DAY, FEB. 16, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY )hio State Swimmers Open Michigan T PLAY & BY- PLAY By AL NEWMAN Tryouts Notice.. --- * * * " OW is the time for all good mer to come to the aid of the party." Join the sports staff and see the world. In fact know every detail of that section of the globe which de- scribes the straight line between the Publications building, Yost Field house, and all points south. See the world via shank's ponies, otherwise known as the dogs. The sports staff needs men, or so the women's staff has been telling us for' years. Qualifications? Two more brains than a professional wrestler. some ability to murder his majesty' English, and a pair of feet that will not wear, crack, warp, or blister. Tryouts should also have fairly good vision. If the vision is defective, apply at Yost Field house for a ref- eree's position. FOR the regular editorial staff, sub- tract one brain from the head and one blister from the feet. Tryouts should report this after- noon at four in the Publications building. For some time the editorial and sports staff tryouts will be to- gether during a short course of train- ing under the editorial staff. After this period, the sports staff will re- deem its own men and try to kick out of them most of the things they have learned during the training pe- riod If you come out for the sports staff, don't let those characters on the editorial staff swerve you from your purpose. YOUR grammar foundation should be fairly good, and you should have a sufficient appreciation of sport to pronounce the Ohio State football game as good football, and to enjoy the exhibition of basketball which the Purdues put on here Monday night despite the fact the Michigan team lost badly. Beyond this in the realm of sports you do not have to go. All else will come to you. You must be willing to work hard and reliability should be your keynote. Your marks should be as good as your feet are tough. Working on the sports staff is almost equally hard on marks and feet. Don't come out for the sports staff with either borderline marks or borderline feet. THERE is satisfaction in sports staff work, especially for those in- clined to creative writing. We offer you the thrill of, your first signed story, all in the due course of time, thn which thrill there is none great- er, so help me. We also offer you the opportunity of meeting Michigan's coaches who are really a group of fine fellows even though at times they are sorely tried and show dispo- sitions remotely similar to a Chow dog's. We offer you also the opportunity of assisting in recording the continu- ity of Michigan's great athletic tradi- tion, second to none in the country- the thrill of writing up another Mich- igan victory, the opportunity of really learning what "The Victors" means. "Go west, young man, go west," and stop at the Publications building. But don't forget for an instantthat you are letting yourself in for some work! Handball, Bowling Head I-M Program Independent team handball cham- pionships will get under way next week, probably Tuesday at the intra- mural courts. Entries are still coming in and it is expected that approxi- mately twenty teams will compete. The Hiiltoppers, with Al Hillburger and Friedman in the singles and Gidja and Redness in the doubles, won the event last year. They are favored over the Blue Raiders, last year's runners-up. FACULTY BOWLING.MEET A telegraphic bowling meet between faculty players of the University of Syracuse and the University of Mich- igan will be run off in the near fu- ture under the sponsorship of the in- tramural department. The local fac- ulty will bowl on the Union alleys. S. G. Waltz, L. K. James, C. 0. Wilser, Dr. Hainer, Dr. Kerlikowske, E. D. Mitchell, H. C. Carver, and others will make up the two five- mlan teams which will compete. Wolverines r e Hockey Six To Meet Wisconsin Puckmen Tonigi Buckeye Squad Swimming At Columbus Has Been Rejuvenated This Season Meet At 7:15 P. M. Ewell And Fela, Stars Of Ohio Lineup; Drysdale May Not Compete Fourteen Ohio State Varsity swim- mers invade Ann Arbor tonight to open the local Conference dual meet season. The tank sport has been rejuve- nated at Ohio State this season and :he Buckeyes appear to be preparing to make a serious bid for Conference honors within the next few years. rhey have secured the National In- ercollegiate and National A.A.U. meets for Columbus later in the year. Tonight's meet will begin at 7:15 harp to allow fans to attend the &Iichigan-Wisconsin hockey game at 3:30. Admission for students is 25 3ents, that for townspeople, 40 cents. Ewell and Fela are reported to be he class of the Buckeye natators Fela and his teammate, Volk, will 3ompete in the 150-yard backstroke, probably against Drysdale. The Wol- verine star may not be able to com- ?ete due to an incomplete which he hopes to have removed before to- night. Besides Drysdale, the Michigan team will be at full strength for the Conference opener, the last condition being removed yesterday. Ewell is the best free style distance man the Ohio school has produced in years and with his teammate Fig- ley hopes to take several points from Cristy and Osgood. Mann has definitely decided to use Kamienski, Renner, Blake, and Dal- rymple in the 400-yard relay against the Ohio aggregation composed of Fela, Faurot, Drennen and Burrell or Hagaman. Fela, who appears to be a one- man team in himself, will also swim on the 300-yard medley relay team, along with Colville and Burrell. Ewell, Figley in 220 Ewell and Figley will again team together in the 220-yard free-style event against Tex Robertson. The Ohio mentor has entered three men in the 200-yard breast stroke event. They are Colville, Green, and Harman. Burrell and Hagaman will be used in the century free style, while the Ohio State divers are Graham, Wal- ton, and Adams. Three men, Burrell, Hagaman, and Walton, will represent Ohio in the 50-yard free style. Mann will prob- ably use Renner in the short event and Dick Degener may also be en- tered. Dick is the fastest man on the squad at the short distance, but us- ually refrains from swimming it since it hurts his diving later in the eve- ning. He Will Dive Tonight Diminuitive Dick D e g e n e r will strike this characteristic pose more than once tonight at the Intramural swimming pool when the Buckeye na- tators attempt to wrest a dual meet from the hb ig h 1y-favored Michigan tankmen. Degener is a diver of na- tional repute. Thinelads Will Meet Buckeyes In First Meet Michigan will open its Big Ten track campaign here Saturday night when it meets Ohio State in Yost Field House. The meet will start at 7:30, and is expected to be over by 8:45, in plenty of time to permit fans to see the Michigan-Wisconsin hockey match. One of the interesting events will be the mile relay, a race in which Michigan defeated the Buckeyes here a few weeks ago but one in which Ohio State has come up considerably since that time. Indications are that the race will be run in 3 minutes, 24 seconds or less. Wolverine stars who will compete are Ward, in the dash, hurdles and high jump;, Kemp and Lamb, dash; Hunt, hurdles and high jump; Capt. Tom Ellerby, Lemen and Patton, 440- yard run and mile relay; Smith, Gooding and Gorman, 880-yard run; Childs, mile run; Alix and Howell, two-mile run; Droullard, pole vault; and Blumenfeld and Silverman, shot put. Ohio will be handicapped by the loss of Co-Captain Whitey Wonso- wicz, who recently quit the team for the season. They will, however, be fortified with such stars as Stapf, a dashman who placed third in the Conference Indoor meet last year, and placed in the 100 and 220 outdoors. Captain Bloor is a quartermiler of proven ability, who is slightly handi- capped by an injury so that he may not be at his best Saturday. George Arnold, another 440 man, although slight of build, has looked good this year. Included with these stars will be Cook and Slabourg, hurdles; Willey, 440 yards; Smith and Dickey, 880 yards; Moore, mile and two-mile run; Sites and Stultz, pole vault; Boucher and Gearhart, high jump; and Neal and Schwartz, shot put. BERWANGER, TRACK MAN Jay Berwanger, sophomore fullback sensation of the University of Chi- cago's 1933 football team, bids fair to star likewise in track and field. He broad jumped 23 feet in high school and also does the hurdles. Two holes in one in a single round of golf is the claim to golfing fame of Victor Black, Livermore, Califor- nia, cattleman who sank his tee shot on the 149 yard, fourth hole and re- peated on the seventeenth before sev- eral witnesses. Badgers Here For Two-Game Hockey Series Wolverines Favored Over Coach Thomsen' s Sextet; Game To Start At 8:30 Wisconsin's puck team, tied with Michigan in the Western Conference hockey race, will invade the Varsity Arena tonight for the first of two games against the Wolverine sextet. The games will start at 8:30 both nights, admission charges being 35 cents for students and faculty mem- bers with coupon books and 75 cents general admission. Both the Wolverines and the Bad- gers have lost two games to the Min- nesota six in series at the St. Paul Hippodrome, and on the strength of comparative scores, the two teams are almost e v e n1y matched. The Maize and Blue, however, will be favored to defeat Coach Art Thom- sen's pucksters and improve their standing in the Big Ten race. Team At Full Strength Johnny Sherf and Ted Chapman, who have been having difficulty in removing incompletes in time to par- ticipate in the series, are expected to be eligible in time to take the ice against the Badgers. With the two Michigan stars able to play, the Var- sity will lineup the same as they have in previous games. Coach Eddie Lowrey's squad will be further strengthened by the re- turn of Red MacCollum and Harold Sindles, who have been ineligible un- til the present semester. In the event that Chapman and Sherf are unable to play, the Varsity will lineup with MacCollum at Chap- man's defense post and Tom Stew- art at left wing in place of the Calu- met Flash. Sindles will be in the reserve line and is expected to see service in both games. Fallon Aids Badgers Billy Southworth and Jerry Femal, the two Badger defensemen who were injured in the second game with Minnesota, are fully recovered and will be in their usual positions to- night. Dick Muther, sophomore wing who gave opponents plenty of trou- ble in Wisconsin's early s e a s o n games, will be unable to play because of ineligibility but his place will be taken by Jimmy Fallon, who is ex- pected to bolster the Cardinal for- ward line. Spectators at the series will wit- ness an interesting contest between two first-class goalies in Johnny Jew- ell and Charlie Heyer. Both are above the average in ability and should make some spectacular saves. Probable starting lineups: Michigan Pos. Wisconsin Jewell ........ Go al......... Heyer Chapman......D..........Femal L. David...... D .....Southworth Artz. .........C........Maxwell G. David ...... W. .........Fallon Sherf ......... W .......... Quinn Michigan S p a r e s - McEachern, MacCollum, Sindles, Stewart, and Courtis. Wisconsin Spares-Fawckes, Halverson, and Mercer. WOMEN'S SWIMMING Though a definite evening has been set for the practice and timing of the swimming candidates according to sorority affiliation, this scheduling was planned only to facilitate han- dling of the groups and preventing postponement until the last possible date. It is suggested that candidates try out early in the season, and then after aafew practices have their time taken again. Next Tuesday night the houses scheduled for timing are Alpha Omicron Pi, Alpha Phi, Alpha Xi Delta, Chi Omega, and Tri Delt. _.n _a. ._ __ Jim Crapo Cristy, Wittler, Boy Scout And Other Things By MARJORIE WESTERN Occurring Jan. 22, 1913, JIM CRA- PO CRISTY, JUNIOR, cap'n, Michi- gan swimming team, 1934, lived in detr't as long as possible, then moved to Ann Arbor some 15 yr's ago. He is now 6 feet 1 inch tall and weighs 161 lbs. He is champion of Canada with regard to a 1500 meter race which he swam away with last summer, but he only has a miniature of the tro- phy, because everybody who wins it has to pay mailing charges as well as a ten dollar bond standing for their honesty. That he doesn't wear his own Sig- ma Phi pin is none of your business. Whittler Collecting maps is his hobby, be- cause he looked at a Nat'l Geogra- phic once. He also disciplines the small children of his naborhood by showing them various heads and things which lie has whittled in mo- ments of leisure. He graduated from U. high, where he was the swimming team and cap- tain. Already when he was a fresh- man M'tt M'nn had his eye on him, however. He used to stroke back- wards as well as f'rwards in those days. He is also cosmopolitan, being of english, irish, scotch, french a n d dutch extraction. Nor will he com- mit himself on his fav'rite subjects, claiming that he has struggled most with french. "Slow on my feet" is his reason for not being a very remarkable tennis player, although he likes it, and ca- noeing. His financial career was un- dertaken at the age of approximately 9 when he earned an unknown sum picking dandelions. Scout Interests That led to his being a counsellor in nature study and woodcraft, as well as swimming, at a Boy Scout Camp for sev'al summers. In his youth his family had a cottage by a lake where he summered, and it was constant exposure to water that made him learn to swim, he says. He was refused admittance to a swell party on the Coast at the Olympics two yr's ago for being an athlete instead of an official. He also took third place in above-men- tioned Ol'pics, first white man to finish. Most of the Big Ten free style dash titles are his, too, for in- stance the 220 and 440. He doesn't diet,. being underw't anyhow. He guesses that they will beat Ohio State alright. He also has the idea that they won't be missing him at the po'l next year, as there are lots of good lower classmen. Where d'ya s'pose he got it? Don Pedan Refuses Indiana Grid Reins BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Feb. 15 - (P) - Zora G. Clevenger, Indiana Un- iversity athletic director, said today he had received a letter from Don Peden, Ohio University f o o t b a 11 coach, terminating the negotiations which have been under way to bring Peden here as Indiana's football mentor. Clevenger quoted Peden as saying he was well satisfied with his job at Ohio University and intended to ,remain there. Indiana authorities recently con- ferred at Ft. Wayne, Ind., with Peden relative to acceptance of the coach- ing position. Peden returned to Athens and Clevenger toBlooming- ton after issuing a statement that further negotiations would be con- I ducted. 'Gabby' S'Well, Street Banquet Without 'Gabby' SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 15. -(/P) - It was a notable gathering of base- ball men. Ty Cobb was there. So was Bill Lange, a New York Giants out-, field star when grandfather was fuss- ing with his sideburns. In one chair satdLefty O'Doul. Charley Graham and George Put- .am, owners of the San Francisco Seals, were on hand. Spry Mique Fisher, 72 years young, cut up old touches of his days as owner of the Sacramento and Tacoma clubs. Oscar Vitt represented he Holly- wood club. It was a sumptuous banquet. Hy- land Baggerly, president of the coast league, was giving it as an official and friendly welcome to Charles "Gabby" Street, who is bringing his managerial genius to the San Fran- cisco mission club after long and honorable service in the big leagues. For one solid hour they engaged in animated conversation. Then some- one discovered that "Gabby" wasn't present. They had forgotten to tell the guest of honor where the banquet was to be held. IF YOU HAVEN'T TASTED AR BOR SPRINGS WATER Try a case tomorrow. Then you'll know what a real drink of water is like .... 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