THE MICHIGAN DAILY )m the RESS BOX John Thomas Wolverines Sweep Hockey Series, Beat Wisconsin2 v Long John Schmieler Secret Vigl Kentucky Derby Mustang Turner * * * LONG JOHN SCHMIELER is quite a swimmer, the Wildcat fans have about decided. They knew thathe was a good breast stroker and' a point-winning free styler, but they had not planned on his capturing the back stroke event as well.h "Happy," as he is known to his Toledo friends, convinced Oxygen Mann, the coach, that he should swim the back stroke event when it was found that Drysdale would be ineligible. At first there was a bit of trouble in putting across his arguments, but he practiced hard at the event and the times turned in clinched all doubt. Down in the Northwestern pool Friday night, John stepped up to the mark when the 100-yard back stroke event was called, got away with the echoes of the gun and was never headed. He helped to win the medley relay by clearly outclassing his rival back stroker. In his own event, the breast stroke, he dogged it and placed third as he had been ordered to do. These two events followed each other and he was expected to save himself for his fourth race of the evening, the 400-yard free style. Degener's victory in the diving could be expected but Cristy's and Kennedy's victories were more or less unexpected. The former won the 440 with the latter second, and these places were reversed in the 220 with Michigan again taking one-two. This was expected to be Michigan's hardest dual meet of the year, against the strong Wildcats in the latter's home tank. The startling victory gives sufficient strength to the team's slogan, "We'll be there, or thereabouts," to show that the team will repeat their Big Ten title de- fense with another victory. The Conference swimming meet will be held in Chicago's pool, where the team had an easy night last eve- ning. It served to get them accus- tomed to the tank. AS MUCH as we wanted a defeat of Iowa last night, now we offer them good dishes for a victory to- morrow night. They play Ohio State and our secret vigil is aimed at nu- merous Buckeye defeats. Just how strong would Iowa have been if Break and Blackmeyer, their two ineligible stars, had been allowed to play? They looked like a sweet ball club last night without them, but they had to play without the services of two first-rate stars. But to'morrow night they will have to play the very best possible ball, to trounce the Buckeyes. They will have to be hot. Bastian will have a hard opponent in Hosket, the great Ohio center. Both men are fighting for All-Conference honors and their play tomorrow night will probably eliminate one of them. TWENTY HORSES have been se- lected as the cream of the 118 horses that were nominated for the fifty-ninth running of the Kentucky Derby. This mile and one-quarter race, with $50,000 added, will attract possibly more space in the sport pages than ever before. Three more horses were named than last year, and already the interest is high, as all of the leading American three- year-olds were nominated. Willis Sharpe Kilmer led the nomi- nators in the number entered with sceven. His Exterminator won the Derby in 1918. E. R. Bradley named six for this year's race. His Burgoo King won last year and in 1921 he placed one-two with Behave Your- self and Black Servant. He dupli- cated this feat in 1926 with Bubbling Over and Bagenbaggage. William Woodward, whose Gallant Fox was victorious in 1930, nominated four, as did Mrs. Payne Whitney who wqn in 1931 with Twenty Grand, and W. R. Coe, whose Ladysman rules as winter favorite for the forth- coming event. The C. V. Whitney stable, also named four. This stable won the Derby in 1915 with Regret and in 1927 with Whiskery for the last Harry Payne Whitney. Ried Injured In Second Period, But Team Wins Neil Gabler Scores With Thit Seconds To Play To Win For Michigan Goal Keepers Star Wolverines Get Second Place In Conference With Two Victories By ALBERT H. NEWMAN Scoring a final goal with but 30 seconds to play in one of the closest contests seen at the Varsity Arena here this season, Michigan made it two in a row over the Badgers of Wisconsin last night. The score was 2-1, and Neil Gabler, left defense- man, was the player responsible for the final score which saved the Wolves from an overtime and the possibiilty of losing the contest. Michigan was not up to the stand- ard set Friday night when they took the Madison outfit with a score of. 8-1, but Goalie Greeley of the visi- tors was performing well last night, and he made several fine stops which robbed the Wolves o fscores which should have gone down in the books. Coupled with this, Wisconsin was more used to their surroundings than last night, and they played a far better game. Reid In Smashup Another handicap was added to the absence of John Sherf when Emmy Reid, high scorer of Friday night's fray, was taken from the ice with an injured heel after a spill into the boards near the Wisconsin net which cost Southworth of the Badger defense two minutes in the penalty box. Reid was unable tohplay for the balance of the game. Crossman opened the fireworks in the first period after a fruitless 14 minutes of fair hockey. The veteran center cut across the Cardinal net from right to left and shot a slow one from close to the cords which barely trickled under Greeley's stick. Second Period Scoreless The remainder of the period was barren of scoring, and the second was occupied in more fruitless sparring with both goal tenders doing efficient jobs. Late in this period, Reid re- ceived his injury, and he was re- placed by Avon Artz. Wisconsin came out on the ice full of ambition to tie the score at the beginning of the third period, and they succeeded in short order as Hal- verson, flashy right wing, eluded the Maize and Blue defense to send one in from far to the right and deep in the defense zone. Jewell was un- abl to touch the rubber. But two minutes had elapsed in the period. Gabler Scores David received a penalty with five minutes to play, but the Wolves were able to repel the efforts of the Badg- ers who turned on full power in an attempt to score. David had hardly gotten back into the play when Gabler received a penalty, and the Wolverines were again on the de- fense for two minutes. Gabler took the ice again with under a minute to play, took a loosepuck atthe Wisconsin red line, and flipped it into the lower left corner of the Wis- consin net. The shot was partially blocked, but it wen tunder Greeley's stick and was ruled as a score by the goal judge despite some controversy. The re- maining few seconds saw Wisconsin desperately attempting to score, but they were able to make but one shot, which looked good until Jewell made a fast save. SUMMARIES Michigan Wisconsin Jewell ........... G ........ Greeley Gabler ......... LD.... Southworth' Chapman ...... RD ........... Lyke Crossman .......C. ..........Mercer Reid ........... LW.......Fawkes David....... . R W .....Halverson Michigan spares: Artz, Coventry, Courtis, Stewart. Wisconsin spares: Kubista, Jansky, Michael, Stehr. Scoring: First period - Crossman (14:59); second period-none; third period-Halverson (2:35); Gabler (19:30). Stops: Michigan, 34; Wis- consin, 38. Referee: Pusstraub, Chatham. Penalties: First period- Fawkes; second period-Southworth; third period-David, Gabler. Buckeye Wrestlers Defeated By Spoden's Mate -4> _____4;- ___-__ -_- Injured again Spoden's Win Gives Margin To Wolverines Wilson, Mosier, Landrum Also Score Victories For Maize And Blue BASI BOXc Michigan Eveland, rf Plummer, lf. .... Garner, c ...... Altenhof, rg Petoskey,Ig .. KETBALL STATISTICS Co-Captain Emerson Reid was in- jured in the second period when Southworth boarded him and when Emmy tried to get up, he found that his heel would not stand the strain. A bone may be broken. Basketeers 'To M e et Maroons Here Tomorrow Occupants Of Conference Cellar Expected To Be A Set-Up For Wolves Michigan's varsity basketball quin- tet will encounter the lowly Maroons from Chicago here tomorrow night for its second game in three days. Not much 'opposition is expected from the Midway five, who at pres- ent are resting in last place in the Big Ten standings, waging a belated contest with Minnesota to break into, the win column. This game will serve as a "breath- er" for the Wolverines, who battled the up and coming Iowa team last night and will take on the strong Boilermakers from Purdue Saturday night at Lafayette. In the last encounter between the two teams, Michigan severely trounced the Maroons 38 to 16. Since this game the team from the Midway has shown rapid improvement, al- though unable to chalk up a Confer- ence victory. Against Michigan's op- ponents of last 'niglit, the Chicago quintet early in February showed surprising power by holding the Hawkeyes to a 36 to 32 score. The game will be the eighth Con- ference tilt for the Wolverines, and will strengthen the local five's posi- tion in the Conference race unless Chicago reverses its previous form' and - trips the Wolves. The hapless Maroons will be engaging in their ninth conference tussle, having lost eight games to Big Ten rivals to date. By FRED A. HUBER John Spoden redeemed himself, and resultingly Michigan won its opening Big Ten wrestling meet of the season. The Wolves defeated Ohio State 17 1-2 to 12 1-2 yester- day afternoon in Yost Field House. About 1,000 people saw the meet. Spoden, who became the "goat" of the team by being pinned in both of the meets on the Eastern trip, came back to throw Wilbur Renner, Buckeye heavyweight in 5:40. Spoden got the edge at the -start of the bout and his victory seemed assured, but his work was better than expected, according to Coach Cliff Keen, who was pleasurably surprised at the out- come of the meet. Score Is Tied' At the start of the final match the score was tied at 12 1-2 points apiece, each team having three vic- tories and a drawn match. Michigan won two bouts by falls while the Scarlet-and-Gray won one. The Wolverines took the lead at the start of the meet when Jimmy Landrum won a decisive victory over Captain Lawrence Wonderleigh. The diminutive Michigan 118 pounder stayed behind during the latter half of the bout. His margin of victory was a 3:11 time advantage. Oakley Held Even An upset occurred in the second match when Floyd Rhodes, an un- known visitor, secured a draw with Joe Oakley of the Maize-and-Blue, at 126-pounds. Both men almost scored falls but the underdog always managed to escape being pinned. It was a rather bloody fight, Rhodes suffering cuts on his arm and elbow and a bleeding nose. Oakley had a cut over his right eye. Carl Tiffany, Ohio State's ace, ex- perienced little difficulty in winning the 135-pound match from Seymour Rubin. Rubin, State'A. A. U. and All- Campus title-holder, was in the first bout at the weight. He was thrown at 4:20. The winner has not yielded a minute's time advantage in five fights this season. Thomas Defeated In the 145-pound bout Captain Blair Thomas was defeated by Frank Wilson, of O. S. U. Wilson gained a 4:44 time advantage. .Thomas had been idle all week, recovering from an attack of influenza which struck him early in the season. Art Mosier, who has been suffering from an injured knee, won from Al- len Downes, Ohio State sophomore with a 4:30 advantage. The Michigan man had his opponent almost pinned on two occasions. The Maize-and-Blue won the 165- pound match when Ed Wilson went to work and pinned Paul Swayer, Buckeye representative, in 2:50. rial Is Better Totals....... Iowa Barko, rf...... Mojtt, rf..... Krumbholz, If ... Kotlow, If ...... Bastian, c..... Grim, rg ....... Selzer, lg...... SCORE F.G. F.T. .3 2 .3 2 .6 1 .1 1 ..1 1 .14 7 F.G. F.T. 0 0 0 3 .3 5 .1 0 . 2 0 .3 0 .5 0 p. 1 0 2 2 6 P. 1 1 1 a 2 3 0 8 Totals ..... .14 8 Shorts Michigan T. M. Eveland, rf.....6 3 Plummer, lf .... 8 3 Garner, c.....12 6 Altenhof, rg .... 3 0 Petoskey, lg .... 1 1 Longs T. M. 3 0 1 0 0 0 3 1 0 0 F. T. 2 4 2 2 1 T. M. 2 2 1 1 1 Assists 3 1 1 4 1 Followups T. M. 1 1 2 0 6 0 1 0 0 0 T. 8 8 13 3 3 35 T: 0. 3 11 2 4 6 10 36 Totals .......30 13 7 1 11 7 10 10 1 LAST NIGHTS RESULTS Indiana 29, Wisconsin 28. Ohio State 28, Purdue 27. Northwestern 57, Chicago 23. Illinois 26, Minnesota 22. GAMES THIS WEEK MONDAY Illinois at Wisconsin. Iowa at Ohio State. Northwestern at Purdue. Indiana at Minnesota. Chicago at MICHIGAN. SATURDAY Ohio State at Iowa. MICHIGAN at Purdue. Northwestern at Wisconsin. Minnesota at Illinois. Indiana at Chicago. Iowa Barko, rf ....... Krumbholz, if .. Bastian, c..... Grim, rg ....... Selzer, lg....... Kotlow, rf ...... Moffitt, if ...... Shorts T. M. 3 0 5 0 5 2 9 2 6 1 2 1 2 0 Longs T. M. 4 0 4 3 0 0 6 1 5 4 1. 0 4 0 22 8 F. T. 0 6 1 0 0 0 3 ]10 T. M.. 0 5 0 0 0 0, 3 8 Assists 0 1 0 1 0 1 1 4. Followups T. M. 3 0 1 0' 8 1 1 0 1 0 2 0 1 0 17 1 Totals......32 6 T-Tried; M-Made. Varsity Tennis Gets Start For- Tough Schedule The Varsity tennis squad this year will be One of the largest and most' promising in many years, according to Coach Johnstone, Varsity coach. At least the first twenty on the. Coach's list are of Varsity caliber, he said, and more will soon be added as a result of the all-campus matches. This year the Coach is starting. Varsity practice indoors and intends to continue indoors for a longer pe- riod than usual. He says he has al- ways been slightly opposed to indoor preparation, but after seeing the marvelous exhibition given by Bill Tilden on the wooden court here re- cently, he now believes an equal skill can be developed on both indoor and. outdoor courts. This is especially true here, as the Intramural Building of- fers almost perfect playing conditions for tennis. As soon as the potential Varsity players get into condition indoors the ranking matches will be played off before moving to the outdoor courts. Coach, Johnstone has ranked the men expected out for the Varsity ap- proximately in the order they now hold before intensive practice starts. They are: Snell, Appelt, Nisen, San- dusky, Baldwin, Corey, Siegel, Root, Waring, Nichols, Durand, Muzzy, Schnap, Eskowitz, Walker, Bristol. Yearling Hockey Squad Boasts No Reids, Cross mans Coach Ed Lowry cut the freshman hockey squad for the last time yes- terday, leaving only eleven men. The squad, according to Coach Lowry, is not the best one he has ever had and has no outstanding players such as last year's squad had in Johnny Sherf and Johnny Jewel. The squad as a whole, is weak in regards to skating ability, but shows promise Women Defeat State Teamns Ir Cage Tourn( Michigan co-eds more than 1 their own in their introduction to tercollegiate competition when t won a four-game basketball tours ment from Michigan State with i victories and no blots on their r ord. The four class teams from Mic gan won their games handily w scores as follows: Seniors, 33 Juniors, 21-13; Sophomores, 23- Freshmen, 28-19. The sophomo and seniors played at Lansing, w the State freshmen, and juniors n; the trip to Ann Arbor. Freshmen High Scorer A Maize and Blue freshman, C trude Walker, was the individual performer of the tournament. 18 points in the freshman battle her first of the scorers, and was of the, chief reasons for the fri man victory. The overwhelming defeat dealt the seniors was slow getting star The two teams played fairly eve during the first half, but in the and, led by Lee Hendricks and J1 Botsford, the upperclassmen wen' a scoring spree that tied up the ga The juniors, headed by Charl Simpson, though behind at the h came through to an easy victory Ruth Root led the sophomore gregation to their 23-17 victory e the Lansing second year piayers. T was the hardest fought and clc game of the series. The freshmen, who showed worst in the interclass season, p vided the surprise of the aftern Due principally to the sharpshoot ability of Gertrude Walker, I point scorer of the day and the d terous leadership of Captain Thomas, the yearling cagers dispo of their opponents handily wit score 28-19. 14 of providing varsity material for the future hockey teams. The only possible choice for men replacing Reid and Crossman for next year's team of this squad are L. David and C. Hoyt, both forwards, and both most likely of the whole frosh squad to develop into stars. Coach Lowry hopes to convert the latter into a defense man but, as yet, has not made any experiments. in that way. Developing and Printing of Snapshots Frosh Cage Mate Enlargements - Greeting Cards Lending Library Than Average, Ray Fisher Says The freshman basketball team is to start work again this next week. According to Coach Ray Fisher the boys are in for some practice ses- sions on fundamentals which they seem to have forgotten. In the scrim- mage against the Varsity the other night the players showed that they were in good form, but a little bit slow. In material Coach Fisher seems to be lucky this year. He has two good guards that he predicts should be Varsity material next season. In Ford at one of the forward posts is an- other promising prospect for next year's Varsity. The team as a whole is better than the ordinary frosh squad, but as us- ual it lacks experience. Against the Varsity it has performed very cred- itably, with the exception of the pivot men. The fault at this position, is not in the men, as Coach Fisher Veicla pointed out, but in the men that they have to play against. Garner at center is a tough man for any center to hold down and the boys on the frosh are not quite tall enough to take care of him. With Allen at center the frosh pivot men are able to hold their own. This one difficulty is all the trouble that Coach Fisher could find with his men. In the matter of practices, the freshmen are quite a bit behind, as they have had only about three prac- tices since the beginning of the se- mester and one of these was a scrim- mage with-the varsity. APPLICATION PHOTOS $1.50 a Dozen WHITE'S STUDIO 110 E. Huron St. Phone 3355 TENNIS SCHEDULE April 22 Detroit Tennis Club, there. April 29 Western State, here. May 2 Mich. State, here. May 5 Chicago, there.. May 6 Northwestern, there. May 12 13 Ohio State, here. May 15 16 Ypsilanti, here. May 18 19 20 Conference meet. Champaign, Ill. May 23 Mich. State, there. May 24 Ypsilanti Normal, there. May 27 Ohio State, there. -All Where Fine Work Is the Tradition. FRANCISCO- BOYCE PHOTO COMPANY TWO STORES 723 North University 108 East Liberty 11 - f r! 5% io. MUSTANG TURNER'S strongest backer is a little woman named Marjorie. She has more faith in him than he himself has. She just knows that he'll win each race, no matter how strong the opposition. And her last name is Turner too. No, we are not announcing a be- lated middle-isle event. She's his sister-you stupe ! Illini gridders are getting off to an early start in their spring prac- tice. Over 60 men are working out on all Campus Handball Title Won By Al Hilburger Alfred Hilburger, '36E, won the All-Campus handball singles cham- pionship yesterday afternoon when he beat Wilbur Gimmy, '33B.Ad., in the final match of the tournament. Hilburger clearly outplayed his oppo- nent in every game except the last. Th grnpuq wvrP-91 to R_ 1 RQo 1'r > Cl@ancrs ( to t'KO Ea:11didioull9 J'r WINTER, SOT EQOIPMET Ice Skates - Skiis - Ski Poles --ockey Clubs, 11! The most sanitary method of I I I 11 I TnlkArx o All