TUESDAY, APRIL17, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PLAY & BY- PLAY -By AL NEWMAN- Michigan vs. N.Y.A.C. FOLLOWING the usual stomach- curdling stop of a New York ele- vator arrested in full upward flight, the door swung open. There was a sound of muffled cheering. The meet had already begun, and you could feel the warm dampness of the New York Athletic Club pool just around the corner. There was a gentleman selling seats at $1.10 per throw . . . "Standing room only, and you're lucky to get that!" The fame of the 1934 Michigan swimming team had preceded it even in the blase city that cares little for reputations and records because so many have been broken and made there. The stands were packed, but one of the be-flannelled, undershirted ushers escorted us to rumored seats, which was about all they were. And there were Matt Mann's trained seals looking strangely out of place in such surroundings. The meet see-sawed back and forth. There were impressive victories by Taylor Drysdale in the backstroke, and Jim Cristy in the 440. In fact Cristy had nearly a length of the 25- yard pool on the field. BUT THEN THERE were Athleti Club victories in the breast-stroke and the free-style sprints that didn't do Michigan's standing any good. Notre Dame is said to have quite a number of synthetic alumni; that i.; the kind of alumni who never went to Notre Dame but who just come oit1 and cheer their heads off at a foot- ball game for their chosen alma mater. But Michigan also has plenty of synthetic alumni, and those together with the real ones made the welki ring with cheers for Michigan while the A.C. drew scant applause. A diving exhibition by two Michigan freshmen, Johnston and Grady. stopped the show. The pair put on what they called a "double diving" exhibition from the high board. Walk- ing out to the end of the board side by side, they took off simultaneously in a series of beautifully-timed flips and twists, which, according to the bald man in the brown suit who did the announcing, were dives only "re- hoised" that very afternoon. THERE was also solo diving, by the regular team of three. Degener again stopped the show with a bril- liant exhibition . . . and the other lads did pretty well, too, considering the competition they had in the con- trast with Degener. Final event of the meet was the medley relay comprised of 100 yards of each of the three swimming strokes. The score was tied, and excitement ran high. Just to prolong the suspense, there was the first half of a water-polo game between N.Y.A.C. and Columbia sandwiched in. It was a tough game . .not the water-polo that's played in these parts but a game where the ball had to be touched against the goal, not thrown, by the scorer. The two teams looked like football teams for the most horrible strangling and ducking exhibitions were counten- anced without malice on either side. Then came the final event . the Spence brothers against Drysdale, Lawrence, and Renner. Drysdale started out by handing Michigan a fairly substantial lead, but Leonard Spence, the breast-stroke artist, put the opposition well in front, and the great Walter Spence augmented it. Not that it was a walk- away, but the Spences were just too fast. So N.Y.A.C. won the meet, but it was a grand exhibition, and maybe some day . . . but it's too much to ask of a university team. Anyway, the Mann men came close. Norm Daniels Will Be Jack Blott's Assistant Norm Daniels, former Michigan star who has been coaching at Hillsdale High School since his graduation in 1932, will go to Wes- leyan College (Conn.) as assistant to Coach Jack Blott, it was an- nounced last week. Daniels was a nine letter man while at Michigan, starring in football and baseball. He will be succeeded at Hillsdale by Omer La- jeunesse, guard on the Wolverine football team in 1929, 1930, and 1931. Lajeunesse has assisted Dan- iels at Hillsdale since 1932, taking charge that fall until Daniels re- turned from a Michigan baseball trip to the Orient. Cap & Gown Orders ii; -111 I JH Eli I I I 11 11 11