S Y, MARCH 20, 1931 THE TCHT A DAILY . . . ......... ...... ... H.. ..... .M........ .. - --- W--r-,] AGAINST CORNELL High 5 Play chool Fives First Round Egleston and Wolfe Should Turn in Victories in Hurdles and Mile Run. Two of the outstanding track- sters who will compete in the Cor- nell classic tomorrow night with the idea of turning in a couple of first places for Michigan are Haw- ley Egleston, Coach Chuck Hoyt's ranking hurdler and Harmon Wolfe, the best miler on the Varsity squad. Egleston came here from Hyde Park high school in Chicago where he held the state hurdle title for Illinois. He is one of the quartet of sophomore hurdlers who are carrying all the responsibility for this event for Hoyt this year. At present he ranks with the best hurdlers on the Michigan honor roll, holding a tie for the Yost field house record at :08.4. Ranks High in Big Ten. Although his performance has been ratlier in and out in the past few weeks, he has chalked up a fairly enviable record, which he seems bent on improving at the ex- pense of the Red and Whte +timber toppers from the East. Over at West Virginia in the first meet of this season and Hawley's baptism of fire as a member of the Varsity, 'he set a new record for the Morgan- town field house in the low jumps with a mark of :08.1 and then tied the high mark with :08.8. With his first indoor track season about to be concluded, Egleston a r e a d y ranks as fourth in the Big Ten hurdling circles. His competition against Hart of Cornell tomorrow should add another victory to his roster. One of the. best events on the program for the meet will be the spirited contest between Wolfe and Arthur Martin of Cornell for the dual meet championship in the1 mile. Although Harmon is a bit out of condition owing to a touch of the fiu, he can be depended upon to put forth all he has, for there is a good deal of rivalry between these two milers. Last year over at the Ithaca oval, Harm set a new dual Meet record for the course only to have Martin come back a week or so ago and break that rec- ord. - Wolfe Out to Win. The same tough luck has hit him in regard to the Yost field house record for after setting a record at 4:26.7 in the triangular meet he only held it a week before Dale Letts, the Chicago ace, came along and knocked it all to smithereens. Thus, with nothing to defend and everything to gain, the little Mich- igan miler is going to make Martin run a whirlwind of a heat if he wants to win. Wolfe hails from Lakewood high school in Ohio where he ran the half and the mile for a couple of years. While a freshman under Coach Hoyt he could make the 8 laps in 4:30 and better. He is now a junior in the physical education department. He was a member of the cross country team last season and will captain the squad during its next schedule. Even the Western Conference took notice of the little Varsity mil- er last spring when he took the fourth place in the big outdoor meet. He had a bit of tough luck in the indoor meet at Madison this year when he was knocked down by a fellow runner and lost his pace. He was a member of the two-mile relay team which set up a new record over at West Virginia at 8:05 lowering the old record 23 seconds.! The same tam competed in the Illinois relays but was edged out of a win by a small margin. His mark over at Cornell last year was 4:25, and it is this mark which he must repeat or better to win to- morrow. in State Tournev Class A At Pontiac: Fordson 16, Port Hu- ron 16. Fordson declared winner, 17-16 on point system. At Owosso: Saginaw Eastern 26, Pontiac 21. Egleston Ranks High Among Star Hurdlers: r ', ! tOP y 6 INTRAMURAL NEWS INTER -FRATERNITY TRACK Intrmnural offlcias are looking forward in anticipation to a great inter-fraternity track meet next Tesday night. This event was a de- cided success last year and the number of entries already register- ed at the office far exceds those of last year. Phi Kappa Psi are the defending champions and they hive entered men in every event in the hope of capturing this trophy again. Fraternities are not allow- ed to enter freshmen who did not compete in the AiI-Frosh meet. There is no limit to the number of entries that a house may send in. To receive entrance points a team must have six men in the meet. The entries will close tonight at 9:00.oeong REACH SEM*I-FINAL Alpha Sigma Phi, Trigon, Phi Sigma Kappa, Beta Theta Pi in Finals. __ ___ r _ ., Class B At Grand Rapids: Iron Mountain 22, Travers City 12. At Ypsilanti: St. Joseph's, Detroit, 19, Negaunee 18. Class C At Mount Pleasant: St. Mary's, Saginaw, 19, Reed City 16. At Lansing: University High, Ann Arbor, 20, Gladstone 18; Char- levoix 21, St. Leo, Detroit, 16. At Grand Rapids: St. Augustine, Kalamazoo, 19, Holland Christian 18, tie decided on points. i lass D At Lansing: St. Thomas, Ann Ar- bor, 29, Maple Rapids 16; Richmond 29, Saginaw Lutheran 9. At Owosso: South Lake, St. Clair Shores, 28, Comstock Park, Grand Rapids, 25. FOUR WOLVERINES A T LEFTHANDED Half of Batters on Michigan's Regular Team Hit From Wrong Side. College baseball has never been noted for an over-abundance of players that took their cuts at the ball from the left side of the plate, yet the Michigan team of 1931 will offer a direct contrast to this ac-' ^epted fact. No less than four ,of the Wolverine .regulars, half of the team that will play day in and day' out for Michigan, will be portside batters. In yesterday's practice session in the batting cages at Yost field house the honors were about even, with four southpaw hitters and four right handers taking a part :n the batting drill. Jack Tompkins, Harry Eastman, Roy Hudson, and, Larry Butler all take their cuts from the wrong side of the plate, while John Drabicke, Norm Daniels, Art Superko, and Mike Diffley were the right handers in attendance. Few of the hits that were made in yesterday's batting drill were of the resounding variety that spells extra base blows on a diamond. This was due largely, however, to the fact that conditions outdoors made the lighting in the field house; extremely hard on the batters. With a minimum of light to hinder them, the Varsity sticksmiths were at a distinct disadvantage to the pitchers, who were able to curve the balls across the plate with rea- sonable assurance that they would not be driven back at them. Several of the pitchers showed toj good advantage when it came to putting deceptive curves and dropst I: . .:J.I;BADMINTON GAEs7TON Drawings for the badminton tour- nament have been made with first Ranked as fourth best hurdler in and second round matches schedul- the Western Conference, is ex- ed to be completed by the end of petted to add a first to Michigan's next week. The matches are as fol- total in his favorite event against lows: S h a w-Chalmers; Pick-Ed- Cornell. wards; Butchart-Uhlenbeck; Youn- MIH G N T AM g e r-Redmiss; Johnston-Benedict; MICHIGAN TEAMS Schnapp-Lord; Campbell-B a c o n; WIN EXHIBITIONSIWalker-Yetter;QGreenbaum-Kissel; SC u r t i s-Carson; Combe -Edleman; i Cadillac Athletic club journeyedu Neitske-Miller; Booth-Ott; Lederle- to Ann Arbor to play a series of Coursey; Bettyjohn-Damm; Powell- exhbiton quah ad hndbllMathews. Booth and Pocock draw' exhibition squash and handball byes. Players are asked to call each matches with a picked Michigan other and arrange their matches. team in vain, as the Wolverines won INDOOR TENNIS the squash exhibitions 3 to 2 and Snell and Hirschman will meet the handball 5 to 2. in the semi-finals match Saturday Reindell and Boak lost their morning at 10 o'clock. The winner matches to Tate and Harris by the of this match will play Oppelt for matchessamescoretoiateeandlasyththe championship. The final con- ae score, -at in the only t test is scheduled for Open House games. Angell won from Wiley 3-1 Night, March 25. and Wilson" 3-2 to even the team CODEBAL e scores. Lukens and Mason put on In the first round of the code- the closest match of the evening ball tournament Jungito defeated with Lukens of Ann Arbor finally Cooper, Groth beat Larson, and winning out 3 to 2.AI Phelps won'from Hrelles. The quar- [ tater finals will be played at 7 o'clock o n icheiganlosttoatchesReinerWednesday, March 25. All matches IefMichigan lost to Lichenstein in in advance of that must be finish- the first match 2-1. Then the Wol- ed by then. verines won 4 straight contests as edbythen. Walker defeated Winter 2-1, Bishop scored 2 to Ruhl's 1, Phelps won Wolverines to Enter from Rohrmosher 2-1, and Husband National Tank Meet beat McGrath by the same score. The second Michigan defeat came (Continued from Page 6) when Corrick won a close match latter, who has been improving all fro'm Goodman 2-1. Cohen gave is a pretty good indication of Michigan her fifth victory by shut- swimming. Fenske and Raike in the ting out Plotkin 2 to 0. These play- the time, will certainly do their ers that represented the home team part to put the Michigan team up are a selected group by the Intra- at the top when the swimming aces mural depariment of the better of the country meet at the Lake players in the two sports. Shore Athletic Club next Friday The handball and squash team I and Saturday. will journey to Detroit to play the All athletic awards to be made same teams from the Cadillac club this year will be deferred until the later in the season, Earl Riskey an- Wolverines have returned from the nounced last night. nationals, although the selection of men made to take the trip Figures Show Hockey is a pretty good indication of the favored men on the squad. Un- Gaining in Popularity til they have done this last bitfor' the Maize and Blue, however, there According to figures released yes-C will be no announcement from the terday by Harry A. Tillotson, busi- University board. ness manager, the attendance at Regular practice sessions will the home hockey games exceeded continueuntil the squad packs its that of a year ago by more than grips to leave town next Thursday twenty-five per cent.-for the windy city. The coach is These figures seem to indicate keeping his stars constantly at that here, as in other places where work with the divers cutting the the game is played, hockey is ra'- water most of the afternoon, and pidly gaining in popularity. the racing entries running in heats The skating rink, which is also of twos and threes when not tak- owned and operated by the Athletic ing a whirl at it by themselves. The association, showed a slight de- times that the men are making, as crease in attendance over that of recorded by the stop watch that last year, but the increased hockey Mann holds on them each time receipts more than made up for this they swim a lap, are still first rate deficit, and combined to make tlk and indicate that the team will be season the most profitable intlin the best of condition to enter history - the Co--i-- n. the National Intercollegiate meet. FRATERNITY JEWELRY PARTY FAVORS A.RA~_JEWELRY SHOP CARL F. BAY JEWELE~ AND OPTOMETRIST Nickels Arcade Semi-finalists in the inter-fra- 215-17 E. Liberty Street ternity basketball race were deter- Will call for and deliver mined last night when Xi Psi Phi_46 lost to Alpha Sigma Phi 14-41, Phi FRATERNITIES & SORORITIES Sigma Kappa defeated Theta Chi Piano Tuning! Phone 6676, Victor 15-7, and Trigon eked out a victory Allmendinger, the concert artist over Delta Tau Delta 10-8. These tuner. Tuner for Univ. School of thre DinersTan deta Th-t. Pi Music. Office at residence, 1608 three winners and Beta Theta Pi Morton Ave. 345C will meet Monday night in the de- termination of the finalists. NOTICE-6% long term mortgage Alpha Sigma Phi sprang a sur- loans on new Ann Arbor homes prise by so decisively trouncing Xi without bonus or service charge. Psi Phi. Before, the Alpha Sigs Clyde M. Smith. Call 4356. 246C were not rated as a high scoring machine and although they were CHARACTER ANALYSIS - Mail picked to meet Phi Sigma Kappa in with self addressed - envelope, the lower bracket in the semi-finals, specimen of handwriting in ink they were not considered a strong on unruled paper, 50 words or team. But after last night, they will meet the Phi Sigs as favorites. over only 50c, care of 527 Church After running up a score of 19-4 St. 23 in the first half, the Alpha Sigma Delta team continued to score at USED CLOTHES bought and sold. will and end the game with a 41- Call 4310. 215 East Washington. 14 score. Renner made 16 points H. Benjamin. 246C while his teammates, S. Fay and S. Shea tied for second place with 8 SUMMER EMPLOYMENT-If you apiece. are interested in making $1.35 an Phi Sigma Kappa had an off- night against Theta Chi by missing hour for your summer work se a great number of dog shots. The score was 3-2 at the half indicating the closeness of the game. Lindsay scored 6 points for the winners and Fuoss 5 for the losers. Trigon will meet the strong Beta outfit as a result of their win last night. The score was 0-0 at the e dro half time as each team used a care- ful type of basketball. Delta Tau prices has Delta forged into the lead in theremarkab1 second period 8-3 with but minutes to play. Clark was inserted into Tri- season's T gon's lineup and proceeded to make two baskets himself and passed to his teammate to net another. These 6 points in addition to a gift shot won their ball game, 10-8. CAr Only major league clubs will be LLA engaged for games with the Chi- cago Cubs during the training ex- TW] hibitions next spring in order to satisfy public demand. Games with SHE Pittsburgh, Detroit, and Cleveland will be arranged, said President William Veeck. P E N S A N D New Shirts P EN C I L S Special$3.00 Ali makes and all prices Basket Weave A Red Arrow Place 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Phone 6615 - on the pitches, but most of them showed a tendency to wildness that must be corrected before they can be of much assistance to the Var- sity team Lefty McKay, chief can- didate for portside honors on the Michigan team, managed to put a lot of stuff on the ball but his wild- ness kept the batters constantly ducking. Michigan Nine Cards Heavy Game Schedule (Continued from Page 6) Indiana, Wisconsin, and Ohio State. A single game is posted against Chicago at Chicago. Another slight change in the schedule as previously "-pounced has been made in the dates of the last two Michigan State games. Or- iginally they were booked for June1 18 and 19, but have been changed to June 19 an 20 instead. is enough to pay for a Good Suit. 2 pair pants, A year ago you paid at least $50 I i i x for a good suit but times have changed. Today you save i i big m11onies, but you get equally good clothes made of fine fab- rics and choice assortment of I colors and smart hand tailoring. Drop-in and look them over. Tom