Twenty Maroons, Maize And Wildcats To Meet On Track Wolverines Are Favored To Win Three-Way Tilt Saturday Night Ward Should Star Wolverine Ace Is Expected To Win First Place In Three Events THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tracksters Picked To Compete In Triangular A squad of 20 tracksters will leave for Chicago tomorrow afternoon to engage in a triangular meet with Chicago and Northwestern Saturday night. The meet will be held in the Chi- cago field house, where the Big Ten meet is to be put on next week. Michigan is doped to win in view of the fact that Ohio State, badly beaten by Michigan two weeks ago, tied Northwestern for first in a quad- rangular meet last Saturday. Chicago took third place. Coach Charlie Hoyt, Wolverine mentor, will not name his squad until after practice tonight. Conference Meet Next The meet will be the final test for Michigan before the Big Ten indoor championship. It will also serve to acclimate themselves to the track which will be the scene of the title meet. The Wolverine team's showing tc date has surprised even their most ardent followers. Dopesters who pre- dicted an easy Indiana win in the In- doors early in the season have raised their eyebrows and quit predicting. For Michigan has displayed unex- pected strength in many events. Jack Childs, for one, seems to have found himself at last. In breaking the Field House record last Saturday night with a 4:17.5 mile, he ran the best race of his career. Followers are wondering if he can maintain this pace. Hoyt Praises Childs Coach Hoyt has stated that Childs is the best potential miler he has ever coached. His teammates also have confidence in his ability. Neree Alix is another surprise. Al- though only a sophomore, his record performances to date indicate that he is one of the best distance men in the Conference. Willis Ward should have little trouble repeating victories in the high hurdles, 60-yard dash and high jump. Neither Chicago nor Northwestern have men in these events to compare with him. Moreau Hunt, another sophomore, has apparently taken Boyd Pantlind's place in the hurdles. Against State and Ypsi he won the lows and placed second to Ward in the highs. Big things are expected of him. For the first time in years, Mich- igan will have a strong contender in the pole vault. Dave Hunn, soph- omore, attained an altitude of 13 feet Saturday night, and doesn't seem to have reached his limit yet. He ap- pears to be a sure point-winner in the Conference meet. The Wolverines have four strong dashmen in Ward, Lamb, Kemp, and Barnes, 'all of whom are capable o 6.4 or better. Kemp is also strong in the quarter mile, along with Capt. llerby, Pat ton and others. Blumenfeld and Alex- ander appear to be possibilities in the shot put, Harvey Smith is almost e sure winner in the half-mile, and Rod Howell should win points in the two. mile. BADMINTON Second round matches in the All- City mixed doubles badminton tour- nament resulted in the defeat of Miss Nancy Quirk and John Havi- land of Ypsilanti by Miss Catherine Sallew and Paul -Coursey, 21-18, 21- 15, and the victory of Mrs. Rene Tal- amon and Lyle LaCroix, '34E, over Miss Virginia Peasley and Thoma Anketell, '36, 21-11, 21-18. Big Ten Standings PLAY& BY-PLAY By AL NEWMAN February News.,.. * * * BENEATH, YOU WILL FIND a typical news summary for a day in February. Being as how this is the first day of March (or is it Leap Year?) you might as well have some typical Ann Arbor February news right now. The Weather: cold and lousy throughout the day becoming colder and lousier toward evening. Sports: Michigan loses another basketball game by a score of blank to blank. Cappon starts an entirely new combination to fool the opposi- tion but the opposition doesn't fool. Regeczi throws ball down floor only to find that he mistook an opponent for the ball. Hockey: Hockey team wins, loses (cross out one) Sherf makes blank goals. Swimming: Michigan beats Blank University by 60 something to blank (Something very low). Mann dis- satisfied. WRESTLING: Michigan grapplers score a t r i u mp h over Blank. Whoosh of the visitors has head cut aff halfway through bout, but does not realize it until meet is finished. Track: Ineligible division of track team beats eligibles by huge score. Hoyt confident of victory over con- ference even with eligibles. Administrative: Board in Control abolishes football due to high quo- tation on pigskin. LOCAL: Beer petition is denied on technicality. Man who presented petition had on purple tie, parted hair in middle. Should have had green tie, parted hair on side. No action possible until sometime in third millenium A.D. Fraternities forbidden to make faces at freshmen during Hell Week. Hell removed from Hell Week leav- ing it Weak. National: Flight Lieut. Phlapper lost over Atlantic. Flying mail on route from Cheyenne, Wyo., to Phoe- nix, Ariz. Lieut. Phlapper slightly off course, last reported over Bar- negat, N. J. NATIONAL SPORT: After bout with Loughran, Primo Carnera and management decide to go fur- ther in the same direction, sign for title bout with one of Singer's mid- gets. International: Slight disturbances in Austria and France. Thousands killed. Governments lay slight dis- turbances to minor agitators. Local Society Note: Last out of town guests for J-Hop depart today. Rinkey Dinks Favored To Win Hockey Crown With winners yet to be determined in the four inter-fraternity hockey divisions, Tom Prause, organizer and reneral boss of the league, announced ;esterday that the games played dur- ng the next ten days would bring ogether the best teams of the cir- suit in some closely contested match- Is. Favorites to take the championship ire the Rinkey Dinks, boasting such tars as Charles Tarbor, Dick Berry- nan, and Bob King. This high scor- ing aggregation has piled up 27 points in two games, and is expected to be pressed only by Lambda Chi Mpha, whose forward line of Ralph Whisler, Keith Davis, and Chuck Kocsis has been a powerful threat ill season. Volley Ball Four teams have advanced to the Fnals of the All-Campus volleyball Tournament. The winner of the Delta Alpha Epsilon-Lambda Chi Al- ?ha game will meet the victor of the Phi Lambda Kappa-Delta Chi con- test for the championship. Louie Westover and Ray Fiske, last year's finalists, will meet again this week in the All-Campus squash finals. Louie is. eager to avenge his defeat of a year ago, and a hotly contested match is in prospect for devotees of the sport. Five Teams In Fight For 2nd Place In Big 10 Northwestern Is Favored As Runner-Up In Cage Race; To Meet Chicago Officially the Western Conference basketball race will be over Monday, March 5, but unofficially,. as far as first place is concerned, it is over right now, for the Purdue Boiler- makers by virtue of their win over Wisconsin last Monday have riveted a handle on the trophy and are twirl- ing it around by the well-known little finger. But while Purdue is in a select sphere by itself, Northwestern, Wis- consin, Indiana, Illinois, and Iowa are putting up a five-cornered battle for second honors. Wildcats Favored Northwestern, with seven wins and four losses, is to date alone in the runner-up position, and is greatly fa- vored to defeat the last place Chicago Maroons Saturday at Chicago and remain in second place. Wisconsin, in a tie for third place with Indiana, will play Iowa March 3 at Wisconsin in a game that should be a toss up. Iowa is tied with Illi- nois for fourth place, but has a scrap- py team that has the prestige of hav- ing defeated the conference-leading Boilermakers. On March 5 the Badg- ers will take on Minnesota at Wis- consin. If Wisconsin can manage to take these two games they will either be in second place alone or tied with Northwestern. Otherwise it looks like third place. Indiana will face Purdue Saturday and Michigan Monday. Indiana may be conceded a chance for second place. The Boilermakers may suffer a let down since they have clinched the title, and Indiana has an edge over the Wolverine quintet. Illini Against Purdue Illinois has won six and lost five. Considering the tilt with Purdue, scheduled next Monday, the Illini will probably finish with a .500 average. Michigan has a chance to go into an eighth place tie with Ohio State next Monday night if the Wolverine cagers can withstand the Hoosier in- vasion. Whether Michigan finishes eighth or ninth it will be the worst season that Coach Cappon has experienced since he took over the reins as head basketball coach here three years ago. In the 1931-32 season the courtmen finished fourth and in 1932-33 Cap- pon managed to guide his proteges to a third place tie with Iowa. Giedhill, Chapin Join Professionals NEW YORK, Feb. 27- (/P) - Bill O'Brien, who is associated with big Bill Tilden in the promotion of pro- fessional tennis, today announced that Keith Gledhill, ninth ranking amateur of the United States, and Alfred H. Chapin, Jr., who was rated seventh in 1926, had accepted terms for a professional tour. They will join Tilden and Ells- worth Vines, Jr., former National champion, on March 21 in a series at New Haven, Conn., starting a Na- tional tour. Gledhill, who held the National doubles title with Vines in 1932, will play with his former amateur part- ncr against Tilden and Chapin and the four will rotate in singles against each other. VANCE WITH FOE NOW CINCINNATI, Feb. 27 - (/P)-Daz- zy Vance, who will be with the Reds this year, remembers Redland field with particular clarity because he once was within one putout of a no- hit game here when a measly fly- ball single by Sammy Bohne spoiled it. Last 3 D----ys QUITTING BUSINESS SAL This Store Closes Saturday Night, March 3rd SCHLOSS SUITS CHOICE OF THE STORE Carnera-Loughran Bou, Little INa po1 Postponed By Weather Of Basebal The Tommy Loughran-Primo C a rn era world's heavyweight!1 m~as eh==Laid To championship bout, to have beenI fought last night at Miami in the Madison Square Outdoor Arena, was postponed until to- Many Notables Of night, because of rain. World Gather Boasting a 73-pound weight ad- vantage over his American chal- Rites Of John Mc lenger, Carnera, the Mussolini- man, reigns a 3 to 1 favorite to re- BALTIMORE, Feb. 28 - tain his title. body of John McGraw, t Loughran has been around in Napoleon" of baseball, I boxing circles for a long period, brought back to Baltimore and he is perhaps the best boxer of his early diamond trium in the heavyweight ranks. Carnera A delegation of Baltir is far from being the best boxer, local sportsmen and friend but when he tags his rival on the at the Pennsylvania Sta button with his 258 pounds, boxing the train arrived. McGr dexterity is rendered negligible. honorary member of the E If Loughran can stay away from past 39 years. Carnera, he will undoubtedly out- The body was taken t point the Italian giant, and the Cathedral Cemetery by ai title will return to America for the the fraternal order. It v first time since the championship temporarily in a vault. B days of Jack Sharkey. be made in the spring. Among those accompa body to Baltimore after t Oklahoma Confident services in New York toda McGraw, the widow, Of Keeping Control Stoneham, owner of the Giants, and William Te O f Wrestling Crown ager of the Giants, who McGraw. EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the third of a series of articles on the forth- NEW YORK, Feb. 28 - coming National Intercollegiate wres- friends gathered to take ting meet). well of John Joseph McG By FRED A. HUBER The tremendous pile of If publicity releases received from that is St. Patrick's Cat] the Oklahoma A. & M. wrestling the setting of funeral serv team are to be believed, the National baseball veteran whose tu Intercollegiate wrestling title is al- reer came to a peaceful ready in the Cowboy trophy case. The in a New Rochelle hospit record of the Oklahoma team is truly The list of honorary i impressive, but competition which also included notables of they will receive from the Eastern ferent fame -GJohn McC schools in the meet here March 23 Irish tenor; George M. and 24 may cause the Cowboys to .re- Wolf Hopper, Sam Harris evaluate themselves. ers, Charles Dillingham In the past the entry list from the Crumit of the theatre; Ed seaboard schools has been quite small, Max Hirsch and James E due to the inaccessibility of the meet, the turf; Edward P. Mul but with Ann. Arbor, a centrally lo- mer p o 1 i c e commissiol cated town, the meet is already as- Hoppe, Jack Doyle and F sured of a far greater representation of billiard fame; Tim M of Eastern matmen than the Inter- promoter; supreme cou collegiate has seen in many years. business men; sports Cowboys Have Champions many others who had co The outstanding feature of the Ok- and respect the doughty lahoma team is that neither of their the diamond. National title-holders, Rex Peery at 118 lbs., and Ross Flood at 126, have 4T chian Var been beaten in dual meet competition this season. Flood was replaced by Inactive Aft Lester Barnes earlier in the season, but Barnes has Rhad difficulty in Iasketbli making the weight and is at present battling with Ralph Rasor for the 135-lb. job. Just which one will get The rabid sport's fol] the call on the eight-man team the craves a generous sprinkl Cowboys expect to enter in the Na- letic events to mix with 1 tional is uncertain. routine of study, will be i Unbeaten in dual competition since after next Monday night's 1932, the Oklahomans feel supremely game with Indiana, for t confident of making their mythical ter winds up the hom( team title a reality this year, espe- Michigan's Varsity win cially so after a 15 1-2 to 9 1-2 vic- teams. tory over the Southwestern State From then on until t Teachers' mat squad. The outstand- April, there will be a lull : ing event of the meet from the Cow- to be broken only by ti boys' angle was the heavyweight intercollegiate wrestling r event, in Which Teague of South- will be held here Marc western, national champion in 1933 24th. This display of the was only able to gain a 2:06 time is in college grappling v advantage over Tom Hanley, of A. & worth seeing by any in M. With Hanley proving himself a Ann Arbor, and will tem worthy competitor to the champion, vive the "dyed-in-the-woo and Yale boosting their undefeated from his coma of protr candidate, Snowden, a three-cornered ness. fight for the crown is expected. The Wolverine basebal Have Colorful Team be very busy during the Even if the Oklahoman team fails of April, but the fans w to win the team title, and a large consolation, as this busin share of the individual champion- on foreign diamonds, Ho ships, they will undoubtedly provide nis meets on April 27th much color to the meet, both on with Michigan State and and off the mat. Emphasis on wres- spectively, may serve tc tling at the Cowboy school is high, sport fan's appetite for and their grapplers, appearing reg- come. ularly in ten-gallon hats and typical Once the month of May cowboy outfits, will bring a new fea- the sport fan's worries w ture to the Michigan campus. It was for the Michigan nine w this showmanship that gave the Ok- here on the 1st, 5th, 8th lahomans much fame and publicity in rapid succession, with on their trip to the east a few years -ames coming near the ago. month. I, W L Purdue....... ....9 1 Northwestern .. . ......7 4 Wisconsin .,.........6 4 Indiana ............6 4 Illinois ......... ....6 5 Iowa.. . ..... . .6 5 Minnesota .. .. ....5 6 Ohio State . ...,......4 ,8 Michigan... .......3 8 Chicago ............2 9 Although they failed to win gle Rocky Mountain conferenc Pct. .900 .636 .600 .600 .545 .545 .455 .333 .2'73 .182i a sin- e bas- THURS. FRI. SAT. 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