Member of associated Press L £fr igau XLV. No. 1 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1934 PAGE ELEVEN fty Players Return For Early Football Practice Freshmen To Inspect I-MPlant nitramural Staff Plans An Extensive Introductory Tour of Athletic Plant r ourneys Feature Orientation Card ibbons Will Be Awarded For Firsts, Seconds In Thirteen Title Races Offering thirteen sports and the fa- lities of the Michigan Union to the ass of '38, the Intramural depart- ient of the University will' provide Vree days of participation in or- Lnized games or informal competi- on to the entire freshman class. Starting Tuesday at 4:30 and on Le following two days at the same me, groups of freshmen will meet the Intramural building (hereafter ;be known only as "The I. M." to 1 loyal sons of the Maize and Blue) id troop through the huge athletic ant to view its unexcelled facili- es. Immediately following this tour inspection which will be ably >nducted by the leather lunged iaches of ye olde Michigan, competi- gn will begin in badminton, boxing, deball, fencing, gymnastics, hand- ,1, horseshoes, rifle shooting, squash, imming, volleyball, and wrestling. Details In Handbook All freshmen interested in these orts should consult the Orientation eek Sports Program, obtainable in e I. M. office, for details concern- g places and instructors. Bowling enthusiasts may turn in e scores of two games to be bowled the Union anytime during the week id the highest score will be awarded *e I. M. title. Golf and tennis tournaments will crt on Saturday, September 22. The lfers will tour the 18-hole Ui- rsity course in quest of the low edal score which was won last year Bob Gault. The tennis matches 11 commence at nine on Saturday orning and continue through until e champion is discovered. Freshman Codeball Ray Fisher, freshmen football ach, requests all men who plan to me out for freshman practice to port to him at Yost Field House at p.m., Monday, September 24. The, -st session will be limited to the ing out of equipment and a light nbering up drill, but a large squad anticipated and drills will continue stiffen until the team is paired wn to manageable size. The aim of rich Fisher will be to whip the frosh to shape for the annual tilt with e Varsity which usually takes place out a week before the opening game the season. All freshmen to place first or sec-1 .d in the I.M. tourney in any of the heduled events will receive ribbons recognition of ability. To the freshman who makes the ghest total score on the rifle range er a three-day period the R.O.T.C. 11 present a .30 calibre Krag rifle. The swimming and bowling facili- s of the Michigan Union will be en to the freshman class during dentation Week without charge, and usual will be taken advantage of a large group of incoming men.' Sigma Delta Psi Both freshmen and upperclassmen e eligible to try out for Sigma Delta i, national honorary athletic frater- ty. In order to secure membership, 'teen athletic tests must be success- lly passed. All men interested in is fraternity should report to Mr. ebster at the Intramural Building me time during the week of Sept. Participants should wear old clothes .d gym shoes when they report at e I-M building during Orientation ek. With the exception of tennis cquets and golf clubs, all playing uipment will be furnished by the partment. During the tour of in- ection, personal belongings such as cquets and golf clubs may be ecked. Should rain mar the festivities, eshmen are instructed to come to e Intramural Building regardless, d take part in the indoor activities To Lead Wolverines' 1934 Title Race m lw F' .' Hurls No-Hit Game STAR * AUSTIN Tackle i Captain Thomas Austin, regular tackle on the championship Wol- verine teams of the past two years, who will attempt to lead the 1934 squad to its fifth consecutive Western Conference title and its third consecutive national crown on Mid-West gridirons this fall. Austin's home is in Columbus, O. Michigan Brings College Golf Title To West For, .First T'ime * DUST *-By ART CARSTENS-* WHEN PRESIDENT ALEXANDER, RUTHVEN came out of his office the other day looking as though he had just heard that the enrollment had jumped to 20,000, someone asked him why the jubilant expression? "Boy, oh boy, did you hear that ball game?" he answered. "They won in the ,twelfth on Gehringer's homer!" We feel the same way. It's a real ball club that Mickey Cochrane is leading toward the World Series. Star Dust cannot, we feel, open the year more auspiciously than by toasting the Tigers. May they win the World Series! * * * STARDUST is glad to offer its wel- coming hand among the many that are outstretched in greeting to the class of '38. We hope that in your four years here you will witness as many athletic triumphs as we have seen in the past three and Star Dust places itself at your service as inter- preter of those triumphs - and the defeats that inevitably must come. If you are an athlete yourself Star Dust will record your exploits, if only a spectator, Star Dust will acquaint you with the feats of your classmates. * * * And here's our salutation to the king of sports - football. Let the Tigers and Yankees scrap over that pennant, soon the thud of toe on pigskin and the thun- dering stadium crowds will drown , all Patsy O'Toole's and the rest of that baseball hulabaloo. ., * * On the strength of seeing little more than than the distribution of uniforms to fifty football candidates we're going to discuss the prospects for this year's Wolverine outfit. Two points of doubt stand out: 1. Will Bill Renner be able to stand the physical punishment of another national championship campaign? 2. Can Kip- ke find a capable blocking back? ON RENNER, we feel, hangs the fate of the ball club. Bill left school at the end of the first semester last year after having his appendix removed. The last we heard of him last spring he had lost considerable weight and did not seem to be regaining it as fast as was expected. Renner has always been rather fragile and the loss of even a few pounds may be disastrous. He is apparently ready to go now and it is obvious that he will start the season as first string quarter and number 1 passer. If Renner does fail to come through (continued on Page 13) By SHELDON C. FULLERTON Another National Intercollegiate cup, a trophy born in the east and bred in the east, has at last, like so many others before it, moved west of the Alleghenies. After thirty-seven years spent in knock- ing around the trophy cases of Yale, Harvard, Dartmouth and Princeton the Maxwell Cup, comes fittingly to rest in the already overstuffed trophy rooms at Ferry Field. June's sporting events seldom make good reading in September's football - filled chronicles, but to Wolverine followers the National Intercollegiate Golf Championships of 1934 carry a real punch. Staged in June on the tortuous rolling and wooded fairways of the beautiful Country Club course in Cleveland, they produced, for the first time in history, a western golf champion, a champion wearing the Maize and Blue of Michigan. Malloy and Seeley Tied Paced by their brilliant number one man, Charley Kocsis, the remainder of the Wolverine quartet, Woodrow Malloy, Clarence Markham, and D. Seeley stuck doggedly to their guns to oust Yale from its three-year stay at the top. Only three strokes was the margin separating the two teams, and thanks for those few deciding points go to Kocsis, who led the en- tire list of 123 entrants after 36 holes of a two day qualifying round. Koc- sis shot a steady 74-73-147, part of it in a driving electrical storm, to take the pole position away from Charley Yates. of Georgia Tech, Ed. White of Texas, and Bob Ryden of U. C. L.A. Malloy came in with a 77-77-154 to deadlock Seeley, whose 78-76 for another 154 placed him five strokes ahead of Markham's 80-79-159. This gave the Wolverine entry a team total of 614 to beat out Yale's 617 with the veterans Oliver Transue and Law Weatherwax showing the way. Georg- ia Tech, with Yates and Berrien Moore as pacemakers, also threat- ened Yale's hard-pressed sharp- shooters, but fially had to be con- tent with 618, one stroke behind the Bulldogs. Other team totals were Notre Dame 623, Texas 635, Prince- ton 636, Minnesota 657, Washington 664, Pittsburgh 665, Georgetown 667, Cornell 667, Buffalo 692, and Dart- mouth 699. Koesis' Play Sensational Michigan, with one championship tucked safely under- its belt, threwv Kocsis, Malloy, Markham, and Seeley into the fight for the individual crown as well, but a combination of brilliant play and the breaks proved too big a barrier for them to over- come. Charley Yates of Georgia Tech, a tow-headed protege of Bob-- by Jones, finally crashed through in COACH RAY FISHER * * * much as a perfect golf machine, he had been sending towering tee shots and pin-splitting irons dead to the greens all week. He had pulled bird- ies out of the bag when they were needed; he had substituted a mashie- niblick for a putter to sink his ball when the greens had taken on the appearance of fish-ponds in the pour- ing rain. In the first round of match play he had eliminated the well- thought-of Burt Resnick of Yale, 3-2. Berrien Moore, one of Georgia Tech's aces, felt the power of the Wolver- ine's play in the second round, bow- ing by a similar score of 3 and 2. The quarter-finals found Kocsis paired against his own team-mate, Woody Malloy, who labored futilely to hold his own. The score of that match was 9-8. Meanwhile White had taken Fred Towne of Yale, A. F. Kammer, Jr., of Princeton and Johnny Banks, the Notre Dame sensation, over the coals in his three matches. Battling tooth and nail for every stroke, Kocsis and White tangled, in °There Is Life In The Old Arm Yet" --Fisher Proves It Ray Fisher, Michigan's Varsity baseball coach, still has a few good games in the 47-year-old right arm which for many years twirled for the New York Yankees and which ended its major league career with the Cin- cinnati Reds in 1921. And the folks up around his home country in Vermont are the best sup- porters of that belief. For the Ver- monters, as loyal fans as any to be found according to Fisher, today be- lieve that Ray could beat the Giants. All this in view of a little perform- ance he put on last week, in a game between Vergennes and the Queen City Blues of Burlington. Ray went out that day, expecting to work three or four innings. Fifty- five minutes later, for Fisher has al- ways worked fast in the box, he had hung up a no-hit no-run game, and seen his teammates score four runs. The box score also showed that only one opposing player reached first base, on an infield error. Georgia Tech Faces Suicide Grid Schedule To Encounter Michigan, Alabama, Duke, Tulane Florida, andGeorgia Led by their 135-pound quarter- back, "Shorty" Roberts, who has called the Georgia Tech signals for two years, the Yellow Jackets are faced with the problem of building an organization powerful enough to carry them through a schedule in which they must face Vanderbilt, Duke, Michigan, North Carolina, Tu- lane, Auburn, Alabama, Florida, and finally their arch-foe, Georgia. The technocrats will be a bit battered by December 2. Although he has lost Captain Poole and Bob Tharpe, outstanding line- men of last year's team, and "Wink" Davis, one of the best of last year's backs, Coach Bill Alexander faces this season with a great deal of confi- dence. "Sundial" Martin, a mountaineer, from the hills of South Carolina, who got his nickname trying to get water out of horological ornament on the Tech campus turned out to be the best of Coach Alexander's backfield pros- pects. pects. With the Wilcox brothers at guards and "Pee-Wee" Williams at tackle Tech has the nucleus of a good line. Jack Phillips, an extremely dan- gerous triple-threat man, is the chief Tech offensive threat. It will be in- teresting to note what the Michigan line will do to "Shorty" Roberts, whose 135 pounds have already car- ried him successfully through two bitter football campaigns. Coach Alexander thinks that the Yellow Jackets will at last shake off the one-point defeat jinx. Last year Tech dropped four games by three- point or less margins, and despite this had a fairly successful year. DUNLAP IS EXCEPTION NEW YORK, Sept. 17. - M) - Golf experts preach, "hit from the inside out, don't cut across the ball." But George Dunlap, National Amateur (continued on Page 12) __ wolverine Squad List Following is the 1934 Michigan: the first practice Saturday: football squad as it reported for Amrine, Robert O. Aug, Vincent J. . **Austin, Thomas I Barnett, David G. *Beard, Chester C. Bissell, Frank .... *Borgmann, Willia Bolas, George. Brandman, Charle Carr, Carl W., Jr. Ellis, Joseph 0.. Everhardus, Chris Fisher, Joe ...... **Ford, Gerald .. **Fuog, Russell J. Garber, Jesse G.. . Grauer Robert Class ..........'37 ........ '37 D. (Capt.) '35 ..........'37 ..........'35 ..........'37 *m F. ....'35 .'36 5.........'37 . '37 . '37 .'37 .... '36 ..........'35 .'35 . '37 %X ui i, U C G . . . . . . . . . . . o Hanshue, Cloyce E. ........'37; **Hildebrand, Willard H.....'35 *Jacobson, Tage O.........'35 Jacobs, Phillip H. ..........'37; James, Richard H............36 Jennings, Ferris............'37, Johnson, Ernest C. ........'3 Kidson, James .............'36 Lett, Franklin .............'37; Liffiton, Jack K.............'3 Meyers, Earl J.............'37; Mumford, John ...........'37; **Oliver, Russell D. ........'35 Oyler, Thomas T. ..........'37; Patanelli, Matthew L. ......'37; Pederson, Ernest A. ........'37; Pillinger, Harry J...........'36 Pope, Vincent .............'36 **Regeczi, John M.........'35 Remias, Steve ..............'36 r 5 5 '7 6 6 6 7 7 7 7 5 7 6 6 5 6 Pos. HB HB T HB G G G QB QB HB QB HB T C C G E G G T HB HB QB E HB E FB E FB FB E E G QB FB FB FB Years on Squad 0 0 2 0 2 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 0 0 2 2 0 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 2 1 Home London, O. Cincinnati Columbus, O. Detroit Youngstown Pittsburgh Ft. Wayne Chicago Findlay, O. New Rochelle Eagle River Kalamazoo Ann Arbor Grand Rpds. Chicago New York Maumee, O. Kalamazoo Hartland Detroit S'lt S. M'rie Detroit Ann Arbor Grand R'pds. Chicago Battle Creek. Lakewood, O. Detroit H'land Park Pontiac Cincinnati Elkhart, Ind. Grand Blanc Whitehill Dearborn M'kegon Hts. Chicago