V 4, 1934 THE MICIHIGAN DAILY . .. -a PLAY & BY-PLAY -By AL N EWMAN4 Decrepitude . . . * * * N0 W I can feel that old age is ad- vancing and the mists and fogs of decrepitude are slowly but surely enveloping me as these kindly old eyes become dimmed with age and I can no longer enjoy the sport of a youth that was wild and reckless. Yes, I am afraid that I am becoming older. You, by this time, are wondering just what has given rise to this, and you shall hear the whole sad story. Long ago it was my delight of a snowy- winters' day to make a pil- grimage to the nearest high hill and coast on a sled in company with other urchins swathed in clothing that was, fortunately, thick and soft enough for the eventuality of collis- ion and accident as well as suffi- ciently warm to withstand the rig- orous of the weather. It always seem-, ed to me that there was never a hill high enough nor a slope steep enough to satisfy the juvenile appetite. Only last week there was a wonder- ful snowstorm and I, eager to re- capture the delights of the old, be- took myself to - well, just a slight hill, to be perfectly honest about it. I had a sled with rusty runners. You could hardly call it a racing job, if you get what I mean. In fact, it was probably the slowest sled that par- ticular hill had seen in many a long year and I could almost feel the sneers of the youngsters clustered about the crown of the rise waiting their turn to go. The track was perfectly straight and very icy . . .one of the easiest coasting hills I had ever seen. Never- theless, there were a few ruts in the surface and with a great deal of sup- plication to the deities which govern that particular sport, I shoved off. I enjoyed it for the first five feet. After that, it was just simply a case of picking the softest spot in which to break the fewest bones possible. The wind sang as it passed my ears, and telephone poles, at least three of them, whizzed by with something ap- proximating the speed of light al- though I can give you no accurate estimate. I came to the full realization of the fact that sleds, unlike auto- mobiles, are n o t equipped with brakes and the only thing to do is steer. To be perfectly honest with you that particular sled was not an invention of the field. It would have taxed the ingenuity of several fiends to hit upon anything like it. It didn't steer worth a cent and I am not re- ferring to a pre-inflation cent either. Bernard Stars In East-West Football Battle Chuck Bernard and Herm Ever- hardus are now on their way back from San Francisco after participat- ing for the Eastern all-star team in the annual East-West football bat- tle on New Year's Day. Reports of the game show that Bernard played one of the best games at roving center ever seen on the west coast according to the state- ments of several of the prominent coaches and football authorities who witnessed the game. Everhardus also turned in an excellent performance at half-back for the Eastern team. The Western team won the game, 12 to 0, before a crowd of fifty thou- sand fans. The game was played on a wet field and under bad weather conditions. Columbia-Stanford The Columbia Lions proved to be good sea lions Monday in their battle with the Stanford football team in the annual Tournament of Roses classic, and as a result they earned a surprising and clear-cut 7 to 0 victory. No gamer, more determined bunch of football players ever appeared in the Rose Bowl than this furious crew Coach Lou Little loosed on the un- suspecting Indians. Twice turned back from the Cardinal Goal line in the first period, they kept plugging until Al Barabas, left halfback, raced across the line for a touchdown. Six different times during the con- test, twice in the first half and four times in the second, the Big Red team crashed and drove its way to the shadow of the Columbia goal, and each time Columbia staved off those threats. In the matter of statistics Stan- ford possesses the consolation of far outpointing their rival. They com- piled 1 first downs to six for Colum- bia and gained some 272 yards from scrimmage to 114. Likewise, the Car- dinals had 6 scoring chances to three for the Lions but unfortunately these figures are not recorded on the scoreboard. So the only thing to do was to steer the unsteerable and the Philosophy department will tell you after some deliberation that that is quite im- possible. So I just gave her her head and hoped that somehow she would find her own way down the hill. And she did. Grindingly she came to a safe stop at the bottom and I betook my- self and sled back to a nice safe place by the fire, realizing that neither of us are what we once were in the far-away days when we were young and none of the paint was worn off. Big Ten Teams! On Michigan' s 1934 Ice Card Minnesota, Wisconsin To Meet Wolverine Sextet In Six-Game Series Michigan's hockey sextet, facing a schedule of foreign invasions be- fore final examinations in February, enjoyed a snappy workout last night after the holiday let-up. No games are on the books for this week, but Coach Eddie Lowrey expects to con- tract either the Chatham A.C.'s or London (Ont.) city team for a game next Tuesday night. White Stars Booked It has been definitely settled, Low- rey stated last night, that the Wol- verines will battle the White Star team of Dearborn in the Varsity Arena immediately after the team returns from the trip to Minnesota. The Whitel Stars have been going big guns this season in the Michi- gan-Ontario amateur league and. along with the game next week, will provide Maize and Blue fans with a pair of thrilling encounters before mid-years. The remainder of the winter's hockey has not yet been completed by Coach Lowrey, but the following dates and teams have been con- tracted for thus far : Jan. 12.-M i c h i g a n Tech at Houghton. Jan. 13.--M i c h i g an Tech at Houghton. l Wolverines Capture Four Titles In Big Ten 1933 Competition By ART CARSTENS Michigan athletic teams won four Big Ten titles during the 1933 sea-l son in the same events in which they captured crowns in 1932. The events were football, swim- ming, outdoor track and golf. In ad- dition the football team was gener- ally conceded the national champ- ionship, having won the title for the second successive year under the Dickinson rating system. The swim- ming team also made a bid for the national crown but was nosed out by the Northwestern team which they had defeated in two dual meets and the Big Ten competition. Tracksters Surprise The track team supplied the sur- prise of the season when a supposed- ly mediocre team came to a great height during the Big Ten outdoor meet to gather the amazing total of 60 points behind the stellar all- around performance of Willis Ward, who alone contributed 18 points. Besides the Big Ten title the Wol- verine tracksters captured the West Virginia relays, the State A. A. U. indoor meet, a triangular meet with Ohio State and Illinois, and finished second in the Conference indoor competition. The swimming team kept up its winning ways, annexing for the sixth time a crown that they captured in 1927, 1928, 1929, 1931, and 1932. Ward Individual Star Willis Ward was undoubtedly the brightest individual star of the year. His performance in winning the 100- yard dash and high jump in the Con- ference meet, besides taking seconds in the high hurdles and broad jump stamp him as the greatest all- around track man Michigan has ever produced. His work at end on the football team, while not as flashy as Petoskey's, was consistently good, and critics are picking him to be one of the team's best prospects for All- American next season. Figures show that Michigan com- peted in 97 dual events, won 71 and lost 24, for a winning percentage of .747. Tennis was the only sport in which the Wolverine teams failed to get an even break or better. The 1933 record follows: W L Golf............... 7 0 Fencing ............ 6 0 Swimming ..........4 0 Track .............4 0 Football............7 0 Baseball ...........13 3 Hockey ............11 4 Basketball ..........10 7 Wrestling .......... 4 3 Tennis .............5 7 T 0f 0f 0 0 1 0f 1 0 0 0f Pct. 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .813 .733 .588 .571 .417 Swimmers To Meet In Handicap Races Michigan's 1934 swimming squad will be on parade for the first time this year on Friday night, January 12, when the Open Handicap meet will be held at the Intramural pool. The meet will be open to everyone interested in participating in the various swimming events including the Wolverine Varsity, freshmen, and those who are ineligible for the Var- sity. It is also expected that some of the Michigan coaches will take part in the meet. The entire swimming squad was sent through a long workout by Coach Matt Mann yesterday after- noon. The policy of strenuous prac- tice sessions will continue until after the Handicap meet. Jan. polis. Jan. polis. Feb. bor. Feb. bor. Feb. bor. Feb. bor. Marc Arbor. Marc Arbor. 18. - Minnesota at Minnea- 19. --Minnesota at Minnea- 16. - Wisconsin at Ann Ar- 17. --Wisconsin at Ann Ar- 23. - Minnesota at Ann Ar- 24. - Minnesota at Ann Ar- h 2. - Michigan Tech at Ann IIq ih 3. - Michigan" Tech at Ann rives Slim Margin Purvis Conference Honors Over Ward JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE DARK SUITS-ALL OVERCOATS TOPCOATS - SHOES -LINED GLOVES - WOOL SCARFS SHIRTS Compare quality - then price SINCE 148.. STATE STREET (By Associated Press) Beating Willis Ward of Michigan by the slender margin of two votes, Duane Purvis, Purdue's mighty man of football and the javelin was named the outstanding athlete for 1933 by conference coaches and sports writers. In the final count of the fifty-five votes cast in the Associated Press poll, Purvis received seventeen votes to fifteen for "Michigan's one-man track team," Ward. A total of eigh- -- teen of the Conference's outstanding athletes, representing every school in the Big Ten, were named. Third place in the balloting went to Ted Petoskey, Michigan's basket- ball captain and three-sport star, with five votes. Dutch Fehring, Pur- due's three-sport ace, and Joe Laws of Purdue ranked fourth and fifth with three and two votes respectively. Two other Wolverines were named, Dick Degener and Herm Everhardus each receiving one vote. Purvis, a junior, was the outstand- ing member of a brilliant Purdue backfield, and culminated a brilliant season by being named a practically unanimous choice on the various All- American teams. Purvis also won the Big Tenrjav- elin championship with a record heave and then went on to win the national collegiate, missing a new record in the meet by inches. _ ___ ail Suits O'Coats Before You Whip Out Your Checkbook, Write This Down as a Certainty . . . Corbett's Have the Suits and the prices! It's generally known all over Ann Arbor that Corbett's is the clothing department to walk into for a January suit or O'Coat. $21.95 -- $26.95 $29.95 Michaels Stern Suits, O'Coats reduced for the month of January Formerly Priced to $37.50 $2000 $2400 $3000 Single or Double Breasted Models |" ,W Iv, U