THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1X31, THE MICHIGAN DAILY .... ..S.... . .MARCH. . 1.... ..... .T.... M...C.....A N...DA IL Y.. Eighth i-M (7pew Ii Iouse Feat i redI By Va ied Sports Annual Exhibition Attracts illIi Array Of Athletes Twenty Men Selected For Butler Relays I. --- - lI Five Freshmen 'The HOT ST OVE Wolverines Will Team Title For DefendI Second By BILL REED - - - - _. _. A r e Awarded Puck Numerals Five freshmen hockey players were awarded numerals yesterday as Coach Eddie Lowrey, ready to leave town in a day or so, stopped long enough to' predict that next year's Wolverine puck team will be one of the strongest in the history of the school. L Frosh Trackinen Beat Badgers Ken Doherty's treshman trackmen quarter-mile run but in return leJ annexed their second postal track the Wolverines scoreless in the hig meet by downing the first year men hurdles. Towle of Wisconsin neg< of the University of Wisconsin 5 to tiated the two-mile in 9 minutes,2 48. seconds, faster than the winning tint High scoring honors for the meet for the distance at the Conferenc went to Bill Watson of Michigan who meet. took firsts in the shot put and the The next opponent for the fresh broad jump and tied for second in men will be Indiana who will end the the high jump to total twelve points. telegraphic campaign for the yea Mehl led the Badger yearlings with The events will be run off at the Fiel firsts in the mile and two-mile for House Thursday afternoon afti a total of ten points. which freshman numerals awards wI Wisconsin suffered a shutout in the be announced. Consecutive Year Coach Chuck Hoyt yesterday an- "NO, we didn't mind losing the meet," Matt Mann was saying, forgetting we saw him Sunday morning and that the long faces of he and his squad gave the lie to that Chi Psi's Triumph Dekes To Captutree 'A' Title Over' Class New Cage Captain S.A.E. Five Wins I Class 'B' Crown Frosh Dekes Btc Grapplers Almost To Capture Class Jordan nounced that a 20-man squad will statement then. "It was a good thing Bill Wood, Detroit; Fred Rhein-' represent Michigan at the Butler Re- for us. I was glad it happened." heimer, Bronxville, N. Y.; George lays this week-end where for the sec- Yes es we knew. What he meant Cooke, Walkerville, Ont.; Ted Ling, ond successive week the Wolverines that a licking is healthy for any St. Johnsbury, Vt.; and John Dux- will be seeking to win a title for the team that has been on top as long as bury, Scarsdale, N. Y. were the year- third straight year. his has, and that he would be back ling skaters named to receive awards. Included on the list are Bob Os- in there as never before next year. Cooke, a flashy skater and compe- good and Ben Starr, but Hoyt stated Further, he meant that he hadn't tent stick handler will probably fill that if their injuries of last week show decided against competing in the a post on Michigan's second forward signs of possibly being aggregated by nationals this year. line next season while Wood will be a competition this week they will not I good second to Irwin Shalek as a net be entered. Osgood has been both- That was right, how about the minder. ered by a tight leg muscle while Starr Inaionass Monty Welch, whose play in the was spiked in the heel at the Con- Well, that all depends." interfraternity league earned him ference meet last Friday. Not that we questioned that na- what would have been the sixth fresh- Change In Relay Team tional meets often did depend, but man award, was declared ineligible. we asked him to go on, what are the__ A slight change in the make-up of chancesGED the mile relay team has been made, GESOT bad at all. Because you can G ig secn sCALLED Steve Mason running in place of Fred NO baatl.BeusyocnI All eligible second semester Stiles. Patton, Aikens and Birleson pretty safely figure the boys won't freshmen and first semester soph- do anvworse than they did at Minn-. eUa s ! JuEuai By THE FRESHMAN SPORTS STAFF Twenty-five hundred interested spectators packed the Intramural Sports building last night to watch 500 athletes compete in 21 events in the Eighth Annual Intramural Open House. The program, complete from fast basketbal lto suberb horseshoe pitch- ing, proved greatly to the liking of the huge crowd that milled through the building to get a glimpse of one sport after another. The three championship basketball tilts and the Varsity-Frosh wrestling meet, together with the swimming ex- hibition drew the largest number of onlookers, and a total of 100 of- ficials was employed to handle the evening's program. Wrestling Before an overflow crowd in the wrestling room of the Intramural Sports Building, the Michigan Varsity wrestling squad defeated the fresh- 'men matmen 15-13. The winning points were scored in the last bout CHAMPIONS CROWNED AT OPEN HOUSE Wrestling-Varsity Squad. Class A Basketball-Chi Psi. Independent Basketball -- All Stars. Class B Basketball-S.A.E. All Campus Tennis Singles-Al. Schneider. All Campus Codeball-Bruce Campbell. Dart Baseball-Forestry 'A.' Fencing--J. Briner. Volleyball-Chinese Students. when Tiny Wright gained a 1:15 time advantage over Forrest Jordan to bring victory to the Varsity. Two falls were scored in the match and both were registered by the year- lings. In the 155-pound class Har- lan Danner pinned Arnold Gross with a double bar arm after 2:05 of fast grappling. Frank Morgan threw Bill Lowell with the same hold in 1:35 in the 165-pound division. Basketball Chi Psi fraternity reigned supreme in the Class "A" fraternity basket- ball league by defeating Delta Kap- pa Epsilon last night, 17 to 14. Victory came for the Chi Psi quin- tet in the last minute of play as Jack Palmer, who paced his team with six points, broke the 14 all dead- lock with a tip-in shot. A foul by Jack Powell, Deke forward, gave Leo McKay the opportunity to sink the final point and ensure victory for the Chi Psis. Going into the last quar- ter the Deke cagers held a slight edge of 12 to 11 but a dog shot and free throw by John McLean, inserted into the game in place of Ed Greenward, put the Chi Psi five into the lead un- til the game was tied up in the last two minutes. Clever passing and ball hawking enabled the champions to will round out the mile quartet thatI last Saturday was clocked in 3:21.0, , .* .. the fastest time of the year. The mile and four mile relay teams are defendig champions at Butler z..;."..and both are favored to repeat this week which will mean 20 points for Michigan if they do. Stone,rFink, ..........::. Staehle and Belsor.il.rn in that order on the four mile team and - should be troubled only by Indiana. After last week's collapse of the Hoosier distance men, however, the Wolverine quartet stands out as one of the best in the country. Starr May Run In the two mile relay Starr, Staehle, Brelsford and Davidson will carry the Johnny Gee, who for the past baton although the make-up may be two seasons has so effectively looked altered before the meet, depending after the center assignment on on Starr's condition. In the medley the Varsity court team, was elected Stiles will lead off running the quar- yesterday to the post of captain of ter, Gorman will follow in the half, the 1936-37 squad. Having two O'Connell will run the three-quarters years' experience behind him, Gee and Devine will finish with the mile. should prove a most capable leader. Sam Stoller has been entered in both the 60-yard dash and the broad maintain their margin until the final jump while in the shot put Michigan gun. will have Townsend, Fisher and In a fast, rough game the All- White. Osgood and Hunt are en- Stars won the Independent basketball tered in both hurdle races. championship with a 19-16 victory over the Physical Education team,1 defending champions. played with Sherwood and Kahn vic- The Phys. Eds took a four point torious, 6-4, 4-6, and 6-2. lead at the outset of the game but! two baskets by Fowdy tied it up and Horshoes from there on out the All-Stars main- tained a safe lead. The score at half Bob Hitt, small fourteen-year-old timefd tsafe d.Phsd Clutretal-youth from Plymouth thrilled a crowd time1found the Phys. Ed Club trail- of some four hundred persons with in the first basketball encounter his exhibition of expert horseshoe I the evening, Sigma Alpha Epsilon pitching. With his brother hiding the annexed the fraternity class "B,, stake in various ways, such as holding anexednhep fyratity class "" a blanket in front of it, and lying championship by beating Delta Sigma down befoie it, he managed to ring Pi, 16 to 8. The latter five was about half of the shoes he pitched. table to score only one point during Besides overcoming the hidden stake the whole second half.n, handicap, he also had little difficulty The S.A.E.'s were trailing 7 to 2 at in putting the shoes around the stake half-time, but came back with a through his brother's arms, with the spurt to rout the Delta Sigma Pi team. latter sitting on the stake and with Hagen, Giller and Lucius made three him combining the two stances. successive goals to open the second half and gave their team a lead which Swimming was maintained until the end. The feature of the evening in the UU ~iy V L V1(:1 ..j -omor es that are interested in try eapolis and there is every reason to { ing out for football manager are think they'll do better, especially the asked to report at the field house divers, tonight at 8:00 p.m. Then look at the meet from 4 this angle. Thirty points should be enough to win it with three teams piling up points. Then start figuring what we can get. First give us eightpoints in thef medley relay, which isn't opti- mistic considering their new in- tercollegiate record. That makes 13 points. Then Frank Barnard, in whatever event he wants to enter, harry Riecke in the back- stroke, and the sprint relay team with Barnard swimming should be able to get at least six points between them, which makes 19 points. But then you come to the biggest if of the meet. If the divers can give us 15 points on the two boards the meet should be reasonably simple. They say they can, and who should know better? Or look at it from another angle. Yale and Iowa will be the principle contenders for the team title, with Michigan, and they will be cutting each other's throats. Also, Jack Medica and Jimmy Gilhula and a lot of others will be swimming for Mich- igan, as they cut in on opposition points without hurting us. John Macionis of Yale, for in- stance, will be fighting Walters of Iowa fn the sprints. Medica and Gilhula will be shoving Yale down in the longer swims. Then there's this fellow Hutler of Harvard, who has done far better than Walters in both sprints, and he can take points from both Iowa and Yale without touching the Michigan total. Things aren't so bad. No sir, Mr. Mann will tell any- body, he doesn't figure his team out, of the big meet, and we suspect a strong reason is that he would like to make a comeback after a defeat in the Conference meet which he did feel, after all. peated twice was an exhibition of rope spinning by Bryant (Bud) Ruth- ven, and a series of relays between Ypsilanti Roosevelt, State Interscho- lastic champions in Class B, Ypsilanti Central, Ann Arbor University High, Ann Arbor High and Ypsilanti Central Alumni. William Bates, Varsity Manager. -- New Spring Styles White Is Always Right Society Brand CLOTH ES $3500 Other makes at $22.50 $25.00 "Semester Shirts"! - That's what college men call Arrow Par and Gordon. A repu- tation well earned no less, for these two notable shirts seem to last forever, year in and year out. Furthermore, white is always right - and with Mitoga fit and Arrow's authentic collar styles, you can't go wrong. Call on your Arrow dealer today. $2each AROW SHI RTS and TIES $29.50 Topcoats $18.00 to $40.0 STADEL & WALKER 1st Nat'l Bank Bldg. EG DOWNTOWN - Next to Wuerth Theatre The Foremost Clothiers in Washtenaw County t l Tennis swimming pool was an exhibition off the high-board by Dick Degener, for- Al Schneider, former junior tennis mer Michigan star and present world champion of Detroit, defeated John ! champion, and Ned Diefendorf and Skiriski, Pittsburgh public parks star, Adolf Ferstenfeld of Coach Matt in the final match of the all-campus Mann's Varsity squad. tournament, 7-5, 10-8, Schneider, a Also on the program, which was re-1 medical student, won through his - greater experience and a superior backhand, although in both sets Skir- iski, a freshman, came from behind to tie up the set only to lose in the extra games. Four members of Michigan's Var- sity tennis team put on a doubles ex- hibition as part of the Intramural Open House last night. Dean and Flick paired off against Sherwood and Capt. Kahn. Three fast sets were Contemporary Out Today. h: { t ii I I I agOd LO-DOWN Brown Bucko- black gum bottom . 4v' r '. . j fY J:'. J . " .A {P J .'!' .may 1 .{, .,,_ Fr , :.Y'. : 'i;} ' . f - rk; F s .f}: .. { 'r K+" :.5 "" :":" ..r. ?." .,1 .,: ' A J. Y:?.::. ' {%. -stories by your fellow students poems and reviews -the lowdown on Betty Coed a scholar on jazz and "What Really Happens in Hamlet" will surprise you! T47t r Campus classic. Roughed up calf that scorns scuffs. Chunky black rubber soles. Easy, springy. Practical for your vacation. Varsity Blucher on our short-front LO-DOWN last. I' This Spring-- j _ ~'/'i:" 1 1