_______ THE MICHICAN DAILY 1 Jagers to Meet Mt. nion, Syracuse Over Holiday hh -I HAVE NO REST RIN-CVACATION in Eastern Journey for Syracuse Gane. VILL PLAY HEREI rd Mt. Union Game for Saturday at Home. By Sheldon C. Fullerton xistmas holidays, welcome as are to the average run of stu- s mean little or nothing to bers of the Wolverine basket- :uintet, who will be called upon lay two more games before o> starts again in January. To-e 'ow night, in the first of these contests, the Maize and Blue rs will stack up against Mt. in College, of Alliance, cham- s of the Ohio Conference last M. Will Play Syracuse. the Saturday before resump- of classes, Jan. 2, the Wolv- ;quintet will journey eastward ckle the powerful Syracuse University aggre- gation in the last practice clash be-1 fore the opening of the , regular ° Western Confer- . ence season with Wisconsin, Jan. 9. Mt. Union, the team that will in-, vade Yost Field .House on Satur- day night, boasts VEIAND of practically the team that represented them eason, when they were stopped once throughout the entire After capturing the Ohio Con- ce title, the Mounts were fore- 1ow to Wooster in the final7 of the year, after beating . earlier in the season. iit. Union is Strong. a lettermen are back on the it Union team this year, but1 nine of them will be brought nn Arbor. .Among the main- * on the Mount team are Lee es, Ohio's leading football r for the past season, Leloy' r, an all-Ohio end, and Jimmy d, veteran cage star, all of a will bear watching by th erines. M t.] o n will be' ng its second r:' in as many - : s, as they . scheduled to Findlay to- .e Michigan * et that will ,*. e Mt. Union , is expected . ., the same as < one .that met S°iAW igan . t at e last Saturday. DeForest, Eve- and Hank Weiss will share the ard duties, although Bob Fe- eye for the basket as shown he spartan game will entitle to chnsiderable recognition as rter at one of the two forward ?. Daniels Will Start. rTM Daniels, who was replaced rarner .during a large part of Michigan State fray, will start ame at center. During the last of the game against the East ing aggregation Daniels found basket with more regularity he did earlier in the game, should prove stronger on the (Continued on Page 7) LARGECROWDI AT ENDS WRESTLING EET Tenders Resignation AssooaWed Press Photo John F. "Chick",Meehan, who re- cently withdrew as head football coach at New YorksUniversity, and returned to his duties as vice-pres- ident of a contracting firm. He an- nounced his determination never to coach the grid sport "on a big time basis" again. MI C'HIGSAN TANKMEIN Swimmers to Leave on Eastern Trip This Morning; Have Four Matches. Ten Wolverine swimmers are scheduled to leave at 11:30 this morning for Cleveland where they will meet the Y. M. C. A. team of that city tonight in the first tank meet 'on an Eastern trip which will bring them into competition with four strong opponents. This is the second meet on the pre-Conference schedule of the Wolves who took over the Toledo Y natators last Saturday, 52 to 19, contrary to the score previously announced. The swimmers who will accom- pany Coach Matt Mann include Capt. Robert Miller, Frank Fenske, Don Marcus, Louis Lemak, Richard Degener, Taylor Drysdale, James Cristy, Frank Kennedy, John Sch- meiler, and Ivan Smith. Saturday night will find the Michigan team in Pittsburgh for a meet with the Pitt Athletic Club. New York University's squad of tank stars will oppose the Wolver- ine swimmers Dec. 21 with the New York Athletic Club closing the pre- holiday trip with a meet Dec. 22. Hildebrand Wins on Fall From Bauss in Feature Battle of Evening. By John S. Townsend Upwards of 200 persons were on hand to see the eight bouts on the card of the University Wrestling championships held last night in the big gym of the Intramural Sports building. Practically every available seat was taken and the rest had to be content with standing room. Last night was the first time that a wrestling program has ever beenl offered to the public on such al large scale outside of the Varsity meets. Every grappler on the card was a member of the student body and every match was of champion- ship calibre. Hildebrand Throws Bauss. In the final bout of the evening which proved to be the feature match, Willard Hildebrand, a fresh- man from Saginaw, threw Harvey Bauss in the 175-pound class. Hil- debrand held the advantage over his opponent throughout the match up to the time when he threw him ,in 7:43. The grapplers started off with a bang and Hildebrand got the better grip and tossed Bauss. right over his head, almost getting a fall in less than a minute, but Bauss proved too strong and came out of it, and then made for the edge of the ring. This bout was the most exciting one of the evening and alone was worth the price of ad- mission. Heavyweight Match Exciting. The two heavyweights put on a real fast bout for men of their size, with both Spoden and Conover bat- tling on fairly even terms for the greater part of the match. After be- ing forced through the ropes by Conover, Spoden came back to win by a fall with the bout at the half- way mark. .Hilton Ponto had a tough job on his hands in handling Duxbury in the 165-pound match before throw- ing him in 6:09. Ponto held the ad- vantage throughout the bout with Duxbury putting up a determined fight to keep from being pinned, but Ponto finally put it on his op- (Continued on Page 7) tni~s Al lRBi-Te-n ST. LOUIS CARDINALS SURPRISE ASRAT ,FANS BY SUIDDEN XoWA -Ak.WA-JJL4VA ILC IA-d AL A 36L I 6.0 our 1 L.Y v A.OF .vA-JL 11 He witt at End Is Only Player Trade Involving Grimes, Wilson Representing Mwihgan- Teachout, Upsets Dope. The Daily Northwestern, student By Fred A. Huber newspaper of the University of I Much discu sion has been arous- Northwestern, announced its selec- ed by the recent surprise deal, in tion yesterday for anl all-confer-a which the St. Louis Cardinals trad- ed Burleigh Grimes to the Chicago ence team of the season of 1931. Cubs for Lewis "Hack" Wilson anti Four Northwestern players, Rent- Arthur Teachout, a left-handed ner, Riley, Marvil, and Evans, gain_ pitcher.y The Cardinals, as is well remem- ed berths on the mythical eleveni bered, flashed to an upsetting win in while Michigan was represented the World Series last fall, and at only by Bill Hewitt on the first the time it appeared that the Red' team. He was placed at right end. Bird team could stand without any Miller, of Purdue, was placed by the material changes, ready to be a first class title defender in 1932. Daily Northwestern at center. Two Then things happened. other Purdue players were given Andy High was sent to the Cin- positions, while Minnesota placed cinnati Reds in the first deal. High i two men. Ohio State was repre- had served capably as a utility in-I sented by Cramer. The reason giv- fielder throughout the last cam-1 en by the Daily Northwestern for paign. He filled in at third base the placing of Hewitt at a flank mostly, being noted as a fine field- post rather than at fullback was er, but a rather weak batsman. The because "at that post he displayed Cardinals tried to release High to real power and defensive ability." their farnm at Rochester a year ago The complete team: Name Position Moss, Purdue . ..............LE. TROJAN CONTEST Riley, N'w'st'n ................ L.T. WORRIES TULANE Munn, Minn. ...............L.G. _ Miller, Purdue .............C. Evan, N''st' R GScouts .for Green Wave Report Evans, N w'st'n . ... . . .. .. ... . . R.G. ,P. Marvil, N'w'st'n .. . ... ... T. on New Year's Day Rivals. hewitt, Mich.............R.E. Cramer, O. S. U.... .......Q.B. NEW ORLEANS, Dec.,17.-())- Purvis, Purdue ................L.H. Coach Bernie Bierman is whirling Rentner, N'w'st'n ............ H his whistle-cord a little faster than Manders, Minn . .......... . ....F.B. usual as Tulane's Green Wave drills for the Rose Bowl game with Red Grange Sets High Southern California New Year's .,..ed- ,Day. Ground Gaintng Mark That's the only outward show 'of emotion in the Wave ranks follow- CHICAGO, Dec. 17.-(AP)-Old No. ing the one-point-a-minute score 77- otherwitse Bedl Grange ran gtill set by the9Californianc il thp am but Little Andy rebelled and as a result was retained. He saw service in the last World Series in a reserve capacity. His release was expected. The man the Cards received in trade was Cullop, an outfielder, who was immediately notified to report to Columbus, American Association farm of the St. Louis interests. Wilson in Slump. But the need for the Grimes-Wil- son deal was not at first obvious. The excellent pitching of the vet- eran Burleigh in the last series will go down in baseball annals. Wil- son's performance with the Cubs last season certainly does not need to be spoken of. He was a veritable. bad boy in every sense of the word. After leading the National League in batting in 1930, his average fell off greatly, his fielding, never a strong point with Hack, was none too good, and worst of all, he was an avowed trouble maker. He quar- reled with the manager, Rogers Hornsby, he encouraged the other boys to break training and all in all was no credit to the team. Horns- by is indeed glad to be rid of him. Grimes May be Through. The next question is why Grimes was traded. He' had finished his best pitching days and although he did heroic work in the last -series it was extremely hard on his arm and he may never reach full season form again. Still another moot point is just why the Cardinals need another outfielder. Martin, the ambitious hero of the series, Hafey, League hitting champion in 1931, and Wat- kins and Roettger form a capable set of gardeners. Wilson, will re- ceive a chance to break into the regular lineup, however, according. to Manager Gabby Street, of the Red Birds. DEAL :PURDUE AND ILLINI Boilermaker Quintet Will Meet Pitt in Feature Game; Illinois at Miami. With Michigan playing the last pre-holiday game here Saturday night, most of the other conference quintets are also engaging in prac- tice games that will help to keep them in trim for the opening of the Big Ten schedule in January. Purdue and Illinois are the two teams that have games tonight. In the feature game Purdue will at- tempt to maintain their string of pre-season victories against thy strong Pittsburgh five. So far on their western trip, the Pitt quintet has split even with Western Con- ference foes, losing to Wisconsin by, a one-point margin and winning from Indiana Wednesday night in an overtime thriller by a 29 to 24 score. Pitt will have plenty of op- position from Ward Lambert's boys, as Purdue showed their strength Tuesday night by crushing Notre Dame 34 to 24. Last Saturday night, Purdue scored more than 50 points in winning from Wa$hington Uni- versity of St. Louis. Both teams are strong, but Purdue seens to have the edge. Illinois journeys to Oxford, Ohio, to assist in the dedication of the new field house of Miami Univer- sity. The Illini will present' the same line-up that overwhelmed St. Louis last Saturday. Saturday night, Northwestern, last year's conference champions, meets Washington University, the same team that Purdue ran- wild over a week ago. The Wildcats should have little trouble with the Continued on Page 7) S , g inoW1VXc 71G1 , U i l.1I get around on a foot ball field. Grange, the famous "Galloping Ghost" of the 1923-24-25 Illinois teams, led the Chicago Bears of the National Professional League in grourfd gaining with an average of 5.3 yards a try for the recent sea- son. Grange lugged the ball 114 times for a total of 604 yards. Max Schmeling, world's heavy- weight boxing champion, plans to sail for this country December 29 for an extended exhibition tour. He also plans to defend his title this winter, either in Miami or Los Angel s. pu"y El 1d1211 ~ n i.iltle game with Georgia. The score was 60 to nothing. Tulane's coach-scouts returned with these comments: Lester Lautenschlaeger: "We ex- pected to see power plays mostly. What we saw was a series of lat- erals, spinners, reverses, etc., which went on behind a line Georgia was not able to penetrate once." Ted Cox, who becomes head coach when Bierman goes to Min- nesota early next year: "On de- fense, the Trojan line charged as- tonishingly fast and low, and on offense-well, it was just scientific murder." MICHAELS-STERN CLOTHES \ 0 a sa + - J At Corbett's the Battle Cry is MORE GIFTS PER DOLLAR 'I : - 141,11 J a EN AVANT .A A A A A A .~er forwardA Af Burr, Patterson & Auld Co. Manusa tuiin 6.0t+nt y aw a " Detroit, Michigasn & Walerville, Ontario A For your convenience A Ann Arbor Store A 603 Church St. A FRANK 0CAKES Mgr. We can't remember when you could remember so many men for so few dollars. Neckwear ' . .. $1.00-91.50 Interwoven Socks 25c-$1.00 Glover Pajamas $1.50-45.00 I A MERRY CHRISTMAS AND A HAPPY NEW YEAR TO YOU ALL Upon your return we will be in a posi- tion to show you the Spring Line of Woolens of entirely new Fabrics "NOT A SHOP-WORN NUMBER IN THE ENTIRE ASSORTMENT" and The PRICE. We will show you VALUES that will open your eyes. Over One Hundred Fifty Fabrics Costing You the suit With extra trousers Keep this in mind while on your vacation. TINKER & COMPANY South State Street at William Street Serving University Men for over thirty Turns Sculptor Gloves Shirts $2.00 $5.00 $1.50-$3.50 Book end ash receiver, S10. Creator of ti, famous Fisher Body girls and'many of to-day's most beautiful magazine cov- ers, Mr.Barclay has now Ltuned" his gifted hands to sculpiug. The result is a striking group of exquisite small bronzes. Each is useful and uniquely decorative'-a chanring-c dur- ing gift. Attractively priced. :1 1 ,nii r sho o, ororrder of I SPAR TON OVERCOATS Kerchiefs . ... 25c-$1.00 Hats .. $3.50-$5.00 Shirt and Shorts, Per Set ... .$1.00-$1.95 SPARTON SUITS I Book end ash receiver or candle stand, $18- Walk a Few Steps N £o - n ~~ I