TUESDAY, DECEMBER 12, 1933 Colgate Hockey Team Will Play Michigan Here Lowrey Prepares M a i z e And Blue For Strong Eastern Invasion Following the two close victories hung up by the Wolverine hockey team last week, Coach Eddie Low- rey is now concentrating on perfect- ing his ice squad for the game with Colgate (N.Y.) here this Wednesday. With the ice season barely under way for Michigan, much in the way of improvement is possible in the week remaining before the holidays. Consistent development in the accu- racy and team-work of the pucksters has been shown in the two games played so far, and Lowrey expects to have a polished offense ready for the Maroon's invasion Wednesday night. Coach Howard Starr of the Col- gate rink team will bring a fast and heavy squad here this week. Capt. Pud Galbraith and six others on the Maroon team are 180-pound football men and are reputed to be excep- tionally tough and fast. Strong In East It appears that Colgate will have one of the strongest teams in the East this year. Reserve material, which counts for so much in the puck sport, will be abundant, since Coach Starr has three full teams available, although he will probably not bring the full squad to Ann Ar- bor. Eastern collegiate hockeythas long been 'considered of a better quality than the Mid-western competition, although Michigan and Minnesota have'been bringing the Big Ten to the fore in the ice sport in recent years. Minnesota was National Champion last year, but four East- ern teams followed her in that rank- ing, with Michigan sixth. One of the most colorful players of the Maroon roster is a senior wing named Wheeler Woolsey. He was not named after the screen pair, of course, but when playing football this fall, he received tokens from his illustrious namesakes before every game. Captain Galbraith is a natural born Canadian, although he lives in Ithaca, N. Y., at present. Besides playing hockey for three years, he is a pole vaulter on the Maroon track team. Caoers Show Up Satisfactorily In LocalOpener Although his team was defeated in their opening home encounter, Coach Franklin C. Cappon has expressed himself as "satisfied" with the Vars- ity cagers' improvement over the sea- son's opener with Western State. Especially gratifying to the coach- ing staff was the showing of Fred Allen at center and George Ford, the flashy sophomore forward. Although Allen spotted Buysse, the opposing center, several inches in height, it was his control of the tip-off in the opening minutes which sent the Wol- verines to a five to nothing lead, com- pletely stopping the Spartan offense. Ford Shows Promise George Ford, playing his first Varsity game before a Michigan crowd, gave evidence that he will ful- fill all predicted for him as a fresh- man. Although betraying a lack of experience evidenced by unnecessary steps and occasional faulty ball- handling, it was his aggressiveness and speed which kept the Blue team in the running in the last minutes. He also showed an eye for the basket, chalking up seven points with three baskets and a foul goal. Cappon, following the game, laid the close defeat to his team's failure to cash in on foul goals. THE MICHIGAN DAILY Layden Confers About New Notre Dame Job -Associated Press Photo Elmer Layden, one of the famed "Four Horsemen," talks with the Rev. Fr. John F. O'Hara, vice-president of Notre Dame, over his return to the Alma Mater as head football coach and athletic director. Layden, as the Irish choice to succeed Heartly (Hunk) Anderson, is the second coach in the last two years to pick up the reins that the late Knute Rockne dropped and to attempt to regain the old Notre Dame grid glory. Frosh Squea d To Scrimmage Varsity Cagers Coach Ray Fisher works on the assumption that what you are not sure of isn't worth saying. His fresh- man basketeers worked out at the Intramural Building yesterday for the first time since they started in- tensive practice at Waterman gym- nasium about a month ago. Coach, Fisher would not comment on the relative excellence of the present squad as compared to last year's freshman group which was acclaimed just about the best in the past dec- ade. Instead he decided to withhold any hurrahs until the week is over. This afternoon and again on Thursday Coach Cappon will send his Varsity cagers against a picked group of freshmen in preparation for the Eastern trip. After the set of games is over Coach Fisher will have a better line on each man's indi- vidual play and he will be prepared to make a statement as to the worth of the squad. According to Fisher, his only desire in the games with the Varsity is to hold the score as low as possible and prevent a run-a-way. Gee Outstanding. The standout possibility for cen- ter is a boy named Gee from Syra- cuse, NewYork.mHe towers six feet, six inches. At present, he is ironing out a defet in his timing. Harry Solomon, who played at Ypsi Nor- mal for a year, is one of the out- standing shots on the team. He is over six feet and is one of the most experienced men on the team. Pete Raft and Ferris Jennings, both of Ann Arbor, Matt Pattenelli, of Elk- hart, Indiana, Al Drewes, who comes from Yonkers, New York, which team won the championship of the state, and Chet Stabowitz, of Carl Schurz High School, are some of the out- standing men on the team. MacFarlane Is Winner Of Golf Meet At Miami CORAL GABLES, Fla., Dec. 11. - () - Willie MacFarlane, erstwhile Scot plasterer, today possessed the $2,500 first place money of the "Ten Grand" Miami Biltmore Open. Shading par by one stroke on the final 18 for a 72-hole lead of 288, he came in four strokes ahead of the field, breaking free of a three-way tie on the 54th. The runner-up was Johnny Re- volta, Menominee, Mich., with a 292 to take the second position award of $2,250, while Paul Runyan, of White Plains, N. Y., and Tommy Armour, Chicago, s p 1 i t third and fourth money for $875 each when they fin- ished with 294's. Ralph Guldahl, St. Louis, who, with Revolta, was tied with the win- ner at the 54th, blew up on the en- suing holes and finished; with Al Watrous, Detroit, with a 295 . MacFarlane, 42-year-old Tucyahoe N. Y., professional, suffering from neuritis and playing in the tourney against his physician's orders, re- received a "big hand" from the gal- lery as he holed his ball with the 288th stroke. Stroking with authority, MacFar- lane hung up a new course record of 67, four under par, for the first day's 18. On the second 18, he slid back to the field with a 77, but re- covered yesterday afternoon with a 71. Warburton Is Fourth Among" High Scorers Everhardus Holds E a r 1y Lead And Finishes At Top Of Midwest Heap (By Intercollegiate Press) Irvine (Cotton) W a r b u r t o n of Southern California counted two touchdowns against Washington on Saturday to boost himself into fourth place in the final Associated Press compilation, of leading conference scorers for the 1933 season. Warburton finished with 72 points against 78 for Beattie Feathers of Tennessee, 90 for Cecil Kent of Mur- ray (Kentucky) Teachers, the South- ern Intercollegiate A. A. leader, and 108 for Pete Young of Bluefield Col- lege, the nation's pace-setter. The leader in each group or con- ference follows: Player and college . Points East -Young, Bluefield College. .108 S.I.A.A.--Kent, Murray Teach. . .90 Southern - Feathers, Tennessee. . 78 Pacific -- Warburton, U.S.C....,.72 Southern -- Cox, Duke..........69 Southwest - Casper, Tex. Chris. . .66 Big Ten - Everhardus, Michigan. . 64 Big Six - Graham, Kansas State. .49 Rocky Mt.--Richins, Utah ......45 Coaches Pick Bernardf Bernard was the only Michigan' player selected on the All-American team compiled under Parke H. Davis, widely known football authority, in collaboration with 100 coaches. They named: Skladany, Pittsburgh, and Geisler, Centenary, ends; Ceppi, Princeton, and Schwammel, Oregon State, tackles; Corbus, Stanford, and Rosenberg, S o u t h e r n California, guards; Bernard, Michigan, center; Montgomery, Columbia, quarterback; Buckler. Army, and Purvis, Purdue, halfbacks; Feathers, Tennessee, full- back. Three Big Ten Dual Swimming Meets Carded Ohio State And Iowa Will Swim Here; Wolverines Go To Northwestern The Wolverine tank team, cham- pion swimmers of the Big Ten, will engage at least three Conference op- ponents in dual meets during the 1934 season. In addition, there is a possibility of the Maize and Blue meeting a fourth Big Ten foe if plans now under way materialize. Michigan State will be met in the Spartan pool in the only non-conference meet that has been scheduled so far. Ohio State will be the first Con- ference opponent to engage the Wol- verines, the meet to be held in the Michigan pool on February 16. A week later, Iowa will furnish the Wolve- rines a big test, this meet being also scheduled for the Michigan tank. Northwestern Key Meet On March 2, Coach Matt Mann will take his tankmen to Evanston where the Wolverines will meet Northwest- ern. This meet should go a long way toward determining just what team will win the Big Ten championship as the Wildcats and Wolverines are probably the two best teams in the Conference, if not in the country, Coach Mann is negotiating with Illi- nois at present in an attempt to schedule a meet with the Illini on the night after the Wildcat meet. If the Michigan mentor is able to sched- ule the Illinois swimmers, it will make four dual meets with Conference foes. The first dual meet of the, season is scheduled for January 17, with the Spartans furnishing the opposition. Michigan swimming fans, however, will have an opportunity to see the Varsity in action the second week after vacation as Coach Mann is planning a handicap meet for that week. The Conference meet is scheduled for March 17 in the Iowa pool, with the Nationals carded for March 30 and 31 at Columbus, 0. Hockey, Basketball Leagues Feature New I-M Schedule In keeping with their usual illus- trious program, the Intramural De- partment will sponsor four separate basketball tournaments and an ice- hockey league as the major attrac- tions of their current winter sport's card, with a problematical chance of a faculty league coming into being. Tonight will be the last oppor- tunity for fraternity teams to enter. There are two classes in the fra- ternity league, class A for the reg- ulars and class B for the reserves. Schedules will be mailed to each of the participating houses at the end of the week. Besides the fraternity league t h e r e is an Independent league, an R.O.T.C. league, and a Student Publications league. Sixteen teams have already en- tered the hockey festivities, and en- tries will close at the end of the week. This is an all-campus event, open to any and all kinds of students. The Intramural department will fur- nish all of the necessary equipment except skates and skill. LETTERS of a gangster in college to his lady-friend in the Big, Wicked City. Dear Mabel: Yesterday I arrive in Ann Arbor again after watching the Michigans beat the Vile Cats which are the Northwesterns What a weekend, eh, Mabel? I find that I am some weeks late in getting back, and I begin to have some glimmering of an idea that my Chemistry prof. who does not like me very well to begin with likes me even less now if that is possible. I also find that the football season is all over and that the Michigans are the National Champions according to a professor at Illinois. Wiell all I have to say about him is that he is a very, very fair-minded person, indeed, if he can see the Illinoises play the Michigans and not see the Michigans at any other time and still award the championship to the Michigans. The people here are now interested faintly in a game which is known as hockey and also in a game called basketsball, and I see that I will have to find out what these games are as soon as possible. In fact, I am going to the hockey game tomorrow night. The Michigans are playing the Colgates and I am strictly refraining from any cracks about toothpaste, on account of my friend Al would not like it as any such things would be hopped on as advertising. You remember that I introduce you to Percy Frostbottom, that nice Englishman which I bring with me foif the game. Well day before yesterday I go to hunt for him to bring him back with me and find that he has taken a flat out in Cicero. He refuses to come back, saying that at last he finds people which are "refreshingly genuine" which means, Mabel that in Cicero if a guy does not like you he does not go around pretending that he does so. He merely draws his rod and fills you full of lead. I predict that Percy will live in Cicero until some guy finds that he does not like Englishmen. That will be some joke on Percy, eh Mabel? Sincerely, WOMEN'S S P 0 R T S Every sorority house and dormi- tory on campus but one has entered a team in the competition for basket- ball laurels this winter. Elimination play, split into a winners' and losers' division, started yesterday afternoon on the Barbour gym courts.' Of the 33 sextets, Jordan is back- ing three, and Newberry two. The graduate and independent groups will also enter more than one, in all prob- ability. The practice hours to which would- be basketeers have been devoting themselves during the past couple of weeks will very likely be factors in the final results of the tourney. It is the only opportunity the women have had to practice together, and they have had the benefit of faculty coaching. Dr. Rugen, Miss Hartwig, and Miss Field have all assisted in the instruction sessions. Graduates wil meet Tuesday eve- l i 1 GIFT Itis Christmas Time at R W Sere lvee/Ve /i!,ain.. 309 SOUTH MAIN STREET Gifts of Goodness & By virtue of its vast holiday preparations, Staeb & Days store for Men enjoys the distinction of being Ann Arbor's gift headquarters. Everything new, and from a new store with new low prices. A few gift sugges- tions are listed below: And Dependable Quality is the Keynote SUEDE JACKETS...... . . $5.95 to $10.50 W OOL REEFERS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... $5.95 CORDUROY COATS, wool and slicker, slicker lined . $6.50 FLANNEL ROBES . . . . . . . . $6.50 to $8.50 y SILK ROBES $8.50 to $12.00