hockey Series By Downing olverines, 2. Stellar Wrestlers To Compete Here For National Title EDI OR'S NOTE his is the second of a series of articles on the coming National Intercollegiate wrestling meet. When a National Intercollegiate title-holder isn't able to make his own team, the class of competition in the approaching meet is assuredly high. And when an Eastern college team boasts an undefeated heavy- weight who edges out a star of two seasons' standing for a place on the squad, the caliber of the grapplers who will visit Ann Arbor March 23 and 24 is bound to be outstanding. Flood, of the Oklahoma A. & M. team, winner of the 126-lb. title in 1933, was replaced by Barnes in his last meet, and advance reports in- dicate that the d e f e n d i n g team champions may enter the latter rath- er than the man already boasting one national crown. Yale Strong In Heavy Class The heavyweight situation is also bound to awaken interest. Teague of the Southwestern Teachers' Col- lege won the "big boys'" crown last year but Yale is claiming almost cer- tain victory for their unbeaten man, Snowden, who, to win himself a place on the Eli mat squad had to oust Taft, grandson of William How- ard Taft, and long regarded as the cream of the seaboard matmen. In order that the winner will be able to prove himself a real cham- pion, and yet avoid upsets by less worthy candidates, a seeding system will be introduced into the meet, whereby the favorites will be placed to clash in the finals. No wrestler will be called upon to wrestle more than four matches in the two day meet, putting a premium upon quick falls and encouraging much more action than is found in the average dual meet. Another innovation will be the requirement that all entries must have proven their worth in previous competition, either by win- ning a place in their conference or establishing an outstanding record in inter-school matches. Team Trophies To Be Awarded With the agreement to again a w a r d t e a m trophies, a practice which was abandoned a year ago, fuller entry lists from outstanding teams are expected. Indiana and Michigan of the Conference schools, Iowa State College of Ames, and the 1932 team champions, Oklahoma, plan to send a full squad of eight men to the meet. Lehigh and Cor- nell college of Iowa have announced five man entry lists, and the other leading teams will probably send be- tween three and eight entrants. Until the blanks are filed the full entry list cannot of course be com- puted, but 143 colleges in the coun- try boast full wrestling teams and a fair measure of these are certain to enter at least a two man squad. It is believed that there will be no less than 16 entrants in each of the eight classes, which guarantees a list of over 100 starters at the out- set, and current rumor tends to show that this season's entry list will be , one of the largest in the history of - Intercollegiate wrestling. (The third article in this series will appear in Thursday morning's Daily). Jun Bausch In Town; t Looks Over Tracksters Jim Bausch, Olympic decathlon 3 winner in the 1932 games at the Rose Bowl, California, two years ago, ar- , rived in Ann Arbor Friday, put ur at the Allenel Hotel, 126 E. Huron and attended the triangular tracI meet in Yost Field House last night Victory Over Iowa Swimmers Gives Michigan Title Hop The Michigan s w i m m i n g team rested on its laurels yesterday after handing the Iowa State natators a crushing defeat in a dual meet Fri- day night in the Intramural pool. The flashes of record - breaking ability showed by the Wolverine splashers Friday night clearly dem- onstrated, in the opinion of many observers, that the Maize and Blue are again the logical choice to win both the Western Conference and National Intercollegiate swimming titles. Taylor Drysdale's performance in winning the 150-yard back stroke in the amazing time of 1:38.7 was per- haps the most spectacular event of the meet. The existing Conference record, made by Drysdale, is 1:42.3, almost four seconds slower than the Wolverine backstroker's time against the Hawkeye swimmers. A comparison of Drysdale's per- formance with the times made in this event in the Nationals would indicate that Drysdale should win his favorite event at Columbus this year. Last year's winner was Chal- mers (Franklin and Marshall) negotiated the distance in 1:39. 1931 Kojac (Rutgers) won the in 1:38. The Wolverine 400-yard team, composed of Kamienski, rymple, Robertson and R e n clipped almost three seconds of Conference record for the event by Northwestern. The existing is 3:40.4 while the Wolverines ered the distance Friday nig) 3:37.6. Capt. Jim Cristy gave notice he may be breaking some re himself by swimming the 440 free style in 5:04.7. The ex Conference record for the 7y pool was set by Cristy in the of 5:01.4. The late Frank Kei holds the 60-foot pool mark fo distance, swimming the 22 le in 5:06.4. The Michigan captain's time i 220-yard free style bettered the he made in the Conference c pionships last year., Cristy's ti 1933 was 2:21.8 and he swar distance Friday night in 2:21.J IF _ New Weavings from Overseas -Associated Press Photo These Northwestern cagers will see service against the Wolverines tomorrow night at Evanston, Ill. Ed Manske gridiron star, also plays basketball for the Wildcats and usually takes a forward position on the court when he does. Irwin Kopecky at center, Donald Brewer at forward, and Nelson Culver and Al Kawal as guards are outstanding point getters for the Wildcats. Michigan Ineffective Twice in the third period the Mich- igan sextet had the chance to tak( advantage of penalties against Min- nesota but was unable to score. Johnson was sent to the box for trip- ping Chapman and Coach Lowrey promptly sent in Sherf, David and Artz to replace Stewart, Sindles and MacEachern. The Wolverine line, however, proved ineffective and the opportunity was lost. Near the close of the game Mitch- ell received a penalty but the Wol- verines were too weary from the ter- rific pace to take advantage of the break. Gophers Outplayed During the first period the Wol- verines far outplayed the Gophers but it was not until the closing min- utes of the period that the Maize and Blue scored. After Clausen had cleared nine times as the Wolverine puckmen bombarded him, Johnny Sherf took the puck near the Michigan cage, skated straight up the ice until he reached the center of the rink where he let loose a terrific shot that rifled between Wagnild and Johnson, and sailed past Clausen's feet for the only Michigan score of the game. Appar- ently the. Gopher netminder failed to see the puck as he did not seem to know when the disc shot past him. Summary: Michigan Pos Minnesota Jewell..........G.......Clausen Chapman .......D....... Wagnild MacCollum......D.......Johnson Artz...........C........Munns G. Daid (C) .....W.... ... Russ Sherf.. . .... . W..........Gray Mchigan spares-L. David, Mac- Eachern, Stewart, Sindles. Minne- sota s p a r e s - McGlone, Mitchell, Zeiske. First period scoring -1. Sherf, 17:46. First period penalties -none. Second period scoring -2. John- son (Russ), 10:46. Second period penalties - Chap- man, Sherf. Third period scoring -3. Wagnild (Zeiske), 10.35. Third period penalties - Johnson, G. David, Mitchell, L. David. Last Night's Results BASKETBALL SCORES Wisconsin 44, Ohio State 38. Purdue 60, Michigan 33. Indiana 36, Illinois 24. Iowa 33, Minnesota 30.1 TRACK SCORES Illinois 55 1-3, Notre Dame 48 2-3. SWIMMING SCORES Iowa State 19, U. of Minnesota 11. Northwestern 60, Indiana 24. By AL NE\V'MAN-- Legal Betting.... The Yewkant City. . . . * ** WELL, I SEE that the old state of Va. is following the new parade and getting set to grab a slight bit of change by contributing to the moral downfall of its citizens. At any rate, the Va. house passes a bill legalizing horse-racing and pari-mu- tuel betting. It is . a custom of thousands of years' standing for citizens of all sorts and conditions to wager such things as shirts, pants, suspender- buttons, silver, wives and such com- modities on the outcome of horse races. Such customs are no doubt very, very detrimental to the wel- fare of the immortal soul or what- ever it is that keeps human beings going inside. But the chances are right now that the good citizens of Va. are crossing the state borders to do such things detrimental to souls and such, and here the morals of said citizens are being impaired with revenue from same going to some other state in the form of a wagering-fee, which is known as a tax on betting. * * * NOW IT IS a well-established prin- ciple for many years in American gov't. that a state should have at least some of the profits accruing from the impairment of its citizens' morals. Therefore, it is very, very wrong for another state to steal such profits, and the Va. Legislature has just gotten hep to what is going on Personally, I think it is fine for the good citizens of Va. to bet right on the own home grounds without hav- ing to make any foreign invasions for said purposes. Of course, the students of the Uni- versity have to climb over the Di- vision St. boundary in order to drink beer, and will continue to do so un- til beer is brought up onto the home grounds, but that is another story and has nothing to do with the case. THIS QUESTION of the Division St. beer-line is an intriguing one, as is the fundamental philosophy behind the ruling. The ordinance may be found by looking through the local books until one is found with *a predominantly azure tinge. Anyway it is a blue law. Now just where is this line? Is it down the center of Division Street. or more conveniently located near one of the gutters? Shall we send out a corps of Engineers with cali- pers and micrometers and other such c o m p 1 i c a t e d and unmentionable things to determine the line, or shall' we just say that the line is some- where down Division St.? Anyway, if such a line exists, what does it signify? I'm not talking about the legal aspects ,of the case because it simply means that yew- kant sell beer west of it and you can, under license and proper conditions east of the line. All of which quali- fies Ann Arbor as one of the leading Yewkant Cities of the nation. NOW Fifth Avenue is the street just East of Division and Thomp- son is the street just West. Can anyone in good conscience tell me that selling beer on Thompson street, exclusive of the ordinance against it, is any more (or less) detrimen- tal to civic welfare than selling it on Fifth? I wonder. Still and all the City Fathers are running the city, a petition of 1,600 voters was voided on a technicality .... the will of the people be done. But the City Fathers are still run- ning the city and they will keep on running the city. . . . until the next election! Betsy Barbour, Martha Cook, To Meet In Finals Betsy Barbour's sextet and one representing Martha Cook will clash in the Intramural finals for the 1934 women's basketball title Tuesday night at 8:15 p. m. in Barbour gym- nasium. Both teams have come through a stiff season's competition in the A division of the cage tourney, and have both disposed of their opposi- tion with little real difficulty. The B division finals will be played off at some later day in the week. Jordan I and Alpha Chi Omega are; the finalists in this section, having lost only once during the season's play. y Michigan's basketball squad will round out a busy week end tomor- row night when it takes on the third place Northwestern cagers at Evan- ston, Ill. It will be the second contest this year between the two teams and the second game within three days for the Michigan team. The Wildcats thoroughly trounced the Wolverines on their last invasion of the North- western gym, 44 to 23. The Northwestern lineup will in- clude such men as Donald Brewer forward, Al Kawal, guard, Nelson Culver, guard, Irwin Kopecky, cen- ter or forward, "Eggs" Manske guard, Fisher, center, Seorer, for- ward, and Spoerer, forward. Brewer, Culver, Kopecky, and Fish- er are mainstays of the Northwest- ern array and will probably see reg- ular service tomorrow night. Coach Cappon will very likely send the same starting lineup against Northwestern that faced the Boiler- makers last night. This will be Plum- mer and Fishman at the forward wall, Joslin at center, and Oliver and Tessmer at the guard positions unless Petoskey and Ford recover sufficiently fiom facial cuts to war- rant a change. . 1 i . ' / - 0 _ ii I/i. *1 ,_. HARRIS TWEEDS Designed for Spring. Mod- erate checks in brown and gray, or bolder overplaids and squares - all in perfect taste, never gaudy or flashy. Practical, correct models- snug fitting bi-swings and casual Norfolks. Ideal jack- ets for combination with contrasting slacks. 'THIRTY DOLLARS FLANNELS FROM ENGLAND All of British weaving art- istry is reflected in the neat stripes and shadings of the grays and blue-grays that we have imported. Double- breasted for style; ease of line and light weight for summer comfort. THIRTY-FIVE DOLLARS for SUJITS 11 11 fillI 11 for COATS BALMACCANS A high, sure note of fashion. By long odds the favorite of leading University men. Ex- ecuted in matchless weaves of tweeds and checks. The drape, comfort, and distinc- tion make them unique in their field. THIRTY DOLLARS 1~~~> ::;24. / 1 - 4 -- . /A, RAGLANS 11 In these discomfort is out- lawed; style personified. A graceful, , easy coat that stamps its wearer as a dis- cerning critic of authentic fashion. Rich shades of brown and gray - the peak of dignified informality. THIRTY DOLLARS II L . 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