank team this TO____ season despite the loss of several veterans, and are expected to ex- tend the Wolverines in every event. Minnesota's 160 yard relay teat is an especially strong threat,tand willz provide fast opposition for the quar- r m tet of Michigan swimmers. The Wol- verine team of Capt. Darnall Seager, Walker, and Walaitis will race against Capt. I ill, Morris, Crocker and Moody. On the basis of past perform- ances the Gophers pcssess one of ther Vest college relays in the country.. The Michigan quartet a'Iso has an impressive record, having scored vic-ATh EWSON tories over Syracuse, Erie Y. M. C. Bruce Caldwell, who has starred(o A., andT iPenn A. C. e the next great college football pla Tw ) ol rI To l' meet io hf sional baseball. Several majer leagt Two old rivals wili, meet in the spring. 40 yard free style when Darnall of A number of other athletes who st Michigan and Max Moody of Minne- careers, have entered the majors an sota toe the mark. These two aquatic Ernie Nevers, a member of the St. Lo stars met six times last year, Dar- present, while Thorp and Mathweson nall winning five of the races. Sam Mill, one of the few swimmrers that beat Darnall in 1927, will also re- present the Gophers in this event.' 1 Seager will be Michigan's other en. trant in the shorter sprint. Purdy and Bayers will be the Min- nesota entrants in the 200 yard breast stroke. Purdy placed third in the Big Ten and national collegiateT meets last yar. Thompson and Wag- ner, both of whom have turned in By Clarem good time for Coach Mann, will op- IIEuuuIIIIII pose the Gopher entries. Aultf To Compete lit 440 The 440 yard free style will bring ue at together Ganet Ault of Michigan and Nuerous queriesindeex- Frank Lucke of Minnesota. In this, planation of the decisive defeat acl- his first year of competition, Ault ministered by Purdue to the Michi- has shown remarkably well in the gan basketball team on M6nday re- meets in which he has participated.veal only two facts, that the Boiler- Sam Hill, brother of Jim Till, the makers were just "hot" and that at Gophers' 1927 captain, will endeavor least two of the three veteran Wol- to emulate his brother by conquering vcrines played through what takes Hubbell and Spindle of IMichigan in rank as one of the worst games of the 150 yard back stroke This will their respective careers. Expect Big Crowd To Watch Te In Second Encounter Of Year In Kresge Gymnasium ains KANITZ MAY NOT PLAY Before what is expected to be the largest crowd to witness a basketball game in Kresge gymnasium this sea- son the Michigan "B" basketball team will meet the Albion quintet tonight at Albion. This will be the second meeting between the two teams, Coach Kipke's charges have defeated the Albion cagers earlier in the season by a one-sided score of 43-23. It is quite likely that the Wolver- ines will enter the fray without the services of Kanitz who has been their biggest scoring threat to date, as it is expected that he will be transfer- red to the Varsity squad. Wolverines Show Power The Michigan team has shown oc- casional signs of power such as was exhibited in the first half of its game IOWA CITY, Feb. 121-In cham-# pionships, first places, total points, winners by events, University of Il- linois track teams and individual athletes have amassed the finest re- cord in the Western conference in- door meet down through the years. The. supremacy of Coach Harry Gill's men is strikingly revealed in a summary of the 17 championship meets, three weeks before the annual affair is held in the Universityi of Iowa field house, March 9 and 10. Seven team championships have been swept in, by the Illini teams, the most impressive showing being that of 1920, 1921, and 1922. Michigan has four titles in the books. Gillmen Take 49 Firsts Just as conclusive of Illinois prow- ess are the 49 first places won by Gill's stars. Chicago men have taken, 39 and Wisconsin, 33. Michigan brings up in fourth place with 26 firsts. To win the seven team champion- ships, Illinois men scored a total of 480 points, easily topping the 337 markers of Chicago, the 307 of Wis- consin, and Michigan's 255 Illinois has the edge in half of the n Yale football and baseball teams may yer to establish a reputation in profes- ue clubs bid hotly for his services this tarred on the gridiron in their collegiate d proved to be stars. Of this number, ouis Browns is the most outstanding at starred in the past. (we Edelsoni a11nlalaI'' with Alma but it has also displayed 'en-events . , two1IL mIl a tedeny tobecmin ratled111ten events. The mile, two mile, mile a idency to becoming rattled in relay, pole vault, and high hurdles the pinches when the going gets have been won more times by Illi- tough. This can be seen from the nois men than by athletes from other last game with Alma when Michigan universities. entered the second half with a 10 point lead only to become excited and lose the contest when Alma started SPORTS CALENDAR FOR a rally. W EEK Tonight's engagement is expected to be a more closely contested battle ; Varsity 'Basketballj as the Alm-a team is being pointed for 1 Saturday-Northwestern, here. this game and Coach Kipke is forced to rearrange his team because of Basketball-"B" Team the frequent shifting of players from Wednesday-Albion, there. one squad to another.l Balsamo is certain to start at oneS forward while the other will be taken Wednesday-Minnesota, there. care of by either Magram or Whittle Saturday-Iowa, here. I Captain Nyland will be at the pivot I position while Myron and Lovell are Wrestling the likely starters as guards. Saturday-Purdue, here. Albert Barley Michigan guard, whose versatile playing in his first Varsity appear- ance was one of the bright spots of the Wolverines' 55 to 33 defeat by Purdue. Injected into the game in the middle of the second half, Bar- ley garnered four baskets and a free throw for second high scoring hon., ors for Michigan. Nosing out Delta Phi 13 to 12 in a hard played game, Delta Kappa Epsilon won the final league series in the class A league championship Monday night. The winners of the 13 leagues are now in the final elim- ination tournament which will b.c concluded on March 1. In the interclass and independent league games Monday night, the '30 dents lost to the freshman medics in the fastest game of the series, 16-13. Eighteen other games were played in this round of the elimina- tions series. I yars nire t ro Knr i gfi t ders Nine catchers, 21 pitchers, and nine infielders and outfielders survived the first cut of the baseball squad made by Coach Ray L. Fisher yesterday. Though other cuts of the catchers and pitchers are expected to follow, the present number of nine outfielders and infielders, which will be aug- mented later by Oosterbaan, McCoy, and Gawne, will be retained by Coach Fisher for the rest of year. The catchers to escape the prun- ing knife are Kelliher, Reichman, Short Bracke, Duckman, Stephens, Dolinsky, Bend, and Moyers. The pitchers 'still remaining on the squad are Robbins, Massesohn, McAfee, As- beck, Drabicki, Spero, Whitney, Holtz- man, Walker, Maring, Kiegler, Gil- martin, Nebelung, Hock, Duff, Picard, Burton, Hunt, and Hill. Japanese Outfielder Retalhed For the first time in the history of athletics at Michigan an Oriental student may be included in the line- up when the Wolverine nine takes the field against opponents this spring, Miyanga, a Japanese, is included retained by Coach Fisher. Captain Morse, Corriden, Loos, Weintraub, Lange, all veterans of last yea'snin, trau,Kngtad outfielders whom Coach Fisher will have to choose for service when the season begins in early April. Until this week the pitchers had been engaging in light Workouts, but with the beginning of the preseAt week the hurlers have beein alowed to "let loose." The cut of 20 men re- lieved the congestion in 'the field house cages and the candidates are now permitted to take part in batting practice. nd ------------ . . i .E 24 field goals, the greatest num- ber made against Michigan op- position in about a decade. In performing the feat, of course, the Boilermakers were and indeed had to be inspired by the smiles of Dame Fortune. On this point, the joint coaches of the Michigan squad, George Veenker and Harry Kipke, being in a rather facetious mood, de- scribed the remarkable success of the Purdue attempts in this way: Coach Kipke remarked that the (Continued on Page Seven) be a particularly difficult feat to achieve considering the past perfornT- ances of Hubbell and Spindle this. season. Wilke will be the other Min- nesota back stroker. Gophers Weak In Dhes The 100 yard free style will find Darnall and Walker opposing Waid- erlich and Crocker, two new Gopher swimmers. Walaitis and Rosenberg, Michigan's sophomore (livers, will at- tempt to take advantage of Minne- sota's weakness in this event. Skobba and Matson will probably be Coach Thorpe's entries. Minnesota's great medley relay trio of Jim Hill, Purdy, and Moody, has been greatly handicapped by the graduation of Hill. Wilke, a new- comer, will renlace il li, but it is expected this will slow down the Gophers considerably. Coach Mann will probably pit Hubbell, Thompson, and Seager against the Minnesota trio. Last year the Wolverine swimmers Oefeated 'Minnesota, 47-22, in the Union pool. The Gophers von only two events, t be back stroke andl toi medley relay. NOTICE All men interested in enter- ing the light fleavyweight, 160- 175 pounds bout in the All- Campus show, March 8, see me Monday, Tuesday or Thursday I afternoons after 3:30 at Water-I j man gym, this week. { oach Let Plihill. Of the immense total of 55 points amassed by Coach Ward Lambert's great court quintet, 48 tallies came as a result of the -1I from. '"The Downtown Stre for Michigan Men" White Broadcloth Shirts $2.45 Ifcre is an event for the men who wear / H i-, r kmini of shirts-shmts which usu y costI much more than $2.45-and for m;c, too, whe would appreciate getting M UC.H" I T NER SHIRTS than are offered HATS!' 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