THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'AGE X. DECEMBRR14, 19331 Puckmen Display Brilliant Form In Beating Colgate, 7 To (4) -- " Michigan Gridders Will Join Eastern Team December 20 Chuck Bernard and Herm Ever- hardus, the two Michigan football players who have been selected by Coach Dick Hanley of Northwestern to play on the East team in the an- nual Shriner's benefit game in San Francisco New Year's Day will join the other members of the team at Evanston, Ill., in time to leave with the squad December 20. Both Bernard and Everhardus plan to spend a few days at their homes in Benton Harbor and Kala- mazoo respectively before joining with the other 20 gridders who will attempt to bring victory to the east- ern forces. Hanley and Andy Kerr, Colgate coach, have each named 11 players from the Mid-West and Atlantic sea- board to represent the East in the charity contest. 30 Wrestlers Are In Semi-Final Bouts Over 70 wrestlers took part in the preliminaries of the annual All-Cam- pus tournament yesterday at the wrestling room of the Intramural Building. The number was narrowed down to the 30 who will take part in the semi-final and final matches today at 4:00 p. mn. and 7:30 p. m. The finals will be held at the large gym. Oren Parker showed splendid form in the 165 pound division, and won both of his matches by falls, the last one being over Tony Dauksza. He will meet Lawton today in the semi-final and the winner of this match will take the winner of the Ponto-Ross bout for the final. Seymour Rubin also came through to the semi-final round and will meet Slocum, a member of the freshman squad. Milton's SHOP FOR MEN I 19 South Main St. For' Gifts that Men Will Appreciate Suits and Overcoats $1I5-$2O Maroon Goalie Turns In Good Defense Record Michigan Shows Improved Offensive Play In One- Sided Contest By DON BIRD The Wolverine varsity hockey team hung up its third consecutive victory of the season last night against Col- gate's Maroons, 7 to 1. It was Col- gate's third night on ice, and Michi- gan had little difficulty in checking the Maroon's occasional threats. The outstanding performance of the game was turned in by Hoff, Col- gate goalie, who made 39 stops, many of them the bullet drives from John- ny Sherf's stick. Hoff was the Ma- roon's redeeming performer in the absence of either good offense or de- fense. Michigan Play Smoother The entire Michigan squad played a much smoother game than here- tofore. Tommy Stewart, offense spare, showed improvement in both his passing and skating and was heartily commended by Coach Low- rey after the game. Larry David, playing with an in- jured shoulder, brought the near ca- pacity crowd to its feet time after time with his characteristic air-tight defensive maneuvers. His unassisted score in the second period with only four Wolverines on the ice was the most thrilling play of thegame. Woolsey Wheeler Scores John Sherf and Avon Artz tied for high-scoring honors of the evening, with two goals each. Sherf had two assists to Artz and Capt. David in the third period. Woolsey Wheeler tallied the lone Maroon goal after nine minutes of the final stanza on a neat solo dash. Taking the puck from center ice, he evaded David and 'Chapman and flicked it over Jewell's prostrate body into the cordsasthe Michigan goalie came out to stop him. Only in the second period did Col- gate threaten, and this merely while Michigan's spares were on the ice. Throughout the contest the Red Raiders' skating was wobbly and their passing was far below the Michigangstandard. Capt. George David, the Wolverine checking for- ward, and Johnny Sherf kept the puck out of Michigan territory, leav- ing it for Larry David to score for Michigan in this period. Capt. Da- vid came through to make his first score of the season early in the third period on an assist from Sherf. Chapman Gets Final Tally With 15 seconds to play in the hectic third period, Ted Chapman twice brought the puck up the ice and skated in vain around the Col- gate goal. On his third try he put on an unusual exhibition of puck- handling and slipped it past Hoff into the corner of the net for the seventh and final Michigan score. LINEUP S Michigan Pos. Colgate Jewell ........Goal...........Hot Chapman ......LD.... McDonough L. David .......RD...... Pumphruy Artz ............ C........ Speckel G. David (c) . .LW.. Galbraith (c) Sherf ..........R W ..... Tompkins Michigan spares -Stewart, Mc- Eachern, Courtis, Ondredonk. Colgate spares -Billings, Aber- crombie, Wheeler, Ackerstrom. First period - Scoring: Michigan; Sherf, :17. Sherf, 12:50. Penalties- Michigan, Chapman; Colgate, Gal- braith. Second Period --Scoring: Michi- gan; L. David, 17:20. .Penalties- Michigan, Sherf, Chapman. Colgate, Tompkins, Wheeler. Third period - Scoring: Michigan; G. David (Sherf), 2:30; Artz (Sherf), 12:00; Artz, 14:34; Chapman, 19:52. Colgate; Wheeler, 9:30. Penalties - Michigan, Sherf, 2. Referee- Percy Taub, Detroit. I, F PLAY & BY-PLAY By AL NEWMAN , Varsity And 'B' Basketball Men - R In Last WorkoutS HOCKEY TODAY This afternoon marks the last Jayvees Win From Grand gathering of women hockey candi- Rapids 18-13;!Jablon- dates before the Christmas vacation. The practice will begin at 1:30 p. m. Ski Leads Scoring and will be held in the Varsity Arena. coach, will be on hand to 'conduct the workout. Although Lowrey was not able to drill the co-eds in last week's practice, he will be at the Arena today to direct all women who report. After the holidays the winter sports program now under way will be concluded for women. Charlie Belanger, well-known pugi- list, has engaged in 201 fights since he started fighting in 1912. He was then 18 years of age. Belanger calls The Ice Industry Again. * : COACH EDDIE LOWREY'S LADS of the ice industry put on a nice hockey exhibition last night and don't let anyone tell you otherwise. On last night's showing they were a great deal better than a good many of the teams which sent the Wol- verines down to defeat last season. All of which goes to show that the boys are whipping into shape. They beat Colgate's Red Raiders seven' goals to one. Of course, it was Col-I gate's first game, and only their third time on the ice this season and this probably accounts for the fact that the defensemen were so immobile and the forward trio so ineffective as to be almost superfluous. It was Hoff, the goalie, who was in form last night. He really did great work down there in a perfect rain of Michigan shots. . . . stopping thir- ty-nine, most of them close ones which should have scored. Still, the Maize and Blue put on a great display of passing. There was a great deal more in the way of concerted effort on the part of the; Wolverines. JOHNNY SHERF TURNED IN HIS USUAL good offensive game, skat-' ing around the Red defense time and again, only to have a perfect shot stopped by the goalie. However, he did manage to push a few past the Colgate defender. Larry David, nursing an injured shoulder, played a nice defensive game, and even broke away once to, score a solo effort while but four Michigan men were on the ice, counting goalie Jewell. Tom Stewart played a surprisingly good game for a spare last night, while Artz and David showed a great deal of improvement. And as usu- al, Ted Chapman was there also. He was robbed of several good shots by that alert goalie. One of the things I liked best about the game was that a lad named Woolsey Wheeler played, and so did another named Robinson Crusoe Billings. . . paging Man Friday! Cage Squad Will Leave Friday For Holiday Ganes In The East Everybody is welcome - in fact, is Frankie Campbell the hardest punch- Franklin Cappon, Michigan bas- urged to come and join in all the er he has met during those fights, ketball mentor, gave the "B" team practices. and Mickey Walker the most capa- cagers little opportunity for rest Eddie Lowrey, Varsity hockey ble. after their hard fought victory over Calvin college Tuesday night, driv - ing them, along with the Varsity, through a strenuous offensive drill in an effort to perfect an attack to be used against the zone defense the Wolverines will encounter on their Eastern invasion. Coach Cappon has not as yet de- cided the personnel of the squad which will leave Ann Arbor tomor-N ,,3P row for the trip to the East, but it is expected that twelve players will make the jaunt. Michigan Wins, 18-13 - The Jayvees defeated the Calvin college quintet in a tight defensive contest Tuesday night at Grand Rapids by a score of 18 to 13.Neither HOLIDAYNE W SCARFS five could penetrate the opposing de- N EW SCARFS fense with any consistency, with the - $ "B" aggregation holding the Knights 69c - 95c - $1.50 Wool $1 .45-$2.45 to only four field goals. The Wol- verines doubled that total, dashing in on eight attempts from the floor. INTERWOVEN OS Coach Bill Cornelisse's cagers had a slight edge over the Maize andand WOOL asih edeoeth Mazan HOEBlue from the foul line, making good 'IL OS SILKad W O on five out of eight attempts while ? 35c- 3 for $1.00 50c -75c -$1.00 Cappon's outfit could sink only two out of seven. Feikema, lanky Knight center, was : PARIS SUSPENDERS . .. $1.00 the leading scorer with three field*z goals and two gratis shots for a total of eight points.'Jablonski, Wolverine H KO BELTS: center, followed Feikema in the scor- H ICKO K ing column with seven markers. To- and BUCKLES R mango and Regeczi of Michigan $1 50 $SUSPENDERS were right behind the two leaders -$ - ~~ . with five and four points respec- -_-_- tively. -- -YOUNG MEN'S SUITS. . $18.25 Up Overcoats $19.50 and Up i74 .m1d!. tri ree direct daily schedules S TO ALL POINTS F SFirst National Bank Bldg. 205 South Main St. AVEL BUREAU The University Man's Downtown Store Phone 9142 and 5672 By MARJORIE WESTERN Michigan's basketeers, about a doz- en of coach Cappon's most promising proteges, will leave Ann Arbor Fri- day afternoon to tackle four Eastern quintets in the first intersectional cage games of the Wolverine 1933 schedule. In six nights the ambitious cagers will play Penn, Maryland, Rutgers, and Temple, and without a breath- ing space between the last two. Penn is first on the Eastern card, and will meet the Wolverines at home on Sat- urday night. Sunday will be devoted to sight- seeing in Washington, and some rest before the squad encounters Mary- land on Monday. A rest the next evening will be followed by the trip to New Jersey for the Rutgers game, and then the team will journey back to Philadelphia for the Temple game Thursday night. The battle witheTemple concludes the pre-Conference season as well as the Eastern schedule. A two-day period after this game gives the members of the squad time to get home for Christmas, but they have to return for drill on Dec. 27. The possibilities are that the start- ing line-up for the invasion will com- prise Captain Ted Petoskey, Al Plum- mer, Fred Allen, Russ Oliver, and either Manny Fishman or George Ford. The other squad members likely to make the trip are John Ja- blonski, Howard Levine, George Rud- ness, Chelso Tomagno, Don Black, Dick Joslin, John Regeczi, and Phil McCallum. ++"' ;. i i "" ti:1i' S vs %Vn't 8 : :l .. . t,: ; . ;.i. r": x!. . .:: ' "". y.: .a -.5c .c i ',";':. CHICAGO New fast service - th LOWEST FARE CAMPUS TR CHUBB'S 10 A.M. -8 P.M. 4~4~ / ..... ~ ~. 1~. I I I ruxedoes. Tux Vests . $22.50 . .$5.00 Hats . . . . . $3.00 Shoes . . . . $4.40 cigarette you ever smoked. Spats $1.25 .. . .0 Suede Jackets $7.50 Corduroy Trousers. . . $2.95 Suiting Trousers. . . . $3.50to$5.00 Shirts, White Broadcloth . ..$1.25 Ties . . . . . . 65c i YULETIDE Suspenders . . . . .50c to $1.00 Belts .. 75c &,$1.00 Scarfs, Silk . . $1.25 You can always save money by spending wisely at MILTONS GIFTS THAT LAST A 4E:5. ~3N ~ fi ; ':