* FRIDAY, MARCH 4, 1938 THE MIC HIGAlN DAILY Wo yerine Track Team Leaves Today For Illinois Selected Squad Of 22 To Face Big Ten's Best Hoyt Sees Meet As Chance To Compare His Team With Loop Opponents The University of Michigan track team entrains at 5:15 p.m. today for the Illinois Relays classic Saturday at Champaign. The handpicked Wol- verine squad will number 22 men. Victors by top-heavy scores over Michigan State and O.S.U. in their only two indoor dual meets, the Hoyt- men are among those favored at Champaign where their competition will include all but Wisconsin and Iowa of the Big Ten. Meet Tests Varsity The Illinois affair is regarded by Coach Hoyt as a scale by which he can judge to some extent the strength of his aggregation in comparison with the other loop opponents who will be gunning for the Wolverines' indoor crown at Chicago next week. Besides the Big Ten teams there will also be performers from 32 in- stitutions to the number of better than 400, hailing from as far west as Kansas and Oklahoma, presenting a brilliant field in the 10 special events and eight relay races. Topping the program will be the four university relays. Michigan wil: be entered in all four with a better than even shot at copping the titles in each. Michigan will also presen Gedeon, Kelley, Olmsted and Kutsche in the 320 yard shuttle hurdle relay The outstanding Wolverine quar- tet will be in the distance medley in which the distances are a quarter half, three quarters of a mile an mile in that order. Distance Men Listed At the 440-yard distance either Waldo Abbot or Bill Aigler will start Bill Buchanan is slated for the hal mile leg, Harold Davidson the three quarters and "Rambling" Ralph Schwarzkopf the full mile. Running in a time-trial this wees with Schwarzkopf, Davidson ran the three quarter distance in 3:04.9. which, besides giving the Wolverines a terrific time for that leg of the medley, shows that the wiry Michigan distance man may have the key to a world record mile before his college career is ended in view of the 304.2 which Glenn Cunningham carded for the same distance last night as he sped to his 4:04.4 in a paced mile at Dartmouth. Davidson will also run in the 1,500 meters and Schwarzkopf will seek to avenge his beating at the hands of Buckeye Paul Benner in the two-mile ATHLETICS DRILL LAKE CHARLES, La., March 3.- (iP)-The Blues beat the Whites 7 to 5 today as the Philadelphia Athletics played their first intracamp game Rookies came in for their share of good baseball. i L g r s '! t _{ .; :j "E 1 li 1 'I r ; _i r s s I ! r 5 P ' Here's A Ouintet I To Watch As Conference Swimmers Clash ---- -1 - . 4,.,.,.., ...., . Trackmen View Illinois, Butler Relays As Fun Amidst Business By ROY HEATH With their only indoor dual meets safely tucked away by decisive mar- gins, the Wolverine track team now prepares to mix business with pleas- urp. The business will be their coming battle to retain their Big Ten indoor crown at Chicago on March 12. The pleasure will be their tour of the "gravy league" starting when they appear at the Illinois Relays Satur- day at Champaign and ending in the season's indoor finale, the Butler Re- lays at Indianapolis, two week-ends hence. What A Grind! This "gravy league" junketing is hard for the sweating cinder addicts to take. To begin with it means a chance to leave Ann Arbor. After that it keeps getting tougher. It means gruelling travel on first class trains, nights spent in the dank confines of A-1 hostels. And the food. The boys would probably starve if it wasn't for those steaks and rolls served up little better Uhan mother could do at her best. Let it be understood that it takes pioneering blood to travel from one place to another like that. The food however means practical- iy nothing in comparison with the loot that accrues from such roaming. The vandals returning from their his-d toric sack of Rome would look like five thumbed pick-pockets in the same room with a Michigan track team. The sponsors for indoor track car- nivals such as the Butler and Illinois classics seem to be in competition to see who can give away the most gold watches, pen sets, medals rang- ing from gold to brass and sundry other bric-a-brac. Prizes - And How One runner of bygone years is said to have gone mad from the con- stant ticking of the veritable watch- works he had picked up in the course of his travels during his collegiate career. It was a cuckoo clock picked up in a special sack race which fi- nally caused his brains to crumble. The sack race brings us down to the special events. While the afore- mentioned sponsors are more than generous with the stars of their get- togethers, this commendable open handedness cannot be attributed to large heartedness. Business is the word for it and new records make business good. Customers Always Right The cash clients are always appre- ciative of record performances, not so much because they know the differ- en ce but because they like to say "I watched it." The customer is al- ways right since he keeps rust off the turnstiles, hence records there shall be. If the mark in a strictly McCoy event ,is too formidable a more sus- ceptible one will be substituted. It doesn't make much difference to the competitors, noneat nall to the pooh-bahs who put the thing on and the customers are happy. Besides it's all in good clean fun. ?3P7: DeMiq /g , C4e(o-C,7//MP6rT7*Ro/ /N 1.AIM R iZ37r 97: j ORMN' zsd&E' -MICe'i /- -OW/ 0 T 7"k7 - -MINE150'TR - -NOATgIL/-eSTR'- With the dual meet swim season a thing of the past, the Big Ten's aquatic aces have settled down to rigid drills for the Conference meet which will be held this year in the New Trier High School pool in Winnetka, Ill. on March 11 and 12. Pictu ed above are a quintet of men who are expected to do well by themselves and their teams with point-winning efforts. Michigan's Kirar will defend his 50- and 100-yard titles, and will also swim a leg on the title-holding Wolverine 400-yard free-style relay team. Bob Allen, Iowa breast- stroker, placed in last year's meet, and improved perfc-rmances this season label him as a threat in his event. Boudreau Case Helps Involve Bi TenStandings ProgVeColg al F r B aseball F end- Pro 7. Col W 1L et. tp olp on.clet. i r f i a By TOM PHARES pressure was due for another rise. Purdue ...9 2 .818 479 375 42.6 34.1 Take cover men, they're a feudin' The Washington Senators walked Minnesota 8 3 .727 358 340 32.6 30.9 agin'! No, it's not the Martins and in where angels feared to tread to N es te 7 .740 447 389 34.6 32.6 the Coys but the professional base- sign Catcher John Beard, a junior Ohio State 6 5 .546 417 389 37.9 35.4 ball clubs and the college authorities at Willamette University of Salem wMichigan 5 6 .455 373 345 33.9 31.4 who are once more tooth and nail Ore. "They can'f do that," yelped the 1ichin 5 6 .455 473 44 33.9 31.4 over the debatable question whether Westerners. But they did. . Wisconsin 5 6 .455 411 404 37.4 36.7 Indiana .3 8 .273 418 455 38.0 41.4 or not the pros should sign college The Boudreau Affair illinois ...4 7 .364 393 420 35.7 38.21 players before they have graduated. Meanwhile, hard feelings were im- Chicago . .2 9 .182 360 496 32.7 45.1 Of course the college coaches claim proved none whatever in the mid- ------- s.L_.' Teams. Seldom Win Them All Regardless of who wins the Big Ten' basketball championship this year they will be following in the footsteps of a majority of their predecessors in one respect-they will not have sur- vived their Conference schedule with an unblemished record. Unlike football, a Big Ten basket- ball winner seldom goes through a season without having at least one de- feat marked up against it. Only four times in Conference history have title ....4"* CARBURETOR U. S. Pat. No. 2,082,106 1 5 New way of burning - tobacco - better, cooler, cleaner. Carburetor-Action cools smoke. Keeps bottom of bowl absolutely dry. Treated with honey. Get the genuine. SPRING -HATS ALL NEW STYLES AND COLORS One Price MILTONS CLOTHES 119 South Main Street that it "aint cricket" since it de- west with the discovery that Louie winning quintets been able to display, prives the boy of his education and Boudreau, University of Illinois star' Fisher To Cut perfect records, with Purdue the only lessens interest in the college game, basketball player and promising di- school to have more than one such not to mention the fact that some- amond performer, was being paid by nLL1 q useason. times it puts a crimp in the coach's the Cleveland Indians in return for Sei i aPurdue Did It team. his promise to sign with them after Purdue was the last to turn the Recently the astute Boston Red graduation. Although this case was + . trick. This was done in 1930 when N Sox made a ''midnight raid" on the a bit different, Big Ten officials saw Infielders 4Get First Tase the Boilermakers managed to survive University of Ore- fit to rule him ineligible because of it. Of Field Work In Drill their 10 game schedule without a gon baseball squad The professionals' argument in defeat. carrying away the many cases is that in the first place The first game is still more than Before that it is necessary to go MR. EDDIE H team's sensational they are doing nothing wrong and a month off, but Coach Ray Fisher back 11 years before another unscar- sophomore pitcher, there is no law against it. And in the has so many aspirants for the Varsity red record can be found. In 1919, Bill Sayles, much second place, if it were not for the baseball team working out, that he Minnesota made a clean sweep of its a to the anguish of fact that many college players have announced he will make a abbreviated 10 game schedule. Illin-wp Oregon supporters. their ways paid through 'school by stantial cut within a few days. ois came close in 1915 when it won wear Friday Sayles won the the pro clubs and that many others Already the Field House facilities 12 while dropping one and Wisconsin conference title for j only play college ball as a step to the are taxed to the limit, and it will be did the same in 1914. We cordia i his team last sea- majors, college baseball wouldn't exist necessary to make room for the ath- Purdue went through the 1913 cam- son and was being in the first place. letes from the winter sports who will paign without a loss being marked up an . counted on for a However, the problem has grown report for diamond duty shortly. against it and Wisconsin managed to Boudreau couple more years. to such proportions that Judge Lan- Fisher has been able to determine capture 12 straight in the 1912 season. Then, as if to add insult to the dis, baseball's high commissioner, is l from the workouts of the past week There have beer many "almosts." West's injury, the Seattle club of the investigating, what men will not be. able to make The Chicago quintet of 1920, still Pacific Coast league went into the-- ----------- the grade with the Varsity. rated with the best the Conference freshman class at the University 'of It takes a bright sun to break has yet produced, dropped two of itsVn Washington to pick up outfielder Bob Cleveland Wins through the Field House skylights, twelve contests. Fritz Crisler, new Edo Vanni who is also the star field flbut yesterday it broke through and Michigan coach, played for the Mar- goal kicking artist of the frosh foot- Shooting Meet provided enough light for the squad oons that year. ball squad. to go through the most satisfactory jLose Only One Yanks, Cards Scrap The Intramural rifle shooting con- workout thus far. Batting practice Purdue, paced by Johnny Wooden, was especially encouraging. dropped one contest while winnng 11 After the New York Yankees vs. St. test which was held at the R.O.T.C. aeeciald ecdur aged nei cony whsl wisin -1 Louis Cardinals scrap in December building last night was won by Robert Tin fiel d cae and tn 1932. Thinly ls as a 2he had subsided, things grew relatively Cleveland, '38E. The winner had gfind an unoccupied corner a md en- idefeat sustained at the hands of the quiet with the aspersion-casting and score of 189 out of a possible 200 and gagedin a snappy "pepper rgame Ilini at Champaign. mud-slining at a minimum. his marksmanship will- be rewarded getting their first taste of field work. In 1936, both Purdue and'Indiana tghmak npld IIcluded in the workout were Walt won 11 and lost one to share the The wail of dismay in the Pacific lose behindCleveland'were Hud- Peckinpaugh, Don Brewer, and Pete crown. Last year Illinois and Minne- lo se besroghidfordoeCflheiniellMchgadwswnetirepacHwthon Northwest immediately rose from low Lisagor of last year's Varsity infield, sota limped through to split honors _____highC__utAmagamatedB__d- '39E, who tied for second with a total and Earl Smith, who is making a with 10 wins and 2 defeats while of 187. strong bid for one of the infield Michigan was in third place with one TRACK CANDIDATES Thirty-one contestants competed berths. I less win and one more defeat. Tr K i in this contest n the first of its kind to Within a few days after the first j Michigan, who shared the diadem menntherestin remn tra be held in thee years fi cut has been made and Coach Fisher in 1929 and had their last clear claim TAN CALFSKI is relieved of his duties as Frosh to the crown in 1927, won 10 games at Yost Field House Saturday, ---basketball mentor the formation of and lost only to Indiana in the latter March 5 at 2:30 p.m. Experience the squcad will begin in earnest. year. is not necessary. . RCeI Wings Rally Fails ------_.. ... - Ken Doherty, Coach. As N.Y. Rangers Win, 4-3 NEW YORK, March 3.-(-)-The Raincoat s l Ne York Rangers barely suvived pa desperate third-period rally to- $2.65 to $3.95 night to nose out the Detroit Red WALK A FEW STEPS Wings 4 to 3 in a National Hockey AND SAVE DOLLARS League game before 9,000 fans. LLeading 3-0 on goals by Bryan Hx Elum H MNN all, Alec Shibicky and Lynn Patrick UfH N 'Sin the first two periods, the Rangers Young Men' Shop found their wide edge all but wiped 205 E. Liberty St. Phone 8020 out as the Wings came back in the A H EA third session., goes on ins springy crep BETTER SERVICE BUREAU footing in ev ' and shoes, when 's! INFORMATION CENTER Hats. MERCHANTS! Join the Procession to Scan imagine. "i whip" the Recession! Climb aboard the 17 Nf LP O' LIVING - shoes of this type. The thick, e-rubber bottoms give you sure very kind of service. Get good your pleasure and appearance AAN (noted Shoe Stylist) is at hoe, Inc., in the Nickels Arcade display of Men's Spring Foot- and Saturday of this week. ally invite you to come in ad look them over. ..®a