', MARCH 2, 1933 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ',MARCH 2, 1933 THE MICHIGAN DAILY mmwmvmw From the PRESS BOX By John Thomas Track Honor Roll Mile Relay Wins Football Crowds * * * MAJ. J. L. GRIFFITH, Big Ten Commissioner of Athletics, pub- lished his Collegiate Honor Roll for Track in the current Athletic Jour- nal and made several startling omis- sions. In the Ohio State-Michigan dual meet last spring, Lemen and Turner finished the half-mile in 1:55.1. These two men were not included in the select list for the 880 although times extending to 1:56.0 were used. The .meet itself was official as he picked Bennett's :09.6 100-yard dash mark out of it. He included only one man in the 800-meter race who ran in the time of 1:52.4. Ned Turner, in the Olympic finals, ran this race in 1:51.8. Here again,- other Olympic marks were used, but Griffith's list does not con- tain the name Turner. Brooks heaved the discus 158 feet 11 inches in the Michigan A. A. U. meet, but Griffith chose to select his mark of 153 feet 6 inches made in the National Collegiate meet instead. Capt. Ed Russell and Brooker Brooks are the only Michigan men on the list of 1932 track celebrities. Russell rated with a mark of :48.4 in the 440 of the Western Conference meet. , All in all, especially when Turner was an All-American track star for 1932, the list is not representative of the hest marks but of the number of schools. If Michigan had gained three more places, probably some of the other men from bush-league track schools could not have been Included, and the Athletic Journal must appeal to all to sell. MICHIGAN'S. mile relay team has only lost one first in the last three years. This record includes all com- petition, Drake and West Virginia relays, National Collegiate and Big Ten meets. Again this year, with Allen, De- Baker, Turner, and possibly Ellerby as the quartet, Michigan's prestige will not suffer. ** * COACH KIPKE has turned his thoughts back to football again. We asked him the other day if the team would play its home games on Ferry Field next fall because of the depression et, al. Quickly he pointed to the crowds that the Red Wings have been play- ing before in the Olympia this win- ter, to our own hockey crowds, to the successful attendance at home Ohio State basketball games, a examples of how crowds follow winning teams. Of course Michigan had a winning football team last year and still the attendance records fell into decline although the first two games were big drawing cards, more than previ- ous years. Wolverine Pucksters Will Meet Marquette Teams Will Be Well Matched In Iee Battle Wisconsin' Sextet Worksj Out In Preparation For Veterans' Contest Hockey as demonstrated by two :venly matched teams at late-season )erfection will be the treat in store or Ann Arbor devotees of the ice port at 8 p. m. tonight in the Var- ity Arena. Michigan's battle-scar- ed outfit will meet an equally ex- >erienced sextet from Marquette. It will be the first game of a series >f two, the second contest being cheduled for Saturday night, prob. bly after the basketball game. Thus )oth games will find the principals ested and ready to play at their ;est. Marquette Works Out Marquette's squad of ten puck- tersarrived yesterday evening, and vorked out on the Arena ice to get sed to the size of the expanse and co remove the kinks induced by the long journey from Wisconsin. A team which has played together for years will face Michigan tonight, as the Milwaukee aggregation is composed of veterans. On compara- tive performances, the team from the northwest has the edge, since they humbled Michigan Tech twice in as many contests, while the Wolves suc- ceeded only in halving the series. Wolves Formidable Michigan's aggregation this year is comprised of a formidable array of players, considered individually, but the team as a whole has gone through some off nights which have proved disastrous to the record so far. On the nights' when the Maize and Blue players click, it takes a real team to stop them. Reid and Crossman are outstand- ing teammates, yet in the game Fri- day they seemed incapable of pass- ing accurately. Yet Michigan came through on Saturday night to beat Minnesota for their first defeat in 11 starts. Jewell Uncertain Jewell has on and off nights which almost determine the outcome of the game held on each particular night. Gabler and Chapman are a fairly consistent duo, and their work is commendable on almost every occa- sion except for the fact that Gabler is not as outstanding in clearing the puck as Chapman. With these considerations, it is a precarious task to predict the out- come of any Michigan game, but win or lose, good hockey during at least one period of the game is invar- iably a feature of the contests Chicken Sandwich l Oc OPEN ALL NIGHT BALTIMORE DAIRY LUNCH Across from Angell Ia Ladies Invited Has 14 Points Gym Team Wins Wrestlers Depart F rom Turners Today For Wildcat In Close Meet And Chicago Meets Nine wrestlers and Coach Cliff Keen will depart at 10 a. m. this Lassila Scores Highest For morning for Chicago, where they will Wolverines- Meet Won meet the Northwestern and Chicago ti mat teams on Friday and Saturday By Final Rally nights. These two meets will close the dual season for the Michigan Flashing a closing rally against an grapplers, only the Conference and experienced Turnverein outfit, Mich- National Individual Championship igan's gymnastic team upset the De- events remaining. troiters last night 436.5 to 427. Al- Captain Blair Thomas is back in though the Turnverein team took the the fold and is slated to wrestle at first three of the five events, Michi- 135-pounds on Friday and at 145- gan came back to win the last two pounds Saturday. Saul Freedman, by an overwhelming margin and a who made a creditable showing victory in the meet. against Indiana last week will go An outstanding feature of the meet at 145-poundsdthe first night. was Lassila's work for the Wolver- Landrum at 118 ines. The apparatus artist did not The diminutive Jimmy Landrum is place first in any event, but by his slated to get the call at 118-pounds consistent point-winning he piled up on both occasions. Seymour Rubin an individual score of 219.5, which and Joe Oakley will share the work is over one-half the total of the at 126-pounds, with Oakley also Michigan score. For the Turnveriens, wrestling in the 135-pound class. Buerkle turned in the best perform- The other four positions are cer- ance with firsts in the horizontal tainties, Ed Wilson having the call bars, side horse, and parallel bars. at 165-pounds. Art Mosier, the team's leading point scorer going on at 155- In the flying rings event Parker of pounds, John Spoden, heavyweight, Michigan took first with 48 points, and Harvey Bauss, 175-pounds. while Ponto, with 49 points, cinched To End Year the tumbling act. The Michigan team These two meets will conclude the was composed of Lassila, Ponto, dual wrestling careers of Captain Parker, Sebald, Clay, and Ferar. Thomas, Wilson, and Bauss, all of Turnverein was represented by Buer- whom are to graduate in June. kle, Kruezer, Olzman, Katchmark, The Northwestern team, which Striebel, Pare, Schaltenbrand. will be met in Patton Gymnasium on In a gymnastic meet the compet- Friday, has suffered but one defeat ing teams take turns on the different to date, that at the hands of Illinois. pieces of apparatus and only the Captain Lowery, who will meet scores of the three highest men on Mosier at 155-pounds, is the out- each team are counted. standing man on the Wildcat team. Summary: Horizontal bars, Turn- I Other stars are Brown, Conference verein 98.5, Michigan 87, Buerkle (T) j title-holder at 175-pounds, Seifert, 51.5; side horse, Turnverein 91.5, 125-pounder, an d Spencer, 145- Michigan 85, Buerkle (T) 46; parallel pounds, who was runner-up in the bars, Turnverein 93.5, Michigan 81, 1932 championship meet. Buerkle (T) 47.5; flying rings, Michi- gan 89.5, Turnverein 80.5, Parker (M) 48; tumbling, Michigan 94, Turnver- FOR LADIES / ein 63, Ponto (M) 49. We are pleased to announce a spe M r.McDONALD of our shop wil 100 ENGRAVED CARDS 'I and children's haircutting. He wil and PLATE $2.25 and with the care a woman dema - Any Style - DAVIS & O HLNGER KeepWelGr 109-111 East Washington St. Phone 8132 Second Floor 14 615 East Liberty Street Art Mosier, veteran 155-pounder, ;s leading the wrestling team in scor- ing. He has registered victories in four of his five matches, totalling 14 ljoints. Basketball Championship Tourney Begins Today Pairings for the Fraternity "A" Basketball Championship Tourna- ment which will start today have been prepared and are as follows: Beta Theta Pi vs. Zeta Psi, Trigon vs. Chi Psi, Theta Chi vs. Alpha Omega, Alpha Delta Phi vs. Delta Kappa Epsilon, Sigma Nu vs. Phi Gamma Delta. 114 I L I ~eo k I Noma~ I, OUR SPRING MERCHANDISE IS HERE Everything the College Man wants for Spring and Sport wear and at prices reduced to fit the times. and Topcoats and Up .. +'... 3 3 i: aester . HEN smokers keep buyingthe ., same cigarette day after day... .": .." it's a pretty good sign that they're getting what they want... mildness, better taste -a smoke that's always the same. So we're going right on making Chesterfields just as we always have V. selecting choice, ripe tobaccos ageing them . .. blending and cross-blending them ."..making them into cigarettes in the most scientific ways that are known. 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