PACt SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JANUARY 6, 1931 TI-IF. MTC'l-IIC1AN DAILY TUESDAY, JANTJARY 6, 1931 CHAMPIONS INU~c T 0iO OF VEEHAYO Untried Wolverine Five Seeks .'.,_ 'I Revenge for Last Year's Pair of Defeats. MJia Mentor Believes That "F1'0 -,i . :, I > ' . ' . C.< A . , , au Tonight E frJ ,,1 fl qr gis 8-1 long. as the Big rTen, which isthe oldest organized group in Amneria. dating from 1896. The trouble c? oTvr-emhasis in ffc~fhilis2 -r)' . "Lj3., v J ... Ce ~ i ! t.. k: Id7IOBLgIE LINE-UPS Michigan Plfrdu "C' n ito Exists Only its ':.. _. Ta.weire It. Weiss .........F.......... Kellar S e v e r a 1 recommendation~s for Eveland ....... F........... Eddy solving the college football prob- Daniele........ C......... Stewart l em, so recently attacked by educ - Williamson . ... G ........ Wooden tors all over the country, were made Altenhof ...... G...... Parmenter at a recent New York meeting of ,the National Intercollegiate con- In a game which may go far in Terence by Dr. Kennedy, president determining~ Michigan's ultimate of the association.. However, the place in 1931 Conference cage rank- j problem so recently over-emphasiz- ings the Wolver-, ed has been met and satisfactorily ines will play host settled in the great majority of col- to Purdue tonight legiate conferences, said Fielding in the Field House ;.H. Yost in an interviewv yesterday. at 7:30. Although "It is interesting to know," stated three regulars of Mr. Yost, "that if all the recom- the Boilermaker : "":" : mendations made by Dr. Kennedy, team of last year, tIo the National Collegiate Athletic which was undo- association were adopted that the feated in Big Ten colleges of America would for the competition, are most pa rt be accepting principlesl lost to the squadI many of which have been in effect Coach Ward Lam- in the Western conferenc'e for bert has another twenty-five years." powerful aggre- DANIELS According to Coach Yost there gation, and quite reasonably ex- really exists no problem in the Big pects to land near the top. Ten or in any of the other organiz- Justas he urdu fotbal ed collegiate conferences, although Jus asthePurue ootallgame ,most of the other conferences have last fall proved to be the turning I not had the rules in operation as point in Wolverine gridiron for*- tunes when CoachPT H R R ......Kipke's men set C ER T R t.the c haminpions EARLY TRAINING home smarting T A NI under an ":.::.''::..:: unex-_ _ . ::; pected defeat, a Pitchers will receive the first .-*~ victory tonight baseball call from Coach Ray Fish- would add the er this week, hie announced last confid ence to the night. Workouts are expected to Maize and Blue take place in Yost field house andl :a= attack w h i c h, only the new men are to work in might carry them ' the first practices. Veme Compton, through the sea- ace of the 1930 baseball staff, Kieg-' WEISS son. Michigan is lcr. who was also a starting pitcher, - green and has one and McNeal, a relief man of last of the toughest schedules in years season, will be called out later. to buck, and this' week will prob- Bartholomew, relief pitcher last ably be the hardest of the season, year, McKay, a sophomore port sid- with Purdue, last year's title win- I r, Prebrey, and Traverse will be ners, and Northwestern, favored to among those who are to start lim- win this year, both carded, boring up this week. Coach Fisher With this in mind it is easy to stated that he was also looking for see why a win over the famed! new mraterial. Boilermakers may influence the Hludson, Daniels, andt Superk')o o entire season. Michigan by form 1=. t year's infield will return to showD nii its pre-season gam es has Coach Fisher this spring. Captain} a potentially powerful teals, but 'Tompkins, goalie on the hocked; a team yet to be proved against team, will be the onlly veteran to (Continued on Page 7) return in the outfield. ent only in those instfituin w a do not belong to "ny organie group, and the only reason th a{ these colleges do not become asso- ciated with a conference is thai they wish to enjoy a free hand in managing their athletic teams. There are very few schools whicl, are outside of conferences, and most of these are in the east andI' New England. These are the col-- leges which have training canps. long schedules, and games which carry the teams across the codantry. At Michigan the members of tin- athletic teams are allowed to M QI': only five days of school because of! athletic contests during an entire season; post-season games, re~stric-I tions on the length of the season anih u b r o a e , admny o h r l m t to~ a e b e egulated by Conference rulings. The problem of spring pr Ictice does not exist at Michigan, it is really just part of the program of athletics for all as only those men take part in it that do not parti- cipate in any other sports; hardly ever do the Varsity men appear fol. spring training as they are usuallyj participating in other sports. IThus there does not exist at Michigan this problem of over-er--- phasis, and in all the country the-' are about a dozen colleges where the problem actually presents it- self, and it exists in those places because they want it to.' Wolves Played First j Rose Tournament Tilt Michigan played Leland Stanford universitLy in the first TrLn ament of Roses football game on :Nvewv Year~s Day 1902, piling up the high-' est score ever made in this classic, 49 points to their opponents none. Only fifteen players made the trip under Coach Yost, eleven playing the entire game. LAWRENCE -- Wilbff osil = . :vnwsto '"lc"- and H I-arvard; lT" Tdie With Pa-' 3-3 the Wc'vc-n} rin' ntte Clhri,tmas hl .~ hn c e 1,11 of 9m~y~faanCI is of theen;- '~'' ' ({Q' I ata 0ato ictorlOus atar I H: hi deeatlagIllinois, 12 I 9 i theina ugural of the -,.cile~ to two fi^d goals, 17 i K ( I iam wich were scored 'AadpTicd. Clh u c k 17: ~ ;_ ---o hieot-n, scored the flix imin idthe game, a. foul gc. a t Avanminutes of the 1cm.~~- 111-,ad linois did not ~. ant ag intil after four min- ( aso "the final frame. 11 lMr clmgan"',S Iho'key tearr, winner cif "w o consecuative games on itsj honac ice before the holidays, ran jl a~t rather a.oughl sledding on its an~nual asterin trip during the va - enz. -o and retuarned with only a tic and two defeats to show for its wo'.Gaines were lost to both Liar- and acid to Western Ontario, while ! a cinewith Paris, Ontario, ended with both teams deadlocked at three goals apiece. Despite L.ime fact t-at the Wolver- ize ic"ers were not victorious in an;; of the three clashes, the work of e earn in two o' the gamneswa of : uch a, calibre t hait the ouck- mren s c h ance s to crash through to a s-ccond Conference championship 1 . or I swimming ,^ hedule this year. Al- tlrig h the entire team took some t ine in reporting to the pool's edge, -for15z=, ishe roll' call sh-e;wed no absentees in forw~in, andi l h Wlern Ma on the return a r , h v ? noni ",e ,seat over the holidays. ftThe Wolverines w.ill face the boped through14o.tsirnth squa of the Chicag Athletic Aso j nd 1fe ci Lion here ox,. January 24. This SH10frWeagogregaition - of swimmers is com- SHW t 2o~y '.p Afew o our fiest coats reduced from $65 and over. Furnishings Reduced 20%. Reuenshvour 'warrtobe I