THlE MICHIGAN DAILY FROM THE PRESSBOX'I By JOHN THOMAS James Edwin Garner, Basketball Star Cappon Estimates Garner's Development Bennie Oosterbaan, Michigan's Greatest George Hag gerty's Dead' Shots Purdue's Johnny Woodin, Winner Last Year Sport Shots, Degener, Mitchell Harry Newman NOTHER BASKETBALL star of the first magnitude is flashing across Michigan's athletic horizon. And this same man was once farther from ng a college basketball player than any player who ever participated for chigan. His name, of course, is James Edwin Garner. The Niles, Michi- n pride and joy is said to be six foot 6 inches in height, or the tallest ,n in the Western Conference. His unusual height made him an excellent basketball prospect when entered as a freshman. But for three years he was laughed at, yelled at, de fun of, and generally discouraged in his attempts to iron out the kard movements. Towards the end of last year he replaced Daniels in the last few min- es of a few games. It was rare amusement for the crowd. His antics were ide and his attempts to score were Tracksters To Defend A. A. U. Title 1*? - - Michigan Is Host T o Formidable Array Of Stars Michigan State, Michigan Normal, Western State, Detroit City Entered Wolverine Swimmers To Meet Tod C> Blair Thomas Lost To Mat Team Before Hoosier Meet Natators Seek I'Pucksters Seek pitiful. And he had already practiced three years. His practicing would astound any- one. When most athletes worked three hours a day on a sport and considered it enough, Garner would work five, and sometimes six. Night after night and all afternoon Garner would work on his one-handed hook shot from in front of the basket and his two-handed hook shot from the side of the bas- ket - the shot <,S c:i t h at D an ny Daniels devel- oped last year. Before bas- ketball practice every day for the last three y years, Garner came down early and prac- ticed and prac- ticed. Hours and hours of DANIELS constant work on his beloved sport made him. From the awkward giant of former days, he has become Michigan's high scorer of 'the year. Although Eve- land, with his natural ability, can still lead the* big: center in sheer smoothness, he cat not compare with him in points made for Michigan this year. * * * COACH CAPPON stated recently '~that=Garner had improved more than any other basketball player he had ever known. Right now he is good enough to cause Bastian, Iowa's first-class 'center, to lose his head. In the Iowa game Garner held Bastian at bay throughout the encounter worrying his opponent to the extent of 13 points. He had Bastian all tangled up with himself and prac- tically worthless to the Iowa team. Garner, with four games left to play, will probably join the ranks of Michigan's immortal basketball play- ers. He already has 85 points and will undoubtedly raise this to over 100 before the Big Ten season closes. BENNIE OOSTERBAAN revolu- tionized basketball in the Con- ference. He was the first to use the one-handed tip-in follow up for scor- ing. Although opponents would tower over Bennie, he would outjump them and tip-in the ball for two-points. Illinois brought Froschauer here to do Bennie's job, and he did it well for about five cheap baskets-cheap in that there was little expenditure of effort involved. GEORGE HAGGERTY, in his jun- ior year, was right up in the run- ning for high-scoring honors with a quick floor shot from about 18 feet from the basket. He used to sweep in, receive the pass, and shoot all in one motion. He seemed, to be 'dead' from that distance. Garner has taken leaves out of Oosterbaan's, Haggerty's and Dan- iel's book in his game. Although few realized it, if he gets a shot from the end of the foul circle, it'll invariably be for two points. He too is 'dead' from this distance, al- though he gets few shots from there. He uses Dan- iels' two-handed OOSTERBAAN shot, over his head and back of him, under the basket. He uses Oosterbaan's follow up tip-ins and also Bennie's one- handed hook shot. Consequently he may join their ranks by scoring 100 points during the season. In Oosterbaan's big year, he made 129 points, Michigan's highest as far as we can determine. In making this EN AVANT *Vor loewad total he made 57 field goals, which is still the Conference record. LAST YEAR WOODIN, possibly the greatest basketball player of all time, made 154 points, but only 52 field goals. Daniels madeuabout 100 points and was below the 57 mark. In the Big Ten race this year, Johnson, and Reiff of Northwestern are ahead of Garner, but they have played in nine games while Garner only has eight. Consequently they only have three more games while Michigan's center has four. If he can make 45 points in those four games, which is very doubtful but possible, he can pass Oosterbaan and gain the distinction of making more points than any other Mich- igan basketball player in Big Ten competition. * * * SPORT SHOTS: In a special competition Var- sity wrestlers.of the University of Il- linois won all five "scyffkes" against Varsity boxers in rough-and-tumble fightng. Eastern publicity men are already booming Cliff Montgomery, Columbia quarterback, for next year's All- American team. Six games with Michigan college. teams and 11 or 12 with Conference nines are scheduled for the Wolve- rine baseball team during the com- ing season. Al Plummer, injured Michigan for- ward, was an All-Indiana cager in 'his high school days. His njury is the :ame as Jack Heston received in the Ohio State football game, a trans- verse fracture of the fibula, down -lose -to his ankle. The Daily's sport staff will play the business staff in the first game >f the newly-organized publications 'asketball league, Saturday after- aoon. Al Newman, sport staff writer le luxe, will cover the game in his April 1 style. * * * HARRY NEWMAN may turn sport writer. Unless he signs with some pro football team, he may decide upon this profession to gain a live- ihood, he intimated recently. Several pro teams have submitted terms but he has until June 1 to ;ign.Harry is smart and he is wait- ng until the last bid has been of- fered before he decides upon one eam over another. 1ITCHELL AND his 1-M heads have figured out a new publicity atunt for outstanding men in each ,ine of sport. In the new system blanks are filled out by the I-M de- partment and mailed to the winner's dome town newspaper with the story of the award. Included in the dope is an outline of the competition in the sport, the record of his high school athletic activities, and other information of value for a story. The new idea gives the students in the I-M sports a chance to get publicity in their home [two papers reg~arding their sports ac- Wolverines Favored Coach Hoyt Enters Full Team In Meet; Freshmen Also To Compete A galaxy of the state's outstanding track stars will gather at Yost Field House at 7:30 p. m. today to com- pete in the annual Michigan A.A.U. indoor track and field champion- ships. It will be the first home ap- pearance of what is potentially the best Michigan cinder team in years. Wolverine thinclads will be de- fending their title against a formid- able array of stars from Michigan State, Michigan State Normal, West- ern State Teachers and Detroit City College. Along with these team en- tries, several former college track- men will be competing. Coach Charley Hoyt has entered practically all of his Michigan track- sters in the meet. More than 35 Var- sity members will compete in one or more event. Coach Ken Doherty has also primed several of his freshmen for the meet. Battle in Middle Distance Particularly brilliant battles in the pole vault and the distance and mid- dle distance. events are expected. Chief among the vaulters entered are McKinley, Michigan Normal captain, Pottle, former Michigan field star, Balmer of Western State, Holcombe of State, and Humphrey of 1ichigan. In the distance runs such men as, Zepp of Normal, Swartz of Western State, and Howell of Michigan are entered. Arnold of Cadillac A. C., Turner of Michigan; Mullins of Western State; Kahler, Quinn, Cap- lis and Heshey, .all of .Normal; Pon- grace of State; and Wright of De- troit' are a few of the numerous bright lights who will vie in the mid- due distances from 600 to .1 000 me- ters. Willis Ward may be forced to jump as he has never jumpc4 before to an- nex the high jump title. A formidable foe in Glickert of Normal may push . him past the six- feet-six mark if advance dope may be relied upon. Michigan entries include Ward and Kemp in the dashes, Alden, De- Baker, Akerschoek at y and Ellerby in the 300 and 600-meters; Turner, Lemen and Braden in the 1,000-meters; Doc and Rod Howell, Childs, MManus and Wacker in the 1,500-meters; Eg- leston, Pantlind and Haefle in the hurdles; Ward, Mosio and Gafill in the high jump; Northrop, Humph- rey, Jennette and Lassila in the pole vault; Blumenfeld, Damm, Ford, and Ward in the shot put and Rea, Schell and Reynolds in the broad jump. Bunn in Pole Vault Outstanding freshmen include Sa- rakas in the 300-meters; Starr and Dick Ellerby in the 600; Goding in the 1,000; Randall in the 1,500; Hunt in the hurdles; Hunn in the pole vault, and Anderson in shot put. Michigan will probably receive the stiffest team competition from Mich- igan State and Michigan Normal. General admission for students and others is 40 cents. Capt. Blair Thomas will be idle when the Michigan wrestling team closes the home season, meeting In- diana, in Yost Field House, Saturday afternoon. The Wolverine leader has suffered his poorest season, losing all three of his bouts to date. In his first two years of competition for the Maize and Blue he was only beaten twice, once by Eddie Belshaw, of Indiana, National Champion in 1932, and by Hasmet of Illinois the year before. Thomas was stricken with infiu- enza before the opening meet, and was just out of the hospital when the examination period began. Im- mediately upon finishing the tests he rushed off with the team on their Eastern trip. Is Ranked High According to Coach Cliff Keene, Thomas is one of the country's best amateur wrestlers when he is right but inability to reach 135 pounds, his usual weight, coupled by the weak- ness left by his illness have made wrestling impossible until the Con- ference Chmapionships, practically a month away. The loss of Thomas, coupled with Bob Helliwell's ineligibility leaves Michigan in a somewhat crippled condition on the eve of their hardest dual meet of the year. The Hoosiers won the National title last year, and although they have lost Eddie Bel- shaw, their ace matman, by gradua- tion, can still have a formidable team. Mosier Recovered New Records, At 'Mural Pool Water Polo And Diving To Be Features Of First Dual Meet At Home Spectators who pay 25 cents to see the Wolvernie swimming team in ac- tion against Michigan State at 4:05 p. m. today in the Intramural Pool will receive the biggest quarter's worth ever given by a Michigan ath- letic team, Coach Matt Mann prom-1 ised yesterday.' Mann prophesied that the specta- tors would see a Conference record unofficially broken for each nickel that they donated to the swimming team's fund. After Capt. Johnny Schmieler pro- phesied yesterday that his team would crack several records he pro- ceeded to make good his statement by going out and clipping two sec- onds off the existing mark for the 440 free-style event. It is his aim to swim the distance under five min- utes in a meet during his last year of college competition and there is a feeling in the Wolverine camp that today may be Schmieler's day. Besides the eight regular events of the usual dual swimming meet there will be a' high-board diving exhibi- WILL ACCEPT 1 0 U'S Harry Tillotson, in charge of,; selling tickets for today's swim- ming meet, said yesterday that he would follow the system used at recent hockey games of accepting I 0 U's from students and faculty members who could furnish satis- factory identification. Revenge 0vc Gopher Sexi Michigan's Varsity hockey te, out for revenge. A month agc Wolverines i n v a d e d Minne stronghold in search of one vi out of two games, which would left them in the running for the ference championship. They tempted desperately to take the game, which went into an over the Gophers won, 2-1., The second game was easie the Northmen, and they tool tired Michiganders into camp Then Minnesota defeated Wisc three games, and Michigan too badgers in two contests. Thus or lose in the contests here F and Saturday night with Minn the Wolves are out of the runn But they can still revenge t selves on the Northmen, and t: what they will attempt tom night in the contest at the V Arena which is slated to stE 8 p.m. BLAIR THOMAS Fencing Team Meets U. Of D. Here Tonilht Fresh from a victory over the Mon- roe, Fencing Club last Friday, the Michigan fencing team will face the strong University of Detroit squad here in the Intramural Sports Build- ing at 7:30 p. m. today. A new problem is facing Coach John Johnstone as to the makeup of his starting lineup for this meet. Sellars, one of the Varsity foil men, has left the squad for some unknown reason, and as a result, Coach John- stone is finding some difficulty as to who will replace him. Foils Lose Seiars. The foils division hitherto had been the weakest part of the team, but this departure of Sellars has been a bad blow. Last week, Coach John- stone used Nahrgang, a former epee man, who showed up with some slight success, but not enough to satisfy. Aside from this fact,bthe rest of the starting team will be the same that had been used. Merriman, a sophomore, who replaced Nahrgang, a former Varsity epee man, has kept up the good work and will remain with the starters. Despite all discouraging factors and advance reports, the Michigan team hopes to stretch its string of victories to four. Little is known as to the relative strength of the Dc- troiters except that their team is con- sidered as one of the best in is the state. If they win this meet the Wolver- ines will have beaten one of the best teams in the state, and will rightly have cause to claim the champion- ship of Michigan, one of the goals they are pointing for. Those they have taken over so far this season are Michigan State, the Detroit Turnvercin Club, and the Monroe Coincident with the news of the loss of Captain Thomas comes the report that Art Mosier's knee is com- pletely healed. Mosier, brilliant 155- pounder, wrestled against Ohio State last week with a bad knee but won his match. Two other veteran grapplers will make their final appearance of the season in Saturday's meet. They are Ed Wilson, 165-pound leg scissors artist, and Harvey, Bauss, 175-pound wrestler. Little is known of the Indiana team. They have split two meets with Iowa State College. Bob:Jones, fullback on the football ;team, and heavyweight is the outstanding mem- ber of the squad, although co-cap- tains Goings and Hawkins are wrest- lers of no mean ability. Voliva, 175- pounder, is another of the Hoosiers' outstanding men. Briton Speeds 272 M.P.H.At tion and a water-polo game between the Varsity team and a group call- ing itself "The All-Stars.", The latter aggregation is made up of former Varsity swimmers and- members of this year's freshman team. It will give fans a chance to see in action Tex Robertson, a fresh- man swimmer whose versatility rivals that of Capt. Schmieler himself. Judging from Robertson's times turned in during practice this sea- son he will go a long way toward re- conciling Mann to the loss of Schmieler next year. The diving exhibition will serve to introduce four freshman divers to local fans. Fehsenfeld, Grady, Diefen- dorf, and Johnson all held state or national scholastic titles before com- ing to Michigan and are all fighting for a place with Degener on next year's Varsity. Mann's stars all reached the peak of condition for last week's meet with Northwestern and shall still be at that peak- for tomorrow's- assault on Big Ten and national records. Kid Chocolate, classy little Cuban scrapper, doesn't have a mark to show for his years in the ring. Sherf May Return John Sherf, stellar sophomore wh has been ineligible since the openin of the second semester, will take a' examination today which will deter mine his eligibility for the Gophe contests. His presence on the ic should be a material aid to Michiga inasmuch as he is in shape to pla: Emmy Reid, injured in Saturday game against Wisconsin, has recov ered sufficiently to play against Mir nesota tomorrow night, according t a statementhyesterday by Coach E Lowrey of the Varsity. Lineup Is Uncertain The fact that Sherf's return in ir definite makes it impossible to pre diet with accuracy the Wolverir lineup. If Sherf should return, it not known whether David or Gable would be benched as far as the star' ing lineup is. concerned. Munns, Russ, Zeiske, and Clause are a few of the Gophers that Mich gan will have to stop. Minnesot possesses a number of players wh are potential scorers, as evidence by the scormng column of the tw games a month ago. The Minneapol outfit will face a handicap in ti small size of the Michigan rink . comparison with the mammoth affa which is their home ice. Howeve the Maize and Blue will have to staE , a real comeback to avenge then selves, and that is what they are d termined to do. SHORTSTOP-CLOTHIER Jim Levy, Browns' shortstop, wor in the boys clothing department a St. Louis store during the wint months. 100 ENGRAVED CARDS and PLATE $2.25 - Any Style - DAVIS & OHLINGER 109-111 East WAshington St. Phone *132 Second Floor Daytona beach DAYTONA BEACT, Fla., Feb. 22.- (/)-England's dominance in- the realm of speed was sky-rocketed to new heights today by Sir Malcolm Campbell, who in two blistering runs over the hard-packed beach here to-; day, streaked to a new world auto- mobile speed mark of 272.108 miles an hour. The record was made over a measured mile route. He also established a new record of 271.636 miles an hour over one kilometer on the same trials. Driving a long, streamlined Blue- bird car, equipped with a 2,500- horsepower airplane motor, the 48- year-old Campbell clipped .94 second off his own previous record of 253.968 for the mile and increased the mark by 18.140 miles an hour. Among the new automobile race drivers who are expected to make a determined bid for honors this year are Lester Spangler and Kelly Petillo rM Reorganization Sale Continues BOWLING WINNERS LISTED tivities at Michigan. In the Inter-fraternity bowling SPEAKER GOES WEST tournament the following results KANSAS CITY, Feb. 22.-(P)-Tris have already been determined: Speaker, former major league base- I Theta Chi, 2,187-Theta Xi 2,007. ball star, left recently by plane for D. K. E. 2,276-Chi Psi 2,165. Hollywood to confer with Joe E. Phi Beta Pi 2,153-A. T. 0. 1962. Brown, film comedian, on plans for Chi Phi 2,296--A. K. L. 2,148. the purchase of the Kansas City club Phi Gamma Delta 1,826 on default of the American association. from Tau Delta Phi. 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