,UL~AX, JAN1UAK U,1 93,X 4V Wrestlingl THE MICHIGAN DAILY Team To Meet Spartans Today At East Lansin PLAY & BY-PLAY By AL NEWMAN Ladies Don't Fight... THE SELF-STYLED feminine box- ing champion of Detroit was re- cently matched with the self-styled champion of Hamtramck. Police of- ficials frowned on the bout, bringing forth the edict that girls were not to fight in the metropolis. This imme- diately dropped a nickel in the poetic works of the sports editor, and he came forth with the following: CANTO I little girlies mustn't fight in the city of detright so police officials say do they think indeed that they can change a custom of the ages if you look through history's pages you will find without a doubt wimmen long have fought it out among themselves with tooth and nail for the favors of a male period CANTO II I say that the weaker sex should be allowed to break their nex in whatsoever way they choose and may the best girl never lose if they do it to gain money bet the, fight would be a honey wearing gloves you can't pull hair nor with your fingers gouge and tear gloves hold fingernails so tight there'd be no damage from the fight period CANTO HI it is strictly an infraction for the lovely female faction to have fights with one another anyhow i guess they'd ruther clear the decks and gladly sail into some persecuted male for little girlies mustn't foight among themselves, in old detroight conclusion (end) Nine Grapplers Picked To Battle State At 4 P. M. K e e n Selects Practically Same Squad That Beat Northwestern Landrum Off List Viergiver Or Lawton May Be Selected To Wrestle Reavely, State Star Coach Clifford Keen will take nine members of the wrestling squad for the dual meet with Michigan State this afternoon at 4:00 p. m. at East Lansing. The team will leave this morning by automobile and reach East Lansing by noon. The men who will make the trip are Don Fiero, Joe Oakley, Seymour Freedman, Jack Harrod, Captain Art Mosier, Louis Parker, Hilton Ponto, Geordge Lawton, and John Viergiver. Jimmy Landrum, who, it had ap- peared by virtue of last Saturday's win over Williams of Northwestern, had practically cinched the 118-lb. position, was off the list and Fiero will wrestle in his place. Keen Selects Wrestlers Coach Keen will use practically the same men that started against Northwestern. Joe Oakley will wrestle at 126 pounds, Seymour Freedman, in the 135-pound bout. Jack Harrod and Captain Mosier will take part in the 145- and 155-pound battles. Coach Keen has not yet decided who he will use in the three highest weights. Either Parker or Ponto will start in the 165-pound match. In the 175-pound bout, the decision will be between either Parker, Ponto, or Lawton. In the unlimited battle, either Viergiver or Lawton will wrestle. Lawton Makes Progress Keen will probably decide these later bouts according to the manner in which the meet is progressing. Lawton has been showing remark- able progress in the last several weeks and may get a chance to get some more experience provided the meet starts off in Michigan's favor. . The Wolverines will encounter one of the strongest wrestling teams that State.has .had in a long ime. Reav- ely, the Spartan heavyweight, is con- sidered one of the best in the middle west and will be the favorite in the unlimited bout. Captain Austin, al- though he lost in the 118-pound battle last year against Michigan, will wrestle as a 126-pounder and is ex- pected to hold evenly with Oakley. Union Will Sponsor Billiard Tourney Entry blanks have been sent to more than a dozen universities for the annual Intercollegiate Tele- graphic Billiard Tournament which this year is being held under the auspices of the Union. O'Neill Dillon, '35, student executive councilman, stated that upon the completion of registration there will probably be about 15 universities represented. Several of the Western Conference schools have already signified their intention of entering competitors, while there will also be teams from the East and Southwest, he added. The team which will defend the championship won by Michigan last year has not definitely been selected, Dillon said. About a dozen men will continue to practice next week for a tournament which will determine the five regulars and three alternates who are to be members of the squad. He added that any students inter- ested may still enter the tournament by registering in the billiard rooms of the Union. Cagers Seek Second Win Over Maroons Tonigh c4r- ----_-. Blai Signs As Grid Coach At Dartmouth -Associated Press Photo Earl H. "Red" Blaik '(left), master of strategy for Army football teams for seven years, is shown as he signed a two-year contract as head football coach at Dartmouth. Harry Ellinger (right), former Army line coach, will assist Blaik. University Boxer Fights Way Me To Golden Gloves Meet finals Michigan Five Expects Hard Tilt At Chicago Petoskey, Allen, Tomagno, Jablonski, Tessmer Will Be StartingLineup, The same ten men who went down to defeat at the hands of Wisconsin and Northwestern last week-end will attempt to regain Michigan's lost basketball prestige against the Chi- cago Maroons on the Midway to- night. The squad will leave for Chicago at 8:45 a. m. this morning. They will not have time to practice before the encounter. Although the team was decidedly off form against the Wildcats last Monday night no shakeup has been made in the line-up, and Coach Franklin Cappon will depend on the' same team which took the Maroons into camp here, 34 to 18, earlier in the season, to repeat the victory. May Use 10 Men The ten men upon whom success or failure will rest are: Captain Ted Petoskey, Fred Allen, John Jablon- ski, Al Plummer, Zit Tessmer, Russ Oliver, Chelso Tomagno, George Rud- ness, and George Ford. Practice sessions this week have not indicated that the Wolverines have recovered from their slump. Things went so badly one night that Cappon dismissed the entire squad an hour early, in despair. After trying almost every conceiv- able combination in an attempt to work up a winning quintet, Cappon has reverted to his original line-up and will start the same five men who were previously successful against the Maroons. Plummer May Start He plans to start Tomagno and Allen at forwards, Jablonski at cen- ter, and Capt. Petoskey and Tessmer at guards. If things do not go well he may be forced to shift Allen back to center and replace him with Plum- mer, a veteran whose play has been both excellent and mediocre this sea- son. Another possibility is that Jablon- ski will be shifted to guard in place, of Tessmer. If this happens, Jablonskit will have played every position on the team. Iowa State college students will vote on a proposed compulsory "ac- tivity" fee of $12. Funds from the fee would go to support athletics, the college paper, year book, class dues, concert and lecture forums. Gar Wood Will Race Speed Boat In Texas PORT ARTHUR, Tex., Jan. 19. - (A') -Gar Wood of Detroit, America's foremost speedboat racer, has announced here that he would accept an invitation to race his Miss America against time on Lake Sabine at the edge of this city. The invitation will be for- mally presented soon. The lake is approximately 16 miles long and eight miles wide. Intramural Sports R each Semi-Finals In iThree Divisions Three All-Campus sport tourneys are under way at the Intramural building this week -squash, hand- ball, and tennis. Former champions appear well on the way to another title in two of the tourneys. In the squash tournament, Ray Fiske, winner last year, meets J. An- derson in a quarter-final match. The winner of this tilt will face Gates in a semi-final encounter. Al Hillburger, winner of last year's handball championship, is ready for a semi-final meet with the winner of the Kunitz-Bates struggle. Lappen and Jackson in the second bracket will play a semi-final round this week. . TENNIS Fifty-two entries in the All-Cam- pus indoor tennis tourney will begin first and second round play this week. Howard Kahn and William Boles are seeded 1 and 2 respectively. Play will be so arranged that the finals will take place on the night of Intramural Open House. SQUASH TEAM The University of Michigan squash racquets team lost its final Associa- tion match to the Detroit Athletic Club Thursday afternoon on the In- tramural courts by the close score of 3 to 2. As a result the teamuplaces fifthin the Michigan Association league. Ernie Smith, Michigan No. 1 man, and Ray Fiske were responsible for the Michigan Club's two points, de- feating E. D. Smith and Turnbull re- spectively. Ernie Smith was forced all the way to down E. D. Smith, while Fiske won three consecutive games. Earl Riskey lost to John Reindell of Detroit, McIntosh beat Ernie Vick, and Niehuss was defeated by Burton. VOLLEYBALL The Chinese have a knack for it! For five consecutive years, as long as the sport has been on the In- tramural program, the Cinese Stu- Varsity Track Squad To Hold SpeedTrials Coach Hoyt To Send Stars Against Time At Field House This Afternoon In a week-end featuring basketball, hockey and wrestling encounters on foreign fields, Coach Charlie Hoyt's tracksters will be in the local spot- light with their time-trials this after- noon. Sport enthusiasts may see them in their last test before the indoor season is inaugurated Feb. 3. Time-trials are conducted on the order of a regular meet, with men competing against their own team- mates. The entire gamut of events is run through, including field and track events. The. results will go to determine which men will comprise Michigan's 1934 track team. The privilege of watching Willis Ward, the country's outstanding per- former on the cinders, jump in the high jump, sprint in the sprints and hurdle in the hurdles will be available to spectators. If he's feeling well he may even do two or three things more. Those in attendance will see the great brother act comprising Captain Tom Ellerby and his namesake, Dick. Although Tom has usually had the upper-hand in his favorite event, the quarter-mile, Dick has ideas of his own on the subject. His ambition is to beat his brother to the tape. Boyd Pantlind, will be on exhibi- tion in high and low hurdles. He leaps a wicked gate, and he wouldn't mind beating out Ward in this event. They're almost equally matched. Alix, a two-miler, ran the event in the Field House last Saturday with- out getting dizzy, and it took him less than ten minutes. Jack'Childs runs the mile, Jim Ba- con throws an iron ball almost as far as a cannon does, Cass Kemp sprints like the wind, Rod Howell puffs and puffs for long distances, and some- body's always shooting off a gun when you least expect it. dents have won the independent vol- leyball championship. The Chinese students recently an- nexed the fifth title, defeating D.D.'s and Hops, 2-0, 2-0. By ART CARSTENS Charles Verberg, will be the only representative of the University of 'Michigan in the finals of the Ann Arbor Golden Gloves boxing tourna- ment to be held next Wednesday night at the local Armory. Verberg won his way into the finals of the novice welterweight division Thursday night by defeating Ray- mond Cobb, Ann Arbor hopeful, in a decision fight.- Verberg Is Popular The Michigan welter displayed some of the form which made him one of the most popular of the cam- pus scrappers in. the Golden Gloves, Silver Shield, and Good Will bouts last spring. Though the fight went the full three rounds, Verberg was clearly su- perior tobhis less experienced oppo- nent, Cobb, who was down for the count of nine in the second round but recovered to last out the fight. In the other semi-final bouts on the evening's card, six knock-outs out of twelve fights were scored by the fighters in both open and novice di- visions. Stanley Cieslick, Detroit boy, who gained a great following among local fans when he appeared in the Good Will bouts held at Yost Field House last spring, seems to be headed to- wards another title. Three other De- troit boxers, Patsy Urso, bantam- weight open, Aquinta Ciampia, novice welter, and Arnold Blake, novice fly- weight, are slated to cop the crowns in their divisions. McCleery Gains Bye "Buzz Saw" McCleery, local welter who has led a spotted career in the squared circle here and in a northern C.C.C. camp, gained a bye into Wed- nesday's finals in the welter division when his opponent failed to show up Thursday night. Although the show is being put on by Company K of the local Na- tional Guard unit, and the Ann Ar- bor Daily News, Vernon Larsen,' freshman boxing coach, is responsible for much of the success of the bouts, being especially concerned with train- ing the local and University entrants. Larsen said yesterday that since the Golden Gloves fights have been such a big success this year, he is in favor of holding the second an- nual Good Will boxing show prob- ably in the Field House sometime in the spring. The former professional fighter praised the Golden Gloves movement highly, saying that it pro- vides physical exercise for a group of boys who would be interested in getting it in no other way, and is providing suitable recognition and rewards for those who prove them- selves proficient in the manly art. King Levinsky- Carnera Fioht Is A Possibility NEW YORK, Jan. 19. - (P) - If Madison SquareGarden promotes a heavyweight championship bout in June, the chances are just about 10 to 1 the challenger won't be Max Baer. But it might be King Levinsky. Finding it impossible to tie Baer up to a contract to fight for the garden in the event he won the champion- ship, Col. John R. Kilpatrick, presi- dent of the big arena, and his match- maker, Jimmy Johnston, have dropped all negotiations with Baer, his manager, Ancil Hoffman, and Promoter Jack Dempsey, and turned to Levinsky instead. In their first move to build the talkative ex-fish peddler into the status of a title contender, the gar- den's directors have booked him for two matches, one against Charley Massera, young Pittsburgher, the other against Walter Neusel. If the Kingfish can get by those two hurdles, he may be asked to agree to one more tune-up before getting a shot at Primo Carnera in June, always assuming the mammoth Italian succeeds in beating Tommy Loughran in their 15-round bout in Miami, Feb. 22. Six Conference Cage Teams To MeetTonight With the Big Ten basketball race one-quarter completed, the fast-step- ping Boilermakers of Purdue are roosting on top of the heap with four victories and no defeats. Led by Norm Cottom, who is leading the in- dividual scoring race with 42 points, Coach Ward Lambert's five has piled up 155 points to 90 for the opposition. Stepping along on the heels of the Lafayette quintet are Iowa and Northwestern each with three vic- tories and one defeat. The Hawkeyes, picked to win the Conference title due to their strong showing in the pre-season games, have scored 147 points while holding their opponents to 107 markers. Coach Dutch Lon- borg's Wildcat five, co-champions with Ohio last season, has scored 10 less points than the Hawks while al- lowing 115 points to be scored against it. At the start of the season, the Wildcats were given little considera- tion in picking the possible winner of the 1934 race, but the Northwest- ern cagers have been coming along fast since their opening loss to Iowa and are now in the thick of the fight. Tonight, with Purdue and Iowa idle, the Wildcats will have an op- portunity to go into undisputed pos- session of second place by scoring a victory over the fourth-place Indiana quintet at Bloomington. Other games tonight find the Wol- verines pitted against Chicago at the Windy City while Ohio State will be meeting the Gophers at Minneapolis. Iii GOLFS DE CRIMINALS SHUN LIGHT- JACKSON BANNED FOREVER CHICAGO, Jan. 19 - (P)-- The portals of organized baseball are closed forever to "Shoeless Joe" Jackson and his confessed cronies, who staggered the National game back in 1919 by "throwing" the World Series to the Cincinnati Reds., Kenesaw Mountain Landis, who, was named commissioner of the or- ganized game as the scandal flared., shut oi their last ray of hope today when he denied the application for re-instatement made by Jackson. burn a lamp all night for ONE CN 9 9 a ustomer A letter f o u a cus8tomer THIS customer's experience is not unusual. for crime statistics _ show without a doubt that darkness breeds crime. Many large cities attempted to economize during the depression by turning off street lights to save money. But there was such a shocking increase in night crimes that the lights were soon turned on again to save lives and property. Surveys of crime in large cities show that improved street lighting brought about a 40% decrease in the number of street crimes Mih Ions SHOP FOR MEN S119 South Main St. * 0S* * 0 0 0 SAVES you money on - Fresh Winter Stocks ALL in the Entire Store ALL SU IT S in the Entire Store TUXEDOS Complete with Silk Vest t 95 !SHOE6S All Styles - All Leathers DERBY HATS Silk Lined . You CaiAlayS Saven M1oney ly 8 ,tt S1iidig I Criminals shun light. It was Theodore Roosevelt who said that every street light is equal to a policeman in the prevention of crime. If you want a personal guardian in your home-to protect your property as~ your family during the dark hours when burglars break in-leatr a light burning! E 11 ,