MER14,1933 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Day Off1 Drill Today For Crucial Gan Regeczi Crashes Through Iowa's Line For 2 Yards Phi Kappa Psi Is X-Country Vict Phi Kappa Psi won the ann fraternity cross country meet : terday, which was run over a two one-half mile course. Brelsford member of the winning team, an freshman in the University, sr tered the old fraternity two and 4 half mile record of 14:52, by bre ing the tape first in the good 1 of 13:53. Following is a list of the fratei squads in the order in which finished: Phi Kappa Psi, Brels (1), Ellerby (3), Fisher (4); T Xi, Simons (2), Thorn (6), Gerk neyer (9); Theta Chi, J. Witmer B. Witmer (8), Balmer (15); Kappa, Waslielewski (5), Trar tana (14), Gordon (16); Alpha K pa Lambda, Stow (10), Morris Cook (12). IT WAS A NICE EXHIBITION of football Saturday, not to men- tion about fifty snowball fights, the two miniature drum-majors, the po- lice, and the pre-game exhibition of snow clearing. Maybe you want to know who lost the game. It wasn't Iowa; it was the Board in Control of Athletics. Here was a perfectly good football game between the conference leader and a strong contender, and a paltry twenty-six thousand were in attend- ance. Why, with a set-up like that the Board should have been able to pay at least the first installment on next year's footballs. And here they are cheated out of a good gate by a series of snow- storms, hailstorms, rainstorms, and sleetstorms; it's enough to give the Board brainstorms. And then of course there were at least fifty thou- sand potential spectators who would have come to the game if they had felt that they could consume their liquor while the game was in prog- ress. But of course, nobody who wanted to drink came to the contest for fear of offending the Board. I still think that Mike's proposal about the hiring of a fleet of St. Ber- nard dogs complete with brandy-kegs as standard equipment would help in rescuing the boys way over there across the field on bronchitis slope and would do a great deal to increase gate receipts. Well, anyway, the sher- iff and his boys all dressed in blue would no doubt run into considerable difficulty if it ever came to the point of attaching the stadium and bring- ing it back to the office. T THESE football exhibitions, the stadium, like all Gaul, is divided into three parts . . . the, bond-hold- ers, the flask-holders and the hand- holders. If you extended the fifty yard line up into the stands with mathematical precision, you would find al the bond-holders seated right on it. You may know the bond-holder because he looks over the crowd with a crit- ical eye and scarcely ever looks at the game because he is so busy tell- ing a business associate or friend wife about the point-a-minute teams and how Germany Schultz once spoke to him (even if it were only to tell him to get out of the way) that he has no time to look at the game. Each bond-holder holds his bond tightly clutched in the left hand. The flask-holder is usually so happy about everything that he is oblivious to the fact that he is just one of those people who make the Board Members lie awake nights and worry about when the Federal au- thorities are going to padlock the stadium. You will find him in a va- riety of positions, largely in a wide variation from the vertical and some- times completely horizontal. There is not much to be said about the hand-holder. Members of this group are usually little blotches of blanket without form or void to be found. scattered throughout the length, height, and breadth of the stands. There is on record an in- stance of one game in which a mem- ber of this class emitted a feeble cheer, but it is still unverified and that was long ago.' There are also about five students (oh, frightfully Rah-Rah fellows) who actually yell for one of the finest teams Michigan ever had . . . FROSH GAME THURSDAY The annual grid contest between the freshman and Phys. Ed. squads planned to have been played this afternoon will be played Thursday afternoon on Ferry Field. The game will begin at 4p. m. --Associated Press Photo -Associated Press Photo Frank "Butch" Larson, one of the best ends in the Big Ten will be a serious threat to the Wolverines here Saturday. He can snare passes and get down under punts with alarming ability. WO0MEIN'S SPORTS ALL-STATE STARS Seven members of the Ann Arbor Hockey Club have been chosen on the first and second All-State hockey teams; three on the first, and four on the second squad. Ann Zauer, Jane Eaton, and Virginia Peasely are the stars, and Ann Zauer will cap- tain the squad. On second squad are Katharine Locke, Ruth Carstens, Jeannette Sauerborne, and Marie Hartwig represent the Ann Arbor delegation. Marie Hartwig will lead; the second eleven. These teams will play against the All-University teams Friday after- noon, in preparation for the Great Lakes Tournament, play-offs for which begin Saturday morning. GREAT LAKES TOURNEY Teams from all over this sectionof the Middle-West are entered in the Great Lakes competition. This tour- nament is the last elimination series before the national play-offs, sched- uled for the week-end of Thanksgiv- ing. Two teams will represent Chi- cago, two are entered from Cleveland, two from Wetomacheka, and two from Michigan. Trainer Roberts said definitely that Whitey Wistert will be ready to start Saturday. The giant tackle in- jured his neck while tackling Crayne last week and had to be removed from the game, but Roberts said the injury was not serious. Roberts also said that Carl Savage, veteran guard hurt in the Illinois game would be ready to starto against Northwest- ern in next week's game. What doc- tors thought first. was a fracture in his foot has turned out to be only a bad sprain, the fracture showing up on the X-ray plates being an old one that is entirely healed. Savage, himself, protests that he will be ready to go back to his old post against Minnesota, but Kipke will take no chances on using him prematurely. Members of the coaching staff also relaxed yesterday for the first time in weeks. Kipke went out duck hunting. The amateur nimrod wanted to go deer hunting this Fall but will have to be content with haunches sent down by kind friends. Meanwhile he's supply- ing the larder with fresh mallards. Cappy Cappon couldn't stay away from the field house but spent the afternoon playing checkers against all comers. Crayne is shown effectively stopping Michigan's advance before he was seriously hurt in the game Saturday. Everhardus is in the right background and Ward looks on from the extreme left. Gphers' opes For Title Grow As Game Nears Out in Minneapolis they're begin-+ ning to wonder who can stop the big Wolverine machine. That is, all but Bernie Bierman, the Gopher{ coach. And good reason he has for his optimism too. While Michigan was having a time defending her string of twenty vic- tories against the Hawkeyes, Minne- sota had a day of rest and a couple of scouters in Ann Arbor getting more dope on Michigan plays. There- fore Bierman has a pretty good idea of what the Wolverines have to offer, and also has some unused, unscouted plays to work on this week. The Gophers have an even chance to at least tie for the Conference title by whipping Michigan. If either Illi- nois or Iowa should trip Purdue in her remaining games, and Minnesota should take Michigan, there is no denying that the Gohpers would have the title in the bag. The Little Brown Jug enters the scene again this Saturday, but the fact of a win over the defending champions means more to the North- men than a paltry jug. The jug, how- ever, has been in Michigan's lock- box since 1929, when the Wolverines won 7 to 6. The threats of the powerful Min- nesota eleven are mainly Pug Lund, a sensational junior back, and, a sophomore passing threat, Alphonse, who has displaced Proffitt, a 1932 regular. Bierman is specializing in sophomores this year, with six on his first team, and he is having re- markable success so far. Upsets From Coast To Coast Provide Thrills For Fans The West coast was the scene of one of the biggest football upsets of last week end when Southern Cali- fornia's string of 28 games without defeat was ended by Stanford, 13 to 7. Oregon remained undefeated by winning over Oregon State 13 to 3, and needs only a victory over the Trojans to win the Pacific Coast Championship and the Rose Bowl bid. In the East, Pitt shattered Du- quesne's unbroken record with a 7 to 0 victory. Columbia's 14 to 7 win over Navy was something of a sur- prise. Ramblers Take It The Boilermakers of Purdue did the thing they're all doing by taking the Notre Dame Ramblers down the line to the tune of a 19 to 0 score. Illinois proved that her performance against Michigan was not just a flash in the pan by beating Northwestern 3 to 0 with a kick by Dave Cook. Defeat of both the leading Arkan- sas and second place Texas Long- horns by Rice and Baylor left the Southwest Conference race in con- fusion and retained for all seven members a slight chance at the title. Coining nearer home, the Michigan State Spartans came through with a moral victory in the form of a 0 to 0 tie with the highly-touted Carnegie Tech eleven. GOOD CLOT H ES DO THEIR PART, TOO THE MICHIGAN DAILY for AN OFFICIAL RECORD OF CAMPUS ACTIVITY I $4.25 MAILED mow "WH EN AFELL IE 4 NEEDS A FRIEND" a k 0 BASKETBALL Coach Ray Fisher has issued a call for all freshmen interested in freshman basketball to report to him tonight at 7:30 in Waterman Gymnasium, with their own equip- ment. U. Of M. In Return Meet With Hurons In X-Country The Michigan cross-country team will meet Michigan Normal in a re- turn race here Wednesday afternoon. 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