1 MrI. A1VRII £lk-l.CUV LHALji. Ufl U UL AL FOR TOURNAMENT NEARLY 300 BOYS FROM HIGlHl SCHOOLS ARE HEADED FOR ANN ARBOR PLAYERS AND AT CLUBS FRATERNITIES Michigan State Championship Will Be Settled by Play Here Next Few Days Thirty-six basketball teams from high schools of the state will arrive today or tomorrow 'to begin play in Waterman gyrA for the state cham- pionship in the first annual basketball interscholastic, held by the University. Nearly 300 players and coaches will be at the tourney. They have been quartered at fraternities and clubs, but not enough fraterities have been willing to entertain the visitors, and P number of them will be placed in private rooming houses. Players on each team and the lodg-s inga to which the team is assigned are Taylor, Long, Rumbold, Alger, Ger- man, Ackerman, and Sickles. Pi Upsilon Rho, Sigma Delta Kappa, and Alpha Rho Chi houses. Grand Haven-Vyn, Holtrop, Mast- eobrook, Fisher, Van Tol, Bolt, Sling- erlend, Fase, and M. L. Storr, man- ager. Gamma Eta Gamma and Phi Kappa Sigma houses. Grand Rapids Central-Houston,. Kensie, Yeakey, Brown, Beard, and Rice. Phi Sigma Kappa house. Grand Rapids Union-Van Wingen, Cornwall, Quigley, Raman, Krum- heuer, Small, Younglove, Rward, Mil- ler, Gogulski, and Henry W. Lichtner, manager. Alpha Delta Phi house. Grayling-Doroh, Karpus, Meilstrup, Thompson, Shanahan, Case, Chamber- lin, and A. A. Ellsworth, manager. Delta Tau Delta houses. Hart-Rankin, Bennett, McLouth, Dressel, Wright, Steinhoff, Williams, Dennert, Simpson, Smith, and B. F. Beach, manager. Delta Sigma Delta, Phi *Beta Pi, Sackett, and Pylon houses. Holland-Irving, Knite, Klompar- ens, Cappon, Van Putten, Rutgers, and Knutson. Monks house. Jackson at Trigon house Jackson-Auten, Bell, French, Gil- bert, Hoffman, Hunt, Isbell, Meakin, Mitchell, and M. L. Bosier, manager. Trigon house. Lansing-(Entries not received.) Acacia house. Junior Hold lowed with each team. Ending the first week of strife with a narrow margin over the senior en- gineers, the third year mechanics now lead the interclass bowling league with a percentage of .666. The contest between the engineer- ing upperclassmen was marked by the even falling of pins for both sides and the hairbreadth margin of the wins. The first game went to the fourth year men by 10 pins, but some- body dlipped and the second and third were copped by the juniors with re- spective leads of 4 and 23. At present only four of the seven contestants have registered any re- sults but there are several matches which are half finished and are wait- ing the scores of several men who were unable to roll the games with their team. and G. H. Fraser, manager. Unas- As the squads are getting more signed. practice and are becoming better or- Seven men and a coach will be al- ganized the scores, both team and in- Engineers first Place dividual, are hitting a higher aver- age. The high single game team to- tal is now held by the junior engineers with their mark of 877, which won from the 873 counted by the seniors. The individual high honor is now in the hands of Wright of the dents with a sum of 223. Although the junior engineers are in the lead, they have played only three games while the senior lits and senior engineers are close on the track with a more advanced sched- ule. six laps in 2:09 1-5. With these two teams having made their times, there are now a total of five teams registered, with three yet to run. When the entire eight have gone the distance the best four times SCf will be taken and these will then fight it out to see which will enter the finale. To date the senior lits and fresh engineers have the edge on the others but the fresh lits will be there at the finish and should give the abovc mentioned pair a hard run for the championship. Reilly and Glmartin W111n with Ease In the second match played in the handball tournament, Reilly and Gil- martin had an easy time of it with Phelps and Weltman, winning two straight games 15 to 0 and 15 to 1. Managers Reilly and Cohn request that all matches finish before vaca- tion. '17 Engineers who graduate in June or in February 1918, order your invi- tations before March 25.-Adv. 18-20-1-2-3-4 Try The Daily for service. from The teams stand at present: W. L. Junior engineers......2 1 Senior lits.... ......3 '2 Senior engineers......5 4 Dents .................1 4 .'sV - , i i Pct. .666 .600 .555 .2001 RES nd FRESH LITS RELAY MEN DEFEAT PHARMICS AND RUN 2:05 FLAT Defeating the pharmics yesterday afternoon in the race for the class re- lay championship, the fresh lits ran 2:05 flat, while the druggists made the as follows: Mancelona-Davidson, Brown, Blair, Adrian-Youngs, Page, Funk, Davis, McGrath, Medalie, Christian, Hall- Pettee, Wade, Teachout, Patterson, gren, Campbell, Brown, and C. L. Snedekar,, King, and Arnold Jones Taisey, manager. Phi Delta Chi and manager.. Phi Delta Theta house. Psi Omega houses. Durde Alpena Team Midland--Graves, Voorhies, McCal- Alpena~-Beyer, Bisson, Monser, lum, Teal, LeCronier, Main, Stanford, Oliver, Hatton, Singer, Fabianske, and S. L. Straks, manager. Theta Salonde, Shupert, Fitzpatrick, and H. Delta Chi house. K. Richardson, manager. Phi Gamma Muskegon-Bert Hoeker, Joln Hock- Delta and Eremite houses. er, Lange, Peterson, Linden, Bennett, Ann Arbor--Housel, Van Orden, Bolthouse, Campbell, Thompson, and Hicks, Naylor, Merkel, Johnston, Greg- Guy Wellington, manager. Lambda Chi ory, Goulding, Kennedy, Buell, and Alpha house, Stanley Joseph, manager. New Baltimore-Vannock, Dav d, Arthur Hill (Saginaw)-Brooks, Fountain, Meldrum, Vernier, Melkert, Britton, Moore, McKay, Stickney, Marcero, Sauber, Knight, Forest, and Bauer, Giesel, and Ben Vanden Belt, A. H. Cears, manager. Xi Psi Phi and manager. Delta Kappa Epsilon house. Phoenix houses.. Battle Creek-Sweek, Hunt, Iden, Pontiac at S. A. E. House Ross, Langdon, Riedner, McConnell, Pontiac-Slater, Osborne, Collins, Giddinger, and H. K. Allwardt, man- Kirby,, Kinney, boardman, Starr, ager. Delta Chi house; Watchpocket, Pomfret, Auten, and Bay City Western-Pacynski, Lentz, Goodloe H. Rogers, manager. Sigma Shaver, Soderstrom, Woods, Macdon- Alpha Epsilon house. ald, Macintosch,. Myers, Bleicher, Saginaw-Emery, Graham, Kauf- Noble, and Charles Mclvoney, man- mann, Skimin, McGragor, McKnight, ager. Phi Kappa Psi house. Mitchell, Norris, and J. E. Tanis, man- Benton Harbor-Scher, Granzow, ager. Psi Upsilon house. Blough, Rowe, Hennes, Rascher, St. Louis-Andrews, Branch, Whit- Sahlin, Harr, Bernard, and Colef. ney, Wilson, Ross, Madden, Fulcher, Sigma Phi Epsilon and Sigma Phi and W. A. Ellsworth, manager. Beta houses. Thet Pi house. Boyne City -Fairchils, McNally, Wayne--Wagocer, Smith, Cozadd, Benjamin, Herron, Aldread, Barden, Glover, Smith, Brown, Cadwell, Mor- Buschert, Lett, Hilton, Cross, and R. ton, Hoops, Chambers, and Rayeroft, G. Talcott, manager. Delta Theta Phi manager. t ,heta Xi house. house. Ypsilan7~ti-Reid, Holmer, Wright, Cadillac-Donnelley, Mace, Hansen, Boutell, Carroll, Harwick, Lampkin, Titus, Worden, Vyiderhoff, Johnson, and Miller. Chi Psi house. Tabraham, Baird, and Nelson. Alpha Fowlerville-Grives, House, Reyhl, Tau Omega and Akkenaton houses. Grant, Grover, Meyer, and Albright. Charleviox-Hallett, Weaver, Car- Unassigned. tier, Durance, Felts, Butler, Hampton, Pellston-Myers, Buttars, Denny, Newson, Krulik, and L. B. Aseltine, McGarcy, Robbins, Card, Campbell, manager. Alpha Sigma Phi house. Cheboygan-Brown, Mould, Bar- Try The Daily for 'crvice. rowcliff, Sangston, Richardson, Ta mashoie, and C. B. Bishop, manager. Kappa Beta Psi house. Coldwatet-Ferguson, Swain, Foy, Goss, Clock, Amaden Hulenberg, and Mark E. Schmidt, manager. * Sigma Phi, Alpha Sigma, and Phi Delta Chi houses. Detroit Central at Delta U. Detroit Central-Whitlock, McElwee, Wilson, Walmoth, Smokiewicz, Swick, Vance, Winkleman, Beard, Raines, and- D. H. Davis, manager. Delta Upsilon Detroit Northwestern (two teams) uS t Out! -Bosworth, Dorovine, Henderson, Mark, Perkins, Thompson, Vedder, Walhoetter, Wickham, Wiley, Cobe,1 c Reason, Rose, Sweeney, Sprilgstein, Tanner, Thurston, and Thomas. Sigma _ ___ Chi house. EARL& WILSON - Flint Central-Mason, Blanchard, I !>1.1 A #' -po ". x/jx 4P I , S ; '± A_,, i 11 R: LL4L: x;, A r u . .F l_ .tti:' ' {, y... ' . t> C- " Sa . .: y;", ,; , ' ,,^l .,: , ,., .1. *t ®rrrrrii y r . r! «M YOUNG MEN ARE PARTIAL TO THE HIGH WAIST EFFECT L FlFTEE, tion of our cc Alexander Hamilton commanded the atten- )uftry. George Washington was a major at nineteen. At twenty-four, Bismarck was captain of the king's cavalry. At twenty-six, Mark Anthony was the hero of Rome. Napoleon when twenty-eight had revolutionized Europe. On Sale Your allowance for Clothes TO NI GH 8:30 P. M. So throughout history young blood" has ruled, just as' today Suppose that you allow yourself $50 a year for clothes-how do you think you could get the most worth for your money?) Undoubtedly by buying two suits here-by spend- ing the whole fifty on just two suits. You would get far more service from these two suits than you would from four at half the cost each. young hands have caught and are holding the world's style reins. The Young Man's creed is expression and action, our creed is to give him clothe§ that express his bouyancy and confidence. ADLERRHIESTER Clothes give you that THE-WORLD-IS-MINE" feeling. Just the right models for older men-sounding the youthful note of enthusiasm and dignified withal. aI 3Luiunnitt Mrs. M. M. Root 601 E. WilliamS ALBERT GANSLE 'lgtl Tailor Lutz Clothing Store 217 So. Main Street Ann Arbor ...........- --- s . I S(TT' -11