PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY' SUNDAY, DECEMBER 7. 1930 1 western State ows to Varsity Cage Team, 35-2 WERINES SHOW Wu lI IIELL INOPENER Coach Veenker's Quintet Plays Good Basketball for Early Season Contest. Hoyt Announces Track Schedule At the recent annual meeting of the Big Tan coaches held at Chicago, the following schedule for the Wolverine track team was drawn up. Several non-Con- ference meets have alho been added to the card. Michigan, Conference c h a m p i on s, are pcinting to another title this season under their new head coach, Charles Hoyt. 1931 'RACK SCIIEUALE Indoor Seaso t Feb. 19. Ypsi, City of the Col-- WEISS IS HIGH SCORERI By Joe Russell. Michigan's basketball team fur- nished a pleasant surprise last' night in the Field House by opening its 1930-31 season with a 35-23 vic- tory over the highly-touted Western State Teachers quintet. The Wol- verines were expected to defeat the invaders, but the form and preci- sion with which they administered this defeat came somewhat unex- pectedly to the 3,000 rooters who had gathered to get the first glimpse at Coach Veenker's five. The play of the Maize and Blue team was far above the average for the opening game, and the way in which the new men worked into the Michigan style of play argues well for a winning basketball team this year. The mistakes which the Wolves did make may be attributed more to the strength of the oppo- sition than to the inexperience of the players, but even then the mis- plays were few and far between. For the most part, Coach Veenker's men played heads up ball, and le~ mT M ge of Detroit,............. here. Feb. 28. Chicago........here. Mar. 7. Indoor Conference i-et-............Madison, Wis. Mar. 14. Illinois Relays....... Urbana, Ill. Mar. 21. Cornell University here. Outdoor. Apr. 25, 26. Drake Relays . .Des Moines, Iowa. May 2. Ohio Relays ... Colum- bus, Ohio. May 9. Minnesota........here. May 16. Illinois . .Urbana, Ill. May 23. Outdoor Conference :eet .Northwestern, Chicago Ill. June 5, 6. National Meet. Chi- cago, Ill. Big Ten Grid Schedule Completed by Coaches CHICAGO Oct. 3-To be filled; Oct. 10- Michigan; Oct. 17--Yale; Oct. 24- Indiana; Oct. 31--Purdue; Nov. 7 -Arkansas; Nov. 14-at Illinois; Nov. 21-Wisconsin. ILLINOIS Oct. 3-Bradley; Oct. 10-Purdue; Oct. 17-St. Louis; Oct. 24-Michi- gun; Oct. 31-at Northwestern; Nov. 7-Wisconsin; Nov. 14-Chi- ca go; Nov. 21-at Ohio State. INDIANA Sent. 26-To be filled; Oct. 3--at Notre Dame; Oct. 10-open; Oct. 17-at Iowa; Oct. 24--at Chicago; Oct. 31-Ohio State; Nov. 7-at Michigan; Nov. 14-at Northwest- ern; Nov. 21-Purdue. IOWA Oct. 3-Pittsburgh; Oct. 10-at Texas Aggies; Oct. 17--Indiana; Oct. 24-at Minneapolis; Oct. 31- George Washington; Nov. 7 at Ne- braska; Nov. 14-at Purdue; Nov. 21-Northwestern. MICHIGAN Oct. 3--To be filled; Oct. 10-at Chicago; Oct. 17-Ohio State; Oct. 24-at Illinois; Oct. 31-at Prince- ton; Nov. 7-Indiana; Nov. 14- Michigan State; Nov. 21-Minneso- ta. MINNESOTA. Oct. 3-To be filled; Oct. 10--at Stanford; Oct. 17--to be filled; Oct. 24-Iowa; Oct. 31-Wisconsin; Nov. 7-at Northwestern; Nov. 14,-to be filled; Nov. 21-at Michigan. NORTHWESTERN Oct. 3-Utah; O c t. 10-Notre Dame at South Bend or Soldiers' Field; Oct. 17-to be filled; Oct. 24 -at Ohio State; Oct. 31-Illinois; Nov. 7-Minnesota; Nov. 14- In- diana; Nov. 21-at Iowa. OHIO STATE Oct. 3-To be filled; Oct. 10- Vanderbilt; Oct. 17-at Michigan; Oct. 24- Northwestern; Oct. 31-- at Indiana; Nov. 7-Navy; Nov. 14 -at Wisconsin; Nov. 21-Illinois. PURDUE Oct. 3-Coe and Western Reserve: Oct. 10-at Illinois; Oct. 17-at Wisconsin; Oct. 24-at Carnegie Tech; Oct. 31-at Chicago; Nov. 7 -to be filled; Nov. 14-Iowa; Nov. 21-at Indiana. WISCONSIN Oct. 3--To be filled; Oct. 104-to be filled; Oct. 17-Purdue; Oct. 24 -at Pennsylvania; Oct. 31-ai Minnesota; Nov. 7-at Illinois; Nov. 14-Ohio State; Nov. 21-at Chi- cago. ASSOCIATED PRESS WRITERS CHOOSE ALL-AMERICAN TEAM FIRST TEAM Fesler, Ohio State ............ E ............ Arbelbide, So. Calif. Sington, Alabama .......... T............Van Bibber, Purdue Metzger, Notre Dame ......... G .............. ..Baker, So. Calif. Ticknor, Harvard...........C..Hein, Wash. State Woodworth, Northwestern ... . G . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .Koch, Baylor Edwards, Wash. State .......T. .....................Price, Army Baker, Northwestern ......... E ............ Conley, Notre Dame Carideo, Notre Dame ......... Q3................ Dodd, Tennesee Pinckert, So. Calif.......... H .......... Bruder, Northwestern Schwartz, Notre Dam ....... HB....................Booth, Yale Macaluso, Colgate . ......F.. 3............Savoldi, Notre Dame Although many close contests de- veloped before the final makeup of BELIEVES TAXES UNFAIR. the 1930 Associated Press all-Amer- UNIVERSITY OF I L L I N O I S- ican grid team was announced, out- Poor assessment and inequality be- standing performers in nearly every tween classes make Illinois' state position dominated the votes cast tax system unfair to all of its citi- by 213 sports editors and writers, zens, an economics professor stated representing every gridiron sector here recently. of the United States._________ _____ On the first team the Middle West captured the honors, placing six out of the eleven men, almost solely through the work of Notre Dame and Northwestern, the Irish having a trio of all-stars and the Wildcats with two, the only teams(j placing more than one man. Ohio furnished the sixth Midwest star and brought the Big Ten total to three. The Far west gained two positions, the East two, and the South one. On the entire squad of 33 play- ers, comprising three complete teams and assuring plenty of able replacements for the mythical out- fit, the Middle West captured 11 positions, the Far West nine, the New General Mc East eight, and the South five. Michigan failed to place on any of the first three teams but gained recognition by having four Varsity gridders given honorable mention. CAl These were Cornwell, guard; Mor- rison, center; Newman, quarter- back; and Hudson, fullback. The third all-American team consisted of Dalrymple, Tulane, and Ebding, St. Mary's, ends; Foley, - Fordham, and Lubratovitch, Wis- --- consin, tackles; Humber, Army, --- - -- and Broxnberg, Dartmouth, guards; and Siano, Fordham, center. The backfield was made up of Duf field, Southern California, quarterback; Suther, Alabama, and Stennett, St. Mary's halfbacks; and Schwartz, Washington State, fullback. OLD PAPERS DISPLAYED. UNIVERSITY OF ILLINOIS- Newspapers datinig back to the eighteenth century were displayed here during the recent press con- ventions. h Midshipmen Surprise Quakers to Win, 26-0 (By Associated Press) PHILADELPHIA, Dec. 6. - Navy set a string of storm signals for all of Army to see today as a surpris- ingly versatile squad of midship- men battered and passed Pennsyl- vania's fair eleven into absolute submission before an enthusiastic crowd of 60,000. Whipped four times this season, rated hardly a formidable rival for the powerful cadets in the charity %,1 V IGeorgia 13, Georgia Tech 0 climax of the eastern campaignin New York next Saturday, Navy NOTED EDITORS HONORED pulled the plug on an amazingly potent offensive and smothered the UNIVERSITY OF I L L I N O I S- Quakers, 26 to 0. The score might I Busts of eight nationally famous have been twice that large if the. midshipmen had chosen to take editors were unveiled at the dedi- chances instead of kicking and cation of the Editor's Hall of Fame waiting for scores until they all during the state press convention but dropped in their lap. held here recently. FOOTBALL SCORES (By, ~ I r~ Carnegie Tech 26, Washington- Jefferson 0 Notre Dame 27, Southern Califor- nia 0 North Carolina 0, Duke 0 Western Maryland 7, Maryland 0 Loyola, (New Orleans) 9, Univ. of Detroit 6 Navy 26, Pennsylvania 0 Colgate 7, New York U. G Tennessee 13. Florida 6 i ..: :, clearly deserved Ito win. Altenhof drew first blood (Continued on Page 7) when LINE-UPS Michigan Weiss, rf............. Eveland, if........... Petrie, lf........... Hudson, If.......... Daniels, c............ Garner, c ............. Rickettes, c ........... Altenhof, rg ........... Shaw, lg ............. Downing, lg (capt.) .... Totals .............. Western State Teachers Althoff, rf ............. DenHerder, rf ......... Overton, rf ............ Byrum, c .............. Crein, rg .............. Quiring, rg ............ Decker, lg............ MacKay, lg ............ Pugno, lg ............. G F 5 1 2 1 0 0 1 0 5 0 0 0 0 0 2 2 0 1 0 0 15 5 College 1 0 1 0 0 1 4 2 0 0 0 0 2 2 1 0 0 0 9 5 T 11 5 0 2 10 0 0 6 1 0 35 21 2 1 10 0 0 6 2 0 23 IIntramural News INDEPENDENT VOLLEY BALL Seven teams have entered the competition for the Independent Volley Ball trophy won last year by the Chinese Students. The play will get under way Tuesday eve- ning Dec. 9th with the Brewers meeting the Buckeyes, Fletcher Hall meeting Oakland and the Michiganders taking on the Ac- tuaries. Several teams have shown up strong in pre-season practices so the job of picking a winner is a difficult task. The Buckeyes ap- pear to be the team that will have to be beaten to win the champion- ship. Fraternity Volleyball. The drawings for the Fraternity Volley Ball tournament will be held in the Intramural Building Tues- day, Dec. 9th at 8:00 o'clock. Man-i agers of the teams are all invited to be present. 0! I Totals Referee, Feezle, Notre Dame; Um- pire, Thompson, Lawrence. I Burr, Patterson Auld Co. and Badges Guards Rings Fraternty Jewelers STONE SET NECKLACES BRACELET AND NECKLACE SETS UNUSUAL NOVELTIES . . I 603 CHURCH STREET r n 'erIc, She Inans Shop North Univeritr Dressing gowns and robes make ideal gifts - giving a luxurious comfort which will be remembered long after the Christmas season. There is a good selection priced at thirteen fifty and ten- others as low as five dollars 11 .I I I C. C. M. CANADIAN Skate Outfits The Skates That Have No Equal I Complete Stocks Priced Reasonably I I' I .11