STATE NETIN TODLY VairPl"Hy, ictfi Over Nortliweslcr11, x , avo red To D)efeait SpartalI Telinis Tea'ni rTHEMICHIGANDAILY _____________ FOLLOWING ARCHIE'S FOOTSTEPS'[ ffl [ ILLINOIS DEFEATS BADGERS UHIHI!IiIUWHILE INDIANA TRIMS IOWNA CU~ALZQ FIISHE UNON ACEINSPRING PRACTICE GAMES q t t oO '\t .t~ ~ ~ i't , Iai W ani W nixr1 playing between qarters9 of the "In- k db ~ mps CC - !r~d °v iry M,11 ave C ( I I Ck el 1eii I e ~ id Tea,, IwIa treiigt1i diauaIi owa" gamie.In Veenker's line-1 °j ~'.i,-m eAs Cod pored(41To C )iiThlle Odens~e up wereC several veterans1i9 of last, L I Fifty Last WON BLASTYEAR'S MATCH Michigan's Varsity netmen will meet Michigan State today on the Perry field courts in their second match of the year. Winner over Northwestern, rated as ne of the Conrfeirece's fasest. teams this year, iby G-3 score Coach Hutbin's men'. are conceded m are tan an even chance to tuIrn back t he Spartas. In all pof aility 'the Same sq~uad that opposed the Widcats on Satr- (ay will fae the St ae entries. Bar- tn, Ba con, ii can y, Al gyr, Sb ef- ' r, and Moore wl1lar the brunt of the singls uruecn. Cap~ain H1orace Barton and Bing Moore, Conference doubles chamnpion o' last year, are likely to play first doubles while thel second and thir'd doubles teams have "notlbeen -announced) as yet. Both Michigan ;and Michigan State "have been hindered by ~he delay inl conditioning or~ the 'tennis courts. Only for thfe past week has fast play " been possible. t'ae makeup of the Spartan suad is indefinite but will in all prba- 1Ilty include the veterans Cloven, "Perrin, and Pennington. Don Swan, a ( promnent junior si'gles player, is6 at the -present hoding down the secondl singles berth. George Lott, nationally prominent on the courts, xis not eligible for play r~Ts he let school at the eginning o tle crr- rent semester. The match last year went to th Wolverine teamn by a 9-0 scre but athis year's contest is expected to be more fiercely contested by the Spar- tan aggregation In case Coach Hutchins calls uipon reserve streng- th, Elliott, Graha, Kempur, Mar- .shall, Farbinan, and Marsh will le n~ost likely to see action. The following baseball games were played Tuesday: Tau Epsilon pi beat Delta Phi, 33 to 5. Sigma Phi defeatedDla Al- pha Epsilon, 11 to . Sigm a Phi Ep- silon beat Sigma Chi, 8 to 0. Alpha Chi Rho lost to D.K.IE., 11 to . Alpha .Omnega defeatedl't'heta Xi, 8 to 5. TPan Delta Phi worn from Ti igo, '6 to 2. Alpha Sigmra Phi lost to Hermitage, 17 to 9. Alpha Kappa Lambda de- feated Phi Rho Sigmat, 8 to 1. The scores of yesterday's 'games were: D. K. E. , :Phi Kappa Sigmia, 0; Phri Beta Delta 8, Dta psilon ; Alpha Sigma Pi 11, Delta Cli 2; Phi Rho, Sigmrat 7, Kappa Nu ; Pi Chi G, Sigma -Phi Epsilon 3; Alpha' Delta Pi 9rrheta (li 0; Omega Psi Phri 20, Kappa Delta Rho 1; Delta Sigma P i 9,' Concordia 1; Theta K~appa Psi 0, Phi :Sigma Kappa 9; Phi KappaPsi 0, Theta Kappa Epsilon 9; Sigma Chi 8, Alpha Phi Delta 5; Phi Mur Alpha 5, Phi Beta Pi 11; Psi Omega 0, Zeta Beta Ta 9; Alpha Chi Rho 8, Delta Tan Delta 0; Sigma Zeta 0, Zeta PSI 9; Phi Epsilon pi 4, Phi Kappa Tau 10; Chi Phi 14, Theta Xi 8. Varsity TIrack Team Trains For Buckeyes (Continued from Page Six) star, proved to be one of the lumin- aries of the meet. He lead the Buck- eye half mile relay team to victory, running the anchor leg, and then came back to win the 100 yard (ash from his teammate, Kriss. The Ohio State two mile. relay team finished In third place back of Bates and. Harvard. CORNLL.-Daylight saving time is soon to be etablished in this univer- sity, though the city of Ithaca has decided to remain on standard lie. l E Thlirity swinviers - hve cin m'pleted thir recquired lengths" to finish illn 'tae second annual Michi-aIll Union r'cenf l ile "Swimt. (If.Ois~tnuer11)e(leve } x fin ised befoe Eater vacation. At W,, 4 xthis (ate last year (aver fifty ad * t~flalcteul tirlenl(igths while hut . k"X of that number finished by East- e er vacation. r Medals will e awarded Shortly e- fore t he end( of school in June to y .I hse who have suiccessuly co0m- I lt.(l the required distance of sev- (en hundred and four laps. The md- als will he n the form of watch h' , 1carms practicalIy the same as those "40WA~$'sTMT Wared to the winning arii ants f'RUYCET NJo MLATION x 221 entries are carded in tlhs 'BUT T$ej"lE 50TH r year's event as compared to the 24 tif'i-E > . O -{fx+, b f in the first annual Michigan Union tdmeSANKw ,aswim held last year. Ninety of last -~ -i yea1-,4 asiants inshed while this year fro the uresct outlook it - sa~ffeemis doubt ful if the nmbler corn- E)plating the (istance will exceed sev- ! enty. OF 'HE esro'.j A. ' -Te first, eleven finishing this year F= -t-f- sof f w ho co mnpleted the te nl m i les before ~ ~ ~spring vacation are Robert W. So- iriiiiiv ~ fll~i IIIU I~ II 1111 IRIIIIII ile, '1,P A. Knkle, '1; M. M. JUDHII ~1fI1LL IUELO IU HUIflLOlrien, 30A, I. J. Peterson, ' 1, M. EN CH MPION E M O[5HE'IT1QE, Carl Trrll, '31F... W. aly, S '1E, M. M. P' Vank. '29', J. S. Tel- 'Nintee othrs avefinished since (B3y Associated Press) lof ta hminhpcac.We vacation; they are in the order of NEWYOR, My 2-Joriu Fa-T came in after getting my last putttheir completion: S. W. ILebowitz, rellhas'wo th mot o th litle;(dOwn for the 69. the photographers '31, J. A. Pianfett, '29P, M. A. Sef- rel ha wn te ostof helitleall rushed upl to take my piturg Of ,erein, '28, E. E. Ian Cleef, '1, A. A. gotfchapioshis ad nverthecorse 1 could nt refuse but I believe A lplleford, '2, C. F. Kratz, '28, r. big,'one but e is not down-hearted.; that if I had slipped into the club-} W. Malcolm, '1L;, II A. Nffze, '0 Only 27 years of are, hie be- house from the 18th green, my name W. T Fawet, '0, W. Minke.,'3,C li eves he will be open hapion elc wuld e on the cupl. i. Burns, '1, J. 1. Sawyer, '31, . B. I"T took 78 on the final 18, the Blume, '29L, A J. Cipriano, '0Th, fore hie is Forced to retie frmco -smme number Willie needed, and Ci. J. Kuchler 28, R.L 1. Miller, '28, petition. 'lobby came aroundl in 74 to tie Wil-land C. V. Nlawer, '29. When hie does winl the title he 'will lie andl there was a play-off which( It is an interesting fact that the putt his way to it. The, smiling su-ii-mae"arlane won.'';'freshmen outstrippedl Ithe field in perlatively groomed WestchesteFr lire- - ___- boasting the agest number of finish- is the world's greatest long distance j HIAVAD .-Ten men heave been ers. Thirteen first year men have putter. Hle is Prepared to joun en- chosen lv'ire to compete with Yalo in i pleted the reuired (distance to thusiastally in any camplaign for' a new scholarship competition. The d~ate while there are but six juniors, more and bigger greens. (20 contestants will write an examina-I five seniors, and five sopomores. Johnny is only a common or gar- I tio preare by two Harvard profes--__________ den variety of putter from four to snis, two Yale professors, andl one UNIVERSITY OF PRDU,,--Uni- five feet,, but from 40 to 50 feet, he Princeton professor, and the univer- versiy officials have taken steps to re- is a. tcoimbination of (deadly poison sity w~hosefoarn makes the highest (duce the number of required creit andI high explosive. Hie has -made score'kv ill receive $5,00. The names ' hours in mocst of thie schools. TChey putts in serious competition bletter of Imhe c ontestants are t0 le kept b lelieve that if this le put ist:o effect measured in yards than in feet. sert to prevent cramming and pre- te students will have mre time to "What is the explanation?" lie was examination nervousness. ituiy the hours they do take. asked. "Have you always been a goodl l1u ttPer.' r "Always," was the reply. "I could putt before I couldl play r'a other Friday and Saturday (rl part of, the game. I was a caddy at i Onlys Siwanoy and could practice putting when I was not carrying clubs, whileI9" of course, the caddies could not paI n s r a cltyS i t o te course,.o hn7 I M nsB o dcohS it "O cure outhnkevery year Cllar Attached--Fast Colors is your year," Johnny said as he chatted of his prospects for 1928. Fancy Stripe, Plain Blue, Tan or White "but I, really believe I will win'. I $.15 have played good, sound golf 11l winter but not too much and I an Men's Fancy Silk Socks, 25c ten pounds :heavier than I have been. "Golf's a gamble and the light- nigstrikes btsometimes weiyujf ~ I ( latexpect it,, but you have to take A n~D y '.o u .O steps to be as right as you can for M i the big tests. The physical part, 1316". MStn . have ,found not so important, for golf itself keeps one who plays _______________________________________ steadily in shape. It's a terrific nmen- tal strain through a big championship ____________________________________ and if you go through without crack- ing you are lucky. "IT ran into this at Worcester in the open of 1925. At the end of the third position. I had just shot a 69 for a 54 hole total of 214 and was one U Istroke back of Willie MacFarlane. Cleaners andi Dyers Bobby Jones was three strokes backtJ and Francis Ouiimet two. "I thought I was in, for I believed that I could overhaul Willie and stave Service with a Smile off Bobby and Francis. "Piut I was photographed right nit yeaar s eleven and the superiority was OBE Ii,LUNGES WELL oon exhibited when Truskow ski brroethrough to pick lup za "Wiscona- i"Ilinouis'' (eleated "Wisconsini" 1s inl" gunt tht B odeon hl ~bloc~ked to 0) while "Indiana" was trilulephing andm ltrot ted across , he goal line. over "lorwa" 0 to 0 yesterday in the, Ilughes,' intentions; of kicking the first games of the sp~ring footIhl)i a pint, w( re spoile'd whlen a wild practice. 1pass from (ccuter eadd Wistc rt's A swarm sun beating dlown, out of For the remarinde(r of the quartr, a cloudless sky somewhat olf-wfset the cl3l oa t. I eagerness of the gridl candidtes an dt he t i c-. sesawed up ui d w ~ slwe1 p ~ly.J~n punin wsfield. in the folilowing; periodl,. ta I' ~~Illinois" aggregattio n marcheid (down' the imuportant groundl gained with on- th' il gi f akesat ly an occasional pass andl enIllun1thl ieaginn ofthf"Wsonin" mixe infot'dcc l~t~n.line seeming unable t o stop thle fleet For the most part, the lines seem'- "luei" backs. Hughes bna rroh. the e(l stronger ,on dlefense than on ofl- [all to the "Cardinal'' 80-yard~c line onf colrat ,ties. hici oeerg, orte fstan 1 l-yarl (lash Oft tackle while a. colo attims. Hwevr, or te frstdouble pass back of the line, Hleist,- game and with weather conditions ett crd aei is lw Iwhat. they wer'e play in general was ilthe 20-yardl marker. goodi. A few tries, at the line failed to Instead of the usutal four quarters, gain itnl Hughes dropped back to each game was cuot to three. 'I'lJ for, h" 0-adln adhoedtebl teas llayd o th sae gidions-quarely through the uprights for a "Indliana" and "Iowa" playing one hield goal. Another "Illinois" touch (uar~ter with "Wisconsin" and "II(down in the last quarter brought the indcs" taking! the field for thme next finalI score to 15-0. I Ng. Veenker was in charge of " z- linois," Keen wa-s coaching 'Wiscon- silL" Courti-ight supervised "'Indiana" while "Iowa" wats und er the scrur- i'y of Miller. "Indiana" andl "Iowa" clashed first and foughit through a scoreless per- iod. Robechi, playing full on Mil- hers team galve several good exihibi- lions of line plunging while Brown (A. the same team uncorked a fewn sensational passes. Just before the quarter, was over, Justice,' playing at hialt' for "Indiana," recovered a turn- ble and ran it back about 60 yards. Gregg overtook him near the "Iowa" 'goal and downed him just as the whistle endled the play. In the next period, "Indiana" re- ceived the kick off and worked the ball (down the field on line plunges and a few end runs to the "Iowa" 5- yardI line with Lytle hurtling through the line for a touchdown. The try goal failed. Sukupchiek, "Indiana" fullback broke away for a couple of long rains soon after but no further scoring resulted. The third and final quarter was' likewise umraarked by any touch- dlown s. In the meantime, the "Illinois" el- even and "Wisconsin" team were Wolverines To Meet Colgate Nine Today (Continued from Page Six) COY will do the receiving for McAfee. On its southern tour, the Colgate team broke even in four games. Vir- ginia Poly . Institute Was defeated twice, but Virginia and Georgetown each scored victories over the Ma- Opening the regular season, Col- gate won an abbreviated five 'inning contest from Union, 5-0, with Cot- trell doing the hurling. New York un- versity defeated the Maroons' in a seven inning game, 4-2, Wesleyan was defeated in a close contest, 5-4. Last year, Michigan and Colgate split even, in a two game series at Ann Arbor..- The Maroons won the first game, 12-2, behind Hopkins' steady pitching. The Wolverines came back to annex the second by a 5-3 score. DARTMOUTH.The board of trus- tees has announced a building pro- gram for the imnmediate construction of two new dormitories costing in the neighborhood of $2,000,000. LET'S Gil CANOtEING NOTICE A IHALF-PRICE SUIT SALE A manufacturer of excellent clo sIng sold us his entire surplus jste of Spring Snits at prices that enal us to offer them at just oe-half the actual value. Collegiate suits, f college men who prefer snappy styl We 'have a Wite assortment of ph terns and~ colorings, beautifully ta ore(L perfect itting, neat appeari and well wearing Prices range fr $19.50 upward:;. I THE IIFAIR 200 Main Street i G. F. NAGEJ Wat hmake .r. Exprt Repairing 217 South Main St., IUjmtars Wed-Fri-SuA NOTICE-We buy mes clothi Phone 4310. 115 W. Washhgt St. Wed-Fri-:gun SITUATION wanted by experen cook in sorority or fraternity, 1 ginning September, 1328.le RESPONSIBLE, dependal courl Coinnected with Univrsiy; - Children, would like to occupy ho (luring owner's absence, for sum or longer. Bec interested lin ke4 ina home and nremises in sb" Board out. References. Box 43 1 5-59- DO NOT FORGET MOTHER'S DAY-MAY 13th Framed Mottoes-Cars Francisco' Boyce Photo Co. Tu-1h-Sa HT. W. CLARK'S GOLF SHOES. ar blessing to golfers- who ar affli ed with tired, aching feet. T rest your feet while playing. C no more than ordinary golf sho( Golf shoes for men and wome corner ou k'reiLand South Only one store-cannot e bog elsewhere. Handmade. Yes, do repairs TY~lIN-Theses 'a specialty. Rt+I gonable rates. M. V. Hartst Dial 9387.. C-771 TYPEWRITERS- Sales and ervi All makes, large anti portal' bought, sold, rented, repaired. O' Mnachines and work guaranteed. business since 108. . D. orr 17 Nickels Arcade. F©B REN T FOR RFlNT-Firnied groom -pa mernt for business women. Inqul 226. Thompson or dial 6961. 159-60 FOR SAL1 FRATERNITY and rooming house 0. T. Albro, 106 East fur Phone 5800. FOR SALE-Two Choral Union c pons; value $6 on May Festi tickets; for $3 Call 5687 after FOR SALE-Willy'-Knight cabril coupe; used one week; fu equipped; priced' right for qu sale. Call Ypsi 572. 196 WANTED WANTED-Students to know that 4 home laundry methods give y clothes personal attention. IM Laundry, 204 N. Ma iTa #111i1. WANTED-To renct a hose for £ ternity jpurposes. Mut accmie date from 20 to 25 mhen. Spci details. Michigan Daily, Box 4 158-9-60-61 LOST. LOST-D~elta Sigma Pi fraternity p Return to W. F. Spencer, 1502 Cl bridge Road. Call 5518. Rewar 158-59 LOST-A white gold Plgin watch a: chain.k Open chain and mrongr on b~ack of watch. 'Lost betwe Cambridge Road and Engineer Bldg. Phone 5791 for reward. LOST-Theta Chi ' Fraternity la with crossed swords on, col snapse. Reward. Call Kini k bocker, 21737. 159-60 Earn Extra, Credit During Summer V acatil The change and recreation so necessary to ever: one are here. com~bined with superior oppo tunity for, educational advancemnent. Boatin swimming, tennis, con~certs, dramatic performa ceih inspiring lectures, etc., are all available. Organized excursions to industrial, financial andn centers of Chicago. Courses covering full ye'ar's wo In General Chemistry, P'hysics or Zoology, for studen interested in Medicine, Dentistry or Engineering. ,SUMMER~ ON THE SHORE OF LAKE MICHIGAN Opens Junie 25, 1928. and includes: Graduate School Law School College of Liberal Arts School of Mfusic School of Commerce' School of Speech *School of Education School'of Journalise Send for FREE Booklet booklet, "Edetlo Plus Recreation" describest courses of NORTHWESTERN UlN IVERSITY WI MER SESSION -and its recreational and educatioi .adv-utaaes. 1111111111111111111111111111111 III 111111111111111111111111111111111i11111111111 IIIIII IIliiI1111111 W VWW3~FJ~&CMPAH Jo~en W~~ee14 F l * W 4 + 4 w 4 On theH atnivattselingotCdrt + s4 + -4 Th4O ' ell65 4a I Vf la The n orpec I' . Phone 21548 702 S. State St. Spring, parties and dances should be properly announced We Deliver was" 11 With the coming of Spring' are parties and dances---and, parties and dances nceed be announced and invitations ex- tended. We have printed and. engraved hun- dreds of invitations and announcements, both formal and informal, modest' or more elaborate. Before your next party let us submit our figures to you and show you samples of our work. There is no question but that our wNork and prices will please. I 11 SVITS $35 to $75 sal Address WALTER DILL SCOTT, PresideM NORTHWESTERN UNIVERS' University H1all EVANSTO! Subscribe. For THE IIA C.Barf I1 it