HE MICHIGAN D ILY SUNDAY, APRIL 2, 1929 THE MICHIGAN DAILY m _____I SUNDAY, APRIl1 2, 1939 Initial Sports Clinic Proves Great SucessI High School Students See Pictures; Track Meet Won By River Roulge The first annual Track and Base- ball Clinic was a definite success to judge by the reactions of the coaches who were in attendance yesterday morning and afternoon. Dan Kinsey, 1924 Olympic high hurdle champion, who is coaching at Oberlin, summed up the general opin- ion by saying: "It's an excellent idea. Seeing expert runners and players perform, and then having their ac- tions explained by such fine coaches is a really great opportunity. Every coach should take in something like this once in a while." Pictures Shown In the morning, the coaches and several hundred high school athletes saw motion pictures of track meets, and also the American League's "100 Years of Baseball." In the after- noon, the first River Rouge Invita- tion Meet was held at the Yost Field House. River Rouge proved to be the strongest of the nine schools which entered teams in the meet, as they scored in every event to pile up 66 34 points. Flint Central, who scored in all events except the pole vault, took second with 48% points, and the rest' of the field trailed. Wyandotte scored 24 points; Dearborn, 21; Algonac, 191/2; Lansing Eastern, 19; Adrian, 434; Melvindale, 41/2; and Ann Arbor, 2. S1 t( tl u C. 9 v p Wildcat Eleven Highly Touted; GophersTry To Rebuild Line BIy TOM PHARES Wildcats have plenty of men wait- As Coach Fritz Crisler and staff ing to fill those gaps. ;teer the Michigan grid machine in- Junior Jack Ryan and sophomores o its third lap of spring tuning runs Paul Soper and Ollie Hahnenstein the champion Minnesota and tough.are returning halfbacks. Number aorthwestern entries are just getting one fullback George McGurn is back uoder way, but reports from Minne- along with signal-caller Dick Rich- apolis and Evanston are sharply con- ards. And the spotlight is on highly traotisg adEasoarshrlcn-publicized freshman halfback Bill You can almost hear the Gopher DeCorrevant. wail from here. Coach Bernie Bier- One tackle position is the only man has lost no fewer than nine of doubtful spot in. the Wildcat line. his first eleven from last season in- Bob Daly and Ted Grefe are return- cluding such stars as All-American ing ends who saw Varsity service in guardFrsucisTrseasell adeacks1938. Tackle Nick Cutlich will work guard Francis Twedell, and backswihanwrnngmetorpae Wilbur Moore and Larry Buhiler, with a new running mlate to replace uMariucc nRui'ns Bob Voights. Hal Method and Don Mariucci Retu-ns .Guritz will again fill the guardposts Rebuilding a strong line is the big and All-Conference center John Ha- ;roblem at Minenapolis. Of last man will be the bulwark of the de- year's forward wall, only John Ma- fense. riucci will return. Gone are All- Observers rate Michigan's back- Conference end Butch Nash, 200- field and Northwestern's forward wall aound tackles Win Pederson and fiedndNrheen'frwdwal pounta ckle Win Pedrsas tops. That leaves Minesota out, Charlie Schufltz uiard H Rir B Rll Netmen Ready For Trip South' Tobin And DurstI upre-ss In Practice Dradil, With but one week remaining be- fore they embark on their annual spring trip into the South, the var- sity tennis team is rapidly rounding into shape. Coach Weir announced that he will take eight men with him when the team leaves on next Friday or Satur- day. At present, two sophomores are leading the squad as far as accuracy and timing are concerned. They are Jim Tobin and Sam Durst. The first game on the schedule is against Washington and Lee at Lex- ington, Virginia, on April 10. Before the team returns to Ann Arbor, they will have played six matches, the other opponents being V.M.I., Univer- sity of Virginia, George Washington University, University of Maryland and Duquesne University. On last year's trip, the team won three matches while dropping two. li 1 11' BASEBALL SCORES Pittsburgh (N)*..........1422 2 U. of Arizona............4 9 3 St. Louis (AL)...........12 15 5 Philadelphia (NL) ......13 14 4 BEER and SKITTLES and other aspects of Ann Arbor. 25a cents at the bookstores. PROFESSIONAL L TELEPHONE 3113 ., g5 a us o ceLe and Captain Twedell, center Dan El- mer and his understudy John Kulbit- ski. Moanin'g over this catastrophe drowns out anything Michigan's Clarence Munn has to offer. The only encouraging feature of this knotty problem is the presence of junior guard Don Twedell, short, stocky counterpart of his All-Ameri- can brother. The tackle and center situations are acute however. George Franck and Harold Van Every will have to carry the burden in the backfield without the help of flashy Wilbur Moore at- halfback, George Faust at quarter, or Larry Buhler at fullback. The appearance but you just can't do that to Bernie Bierman. He'll start pulling fast charging 200 pounders up from the fifth squad any day now. A I I. NOW SELLING AT NEW LOW PRICES! for Men and Women. More Comfort in this Brand of Michigan's I i ne ocIstLLU in a portIIIig Ju(JCI I UU I I I