AY, OCTOBER 20, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Hoyt Pleased . With Showing In Time Trials Birleson W i n s Quarter- Mile And Stoller Takes 100-Yard Dash Charley Hoyt, coach of the Mich- igan track team, put his squad members through their paces in a mid-fall time-trial test yesterday af- ternoon at Ferry Field, in which more than forty men competed. Outstanding among the achieve- ments of the afternoon, according to Coach Hoyt, was the performance of Stan Birleson in the quarter-mile. This wps Birleson's first cliance in competition with members of the Var- sity, but he took the race with an easy :50.7. Fisher ran second in the event. Captain Harvey Smith led his teammates all the way in the mile run. Gooding was a close second all the way, and. closed in on the last lap, but a great sprint at the end brought Smith in first. Stoller Takes 100 Stoller got away fast at the start of the 100-yard dash, and held his lead to the finish. Stiles ran sec- ond to Stoller. Both competed on the freshman squad last season. Stiles was the winner of the other event in which he was entered. Racing the 220 he beat out Davidson, an- other last year's freshman. Gorman and Randall ended sopho- more domination when they divided the honors in the half mile, coming in first and secondrespectively. In the field events Coach Hoyt al- so has reason to be pleased. Hunn, his pole-vaulter, shows decided im- provement over last year's perform- ances, according to the coach. Good Javelin Throwers Adams, whom Hoyt thinks should be one of the best javelin throwers in the Conference, has settled his scholastic difficulties and will be eli- gible. Kositchek, with two years' experience, is doing consister}tly well in the same field, throwing about 180 feet on the average. Atchells, in the discus, threw 140 feet last week. Hoyt professes himself as pleased with the showing. "For the amount of practice they've had this year, they show up very well," he said. "And you can say that Michigan is going to have three good milers to represent them in competition this year." An all-campus track meet will be run off at 4 p.m. Tuesday afternoon at Ferry Field. It is probable that Eddie Tolan, Olympic star, will be out running with the team, in prac- tice for his international races of. the near future. Shaughnessy Expects Tough ContestToday CHICAGO, Oct. 19.- (P) - The Big Ten will resume work on its own pri- vate football affairs Saturday with fine prospects that there will be noth- ing abnormal about the results. While Minnesota, Ohio State and Michigan are bearing the Western Conference standard into battle against intersectional foes, Chicago and Indiana at Chicago, and Wiscon- sin and Purdue at Lafayette, will get together for. a pair of league cham- pionship games. Iowa meets Iowa State at Ames in the other game, Illi- nois and Northwestern being idle. Whatever happens at Lafayette, it will not be an .upset. Neither Purdue nor Wisconsin rates an edge. The Badgers have not encountered oppo- sition thoroughly testing them. Pur- due has not been at full strength in either of its previous two games and cannot be judged. Both teams finished preparation with light drills yester- day. Chicago figures to beat Indiana, and with injuries rampant in the Hoosier squad, Coach Bo McMillin is inclined to agree with the dope. "I hope we are able tp do better than Michigan did last Saturday," McMillin said, "but I doubt it." Coach Clark Shaughnessy of the Maroons is looking for a tough battle just the same, and hinted that he was a little worried over excessive confi- dence among his men. Captain Ell- more Patterson, who suffered a head injury last Saturday, has recovered and will start at center against the Hoosiers. Purple To Play Lansing Central In League Game Will See Service Today * Local Pro Grid T eam I ndependents STA R DU ST cy ARTNOpens Season Sunday!Gin Presti e TheBlazing Arrows, local proGes-re O Nsional ootbal players will open Ii Intra nurals SDOZENNEWSPAPER SCRIBES 'How do you, spell it?" their season at home tomorrow after- almost committed hari kari yes- "M-o-r-r-i-s!" The manager noon when they oppose the Ham- Blue Raiders To Defend terday at the Michigan Stadium yes- was visibly disgustedtramck Merchants at Wines Field.Emil Title In Non-Fraternit Georgia Tech traveling outfit, from Coach Bill Alexander is a fine man Bethke and Francis Zebbs, former Te m Sports Coach Alexander down to the lowliest Ann Arbor High stars, and the team manager, talk in their particularly and has a real sense of humor. He is made up of Ann Arbor players.. Non-fraternity team spurts.here- evident Southern drawl. was matching his Georgian drawl wit Yost's honeyed Kentucky accents are all old Hamtramck To hear a tiny quarterback when a scribe approached and asked Tegamtratc3 drawling signals in accents one him how was his defense against run- T mentally reserves for moonshine ning plays. and honeysuckles is very discon- G1arden P( certing, to say the least. "Ah really don't know," he an- One scribe almost had to re-fight the Civil War to discover how one of the players spelled his first name. He approached a manager and asked what Left End Katz's first name was.: "Maawwis." "What?" "Maawwis!2" swered, "nobody has tried to use a running game against us this year after they have seen how weak our pass defense is!" "It doesn't matter who throws the passes," he continued, "our opponents always catch them. Vanderbilt got three touchdowns on passes, Duke got two, and Clemson intercepted one of ours for their touchdown." Tigers To Renew WHAT WOULD HAVE been the Rivalry With Penn snclassic dual golf meet of the sea- Tfailedtotmaterialize when Georgia Tech's golf team was unable to make Coach Kipke will depend on Johnny Viergever, Michigan's giant 220-pound lineman, to bolster up the left side of the line this afternoon. Johnny, who plays tackle on offense and guard on defense, will start against Georgia Tech today as the Wolverines attempt to enter the win column for the first time this year. Football Needed Its Hdrses- When Willie Heston Was Here PRINCETON, N. J., Oct. 19 -UP)- One of the oldest of all football rival-: ries will be -renewed Oct. 17, 1936,1 when Princeton and Pennsylvania meet on Franklin Field in Philadel- phia. This terminiates an estrange- ment that has lasted for 40 years. Between 1876 and 1894 the two uni- versities met 31 times, with Prince- ton winning all but two of these games. Penn, 6-4, in 1892, and 12-0 in 1894, after which relations were severed because of the "intense feel- ing of rivalry between the institutions which would lead to undue roughness and engender more bitter feeling." The 1936 game will renew the fourth oldest rivalry of Princeton football. Only the Rutgers, Yale and Columbia rivalries antedate that of Pennsylvania with the Tigers. Although no football game between the two schools has been played since 1894, the universities have been keen rivals in almost every other sport. HOW ABOUT THIS YEAR? slippery Jim Carter and versatile All-American Duane Purvis, Purdue's veteran halfbacks, might easily be termed "The Touchdown Twins." Last fall the two Boilermaker stars ac- counted for nine of the 16 touchdowns scored by Purdue. arrangements to accompany the Yel- lowjacket grid team here and to meet the Michigan golf team today. The invitation to come here was extended on the part of the Mich- igan team by Chuck Kocsis, Wol- verine number one player and medalist in the National Intercol- legiates last year, to Charlie Yates, Tech's captain and number one star. The Georgia team finished third in the team ranking in the National In- tercollegiate meet won by Michigan, and this year includes on its squad all the men who played last year, as does Michigan. Yates, who won the individual col- legiate title, leads the team composed of Berrien Moore, Frank Ridley andI Pad Harris. Moore was defeated in the second round of the national meet by Kocsis while Ridley was eliminated by Yates in the semi-final round. The Michigan team would in- clude Koesis, Woody Malloy, Cap- tain-elect Cal Markham, and Dana Seeley, all members of the 1934 Walker Cup Team and for- mer National Amateur and Na- tional Intercollegiate medalist. Has Max In Anary HOLLYWOOD, Calif., -Max Baer was in a fi today because he thi Square Garden is on th in its quest for a suitable opponent for the title York come June. The world's champion came here with his m Hoffman. to work outt his motion picture, bu talked only of boxing. "I don't like the way is going about gettinga ponent for me in June "And furthermore, if Jir doesn't have a suitable me in June, well, then someone else who gets< New York, Philadelphia else, with Jack Dempsey Baer said Steve Hama defeated Max Schmel Lasky in the Garden bouts, "and now they're matching the two loser me meet the winner o tween them. "Now, I ask you, wh public think of that? "I don't care who I fig is to fight some fellow t thinks has a chance t looks to me as though eliminated everybody bu Feet' Carnera, and I do. one of these two guys If "As far as the restc weights are concerned, r Buddy can lick them." "Why doesn't the Ga and put Hamas up aga Didn't he beat both S Lasky?" asked Hoffman By ROBERT CUMMINS Thirty years ago before each foot- ball game at Ann Arbor, University workmen hitched a team of horses to the bleachers and pulled them into position at Ferry Field on the very spot where the Varsity now prac- tices. Now, Lorenzo Thomas, who has su- pervised such work since the turn of the century, often has a crew of 100 men preparing the huge stadium for the games and the throngs each Sat- urday.} If there is snow, 60 or 70 men are needed to clear the seats; others are needed to clear the aisles and run- ways. When the weather is threaten- ing, 15 must spread the huge tar- Morrison, Bernard Meet In Pro Game DETROIT, Oct. 19.- The Brook- lyn Dodgers pro football team, boast- ing Maynard Morrison, Chris Cagle and John (Shipwreck) Kelly, will ar- rive in Detroit Saturday morning. They will work out at the UniversityI of Detroit Stadium a short time later to prepare for Sunday's game with the Detroit Lions. The game will start at 2 o'clock. Two former Michigan All-Amer- ican centers, Morrison and Charles (Chuck) Bernard, of the Lions, will be in the starting lineups. Maynard was Grantland Rice's selection in 1932 and so well did Bernard fill his position last fall that he virtually was a unanimous selection for foot- ball's highest amateur honor.- .According to Coach Potsy Clark, Bernard has rapidly been absorbing the professional angles of football. Morrison, with more experience, has been an outstanding player for the Dodgers. But there are other pairs who will bear watching in Sunday's game. In his amateur days, Chris Cagle swept aside all precedents in forward pass- ing by sometimes running 25 and 30 yards back of his line waiting for a re- ceiver to get in the open for one of his passes. Earl (Dutch) Clark,nthe Lion pilot, is adept at the same ma- neuver. Kelly hails from the University of Kentucky. He will do his best to cope with Frank Christensen, the Lion kicker. In addition Kelly has a repu- tation as a passer and some of the Eastern experts rate him equal in speed with Ernie Caddel, the fleetest runner on the Lion roster.* paulin over the stadium turf. Four are needed to mark out the yard lines, and they use four 50-pound sacks of lime on this task alone each Friday. On Sundiay a crew of 30, all stu- dents, clear the stadium of the debris left the day before, and occasionally there is quite a bit of debris, accord- ing to Thomas. Two weeks ago the rioting crowd at the Michigan State game left 901 broken chairs in its wake, and one of the few things that was left intact was the goalposts. Posts Imbedded In Concrete The posts are imbedded in chunks of concrete six feet deep and two feet in diameter, and, according to Thomas, it would be impossible for any mob to pull them out. With the aid of ropes they might be broken off, he said. The outbreak of two weeks ago is the only important one of its kind Thomas has.heard of in his 34 years of watching Michigan football, al- though the crowds during the days of Willie Heston, took victories and defeats more seriously than today's crowds do. What A Team! "Those point-a-minute teams of Heston's heydey were the greatest Michigan has ever had," Thomas de- clared. "There have never been any other like them. But although the teams were great, the receipts were not. After the game, the money from the sale of tickets would be put into a galvanized iron box and hauled down to the bank in a buggy. JUST TWO IRON MEN The Singer twins, Milt and Walt, center and end respectively, have par- ticipated as regulars in every game played by Syracuse in the last three years. The twins, each stand six feet, weigh 196 pounds and are so alike in appearance that even their team- mates are unable to tell them apart. e A k Merchants tofore the weak link in the I-M sys- :00 p.m. tem, are rapidly coming to the front as one of the most popular of the activities offered by the Intramural department. Last year was a banner season, Baer thirty-two teams taking part in an eleven-sport program, with the Blue Mood Raiders, under the management of Woody Ward, winning the all-year championship. Oct. 19. - .P) The Blue Raiders are returning this ighting mood year under the management of the nks Madison Spangenberg brothers, Craig and e wrong track George. Other teams are keeping to- e heavyweight gether under the same names, with bout in New new men filling the places of those graduating. n heavyweight Touch football will begin the pro- tanager, Ancil gram this fall, followed by cross coun- t instead he try and volleyball. During the winter months five sports will hold sway: basketball, handball, relays, track, y the Garden and foul shooting. Tennis, horse- a suitable op- shoes, and baseball will be 'in order m said Baer. in the spring. opponent for The winner in this all-year program I'll fight for is determined by a point system in one, either in which a minimum number of en- or any place trance points are given with addition- as promoter." al points going to the victors in each event. is already had . ing and Art Although it is necessary for a team 's elimination to enter a majority of the sports offer- talking about ed to be a potential winner, teams s and having may and often do enter only those )f a bout be- events in which the squad members are interested. Fifteen victory medals iat would the are awarded to the team winning the all-year championship. ght. All I want Play this season will begin on Mon- hat the public day, Oct. 22. o beat me. It h Hamas has '- DANCE at it 'Old SatchelDA CEo n't care which fight. GRANGER'S of the heavy- my kid brother TONIGHT rden go ahead GALE HIBBARD and His inst Carnera? l 12-PIECE BAND chmeling and Men 40c Ladies 25c .Y,.;; n:,:.};y.::r:$r~ ;." .:-5 ....... }-,; e. e. 1h n J:Av f y?,.y: ,+1-y5 };. I JUST RECEIVED Large Shipment BI-SLACKS $4.50 $5.00 An old Five-A League rivalry will be renewed at 10:30 a.m. today when Ann Arbor High School tangles with Lan- sing Central at Wines Field. Both teams are undefeated to date this season and both were victorious over Saginaw Eastern by identical scores. If records mean anything, this morning's battle should be close all the way through. Dick Remington will be on hand 'to -.3 .. -a 1------------------n"in1 CONVENIENCE COURTESY EiEFFICIENCY I With FOUR Excellent Barbers To Serve You at the ARCADE H R A R RF R S-OP Pleated Front, Side Buckles & Straps ZIPPER FLY in all the new shades and Checks WALK A FEW STEPS AND SAVE DOLLARS Tom Corbett ! i 111 .= ............................*.* . . . ... . :.. . .. . . . . . . .