Section Two L i 4,3ttttu Sports ANN ARBOR, MICHGAN, TUESDAY, SEPT. 22, 193 THE PRESS ANGLE By George J.Andros .4 " HE CHAMP" has abdicated. With no greater heights to be reached, Dick Degener, the world's greatest diver of all time and Ann Arbor's youngest purveyor of men's wear. has given up serious competi- tion and the ranks of the amatuers to turn professional. Still as boyish looking as'the baby- faced blond who first stepped on campus as a freshman six years ago this month, Degener only a short while ago returned, from a honey- moon in Germany the holder of an Olympic championship-pinnacle of 'achievement for any athlete and} realization of "The Champ's" great- est ambition. It was Matt Mann, genial Britisher who has coached Michigan swimming teams to seven National Collegiate championships in the past ten years, who first gave Degener his nickname when Dick and Der Johnston were "The Champ" and "The Kid"-the Wolverines' All-American diving combination of 1934. Johnston, the boy who "couldn't take it" came through to win the National Collegi- ate championship two years latre, but that is a story I'll tell again another day. )EGENER'S achievements since the time he first entered divingf During the winter of 1934-35 in the National A.A.U. Indoor Cham- pionships at New York he gained the title of "the world's greatest diver of all time" by scoring 180.68 points off the three-meter or high board. No other performer in history has come close to compiling such a total in 10 dives. In five years the present-time Williams Street clotheir has won 14 National titles, two in intercollegiate competition and the remainder under the auspices of the A.A.U. Dick won what amounts to a 15th nation-wide championship when he captured the final trials for the United States Olympic springboard this summer. diving team I) ICK'S TROPHIES include cham- pionship medals won in five con- secutive National A.A.U. indoor com- petitions off the three-meter board- an accomplishment that bids fair to stand as an all-time record. The three seasons of 1933, 1934 and 1935 saw Degener capture three out of the four National A.A.U. diving title each year, in competition off the three-meter board indoors and outdoors, the one-meter or low board indoors and the 10-meter platform outdoors. During the paste year the former Detroiter took only enough time from his business duties to concentrate on his favorite event, the three-meter board competition, and won that event indoors and outdoors, losing the low-board diving indoors and the platform event outdoors. WHILE AT MICHIGAN Degener won two Western Conference titles and the same number of Na- tional Collegiate championships. At Detroit Central High he was Mich- igan Interscholastic champion twice and walked away with the National Intrescholastic title in his senior year. At the 1932 Olympics at Los An- geles Dick was third behind "Dutch" Smith and Mickey Riley Galitzen, both of the United States. Degener's natural grace off a diving board is a pleasure to behold, and his efforts on his favorite dive, the two and one-half somersaults in the lay- out position, never fail to bring the spectators to their feet in applause. Ann Arbor has gained an energetic business man, but amatuer athletics has lost one of its finest stylists. I take my ha off to "The Champ"-a great competitor and a grander fel- low. DICK DEGENER AND WIFE competition at the gentle read like a story book. age of 131 Hustling Sop homore Group Benches Lettermen Freshmen To Inspect Tour Of Sports Building Will Begin Orientation Week Athletic Program The Students of the University of Michigan, the faculty, and The Daily join with the whole country in mourning the terrible tragedy which has visited the Purdue foot- ball squad. Although Michigan has not had the privilege of meeting Purdue on the gridiron for several years, the ability and sportsmanship of Pur- due teams have been remembered and recognized in Ann Arbor. It is with the feeling of deepest sympathy that we tender our sin- cerest regrets, together with the hope that the friends and rela- tives of the dead boys may gather some degree of comfort from the Kip And The Boys Talk It Over At The Initial Drill By RAYMOND GOODMAN united grief that the whole world Featuring a diversified program of feels. 18 sports the Intramural Depart- ment's annual Orientation Week ath- Powerful State lktic program will swing into action at 4:30 p.m. today, when the class of G 1940 will start a tour through the largest Intramural plant in the world. FO >enin The tour will continue through Fo r 'Thurdng Thursday. Opportunity for active competition Spartans Gird For Third with fellow freshman will be af- forded the first year men in bowling, Straight Victory Over handball, horseshoes, rifle Wolverine Fleven shooting, swimming, tennis and vol- leyball. Instruction will be offered Intent upon making it three in a in boxing, codeball, fencing, gym- nastics, Sigma Delta Psi, squash and row over its hated Michigan rival, a badminton as well as an opportunity speedy and powerful Michigan State to become acquainted with others in- eleven under the capable Charlie terested inthese sports. Any desir- Bachman will open the Wolverine ing to report for freshman football, football schedule track, or wrestling will find this in- cluded in the schedule. j the Stadium. IHere they are, the Wolverine stalwarts, on whose shrulders rsts the responsibility of returning Michigan to the football heights after a two-year absence.. If enthusiasm, spiiit, and alertness have anything to do with gridiron success, Mivhigan fans can look forward to a real sson. All the ick in the world, Kip. Stoller 'Makes U. S. Olympic TIrack Squad' Suspended Wayne Puckma Forgiven For Fight Outburst Adam Widlak, Wayne University hockey player who precipitated a free I To Bowl At Union The Michigan Union alleys will bej the scene of th? bowling tournament. freshman may report at the Union any time during the week and roll two games for a total score and win- ners will be determined on a two- game high score basis. Bowling will be free to everyone during the open- ing week. The tennis singles tourney will be- gin at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Sept. 26th' and should provide excellent practice in preparation for the fall All-Cam- pus meet which will be soon after the opening of school. Tryouts for the freshman tennis squad are advised; to see Coach John Johnstone im- mediately... Tennis, Golf Included At the same hour and date that marks the beginning of the tennis; match, golf enthusiasts will report at the University golf ready for 18 holes3 of medal play in the Orientation; Week tournament. Players will be required to pay the usual student green fee of 50 cents. The swimming meets, which will be held at 5 p.m. on Tuesday, Wednes- day, and Thursday at the Intramural' pool, have always thrown some light on the freshman team in the past and this year should prove no excep- tion. First and second place win- ners in each event on Tuesday and Wednesday will meet on the final day to determine the ultimate winners. Football Starts Monday Freshman football candidates will report to Coach Ray Fisher at Yost Field House at 3 p.m., Monday, Sept. 28. Uniforms will b'e distributed at this tihe and aspirants will be put l through a light drill. iiie 6par ansn ave ost six men from the starting eleven that made the Wolverines look bad with a 27-6 beating last year but indications coming out of State's early practices this fall have it that the loss will not be felt. Spartans Sea Win While they do not expect as easy a victory as last season's, Spartan observers can see nothing for their team but a third win in three years, and the fifth in 40 years of gridiron competition with the Wolverines. Two men, quarterback Dick Colina and climax halfback Kurt Warmbein, are missing from the machine-like State backfield of last year, with Co- lina the only one of the two who may be missed. Red Neumann of Lansing, reserve for two seasons, is in line for the signal-calling post, but his lack of great speed may overbalance his blocking ability and good generalship and give the starting position to one of the two other less experienced per- formers. Husky Al Diebold of Jackson, a sophomore, has been called the great- est quarterback prospect ever to hit the rolling East Lansing campus, and junior Chick Halbert, powerful Grand Captain Bob Osgood, Wadt for all fight at the conclusion of the Stone And Star Sprinter Michigan-Wayne puck game last fall Reach Final Trials and was on this account suspended i for life from Tartar athletic partici- Dame Fortune only frowned on pation has been finally returned to Michigan track and field men in good standing by the University's ath-' the 1936 Olympid games this summer letic advisory committee--and every- in Berlin, but three Wolverine stars body concerned is glad of it. did manage to go as far as the final, trials with one, Sammy Stoller, mak- Widlak, a husky defenseman, tan- ing the American team as a sprinter. gled with Michigan's Vic Heyliger just ig the Americta as pn after the final whistle had blown who has equalled the world record on the Olympic ice last winter and in of :06.1 for 60 yards indoors, was a moment the rink was filled with sixth in the 100-meter finals at Ran- milling players and spectators. The dall's Island after being second to riot lasted only a few minutes and al- the inimitable Jesse Owens in his though no damage had been done heat. Stoller was included on the and no one injured, the Board in squad as a member of the 400-meter Control of Athletics at Wayne held relay team but did not compete for an inquest and suspended Widlak he was removed through maneuver- for life. ing by the heads of the team in Both Heyliger and Coach Eddie favor of Foy Draper. Lowrey regretted that such drastic Sitoller had finished second in the action had been taken, and The Daily semi-final trials two weeks before the Wayne hit the suspension, pointing finals in the 100-meters and was out that although Widlak had been third in the A.A.U. championships. to blame, the penalty was out of He was also third in the National keeping with the offense. Intercollegiate meet in June. The lifting of the suspension Bob Osgood, lanky hurdler and pleases not only Heyliger, Lowrey, captain of the 1937 Wolverine track and Widlak, himself, but also glad- team, apparently had a place on dens the heart of Joe Gembis, Wayne the American Olympic delegation grid mentor. Widlak was a regular clinched, but failed when he fell in tackle on last year's Tartar team, going over a hurdle in the final trials and his return in good standing will cf the 400-meter hurdles. give Gembis added strength when his He was fourth in the A.A.U. meet, squad opens the football ceason at (Contmiued on Page 10) Lansing with Michigan State. Hockey Team To Have Great. Reserve Corps Barring Injuries, 'Rough And Rugged' Pucksters Will Have Rests By FRED BUESSER. For the first time in Michigan hockey history Coach Eddie Lowrey will be able to send a complete alter- nate forward line on the ice this year -if the gaunt shadows of injury and eligibility cast their grim rays else- where. And it is about time that they did.' Year after year Wolverine hockey teams have skated out on the Col- iseum ice with seven and eight men squads to battle it out for 60 minutes with rival teams boasting three for- ward lines and a change of defense. Michigan hockey players have de- veloped a reputation as rough and rugged pucksters who can outfight, outhoist, and outgame anything on skates, and indeed they have had to. Last January it looked like the horizon had finally cleared, that the Wolverines would be able to muster more reserve strength than ever be- for but after the dust of finals had cleared away, Dick Berryman and Dick Griggs wings, and Burt Smith defenseman, could be seen slapping the dirt out of their pants and mut- tering into their beards as the blue coated athletic board stood with up- turned thumb. Thus busted in the snoot with the (Continued On Page 1 7 Larson Continuing Work That Earned Him Big Ten Award For the second time in three years a Michigan baseball player has earned the coveted trophy awarded annually to the most valuable player to his team in the entire Western Conference, Berger Larson receiving the 1936 distinction. 'Whitey' Wistert was given the award in 1934. Larson was captain of last spring's Wolverine nine and pitched the club to its first Big Ten crown in seven years. The team won nine Confer- ence games in 10 starts, beating out Illinois for the title. He led the league in strikeouts, fanning 48 men in the 44 innings he pitched and{ his earned run average of 1.43 was third among the hurlers. His most notable performance came; in his last appearance on the hill1 when he had to pitch over poor sup- port by his teammates to beat Iowa and clinch the championship. After graduation Berger joined the Davenport Blue Sox in the Western League, ranked as an A-1 loop, and with sensational hurling has helped; give the Sox the league champion- ship. Davenport is owned by the Chi- cago White Sox and it is likely that Berger will be taken to training camp' by the American League club next spring and given an opportunity to break into baseball's "big show." Berger won his first four starts with the Blue Sox, one a great two- hit performance that placed him at the head of the league's 1935 rookie hurlers. Purdue Five To Open 'Big Ten CageSchedule The complete 1937-37 Michigan basketball schedule was recently an- nounced by Coach Franklin C. Cap- pon with the releasing of the Wolver- ines' Big Ten schedule by Major John W. Griffiths, of the Western Confer- ence. The six Big Ten teams, selected by a round-table system, will be met twice each by the Varsity and will include both Purdue University and Indiana University, co-champions of the 1935-36 season, with the open- ing game on January 9th taking the Wolverines to Lafayette, Ind., to meet Piggy Lambeft's Boilermaker five. The schedule, which also includes Northwestern, Wisconsin, Ohio State, and Chicago in addition to the two Hoosier 'quintets, will probably prove the hardest hurdle that the Michigan team will have, to take in the title chase. Indiana and Purdue will be as strong, perhaps even stronger, than (Continued on Page 12) New Men Gain Four Positions Blocking And Tackling Left Out Of Early Drills; Stress Conditioning By FRED H. DE LANO After nearly two weeks of prac- tice by Michigan's grid squad it ap- pears that last year's highly pub- licized freshman team was just about as good as critics claimedI, for it seems probable that at least four of the Wolverines starting the opener against Michigan State will be soph- omoresnwhile last year's lettermen will spend their time on the bench. Fifty-four men were invited back to practice by Coach Harry Kipke and have been drilling twice daily ,since Sept. 10. For the first time in several years there was no bodily con- tact work during the first week but instead the time was spent in con- ditioning drills. The Wolverines will be led this year by Capt. Matt Patanelli who is expected to take his place as one of the country's outstanding ends before the season is through. Not only a great defensive end, Patanelli is also an able pass receiver and should fig- ure in many plays for passes are ap-, parently going to play a great part in the Wolverine offense this season with good passers, plentiful among the backfield candidate. No Position Sure A number of the lettermen are be7 ing pushed aside by the sophomores while others are showing unsuspected talent, realizing that no position can the team is a sure one. The battle for the regular center position will probably be one of the outstanding with Joe Rinaldi, a vet- eran of one season, striving to beat out John Jordan, winner of the Chicago Alumni Trophey for the out- standing freshman last spring. Rin- aldi has shown better form in prac- tice this fall than he displayed at any time last season. And it is an old adage that the calibre of Michigan's football aggregations vary with the ability of the centers. At present a pair of sophomores appear to be the outstanding guards, Forrest Jordan.(no relation to John) and John Brennan being the pair in question. Lilburn Ochs, George Marzonie and Frank Bissell are fight- ing, to get in ahead of the first two. Janke At Tackle At the tackles Fred Janke, giant sophomore from Jackson, and Mel- vin Kramer, a letterman, are slated as the leaders right now but are be- ing hard pushed by Siegel, Luby and Greenwald. Janke is a player of the same type as "Whitey" Wistert, All- American in 1933, who has joined the coaching staff this year. Besides Patanelli the leading ends are Valpey, Gedeon, Smick and Sta- bovitz. Valpey is a veteran and will probably start against State. Both Gedeon and Smick are sophomores and under the coaching of the famous Bennie Oosterbaan .are ex- pected to develop into great wing- (Continued on Page 14) I Rapids product, did some fine re- serve work last year. Fred Ziegel of Flint, already an (Continued on Page 13)E I Suicide Schedule May Cloud Michigan's Rising Football Star o \ Doherty To Stage Fall Track Meets Freshmen planning to tryout for } the yearling track squad will have a chance to competa in two Intramural meets this fall. Coach Ken Doherty is yet undecided on the exact dates for the meets but expects to have Already showing definite signs of reports from the Spartan camp Coach being able to emerge from the dol- Charles Bachman will have another drums that have been theirs for the powerful eleven, light but exceed- past two seasons, Michigan's foot- ingly fast, with a world of reserve material. ball team will open its suicide sched- Michian ule Oct. 3 against Michigan State Michigan coaches, however, are and for the first time in history this not conceding State a thing. For opener may prove to be the all- the first time in three years there important game of the year for the is a definite winning spirit in evi- Wolverines. dence at Wolverine practice sessions and this optimism is radiated by Not since the national champion- everyone from Director of Athletics ship years of 1932 and 1933 has the Mielding H. Yost right down through outlook for Coach Harry Kipke's Manager Bill Bates. / In 1934 the charges been as bright as it is at Wolverines won only one game out of the present time. This is due large- eight; last year they split even with Indiana eleven, this encounter also to be in the Michigan Stadium. Last year the Hoosiers dropped a 7-0 de- cision to the Wolverines and Vernon Huffman fumbled a punt and Matt Pattanelli dropped on it across the' goal line. A week later the team will meet the first of the suicide elevens, Minne- sota, undefeated since Michigan beat them 3-0 in 1932. The power of the Bierman coached Gophers is known far and wide but more than once in years gone by a supposedly inferior Michigan eleven has taken the meas- ure of a Minnesota powerhouse. His- tory may repeat itself this year in Minneapolis, the scene of the en- title but against the Wolverines they are always tough. Pennsylvania's all veteran team follows Illinois on the schedule, the game to be at Fr anklin Field, Phila- delphia. Last year here Michigan played its greatest game against the Quakers to win, 16-6. A week later local fans will see tlf final home game of the season with Northwestern furnishing the opposi- tion to the Wolverines. And no critic is doubting that the Wildcats will furnish plenty of opposition to every team they meet this season for Coach Lynn Waldorf apparently has a great 1 1 r 1 Renner Third Michigan Star To Join Yale Staff Announcement was recently made that William Renner, quar- terback and cantain of last year's wmwmwlmvdwU