PAGE STS; THE MI I---IIGA.N DAILY F-j, TrSDAY, MARCH PAGE SIX THE MICHICAN DAILY TTffES~A~, MARCH 2~, 1931 MichiganPickedto tional Swimming eet FIFTEEN 98LLEES ENTER TITLE RACE Wolves Given Edge by Virtue of Overwhelming Victory in Western Conference. Fifteen colleges and universities, including most of the best swim- ming talent in the entire United States, have entered the eighth an- nual Intercollegiate Athletic Asso- ciation swimming meet that will be held at the Lake Shore Athletic Club at Chicago, this Friday and' Saturday, under the auspices of Northwestern University. With the entries closing today it seems probable that these 15 teams will, be the only ones to take part in the meet, although there is the possibility that three or four other .eastern contingents may send one or two men who are outstanding in their events to take part. The schools that have entered teams in the championships are Michigan, Princeton, Iowa, Rutgers, Minnesota, Fordham, Chicago, Pur- due, Georgia Tech, Washburne Col- lege, Southern California, Loyola of Chicago, Y. M. C. A. College of Springfield, Mass., Northwestern, and Stanford. Amherst, Brown, Navy, and Pennsylvania are expect- ed to enter at least one man. Stars Will Stay For A. A. U. Many of the stars swimming in the Intercollegiate championships will plan to remain over for an- other week in Chicago, when they will take part in the A. A. U. cham- pionships. Coach Matt Mann's squad of ten Wolverines is expected to take top honors in the National meet, by virtue of its overwhelming victory in the Western Conference meet at Ann Arbor, March 13 and 14. Al- though there are some other strong teams in the country, the Maize and Blue natators are expected to take enough seconds and thirds, in addition to what first places it may gain, to place it ahead of any other team. Its closest competitors will likely be Princeton, Rutgers, and Southern California, each of which is being picked to give the Wolver- ines a hard race for the title. Finals on Saturday. Trials in the fancy diving and. 50 yard free style events will be held on Friday afternoon. All other preliminaries are scheduled to be staged Friday night, while finals in (Continued on Page '7) Royston Has Record as Putting Wizard in Conference Golf By Bud Jones. (Editor's Note: This is the sec- ond of a series of articles dealing with the members of the varsity golf team.) Starting his third year as a mem- ber of the Michigan Varsity golf team, Captain Joseph Royston, of Pittsburgh, Pa., holds one of the most impressive records for con- sistency of any man who has ever worn the colors of the Maize and Blue on the greens and fairways. Many conference opponents will testify to the fact that the wizard- ry of his putting touch is far tooj much to cope with, since none have ever been able to take his meas- f ure. Royston put in a strenuous sum- mer of tournament play in meets in and around Pittsburgh with vary- ing success. Immediately after the start of the summer vacation, Joe' packed his mashie and niblic, and headed for the National Intercol- legiate tournament, but fell a vic- tim to the sandy wastes of the Oak- mont Country Club, failing to meet the exacting qualifying test by a single stroke. In the Shannopin Open, one of the biggest tournaments in . the Pittsburg district, the Michigan{ leader sailed through a fast field to capture the crown. One of the few defeats he has I ever suffered was in the tourna-1 ment at his home course, the High- 1 lands Country Club, where after advancing to the final round he was forced toconcede defeat on the thirty-sixth green, one up, and to content himself with the runner- up honors. Although few golfers will ever ad- mit that their game on any single (Continued on Page 7) McGill Captures Nine Titles in Same Season MONTREAL, Mar. 23.-(IP)-Mc- Gill University athletes of Montre- al shattered a record recently by winning their ninth intercollegiate title of the current season. Me- Gill's teams hold the title in ten- nis, golf, soccer, track and field, hockey, basketball, swimming, Eng- lish rugby and gymnastic competi- tions. This is the first time a col- lege has won more than eight ti- tles in a season and McGill water- poloists still have a chance to cop that trophy, which will bring the mark up to 10. Al Simmons Demands $100,000 for 3 Years Al Simmons, Star outfielder of the Philadel- phia Athletics, who is holding out for a contract which calls for $100,- 000 for a period of three years. Friends claim he will quit the game if this contract is not granted. SIMMONS WANTS BIGGER CONTRACT Crack Outfielder Holds out for $100,000 for Three Years. PHILADELPHIA, Mar. 23.-UIP)- Press reports received here today from Fort Myers, Fla., where the Philadelphia Athletics have their spring training base, state that Al Simmons, outfielder, wants a three- year contract calling for a total of $100,000, or else he will not play with the world's champions. Sim- mons is at Hot Springs, Ark. "I have not received any com- munication from Simmons demand- ing $100,000 for the next three years," Connie Mack is quoted as saying. "I won't know what he wants until I see him in Philadel- phia in April." Simmons is said to have told friends in Milwaukee that unless he received this sum he would not play again. Football Managers. Second semester freshmen in- terested in trying out for foot- ball manager, report to Field house any afternoon after 2:30 o'clock. Toronto Leads Scoring Chase by Gaining Final Victory Over Ottawa. NEW YORK, Mar. 23.---(2'}-The final week of the National Hockey league season brought ' al good( chances for the scorin .,ers to, fatten their averages but mtle else. as the race for playoff positions had been settled. Toronto led the scoring chase by adding a 9 to 6 victory over Ottawa Saturday which set up the season record for goals in ono gine,to a previous 8-2 triumph over Chi- cago. American Race Closer. In general the final standing showed a closer race in the Amer-1 ican division and an open campaign in the Canadian, with no threats to the records of last year, except in losing games. The Philadelphia Quakers touch-! d the low water mark for a sea- son when they wound up Saturdayt by fighting the world's champion Montreal Canadiens to a 4-4 tie. They won four games and tied four, finishing a point lower than the previous record holders, the Pitts- burgh Pirate of 1929-30. Detroit Loses. Boston ended another triumphant campaign Saturday by beating the Montreal Maroons 3-1 again finish- ing with the highest point total, 62,1 and the greatest number of goals 143. The Americans showed the best, alowing only 74 goals to their opponents. The closing game of the season last night brought a good contest as Chicago nosed out Detroit, 2 to 1. PROS WILL SERVE' AS APPRENTICES CHICAGO, Mar. 23-(/P)-A move to raise the standard of the golf professional has been started in earnest by the United States Pro- fessional Golfers' Assocation. Under the plans, approved by the United States Golf Association heads, the P. G. A will recommend professionals to all clubs and insist that each pro serve a three-year apprenticeship in a shop, learning the art of club making and then follow through by being a P. G. A. member of good standing for two years. the names of several veterans who have failed to show, after many, yea 1 of service, that their work on the baseball diamond has slowed them up to any appreciable extent. One of the most outstanding of these veterans who apparently nev- er grow old is Joseph Ignatius Judge, who has paraded around the first base cushion for the Washing- ton Senators years longer than many present day fans can remem- ber. With Walter Johnson, Sam Rice, and Ed Gharrity, he rounds out a quartet of players from the old school who still retain places on the Senators' payroll, a 1 t h o u g h Johnson and Gharrity are not ac- tive in big league competition any longer. One of Eest Liked Players. One of the best loved of this quartet is Judge. Always a strong hitter, if not of the slugging type,, he has attracted nearly as much attention for his excellent fielding record, his base stealing ability, and calmness under the most trying cir- cumstances that arise during the course of a game. As t-amo captain, Judge has led the club to many victories in the baseball wars, and at the present time it appears that the veteran first sacker will be the field boss this season of a club that may make a determined bid to oust the Phila- delphia Athletics from the top rung of the junior circuit ladder. Washington finished second in the American League race last year, with the veteran Judge playing no small part in their rapid rise to a strong berth in the first division. During the summer months, when the hot weather causes many vet- erans who have not been serving as long as Judge to drop out of work day in and day out, it was deemed the wise thing to purchase a high priced minor league star for re- placement service when Judge wav-, ered. Kuhel Intended as Understudy. Consequently Joe Kuhel, a mighty slugger with Kansas. City in the American Association, was secured with the idea that he would share the first base assignment with the veteran Senator. Kuhel got little chance, however, to show his wares. Judge was having a particularly good season, and, despite his many years in active service, he still had enough stuff to keep a young and powerful slugger like the Kansas 1 4 .. ;' >- '' ' City star on the bench. Furthermore, Judge gives no im- pression of being done even now. He has definitely won the right to start the season at first base for the Senators, and if our guess is anywhere near right judging from his performances in recent years, any newcomer will have a hard time to oust the veteran Joe Judge from Walter Johnson's regular line- up. I~oughran Wil Battle Griffiths at Chicago NEW YORK, Mar 23.-(/P)-One big hurdle stands between Tommy Loughran and a second shot at Jack Sharkey and the ringwise Philadelphian will try to clear it this week. Tommy, whose exploits have fur- nished most of the excitement of the current indoor season, battles Gerald Ambrose Griffiths, Sioux City, Ia., heavyweight, in the ten round feature bout in the Chicago stadium Friday night. It will be an annoying left hand against a devas- tating right and the final issue ai matter of decided doubt. Granted that he avoids Griffiths' heaviest blows, Loughran should win for the middle westerner does not class w-ith him as a boxer. The country's other outstanding shows this week will take place in New York, Philadelphia and Los Angeles.1 Joe Judge, One of Baseball's Oldtimers, Will Once More Cover First for Senators Included among the list of play- ers that will be included on various American League club rosters when the season opens April 13, will be # Canadien Beats Out Goodfellow, Detroit Center, by One Point Margin. Howie Morenz, speedy center ice man of the Montreal Canadiens, by amassing a total of 49 points, won, his second individual hockey scor- ing championship in the National League in four years, final compila- tions of the records for the 1930-31 season show. Morenz closed the season only one point ahead of Eb- bie Goodfellow, center of the De- troit Falcons. In 1927-28 Morenz was also the National League scoring champion, but in 1928-29 he fell to third place. Last season he had to be content with seventh place, but that record was remarkable in that he was kept out of practically half of the Cana- diens' games by injuries. Shore Has Most Penalties. Looking at the other extreme, we find Harvey Rockburn, defense man of the Detroit Falcons displacing Eddie Shore of Boston as the league's bad boy, serving 118 min- utes in the penalty box throughout the year. Shore was second in pen- alties with 105 minutes, with Coul- son of Philadelphia third and Shields of the same club a close fourth. Bill Cook of the Rangers and Charley Conacher of Toronto fin- ,shed in a tie for third place in in- dividual scoring with a total of 42 points apiece. Conacher led the league in snaring goals, with 31 to his credit, while Primeau of Tor- onto led in assists, also with 31. Primeau finished fifth in scoring. Caged 28 Goals. A comparison of the records of Morenz and Goodfellow shows that the Canadiens' star caged 28 goals and 21 assists to gain his total of 49 points. Goodfellow sent 25 pucks whistling into the net, and assisted in the scoring of 23 other goals. The leaders for each team in the league were as follows: Morenz, I Canadiens, 49; Goodfellow, Detroit, 48; W. Cook, Rangers, 42; Conacher, Toronto, 42; Stewart, Maroons, 39; Weilanci, Boston, 37; Gottselig, Chi- cago, 31; Gagne, Ottawa, 29; Low- rey, Philadelphia, 27; and Himes, Americans, 24. Lowrey is the broth- er of Eddie Lowrey, coach of the University of Michigan h o c k e y team. , -as rtr"-, ia ° .r h s ki"Z.S. c.' PS _ S l i f " '...x- .'".':a-.rY^,.i n\ , zo=}: a3;ia yt'1 YouU Find Lots f Flannel Suits but... -y z'j y, r. 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