THE MICHIGAN DAU Y ............... . rs Enjoy Rest Bfore Intercollegiate SWOLS T ACKL Slater-Kupfer Ba DI C. HERE FRIDAY -- ut Headlines Boxing Tank tar Reds, Robins Spring Surprise by Trade Move Should Fortify Cincin- nati Nine; Follow Policy to Strengthen Team. By Fred A. Luber. Baseball fans. were amazed to learn of the l1 st minute trade be- tween the Brooklyn Robins and ie Cincinnati Reds. The Superbas sent Babe Herman, Ernie Lombardi and Wally Gilbert to Dan Howley's club for Jersey Joe Stripp, Tony Cuccinello and Clyde Sukeforth. The three Robins were holdouts and by getting them the Reds have continued their policy of building up. There is no doubt that the move will strengthen the Cincinnati nine which finished in the cellar in the National League last year. They secured Andy High a n d Oscar Roettger from St. Louis and bought Joe Cicero, slugging outfielder from Nashville. Easy Way Out. It appears that the trade was made in haste and was regard- ed by both club owners as an easy method of geting rid of recalcitrant ball players. I t may be that the magnates will have cause to repent their ac- tion at leisure. The deal has still left a gap in the Red Legs' infield and unless one of the two shortstops can be develop ed into a second sacker, Cue- cinello may be missed. All six of the men are good hit-I AOMISSIONS TO 6 0 TO STUDENT FUND Nine Bouts Carded on Feature Campus Boxing Exhibition of Present Season. One +f I b c c i a m t:'3 c1i( winter season is .on the boards for tonight when the semi- final bouts in the All-Campus Box- ing tournament will be run off in, the large gym of the Intramurall building, starting at 8 o'clock. Nine semi-final matches a r e carded, but the feature bout of the evening will be between Jack Slat- er and W. Kupfer for the heavy- weight championship of the cam- pus. Two exhibition matches, which will bring together stars of other I TONIGHT'S BOUTS Jack Slater vs. W. Kupfer, Heavyweight Championship of the Campus ........................................3 rounds Harvey Bauss vs. John Bollock, light-heavyweights..........3 rounds Gus Trometter vs. H. W. Felker, middleweights ..............3 rounds R. Summer vs. W. Kaiser, middleweights ...................3 rounds A. Kalonic vs. S. Bolner, welterweights ......................3 rounds E. Elliot vs. L. Shaw, welterweights .........................3 rounds Dave Golden vs. Bill Pocock, lightweights ...................3 rounds Carl Verberg vs. E. Wayland, lightweights ...................3 rounds r ,, i : : r .ecided), bamtamweight ...............3 rounds C. Glueck vs. NAidner or Guerl, flyweights ...................3 rounds Bob Custer vs. Harold Hirata, exhibition ....................3 rounds Howard Bressler vs. (undecided, exhibition .................3 rounds Sam Henessey of Detroit, Referee. All officials will, be A.A.U. representatives. SWORDSMEN ELECT' WINIG FORCAPTAIN. Next Three Meets for Varsity) yea ars, are also scheduled. ° kNvALrE &SPZCE -0 £176ER9S'rAR.. Walter Spence, star swimmer from Rutgers, who has been the high point scorer in the east this year. He is an Olympic possibility. FRATERNIT Y CAGE RACE NEARS CLOSE Play Advances to Quarter-Finals to End at Open House. Fraternity basketball goes into the quarter-final round this week for Class A. The scores for last Monday show Trigon first in points, with 21 to 12 for their opponents, Phi Alpha Delta. The Dekes won from Phi Mu Delta in three over- i time periods, resulting finally in an 11 to 9 score. The Phi Gamms won from Pi Kappa Alpha, 15 to 2, and Delta Sigma Phi beat Alpha Delta Phi, 17 to 16. The playoffs of the tie betwen Alpha Sigma Phi and Phi Lambda Kappa resulted in an 18 to 2 victory for Alpha Sigma Phi, last year's champion. Class A pairings for the quarter-' finals to be played off Thursday are as follows: Delta Kappa Epsilon vs. Trigon; Lambda Chi Alpha vs. Theta Chi; Phi Gamma Delta vs. Beta Theta Pi; Delta Sigma Phi vs. the winer of the Alpha Sigma Phi- Phi Alpha Kappa game. Class B goes into the semi-finals Saturday with Sigma Chi sched- uled to play Kappa Nu and Alpha Sigma Phi to meet Delta Upsilon. Independent games for Thursday match the Falcons with the Tops and the Wanderers with the Phys- ical Eds. RANGERS TO MEET! XI PSI PHI SQUAD Latter Seeks Third Puck Title in as Many Years. The final contest of the Al Cam- pus Hockey Tournament, between Xi Psi Phi and the Rangers, an in- dependent campus team, is to be played at 6:30 tonight at the Col- iseum. The Xi Psi Phi pucksters will be defending their twice-won laurels. Although the Xi Psi Phi sextet holds a slight edge over the Rang- ers, a close hard-fighting game is expected. The game will feature the smooth, fast-breaking offense of the Zips and the closely-knit de- fense of the Rangers. According to H.W.Copp, manager of the tournament, John Shurf, '35, playing for Xi Psi Phi, is the best stick-handler he has ever seen playing intercollegiate h o c k e y. Shurf is on the Frosh squad now, and big things are expected of him next year. John Jewel, '35, of the same team, is being groomed to re- place Captain Tompkins who grad- uates this year. ters and neither club gained or lpst batting power in the deal. How- ever, Herman is a very poor fielder and as the defensive strength of the Cincy outfield is low anyhow, they may be sorry. Dodgers Well Fixed. F The Dodgers could well af- ford to spare Herman, as Fred- erick, Boone, Hack Wilson, 0'- Doul and Cohen are all good gardeners. Stripp and Cuccin- ello fit into the inner defense well while Sukeforth will serve as a good relief man for Lopez. Lombardi is the biggest problem. The departure of J. Clyde Suke- forth leaves Howley's nine without' a capable receiver and, whether the big Italian, who has only one year of big league experience, can be turned into a first class maskman is problematical. Age Is Factor. The ages of the men will fig- ure greatly. Sukeforth, Herman and Gilbert are veterans, and the last two will join a squad already overcrowded with old . blood. Slater Favored. Fencers Are Cancelled to Slater looms as a slight favorite:2 to take the heavyweight crown dueEn 13Sao to his superior size and punching Jerome Winig, epee and star of power. Harvey Bauss, runner-up the fencing team, has been chosen to Jack Starwas for the light-heavy captain-elect for the coming sea- crown last year, has been estab son, Coach Johnstone announced. The curtailing of the last three lished as favorite to take the meas- meets of the fencing schedule made ure of John Bollock in the semi-fi- possible the early election. nals of that class tonight. I The tilt arranged with Michigan Gus Trometer, last year's middle- State for next Saturday has been weight champ, will get a severe abandoned, following an agreement test when he meets H3. W. Felker, between the respective fencing one of the most promising of the mentors. Coach Johnstone declared I freshman contingent. In the oth- ' that conflicting exam schedules at er semi-final bout of the middle- State made this necessary. The weight division two comparative choice of captain Winig will be fol- unknowns will battle it out for the lowed shortly by the publication of right to fight in the finals. the list of letter-winning swords- Kolonic Caroled.! men. Kolonic, last year's runner-up in Michigan's showing this year has the welterweight division, will meet not been uplifting, rather more Belner, while Elliot will meet Shaw d;sappointing, since the swordsmen in the two bouts scheduled for this were defeated too often for the class. good of the Maize and Blue mark. Golden is favored to defeat Po- Conference competition proved too cock in one lightweight bout, while much for the Wolverines this sea- Verberg seems to have a slight edge son, despite the star performances over Wayland in the other. Golden put. on at times by individual mem- was runner-up to Joe Woedard in bels of the squad. j this division last year. With Winig, who hails from Al- Bantams Not Filled. bany, as a fulcrum for building up The opponent for Dave Gallup, I a new Varsity for the next season, runner-up last year in the ban- j Michigan should, however, with the tamweight class, has not been de- further development of the fresh- cided upon as yet. The same sit- man material available, turn out a ustion exists in the flyweight class team of fencers that will fight its where either Widner or Guerl will way higher into the final standings meet Gus Glueck for a position in I of the Big Ten. next week's finals. Fencing seems to be pushing its By action of the Board in Con- way gradually into the interests of trol of Athletics the proceeds of an increasing group of students tonight's show will be turned over here, for the meets this year have to the depleted Student Loan Fund. been attended by more than usual General admission will be 25 cents. number of onlookers, DE SOTO MINIATURE FACTORY N E WS ARRIVES HERE TODAY bult Beforeoture ars built Before your Eyes n"I river DS) BEFORE YOU 4, La PETE DEPAo Noted Race Dr Will Ta WORLD'S MOST EXPENSIVE TOY ON DISPLAY AT OUR SHOWROOM W fOULD you like to see how a modern automobile is made, from start to finish? Here's your chance. 'T'oday, the most marvelous model of a factory ever built will arrive in town. And it works. It's the DeSoto factory.... going at top speed. You see how heavy frames are moved with- '-'Af b "IIQ Vn QAA 1n ' !1vA' i-IMV%11 ,I the wheels . . . the bodies. You see the men at work. Everything. Everyone invited. Peter DePaolo, world's champion race driver, will explain every operation and answer any question. This is the same $20,000 model that was the sensation of the NewYork and Chicago Auto Shows. Come and see it ... and bring the ."- A T 4