eli 1 Annual IM Open House Will Be Held Foils Exhiibition By De Tuscans' To Be Feature Weir Will Oppose Myers In Squash; All-Campus Finals Will Be Played The twelfth annual I-M Open House,"planned to be bigger and bet- ter than any of its predecessors will take place Wednesday evening, March 13. Once each year the Intramural offi- cials open the doors and put the tre- mendous facilities of the largest build-- ing of its kind in the world on dis- play, hoping to entice more specta- tors into taking advantage of these facilities. Sports Luninaries Presented In the past, outstanding sports lur inaries have been presented to the' crowds which have attended-figures like Coleman Clark, ping-pong trick artist extraordinary, and Bobby Hitt, Michigan's state horseshoe pitching champion for the past three years. This year Mr. and Mrs. De Tuscan, internationally known fencing ex-. perts, will be the feature attraction. Mrs. De Tuscan was the women's Olympic champion at Berlin in 1936, and holds the professional foils cham- pionship of the world. In addition, the Open House will feature an exhibition squash match between Leroy Weir varsity tennis coach and former finalist in the Na-: tional Squash Championships, and Dr. Sumner B. Myers of the math de- partment, whose playing is very un- like that which would be expected of a mathematics teacher. All-Campus Finals Held The finals of many all-campus events such as the tennis tourna- ment and the volleyball tourney will also be held during the evening. Five hundred athletes will participate in all. It is hoped that Dr. Milton Lappin and Al Zerbo, National AAU Doubles handball champions, will be present too, but their entry in the state cham- pionships may prevent this. .I-m sportsj Winchell House ran away with both the "A" and "B" championships, in the Inter-Dormitory basketball play- offs last night. With Hanlon and Pagel leading the attack with ten and eight points respectively Win- chell "A" swamped Williams 28-6. The "B" team defeated Williams, 24-10. Petritz was high scorer for Winchell "B" with 10 points. dl-- -- 1 A , -. I iIra w - - -, . - No I - IN THIS CORNER By MEL FINEBERG .. . . . . -v Chicagoings... The spectre of Chicago continue, to hang over the Western Conference. At the athletic directors' meeting at Chicago last weekend, it cast a pall over the Conference track meet. For two days the directors sat in the Windermere Hotel, debating the is- sue. For two days, they missed every- thing-lunches, dinners, track meets. One newspaperman, waiting for the end of the meeting and the an- nouncement that was supposed to come, was nonplussed when it didn't break up at six o'clock. "It's the first time in history that they have missed a meal-anytime, anywhere," he said. But Friday came and went and no statement had made an ap- pearance. They started again on Saturday, missed lunch again,' broke up for a few minutes at 2:30 to eat and then went back at it again. Finally, exactly at1 8:00 p.m., the moment the track meet began, the stand was an- nounced and it became apparent that ultimately Chicago will have to display its hand-or else be forced to drop out of the Bigi Ten game. The immediate effect was that we just about missed the first three events of the meet-and a fine meet it was. At any rate, Chicago must now either deny the statements of its mysterious "unofficial spokesman" who said that Chicago could not re- tain collegiate football and remain honest, or else refuse to deny it and by so doing tacitly affairm it. It appears as though it would be quite simple for L Chicago to deny that the unofficial spokesman had any authority because the unofficial spokesman has remained unofficial and unknown. But there is some reason to believe that this 'nonde- script had ' the sanction of part of, the board of trustees and that his remarks were the result of a com- promise between the radicals, who wished to make a serious blast, and the conservatives, who were satisfied with the mild statements of Pres- ident Hutchins. If he was a compromise, then the statements won't be denied without a fight within the Chi- cago board of trustees. And fire- works are likely to result. Afterthought: was there any connection between this state- ment and the fact that Pitts- burgh's athletic director James Hagan in Chicago? * * * - Not the least impressive of last weekend's events at the track meet was the flag-raising ceremony. The entire mass of stone building was cast into darkness, the University of Chi- cago band played The Star Spangled Banner and the flag was raised which appeared pretty logical since it was a flag raising. Then everybody got down to the business of the meeting. * All in all the band did a pretty good job but it missed . an awfully good spot for opportunism when Ralph Schwarzkopf ran away with the two mile. The Wolverine cap- tain was off with the gun and be- fore long was 10 yards out in front. It was an ideal spot for the band to swing out with "The Little Red Fox." Schwarzkopf planned to run 9:05 but wasn't up to it. His first mile, 4:33, was about on sched- ule but he fell off the pace after that. When he lapped teammate Joe Daniels who incidentally ran his fastest race, he patted him on the. . on the. . shoulder. * * i Toughest break of night was hand- ed to Don Canham. He just couldn't get up into his accustomed atmos- phere and had to be content with a first place tie-although he wasn't content with it. At the Field House yesterday, he leaped six feet six and a half inches. . * * * Indiana scored 30 6-7 points at the meet. Next year very man who figured in those 30 6-7 points will be back. Michigan has only 19 points in undergraduate ranks. We ran into Fielding H. Yost and Paul Goebel there and the Coach was introducing Goebel, a member of the Athletic Board now, to someone, "Paul," Yost said, "was captain of our 1922 team when we dedicated the Ohio stfdium. What a dedication it was too (score: Michigan 19, Ohio 0; first victory in three years over the Bucks). It was a great beeg Meechigan day." Baseball Squad Complete As Captain Pink Reports The belated appearance of Cap- tain Charlie Pink and puckmen Paul Goldsmith and Charlie Ross rounded to completion Coach Ray Fisher's early season baseball squad. Pink, 1939 batting leader, appear- ed to lose little time regaining his batting eye as he sent several hard hit balls into -the nets in his first few trips to the plate. Goldsmith and Rose, pitching candidates, were put through light workouts to take the rustiness out of their throwing arms. " " Paramount News Presents TIGERS IN FLORIDA and Arrival of Queen Elizabeth, in N.Y. Harbor MICHWAN1