THE MICHTCAN DAILY 'HCSEH 1EWITHOUTFARRELL Long John Edmiunds to Act as Sponsor in Absence of Wolverine MEN uN OO1) CONDITION ON VERt(E OF CINDER BATTLE Steve Will Take Remaining Athletes In Hand in Prepaiation for Cornell - Fray Steve Farrell will be unable to makc the trip to St. Louis with the track team which leaves this after- t oon. The coach's wife iststill sick at their home on Packard street. Long John Edmunds will take charge of the team in the absence of the Wolverine teacher. Minus their coach, the teanm, con- sisting of seven men, will leave- this afternoon at 1:50 o'clock for the Mound City. Those to go are O'Brien, Simmons, Carroll, Scofield, Hardell, Huntington, and Fontanna. Hard Fight Expected The University of Missouri quartet which will be met in the special mile relay by the Wolverines is composed of four seniors who have run together for the greater part of three years. It is one of the strongest quartets in the Middlewest aside from the Chi- cago team, which bested the Wolver- ines at Champaign. In a race last Friday nigh in Kansas City the Missourians turned in a mark of 3:32 3-5 which shows that the Mich- igan quartet willshave their hands full from the start. Just what competition the other Michigan men will meet during their stay in the Mound City is unknown ex- cept in the case of Captain Carroll.' Eddie is to run against the well known. Joie Ray and Tenney of Chicago, and probably three or four others of ex- ceptional ability. What Simmons.will meet in the high jump is a mystery, but it is assured that Vic will have to climb to about the same height the lanky one reached last week to keep in the running for a high place in the summaries. O'Brien is also expected to have the hottest1 P. POPUtJ AR sort of competition, as many of the sprinters in the Middlewest are flyers of no mean ability. Team to Practice The remainder of the team will workout in the gymnasium the rest of the week as usual. Farrell himself will be present every day in the en- deavor to get his men keyed up to their best form for the Cornell en- counter next Saturday night. Steve will remain in charge of the freshmen in their fight against the De- troit Y. M. C. A. here the same night the Varsity men are competing in St. Louis. Steve stated yesterday that all the men making the trip are in good con- dition for this time of year, and should perform well in the sort of competition they are expected to face. DETROIT YIMCIAITRACK TEAM UNKNOWN 1FATOR Mystery shrouds the quality of the Detroit "Y" track team which stacks up against Coach Steve Farrell's team tomorrow night in Waterman gymnas- ium, but it is certain that it will have to show more class than any of the aggregations which have represented the association in recent years to de- feat the youngsters. McDonald, the association miler, is reputed to have reeled off the distance in 4 minutes and 30 seconds. Clare Jacobs is reported to have cleared 12 feet when he was pole- vaulting for the University of Chicago. However this may be, he won the event in last winter's meet with a leap of 10 feet 6 inches. The visitors boast a pair of better-than-ordinary hurd- lers in Babbitt and Williams. The former copped off both the low and high sticks against Bill Fox's crew, while the latter is a former Eastern high track captain who has shown up well at the interscholastics. Wyatt is another former Easterner who is a clever performer in the sprints. Moose Curtis, the east stater's shot putter, won the 1916 meet with a toss of 44 feet 4 1-2 inches. Rube Secord, who runs the mile for the metropolitan gang, has gleaned considerable notor- iety around the state as a cross-coun- try runner. Following are the entries: 50-yard dash-Detroit, Taylor, Med- daugh, Benson, Hale, Nitz, Williams, and Wyatt; freshmen, Cagney, Wheel- er, Johnson, Bergazine, West, and Cook. 60-yard low hurdles-Detroit, Bab- bitt, Williams, and Wyatt; freshmen, Johnson, Wilson, Tuxbury, and Froemke. 60-yard high hurdles-Detroit, Bab- bitt, Williams, and Wyatt; freshmen, Johnson, Later, and Messner. 440-yard dash - Detroit, Taylor, Fleming, Wolf, Walbridge, Parke, Spaulding, and Bennett; freshmen, Hunt, Forbes, Butler, Lombard, and Cuthbert. 880-yard run-Detroit, Russell, Wal- bridge Fleming, Spaulding, and Mc- Donald; freshmen, Schuster, Stoll, Cramer, Larson, and Boyd. Mile run-Detroit, McDonald, Dun- kie, and Seecord; freshmen, Batty, Moore, Read, and Rolls. Pole vault-Detroit, C. S. Jacobs, R. C. Jacobs, and Leszczynski; freshmen, Cross, Robertson, Barringer, West- brook, and McArthur. High jump-Detroit, Watkins, Scott, Atkins, Leszczynski, and White; fresh- man, Later, Kruger, Barringer, and Johnison. Shot put-Detroit, Curtis, Babbitt, Nitz, Libbey, Burke, and Killeen; freshmen, Mustard, Baker, and Bart- uska. BOXING CLUB WILL HAVE TWO HEADLINERS AT FIRST SHOW Rosey Rowe to Act as Announcer While Jazz Band Will En- tertain Two hadliners have been added to the entertainment which will be part of the program of the Boxing club in its first exhibition Thursday night in the Armory. Rosey Rowe will act as announcer and Sandy Wilson's Jazz band, fresh from band bounce fame, will alleviate the padded knockout drops by pouring forth harmony. The boys of the club are in stern training, and interest is now being shown in the sport. Every evening the floor of the boxing room is kept hot, with four pairs of sparrers in op- eration all of the time. Tickets for the exhibition are sell- ing fast, with indications that more will have to be printed to accommo- date all the fans that will want to see the first public endeavor of the club. All entrance will be by tickets sold in advance, as none will be sold at the door. George Moe's athletic store has tickets on sale. Record Crowd Is Looked for at Cornell Indoor Track encounter fled by the By all odds the largest crowd which ever witnessed an indoor track meet in Waterman gym is expected to see Cornell pitted against Michigan next Friday. The bare fact that Cornell has won the intercollegiates for the past two years would suffice to draw out a rec- ord crowd. Several of the individual events have caused the interest to1 jump to such an extent, however, that the association has already had ap- plication for many of the 2,500 seats which are expected to be taken long before the reserved seat distribution closes Monday. Michigan is destined to be the cen- ter of interest during the meet. The two greatest mile runners in last year's intercollegiates will be pitted against each other for probably the next to the last time while they are in college. Windnagle won the event at Boston in 4:15, with Eddie Carroll right behind him, pulling a mark of con ing contest between Vic Simmons and Alma Richards, and the shot put be- tween the same Richards and Cec Cross shouldeseessome excellentwork. The Athletic association is reserv- ing seats in exchange for coupon 14 of the athletic book. This should be mailed at once, as many of the seats were filled by the mails of yesterday. SEMI-FINALS IN INTERCLASS CIAMPS HOLD FORTH TODAY The interclass relay runners took a rest yesterday so as to be able to put forth their best effort this after- noon when the eight teams which sur- vived through the preliminaries will take their places in the semi-finals. Three teams ran yesterday, junior engineers, fresh laws, and the fresh lits, but the others were unable to get together. These will run this after- noon and they .are the senior lits, the senior engineers, medics, dents, phar- fresh lits have made the best time, the senior lits, and the fresh engineers are running well and the race for the championship which will be run later in the season, will be a close one. Conjecture Rife on ,Southern 1Trip Many Opponents Loom Up as Possi- bilities for Coming Season As the time for the team to invade the south on its annual tour ap- proaches, speculation as to just what southern institutions will be on the schedule becomes rife. The schedule is apparently waiting the return of; Director Bartelme and a meeting of the executive committee in order that the games arranged may be ratified. According to reports published from the other end, .the University of the South (Sewanee), has two games scheduled with Michigan. The report comes with a semblance of authority, but no games have been confirmed or announced from this end. No games can be announced until officially rati- executive committee. Last year the schedule began with Kentucky State, but inclement weath- er prevented the game. No rumors or reports from either Lexington or Ann Arbor have announced a game for this season. Washington and Lee and the University of Virginia generally put out strongteams and are usually to be found on a Michigan schedule. It is more than likely that either one or both of the Georgia institutions, Uni- versity of Georgia or Georgia Institute of Technology will be on the schedule. Both of these are well known in base- ball circles for their teams. The team went to'Nashville last year and the probabilities are that the trip will be duplicated again this season. Tennessee and Vanderbilt are bothi formidable opponents on the diamond and a game with either may be ex- pected, although Vanderbilt probably will figure if only one appears on the chart, in view of past competition with Michigan teams in both baseball and football. The schedule will probably be out the latter part of the week, or the 'rst of next. There is opportunity in The Michi- gan Daily Ads. Read them. 4:16 2-5. mics, soph lits, soph engineers and the Other events such as the high jump- fresh engineers. Although to date the Fri OW; Success Dressthe Part 0 BUY Your Friend A DRINK lid _ s' 9 1 _ .' i 4 ' :; V _ i ' lid S ' . ''+ . 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