TiEMCII:GAN DAILY Formidable Defense To Canadian ' ean o---- Of Cincinnati To Get Amateur Golf Tourney 'New Ball Satisfactory. Says New UJS.G.A. Head ii Incoming Speech NEW YORK, Jan. 7.--(AP)-The 1933 National Amatear Golf cham- pionship was awarded the Kenwood Country Club at Cincinnati and the National Open at Glenview, Ill., as the United States Golf Association, at its annual meeting today, formally installed a new slate of officer,= headed by President Herbert Jaques of Boston. Tn his report for the implement and ball committee, President Jaques said the new ball, 1.68 inches in dia- meter and 1.62 ounces in weight continued to prove as satisfactory as it had since inauguration Jan. 1. 19J32 "The reaction is so entii'ely favor- albe," Jaques reported, "that in re- viewing the season's play of 1932 your committee feels its original pur, pose hay been fulfilled: to product a better and Pleasanter ball with which to play the game of golf." The membership summary shower that 56 clubs, presumably because of financial reasons, had withdrawn from the U. S. G. A. during the year, but the addition of 34 new clubs left a total of 1,138. In his address, incoming President Jaques paid tribute to retiring Pres- ident Ramsay and warned that "we are still sailing in troubled waters with many clubs in financial dis- tress." VARSITY BATTERYMEN All candidates for battery posi- tions on the Varsity baseball team are to get in touch with me as soon as possible. Practice will be held Monday afternoon at the Field. House. Ray Fisher, Coach. WOMEN SWIM DATE SET Women who wish to enter the 50 yard free style event in the open swimming meet may have their times taken for the last time Tuesday eve- ning. These recordings must be turned in at Barbour gym Wednes- day morning. BULGARIAN BOOTERS BOOTED A Bulgarian football team arriv- ing at Giurgia, Rumania, for a match with the Rumanians aroused the sus- picion of customs officials. A search revealed that the balls were filled with Bulgarian cigarets. The topnotchers among college vrestlers would win 90 per cent of heir matches if pitted against the eneral run of professionals, in the qpinion of Clifford Keen, wrestling coach at University of Michigan. Coach Keen believes that the av- rage whisker-pulling headlock artist' nows little of the ancient science of vrestling and would be helpless against a college boy, well coached n fundamentals. Wrestling as a college sport never !as been much commercialized, but he game has become self -sustainin it Illinois, Indiana, Iowa and other niddle-western colleges. It has be- come so popular among students at Michigan that 90 candidates are try- ing out for the varsity and freshman squads. Keen's explanation for the large public following of professional wrestling and the small crowds at amateur bouts is that "most people don't understand the game and would ather see a bunch of actors, pre- 'ending to half kill each other, than ,n honest test of skill." "These hippodrome affairs have a lisgusting and nauseating effect on t student of the wrestling game," ,oach Keen said Saturday, "because it is so apparent that professional bouts are all 'bunko' and a fraud on the public." Keen was a champion during his undergraduate days at Oklahoma A. & M. He was conference cham- Michigan Squash Team Beats U. Of Toledo Club Individual triumphs of five mem- bers of the Michigan Squash Team won a 5 to 2 decision over the Uni- versity Club of Toledo yesterday on the Intramural Building courts. The Michigan team is composed of students, faculty members, and alumni.'Individual game scores were as follows: Vick (M) 3, Scott (T) 0; Smith (M) 3, Hewlett (T) 1; Schreid- er (T) 1; Nelson (M) 3, Hobbs (T) 2; McIlroy (M) 3,Davis (T) 2; Urschel (T) 3, Schneider (M) 0; McNerny (T) 3, Boak (M) 2. TYPEWRITERS - PORTABLE New Seoon-Ha , Eebillt, Smi !Corona, Noiseless, Undewood, %yal, ERenigtor. 314 S. State St., Amn Arbor. pion in 1922, 1923 and 1924 and won the title in the 160-pound class at the first National Collegiate meet in 1924. He never was defeated, Professional wrestling, he has ob- served, is about 50 per cent head- locks or other holds which involve the same principle. Amateurs do not use these holds because they are no'; practcal if "the game is honest. The man who tries a headlock is placed at an immediate disadvantage. But the public likes the spectacular-- throwing them around. "Three-quarters of what a wrest- ler must learn toward securing a fall," Keen said, "is maneuvering an opponent into position after getting him on the mat. These maneuvers are not spectacular, and the casual observer can't appreciate what is be- ing done.. Most of the pros neglect to learn fundamentals and if sent against topnotch amateurs would lose 90 per cent of the bouts. There are some good ones among the pros, but most of them are merely actors. Of, course some of the skilled wrestlers put on shows even though they could really wrestle if they had to do it." The primary object of amateur wrestling is to win, said Coach Keen. "That's the fundamental difference between the college and the profes- sional game. If opponents are at all evenly matched and both are deter- mined to win, they must be conserva- tive. They must pave the way for position to get holds. But if the affair is all arranged no one needs to worry. So the pros are free to go right ahead and try anything. "When it's honest, there is no other sport which requires any more skill, OLIVER MAKES MARK Red Oliver, Texas Christian foot- ball star, in three years, caught three kick-offs and each time carried the ball at least eighty yards, two of these runs resulting in touchdowns. MEIJI CAGERS COMING Meiji University of Japan will meet Stanford University in a basketball game at Palo Alto, Calif., on Feb. 13. Topnotch Amateur Wrestlers Would Defeat Professionals, Says Coach Clifford Keen _ -- A REAL SUIT VALUE Oxford grey worsted in a fine twill weave of unusual weight and finish. The most durable and generally sat- isfactory fabric available. Single or double breasted $19.50 Equivalent values available Shoe Department. Scotch shown as low as $4.95. in our grains Li SNE ,4. S TAT E STR~EET a l' Sale Now On.... And Going Strong. V# J 8S 1- 1/ AM V -' I -I CONTINUING ALL THIS WEEK Announcemnent Extraordinary FR EF! A COMPLETE SET OF JAMES BRANCH CABELL WILL BE GIVEN AWAY FREE SATURDAY, JAN. 14 This set consists of 18 volumes, beautifully bound, limited and numbered, at publisher's price of $180. For every cash pie- chase of $1.00 or more you will receive a registered sales ticket upon which you will write your name and address to be dropped into a box reserved for this purpose. Drawing to be made at 3 P.M. Saturday, January 14th, under supervision of a disinterested person. Remember any purchase for cash of $1.00 or more during our sale of next week entitles you to a chance at this unusual FREE OFFER. YOU ARE CORDIALLY INVITED TO INSPECT THIS SALE. YOUR PATRONAGE SINCERELY APPRECIATED. THIS SALE ENDS SATURDAY, JAN*14 Your opportunity to procure the FIN- EST BOOKS, stationery, and supplies at Tremendous Savings. Every depart- ment in our two stores offers unmatched savings opportunities. - TWO 1CAMPTT ROOKRTOR1N -"R . -1K-®® 'I. ®- __ E