THE MICHIGAN DAILY r From the PRESS BOX By John Thomas Hoosier Wrestlers Before The Start Sisler And Joe E. Brown * * * "DEAR JOHN THOMAS: "Open tennis tournaments may be all right, but it seems un- just to our boys who turn out for wrestling to make them engage in open meets like the one with Indiana last Saturday. From the stands those Tnlinn ia z lnl~,ili. rlriw- PA - Wolves To Meet Illini, Buckeyes In Run Saturday Triangular Race Figured A T Ill os ; iiois Is Strong In Shot Put Is -Last Competitioni Keller, Olympic Hurdler, Will Run For Ohio; Seen As Winner With the Conference meet looming less than two weeks away, Michigan tracksters are entering into a final splurge of intense drill. The imme- diate obstacle to be overcome is the Illinois-Ohio State-Michigan triang- ular meet at Urbana Saturday. The make-up of the squad which will represent the Wolverines in the coming meet has not been definitely decided as yet, but in all probabili- ties it will be almost identical to the one that made the Chicago trip. Tom Ellerby, quarter-miler, who has been suffering from a knee injury lately, may not be in condition by that time. To Run Today This afternoon five of the half- milers will compete for a position on the squad. Braden, Bazely, Freeze, Rod Howell, and McManus will run, and if the time is good enough one of them will be chosen. Braden ap- pears to have the edge. The impending meet with the Illini and Buckeyes is significant in that the three teams entered, along with Indiana, are the outstanding con- tenders for Big Ten honors. The re- sults of the meet will quite clearly indicate the favorite for the follow- ing Saturday. Result Toss-Up On Injured List Michigan Swim Team To Meet Wildcats Here BASKETBALL STATISTICS Freshmen Wi Get Track Te Wolverines Stand Out Favorites To Repeat Another Vicorv Long Michigan T. Eveland......(3 Petrie ........5 Garnuer .......1 Oliver ........4 Petoskey ......1 Fishimian......2 'Allen ........0 Shots M. 1 2 0 0 0 0 0 Short Shots Free Thows T. 2 1 14 2 4 0 0 1'. 1 0 1 0 1 0 0 T. 4 2 8 0 0 As In M 1. 3 2 1 .3 0 0 Fonls 0 0 0 4 Assists 1 2 0 0 0 0 '. 1 0 1 2 0 0 M in Trianorle]1 0 Ii 0 )oherty Expects Di Oj i 0 Eveiis To Score A 0 1Rinois Andi tbhic Followupsl E Michigan swimmers yescrday be- Wright....... 0 gan intensive preparation for the McMillan .,... 1 meet with Northwestern here Friday Norman......1 night, 1Robinson . . 7 ~Licht ........17 It will be a battle Dbtwcen con- Sovhacki......2 tenders for the Conference title since Farrell....... 3 0 1 0{ 0 0 1 1 3 6 0 2l 0 0 2 1 0 1 0 0 1. 1 3 1 0 0 0 1 3 0 0 2 3 4 1 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 COE 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 olege it of have en en ss- in 01 tneir general know run of prc :ichigan's w how do yoi ving against n 90 per cent d against the ssionals. We stlers aren't explain their ldian a?" Lady Jane FISHER has issued the call for baseball players, the batterymen who have several weeks already. This des infielders and outfield- .ave not won a Varsity let- sport. Letter winners will [U/\YM~oND '> ~ LT F-_N HOF Associated Press Photo Ray Altenhof, one of Michigan's stellar guards, is the latest addition to, the injured list. Altenhof injured a rib in the Purdue game and is not expected to be in the lineup for a while. Indoor Trac leaches, Grand Climax Saturday NEW YORK, Feb. 27.-(A")-The intercollegiates, the track and field meet which usually manages to pack as many thrills into 12 events as the other meets of the indoor season pro- vide in all their long programs com- bined, brings the 1933 winter cam- paign up to its grand climax next Saturday. The original entry sheet for the twelfth annual indoor meet of the intercollegiate association of ama- teur athletes of America listed 523 runners, jumpers and weight men from 27 colleges. Of these some 300, the pick of the lot, will compete. the Wolverines and Wildcats are con- ceded the inner track in the race forx Big Ten honors. The Wolves have the upper hand at present due to their impressive 46 to 29 win over Northwestern three weeks ago, but Coach Matt Mann fears that the Wildcats, hungry forI revenge, will take his swimmers into camp in their return engagement. Wildcats Pointed Reports coming out of Evanston indicate that the Wildcats have been making a great come-back since the drubbing that Schmielcr and his men' gave them. Witnesses of the last meet said that the loss of Kerber, star back- stroker, on the eve of the meet had demoralized the Wildcats, which might account for the crushing de- feat that Mann's swimmers admin- istered to a supposedly strong team. Wolves Break Marks Just what the Wildcats are going to have to do to take the Wolverines has been demonstrated in the past week when the Schrnieler men, fin- ally reached top form, cracked aI half-dozen existing Conference rec- ords either in exhibitions or during3 practice. Schmieler said yesterday that thej Wildcats would have to do a little record breaking of their own if they were to take firsts in the 220, 440, backstroke, breaststroke, and the re- lays. The diving is virtually in the bag, but the same can be said of no other event. f- LAFAYETTE, Ind., Feb. 27.-Maj. John L. Griflith, president of the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Association and Big Ten athletic commissioner, will be the principal speaker at the banquet on Friday night, March 24,1 that will provide one of the features at the second annual Football Clinic 'at Purdue University, it was an- nounced today by Coach Noble Kizer. Griflith's appearance on the pro-I gram will provide an added attrac-j tion to the continuance of a meeting that met with the instantaneous and enthusiastic approval of high school and college football coaches in Indi- and neighboring states when inaugu- rated by Kizer last year. The two-day clinic, which is e«- I pected to attract approximately 300 coaches, will be devoted to "practi- cal" football, with outstanding men- tors of the middle west assisting the members of the Purdue gridiron staff in conducting the demonstrations and addresses that will comprise the two-day program on Friday and Sat- urday, March 24-25. All phases of the grid game will be touched upon in the program, and every effort will be made to provide ample time for individualized in-1 struction and round table discussions in which the particular problems of attending coaches can be covered. _________________-BOX S GriI To Michigan Eveland,rf...... Petrie,lf. ,SpeakAt Purdu GAnerc . Allen, ......... Football Clin ieOliver, g...... Petoskey, ..... . I ITotals ... .. . Minnesota Wright, rf .... McMillan, if .. Norman, c .... Farrell, c..... Licht, rg..... Robinson, lg, if Sochacki, Ig ... Totals ...... 2 F 3 0 2 0 2 1 2 1 0 0 0 o 1 0 0 0 0 1 3 2 6 u 5 F.G. F.T. P. 0 0 2 1 0 3 2 1 4 0 0 2 2 0 3 1 3 -1 1 0 0 7 4 13 e Sisler once answered one Three more nearly equal teams, calls, as has Jablanowski judging from advance dope, could ny, many others, who have hardly be gotten together, and Michi- long way in baseball since gan goes into the meet with the re- st practice. sult a toss-up. NoneI of the three r six big league teams were teams have met this seasonasyet. for Sisler before he finished Illinois and Ohio State have both i er here. Joe E. Brown, base- met Indiana and both been defeated, mnate and movie star, told us almost by identical scores. The Illini how he once played against bowed to the Hoosiers last Saturday hile the latter was in school 58 to 46, and the Buckeyesmet a similar fate earlier in the season by rown was playing with an a 61 to 43 score. Michigan's only Toledo team at the time, Conference meet, to date, was with ted against the Wolverines in Chicago, whom the Wolverines beat y-season game. Because of 68 to 27. T. 7 4 4 0 1 0 21 T. 0 2 5 0 4 5 18 Tem R y T (1 The University of Michigan billiard team will begin competition for the intercollegiate billiard championship with a match Wednesday, March 1, at 8:30 p. m. in the billiard room of the Union, it was announced yester- day. Last year Michigan's lliardteam under the direction of "Dad" W liamson, Union billard instructor, won the national championship. All I racitcing is done in the billiard room of the Union. niver ily Boxcr,; Train For Silver Shield Meet Led by Carl Burgtorf, of the wel- terweights, the University will be rep- resented by at least 10 box'ers in the Silver Shield amateur tourney to be held in the local Armory March 8-9, according to Verne Larsen, who is coaching the Ann Arbor entries. Burgtorf will probably meet Joe Bommer, Golden Gloves novice wel- terweight champ, in what is expected to be the feature bout of the tourney. flfl. a,;471, aStI VA S ..l t .,LIL With a squad, similar in strengt lo last year's and evidently well ba lam cod, the freshman tracksters w complete a three-way telegraph met withi Illinois and Ohio State th( F'i Id House Saturday afternooi Although the finals of the me will not be announced until Saturda Coach Ken Doherty is running o several events eauh day this week. A. the ability of the yearlings still r( mains an unknown quantity, t mieet will serve as a help to ti coaches and may uncover some ou tanding mmaterial for next year Varsity. Coach Doherty stated yesterdo that he held no great hopes of Mich gan winning the meet but that h strongest p o i n t - winners probab would be in the pole vault and t] middle distance and distance event Although the coach would make r p redictions for the shorter distance it is known that Ohio State will o fer struog competition in the eveni s. Yesterday the time for the mi run wvas taken and very creditab performnances were turned in by Go mnaai and Randall. The 60-yard da: and pole vault are scheduled for tl- afternoon and the middle distanc will follow on successive days, as w also the other field events. FRAT SHOOT TONIGHT The Frternity Foul Shooting Co: test will be -held in the Intramur Building between 7 and 9 p. m, t- evening. The meet is open to all fr ternity men. T1AKE NOTICE ! THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL Oine 8x10 Opal Portrait for 75c Offer Expires Sat., March 4 SAPPLICATION PHOTOS Single Wceght . . . $1.50 doz. j)ouble Weight ... $1.75 doz. or 3 for $1.00 Rembrandt Studio 121 East Liberty (Formerly of Mack & Co.) B 4r ly :l Women Should Like Ice Hockey As Well As They Do Football' ne connection, he rooted for iize and Blue against North- n, and again against Ohio So the moral is, go out for base- ball, play against a to-be movie star, and become known to later would- be sport writers on that basis. We wonder what Sisler would think if he knew that his name was included in. Michigan's immortals. * * * HARLEY McNEIL and Sol Hudson are working out in the Yost Field House in preparation for their trips south with professional baseball clubs. Hudson arrived in town yesterday and will work hard all week before he leaves for Tulsa next Monday. The Tulsa team will give him every, chance to make good as their regu- lar first-baseman of last year was taken by the Pittsburgh Pirates. McNeil will tryout with the Boston Red Sox. He will leave today. For the past month he has been running. around the track, working on the weights and getting his arm in shape. The Red Sox are going to sign up two recruits before the season starts to replenish their depleted staff of hurlers. The21-year-old Michigan pitcher of last year, although he probablyi has not as much stuff as may be needed, showed enough improvement last year alone, to make him stand out on the Ft. Worth team. If he shows as much improvement this, season as he did last, he may make the grade. As a sophomore he was not allowed to work a single game for Coach Fisher's team and only did relief work in two in his Junior year. But last year he came through. Coach Fisher, at the end of the season, had only praise for the one, who in his previous years, could hardly get a grunt out of him. Every year, former Michigan base- ball stars who turn professional, come back to Ann Arbor for their pre-season workouts under Ray Fisher. He gives them a considerable amount of time and patience. His own major league record speaks for itself and consequently the men will work hard under him. Incideintally' major league scouts take Fisher's judgment of a player, to be the best estimation possible on the man in question. At EN AVANT 1 Jrwera P A0 AA Illinois Dangerous Pole vaulting and shot putting, seem to be the Illinois forte. In the Notre Dame meet recently Cook put the shot 47 feet 5 inches to a new Illinois record. In the same meet Seeley won the pole vault, crossing the bar at 13 feet 6 inches. Ohio State's strength is in the dashes and hurdle events. In the In- diana meet Don Bennett tied the American record with a time of :06.2 for the 60-yard dash. Jack Keller, Buckeye Olympic hurdler, loped the 70-yard low hurdles in the present- able time of :077. Pantlind and Kemp will have to go some to keep them in sight. Woolsey Leading Miler Illinois appears to have the mile run cinched if Woolsey turns in any- where near his normal time. His lat- est accomplishment was a 4:17 mile in the Iniana meet. Incidentally he is conference cross-country cham- pion. "Doe" Howell and Childs of the Wolverines will run against Woolsey. Willis Ward is the outstanding man in the high jump. The lanky sophomore, rated the best high- jumper in the country, will probably not open up but will save his strength for the Big Ten meet. Osty is the Illinois representative in this event. His best jump this season is six feet one 'and one-half inches, some three inches short of Ward's best effort. Captain DeBaker and "Chit" Allen will be waging a battle among them- selves in the 440-yard run. DeBaker came in first in the Chicago meet, and Allen evened matters up in the A. A. U. meet by copping the event. By MARJORIE WESTERN Football, from the spectators' point of view, has some times been called "a women's game." Whether she knows anything of the technique of the sport,.it is the accepted thing that the co-ed should go and cheer, wildly for her college team. Hockey as a University sport is just coming into its heritage in the middle west. Though popular for some years in the east, it has never received the attention given the ma- jor sports at Michigan, and until very recently has received no pub- licity. It is probably due to this that the audiences at local hockey games are made up principally of men. Women on the campus know little about the game and display less interest. Strangely enough, the elements supposed to interest women in sport are common to both football and hockey. Color, supplied by the huge cheer- ing throngs in the stadium, is con- tributed by the smaller, but more en- thusiastic crowds which pack the arena. Speed and skill are more truly in- herent qualities of hockey than of the box-office record-holder. Puck} carrying and passing supply con- tinual fast action, and the thrill of a speedily executed scoring thrust is not to be outdone by the rare runs which even the fastest backs can get free for on the gridiron. The chances for individual star- ring, talways interesting to women spectators, who invariably pick fa- vorites in all their sports) are greater on the ice than the football field. Each man is stationed so that some phase of the action depends almost entirely on him, and stellar perform- ances are turned in every game by+ at least three players. Since hockey is, according to all indications spreading in popularity, and combines so many features of widely-publicized sports, women are losing out by not taking a more ac- tive interest in the game. Smoking at the games and the na- tural invigorating air, which, by the way is not too chilly, gives another basis for comparison with football. Of course we should not tell about the couple next to us in the first game we ever saw. But they were very happy, wrapped up in their robe, and kept cheering no matter what happened. Bascball Aspirants Get First Call From Fisher First call for prospective baseball + players has been issued by Varsity Coach Ray Fisher. All men who have not yet made a letter in the sport, and sophomores interested in trying out for the diamond squad, are to meet with Fisher Wednesday at 2:30 p. m, in the Field House. The call for the letter men will bring them out for the first time March 15, after which the intensive # practice for the season will get under way. 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