PAGE FOURTEEN . THE MICHIGAN DAILY . THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1935 THE MTCHTET~AN DATTVTHRDA.AUUT 5 13 .. ,... ... ... . , v, ., .... Conferene Golfers Have Big Plans For Summer Play Three Enter Qualifying' Rounds Of National Amateur Tourney Track Meet Here Featured '34-'35 Sport Season Climax Of Big Ten Outdoor Trva.k Meet Owens' Great Members of Michigan's national championship golf team have a tough tournament schedule laid out forj themselves in the near future. Three, John Fischer, Chuck Koc- sis and Dana Seeley, have announced their intention to attempt to qualify for the National Amateur meet, in district trials which willbe held next week. Koesis, who lives in Detroit, and Seeley, of Ann Arbor, will play in the Detroit district qualifying at Orchard Lake Country Club. Fischer, a resident of Ft. Thomas, Ky., will play in the Cincinnati dis- trict trials. Fischer is the record low qualifier for the National Amateur, a record which he will probably hold forlever, since the old medal play qual- ifying for places in the championship play at the meet has been abandoned. Under the present system, all dis- trict qualifiers immediately begin match play in the tournament. Other Michigan players will be entered in the Ann Arbor city tour- nament. Woody Malloy, low medalist in the National Collegiates, is de- fending champion and he will be faed 'by a field which will include Seeley and Cal Markham, 1935 cap- tain. The city tournament begins Aug. 19. State Will Be After Its Fourth Victory When Michigan State comes here Oct. 5 for the opening of the football season the Spartan gridders will be seeking their fourth win since the establishment of relations between the schools in 1898. The first Spartan win in almost two decades was registered last year under Coach Charlie Bachman when State won, 16-0. In 29 games, Michigan has won 23, lost 3, and played to a scoreless tie, three times. In 20 of 29 games the Spartans have failed to score. The State wins were registered in 1913, 12 to 7, 1915, 24-0, and 1934. + The scoreless ties were played in 1908, 1930, and 1931. Strong Buckeye And G pher Teams Seen Again This Year Most persons are expecting Mich- again, and still not satisfied with the igan's football team to improve over revenge they got last November. last year, some are expecting it to im- Minesota, national and Big Ten prove a great deal, but few indeed are champions of last year, suffered the persons who will predict a Con- greatly with the enforcement of the Conference eligibility rule which will ference championship for the Maize end the careers of Bill Bevan, great and Blue. guard, and Stan Kostka, powerful There are two reasons, both of fullback, as Gopher stars. them good: Ohio State and Minne- Frank Larson, Bernie Bierman's sota. All-American end, is gone also, and Francis Schmidt's Buckeyes, with Phil Bengston, a strong tackle, has one of the strongest teams in the graduated. And Minnesota will miss, country last year, stack up tremen- and very badly, Francis "Pug" Lund, dously on paper, and judging from captain and All-American last year- past performances shouldn't disap- truly a dazzling football player. point much when they get out their But Minesota will be strong. In on the field. Only Regis Monahan, 1934 there were many men who sat 1934 captain and guard, is lost to the on the Gopher bench, yet even then team this year. they were considered good enough to The other ten of the Scarlet and step in and hold the average team at Grey who pushed the Wolverines bay while themselves driving over around in an impressive victory at touchdowns. If they don't bring Columbus last year, 4-0, are back Minnesota another title - and it ap- iears that Ohio State will make it f very tough for them-they'll be up there near the top when December rolls around. Feats Topped Athletic Year At Peak Of His Form, He Cracked Three World Marks, Tied Another MichiganWon Title Conference Mile Relay, Javelin, And Two-Mile Records Also Broken Outstanding of all local sports events of the season was the West- crn Conference track and field cham- pionships, held May 24 and 25 on Ferry Field. And not only did it top all local sports events, but on the basis of comparative times and dis- tances, it was the outstanding track meet of the year. With what is undoubtedly the greatest single performance in the history of the sport, Jesse Owens was the center of the meet's attention as he flashed to three new world's records while tieing another. At the peak of his form for the year, Owens was never more effortless than when he ran away, never pressed, from his fields. Great as was Owens' performance, however, Michigan's valiant team composed primarily of sophomores, vied with the Ebony Antelope of Ohio State for claims of heroic achieve- ments as they doggedly kept behind Owens and Ohio State in the team scoring to win the meet when a for- gotten and untried relay team stepped to a new Conference record in that event. Owens records were set in the 220- yard dash, the 200-yard low hurdles, the broad jump, as he tied the world's mark in the 100-yard dash. Although it is understood here that none of these records have been tubmitted for recognition, all marks but the short dash are eligible. In that event an excessive tail wind recorded by an anemometer installed on the field would prevent recognition. Jumps 26 Feet, 84 Inches Owen's times were: 100, :09.4; 220, :20.3; low hurdles, :22.6; broad jump, 26 feet, 8% inches. Michigan's team, with Willis Ward still suffering from the effects of a leg injury incurred when he won the high hurdles at the Penn Relays, struggled through 14 of the meet's 15 events to enter the relay trailing a Buckeye team with six firsts. The Wolverine points had been garnered with four fifth places, four fourths, three thirds, thret seconds, one first and ties for a first and a fifth. The first-place points were earned by Skip Etchells, who got off by more than eight feet the best throw of his career in the discus, and Willis Ward, who earned a tie in the high jump at 6 feet, 3% inches with Bob Riegel of Illinois. Ward also accounted for a second in the broad jump when he leaped over 25 feet for the first time in his life. Captain Harvey Smith, press- ing behind Don Lash of Indiana in the mile and Walter Stone, also behind Lash in the two-mile, gave Michigan their other second-place points. Relay Team Sets Record In the relay, the team of Fred Stiles, Harvey Patton, Frank Aikens, and Stan Birleson, swept through the whole field to astound everyone including themselves as they won in 3:15.2. Not only was the mark a new conference record, but was the fastest mile relay ever run east of the Rockies. Other marks fell as well as did Owens' events and the mile relay. In the mile the sophomore Don Lash stepped to a new Conference and Fer- ry Field record of 4:14.4; Mark Pan- ther of Iowa set Big Ten and Field marks in the javelin with a throw of 219 feet, 7$ inches; and Lash cracked the Ferry Field mark in the two-mile at 9:23.1. Much of the success of the meet, according to observers, was due to the perfect condition of the track. Fast- est in the middle west, its condition was reflected in the times in all events. The 1936 outdoor meet although no official announcement has been made,+ is understood to have been awarded to Ohio State.; By ROBERT CUMMINS With one of America's greatest coaching masters--Fielding H. Yost - at the helm, Michigan's young coaching staff is each year writing new records of Wolverine triumphs into both the Big Ten and national athletic books. There's the great record of Harry Kipke as football coach - so good that when his team ran into a com- pletely disastrous season last year not a voice was raised among student or alumni condemning him. Himself an All-American halfback and one of the game's greatest punt- ers, Kipke has turned out All-Ameri- can players as often as he has turned out championship teams. Coming here from Michigan State in 1929, Kipke hit his stride the fol- lowing year when the Maize and Blue, after a long football depres- sion, tied for the Big Ten title wih Purdue and Northwestern. Again in 1931 Kipke drove his team to the top, but again Northwestern stepped in to claim its share in the crown. Newman Great Player But Kipke's greatest teams had not appeared even yet. Starting the 1932 season with only fair prospects of success, the Wolverines found a great star in Harry Newman and a great leader in Ivy Williamson. Af- ter Newman's field goal had defeated Minnesota, 3-0, Michigan had its third consecutive Western Confer- ence championship, and soon after was awarded the Rockne Trophy, given by the Four Horsemen, which is the prize of the national champion under the Dickinson system. Kipke was now one of the country's most famous young coaches. But still he and his team weren't through. Three All-Americans--Whitey Wis- tert, Ted Petoskey, and Chuck Ber- nard - led the team to a crushing early-season victory over Ohio State, 13-0, and marched on through the season until Minesota fought to a scoreless tie in the final game. But none could dispute Michigan's Big Ten title and again the Wolverines were national champions under the Dickinson system. Now, although thinking a little of his golf game and his yawl, the Flo (named after Mrs. Kikpe), Kipke is planning a Maize and Blue football renaissance to make the debacle of last year a forgotten thing. And, al- though Michigan students are hoping for a return to the 1930-33 days of gridiron glory,they're also hoping that Yale under Ducky Pond finds greener pastures -and forgets that it would very much have liked to have Kipke as coach not so long ago. Hoyt Doesn't Worry But there's another Michigan coach who hasn't even had one bad year to worry about in the memory of even the graduate students. That's Matt Mann, swimming coach, who's turned out such a swarm of great swimmers and divers in the last decade that Michigan has won six out of nine national championships and has lost the Big Ten title only once in those nine years. And here again Michigan thinks of Yale, hoping this time not that Eli will forget, but that he will remem- ber - remember that Yale, with its impressive string of dozens and doz- ens of consecutive dual meet victories and Michigan, with its beltful of Big Ten and national swimming scalps - are the most logical of opponents. But the Blue, under Bob Kiputh, is shy -so shy that The Daily's sports editor was prompted to concoct an imaginary series of letters between Mann and Kiputh in which the form- er pleaded to "shoot the works to see who's champion of the United States" and Kiputh supposedly re- plied, "No can do, sorry. A winning coach always eats." And so the Maize and Blue swimmers have had to be satisfied with defeating Yale several times in the big national meet. Swimmers Invincible There's one Michigan coach, at least, who isn't worrying about Yale. That's Charley Hoyt, track coach, but, although he's done plenty of worrying about Jesse Owens and Ohio State recently, his teams man- aged to walk off with both the Con- ference indoor and outdoor cham- pionships. Twice last spring the Wolverines defeated Jesse Owens and the power- ful Buckeye squad-once indoors and once outdoors-in dual meets. The only dual meet defeat of the season was at the hands of Califor- nia's Golden Bears at Berkely. For the last eight years Hoyt, who succeeded the great Steve Farrell as Michigan track coach, has turned out teams which have managed to win each year either the indoor or outdoor Conference track crown or both. A little behind the swimming team in number of national champion- ships, Coach Thomas C. Trueblood's A Busy Man \ bra ,;, t , t Michigan's Young Coaching Staff Carries On t'he Old Man's' Record i .> MR. PROSPECTIVE MICHIGAN STUDENT UNITED STATES THE WORLD AT LARGE Dear Mr. Student:- With this sample copy of the University's News Sheet may we acquaint you with our ability to be of service to you in the way of Correct Clothes for Michigan Men. Thirty odd years in the building f Authentically Styled Clothes for Michigan Men assures you of the right fabrics, styled correctly for the individual. This knowledge of what Michigan Men require along with the largest showing of Domestic and Imported Woolens shown by anyone, places us in a position to be of the utmost service to you in the way of proper Clothes Equipment and at very reasonable prices. May we extend an invitation to you to examine our woolens upon your arrival in Ann Arbor this Fall. Sincerely yours, TINKER & COMPANY By 'vg/ I Seidel and Alphonse in the back- field are expected to furnish the nucleus of another Gopher 3ugger- naut or at least semi-juggernaut, while the veteran Ed Widseth at tackle will probably be a tower of strength in the line. These experienced players - with possibly several more - are the ones Minnesota is looking upon to lead a slightly greener and more inexper- ienced band to another Big Ten crown. Human Icicle Test 'Purest Poppycock,' Dr. Fishbei Says NEW YORK, Aug. 14. - (/P) - Two leaders in medical science stood today on the assertion that Ralph S. Willard of Los Angeles can no more freeze Stephen Simkhovitch to death and revive him, than he can reassemble a scrambled egg. Dr. Iago Gladston, secretary of the New York Academy of Medicine, said that when the 80 per cent of body tissue which is water is frozen, proto- plasm disrupts and can't be restored. He termed "preposterous" Willard's plan to refrigerate the 30-year-old scenario writer. Dr. Morris Fishbein of Chicago, editor of the American Medical Jour- nai, said Willard's monkey freezing was "probably achieved by a sneat trick of substitution which any competent magician could perform." "Any claim this man makes," he added, "about 'freezing' monkeys to death and bringing them back to life, is the purest poppycock." COACH FRANKLIN CAPPON Johnny Fisher, Walker Cup star, who walked off with it, while last year Chuck Koesis, the new captain, was champion. Trueblood, professor emeritus of speech, organized the first Wolverine golf team in 1901. The team played then on the nine-hole Ann Arbor Golf and Outing Club course, one of the oldest in the country and said to be the second oldest in the state. The splendid University course became the team's home at its opening in 1931. It was in 1918, largely through the efforts of Professor Trueblood, that 'Authentic Styles Are Available In Ann Arbor Shops By MEDWICK WARNER, JR. For years it has been the vogue for well-dressed Michigan men to find their authentic styles in Ann Arbor. Local men's shops are pre- paring to offer a wide variety of styles in all types of wearing apparel to the University's incoming students. But now to a few sartorial hintsA You will find that Michigan men, for the most part, pride themselves in being noticeably well-dressed and while one does not wish to be called snobbish, it is still a fact that a man is judged in some degree by the clothes he wears. The conviction is spreading about the better college campuses that the best-dressed college men are not the extremely dressed but rather the ap- propriately dressed. It is this stand- ard of better dressing by which the leading clothes-wearers are adjudged at Michigan. To illustrate this point, it might be said that while a double breasted close fitting topcoat might be fine on Park Avenue or Lake Shore Drive, it still can't compete with a polo coat in Ann Arbor. You are going to see a lot of double-breasted camel-hair coats wit hall-ground belted back which are both full and free in cut. They have an easy going appearance and come in mighty handy when the winds start blowing across the Sta- dium turf on Saturday afternoon. Made To Be Worn There is an age-old misconception that when one buys an attractive suit it is going to turn out to be short-lived. But this fall everyone is going to see a great deal of tough materials woven ito really attractive suitings. "Twist" fabrics, such as tweeds, diagnoaI weaves, and the like are going to enjoy considerable pop- ularity. This is the open season on wool socks, and with it comes the annual breaking out of repressed pat- tern desires. In a month or so a lot of students are going to be buying and wearing hose with more pattern interest, more color emphasis, and more design than they have seen in a long time. Slacks again will be seen in abun- dance worn with odd jackets or heavy woven material or gabardine. They will continue to carry the con- ventional pleats and the break in the length will come just a scant eighth- inch or so above the shoe tops. Reversible topcoats are new and well-liked double duty clothes. The outside is a bold overplaid Harris Tweed and the inside is a water- proofed gabardine. As to hats, there are several. Car- ried over from last season will be the conventional dark brown semi-hom- burg snap-brim with black band. Al- so there is the pork pie hat with tele- scoped crown which comes in a light- Iweight felt. Still again, there iq the covert-colored snap brim with a silk bound edge which carries that sort the Big Ten schools accepted golf as a Conference sport. The veteran Michigan coach has often been called the "father of Big Ten golf." One of the busiest men on the whole coachingg )?'hff is I:anklin "Cappy" Cappon. Assistant director of Maize and Blue gridders as head line coach, he is head coach of the basketball team. The Varsity basketball team, under his direction, appears to be heading towards the top of the Conference heap again after several seasons of but mediocre success. Promising freshmen, headed by big John Towns- end, may make the 1935-36 five one reminiscent of the great title-winning teams of the days when Benny Oos- terbaan was an All-Conference star. Oosterbaan himself remains at Michigan as coach, as so many of the whole staff do. Directing the training of the ends during the foot- ball season, playing an active part in the coaching of the Varsity basket- ball team in the winter, and in the spring coaching the freshman base- ball team, Oosterbaan is one of th busiest men on Ferry Field. Not only Oosterbaan, but the majority of the Michigan coaching staff, arQ graduates of the school of Wolerinr athletic competition. Ray Fisher, baseball coach, is an exception. After years' of maxo league service as a pitcher for the New York Yankees and Cincinnai Reds Fisher came to Michigan whe he has turned out teams compa with those of any other school the Big Ten. Several of the players he has d- veloped have graduated to the leagues. It would be quite unreason- able to expect any of them to reach the heights attained by George Sis- ler, Michigan's greatest ball player, yet almost every year there is one or more of his charges that shows major league promise. Both Whitey Wis- ter, pitcher, and Ted Petoskey, out- fielder, were signed by the Cincinnati Reds after graduation, and are now getting further training at Fort Worth and Wilmington. Michigan has great reason to b proud of the prowess ofher athletes, and few forget that the ability and spirit of Michigan's coaches is re- flected in that prowess, and that Wolverine coaches are carrying on a tradition that means more than vic- tory-a tradition that has been uniquely Michigan's for a third of 4 century. Thomias Sick, B3fichman as All-Star Duties Alabama Coach To Dirert Team From Bed; Drill TI Started Anyway CHICAGO, Aug. 14.- () -Coaches for the college all stars of 1934 will meet with George Halas, owner-coach of the Chicago Bears tonight to agree on rules to be used in their football game at Soldier Field August 29. Although the collegians indicated they would insist on the use of the college forward pass rule,.Halas hoped to obtain a compromise by which the college rule would be in force during one half and the national pro rule the other." Under the college rule, the passer must be at least five yards behind the line of scrimmage. Professional rules allow a pass from any point behind the scrimmage line. ' With Head Coach Frank Thomas of Alabama in the hospital suffering from acute arthritis, Charlie Bach: man of Michigan State took charge ' of the all stars today as serious drills began. He was assisted by Doc Spears of Wisconin and "Slip" Mad- igan of St. Mary's. The offense will be built around the Notre Dame shift as 12 of the 43 players were drilled in their college days by Notre Dame graduates. Up at Delafield, Wis., where the cago Bears were drilling, owner- coach George Halas was looking for a quarterback to replace Carl Brun- baugh who advised him that he had signed as an assistant coach at the University of West Virginia and would not be back. SCOUTS IN FOOTBALL One of the most important phases of the successful football machine is its scouting organization - coache who view opposing teams in other games to report features of their play and direct the coaching before the game with that team. Michigan's football coaches include Bennie Oos- terbaan. Wallie Weber and Ray Courtright, each of whom ipao- E - k Typewriter Headquarters Sales ... Service ... Rentals . . . Overhauling Buy your Portable where you can be assured of the services of a TYPEWRITER SPECIALIST in adapting a machine to your special requirements. Special keyboards. It costs you no more. ROYAL PORTABLE $49.50 ROYAL PORTABLE $60.00 Standard Model DeLuxe Model -I