SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1934 " ICE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1934 TUE MICHIGAN DAILY Minnesota And Purdue, Fighting For Title, Meet Wisconsin, Indiana 5 Conference Games Today Close Season Illinois, Chicago Expected To Put Up Great Battle; Iowa Faces Ohio State Today will be the first time in five years that the Big Ten season will have closed without Michigan being a claimant for the championship of; the Western Conference: Every Conference team meets a time-honored rival from within the' Big Ten today and the two teams which have a chance for the cham- pionship are not expected to falter on the way. The undefeated, untied Gophers of Minnesota are ready to face Doc Spears, Wisconsin team at Madison. It will be the last game for several of the Viking stars including Capt. Francis (Pug) Lund, Bill Bengston, Milt Bruhn, Frank Larson, and Bob Tenner, who are determined to end their careers in a blaze of glory. Hoosiers Meet Purdue. co-holder of first place with Minnesota, will meet Indiana in an intra-state battle. The Boilermakers, who have not had a very hard con- ference schedule, although they lost two outside games will try to show their worth against the Hoosiers. The famous "touchdown twins," Purvis and Carter are rounding out their careers at the Lafayette school, along with thirteen other veterans, and they would like nothing better than to do so as champions. A victory for In- diana would place the "Old Oaken Bucket" in their hands for the first time since 1930. Capt. Monahan in Last Game Ossie Solem's Iowa team will in- vade Columbus to tackle Francis Schmidt's Buckeyes. There has been a, great deal of talk about a post- 1' season game between Ohio and Min- nesota, and the scarlet-clad OhioI team will be out to confirm its right to such a game. Capt. Monahan, Smith, Wetzel and Yards are regulars who will play their last game for Ohio State. Illinois runs up against Chicago inf what is expected to be one of the best! games of the day. Both teams are primed and ready to go. The result of this game will determine the dif- ference between a successful or unsuc- cessful season for both teams. Beynon and Bennis, co-captains, and Lind- berg will be the regulars playing their final game for the Champaign school while Capt. Patterson will be Chi- cago's outstanding loss through grad- uation. Michigan Holds 7 To 3 Edge In Wildcat Series Plays Last Game For Wolverines Today Army Opposes Hockey Team Shows Progress Irish. Harvard After First Week 0f Practice At Y ale Today Coach Eddie Lowrey was pleased ie's defense, and with brilliance and with the showing his hockey team accuracy sent shot after shot into made last night, just one week after the net. Stanford-California Game the opening of practice. Already the Although the forward line has been Heads West Coast Card; sextet is smoothing out the rough set tentatively with Sherf at left spots in its offense, and gaining skillswt State Tackles Kansas and dexterity in handling the puck. wing, Heyligerg t cener, adire rn Lowrey is still in great need of a Grm at rihtng, the rern Ancient gridiron rivalries will be goalie to relieve Captain Johnny Jew- of Gil McEachern to active service renwedthi afernon n sverl -ell, and is issuing a. call for any men Monday may cause a change. Mc- renewed this afternoon in several e i n ory Eachern, who has been out this week sections of the country as the 1934 with experience who wish to try out due to an injury received in practice, for the team. football season nears its end. Eastern A attack which functioned will be groomed for one of the for- fans will be presented with the out- well last night had Vic Heyliger, cen- ward posts, probably right wing. standing games of the afternoon, the ter, and Captain Johnny Sherf, left One more week of intense practice Army-Notre Dame and Harvard-Yale wing, as key man. Heyliger consist- before the first game should leave ently found weak spots in the goal- the Wolverines ready to cope with scraps.-Amherstburg on Dec. 4, the opening Without a doubt the mammoth Yale game of the season. Bowl will be filled today as two teams Swiga otsers Host To- - that began their rivalry as soon as football became a sport in the United State Prep Coaches States, stage what should be a great___ battle. Yale, with its victory over Coach Matt Mann and his Varsity Princeton still fresh in mind, is fa- swimmers will be hosts today to vored because of its past performances swimming coaches from high schools but will meet a team gunning for an throughout Michigan. They are con- Rn.TERNITY upset. vening here for the annual rules meet- Cadets Out Far Revenge ins iunder the leadrs~rhip of C. E.I''\T I. I Gerald Ford is one of the six Wolverine regulars who will end his football career this afternoon against Northwestern. Playing his first season as a regular, Ford has started and played the greater part of each game, despite enough injuries to keep several less hardy men confined to bed. He suffered his most serious hurt, aj bruised hip, in the Ohio State game last week, which forced him out of uniform earlier this week, but will start today. 'TA"' IT yCARSTENS 4I In a season of crushing defeats in which a new high for losses in one Wolverine grid campaign was set, the Michigan football tradition has received some of its greatest compli- ments. Minnesota, the best team in the country this year, was overjoyed at its overwhelming defeat of Michigan, 34 to 0, and Ohio State, rated far above the Wolverines, went mad when Michigan fell by the same score to the Buckeye attack. Why did 60,000 fans at Minneapolis proclaim such unusual joy and de- light at the spectacle of a lopsided game? Why did 70,000 fans at Col- umbus go wild, tear up their own goal posts and in general give vent to a crazy outburst of enthusiasm, over a victory which was never in doubt throughout the entire game? The answer, of course, is the Michigan tradition. Metaphorically, Rome fell twice, once at Minneapolis and once at Columbus. It marks temporarily, at least, the end of a long tyranny over the Big Ten. * * * Reports keep coming in from the Coliseum about this sophomore pros- pect Vic Heyliger, whom Lowrey in- tends to use in the forward line this season. The reports are decidedly favorable. Heyliger, a Boston lad, is plenty fast on the ice, stooges tell me, and can rag the puck, and is a good shot. It looks like another good hockey season, what with Johnny Sherf, the rip-tearing, high scorer from last year back to prove his place as captain and left wing on the myth- ical Midwestern, All-Star hockey team. Turning to a couple of freshmen who may see action on Varsity teams in the next few years: Lowrey has a freshman hockey player in Gib James, a youth from Ottawa, Canada. James is working out with the Varsity now, and Lowrey claims he's go- ing to make a good hockey player. James was placed on the Eastern Canadian prep school selections. In wrestling, Earl Thomas, brother of Blair Thomas, who captained the Wolverines in 1933, is a freshman onI the grappling squad. While in high school at Cresco,E Iowa, a state where wrestlers and corn are grown in abundance, Thomas won a National A.A.U. title in the 118-pound division. He is a bit heavier now, and gives promise of being a good prospect for Coach Keen. SOLOMON INJURED Harry Solomon, forward on the Varsity basketball team, injured 'anf intercostal muscle in practice last night, and was ordered to bed by Health Service authorities. The ex- tent of Solomon's injury will not be known for several days, but it is not expected to be serious. FISHER ON CRUTCHES When Joe Fisher, reserve Wolver- ine tackle, broke his leg in last Mon- day's scrimmage, he made record time in becoming acquainted with his crutches, for he walked home on them the same day. He was ordered to keep off the injured leg thereafter. " The game between the Cadets and the Irish from South Bend should be one of the closest of the long series of games that the teams have played. They appear practically even on paper and experts are divided in predicting a winner. A fast set of Army backs may be able to revenge last year's one point licking, but Layden has a powerful battalion of re- serves that may swing the balance Notre Dame's way. Also in the East, unbeaten Temple takes on Villanova, expecting to main- tain its unblemished record. Columbia and Syracuse end their schedules to- day with Syracuse favored to finish the year in a blaze of glory. Crippled Dartmouth invades the lair of the Princeton Tiger for its final game but are not rated to beat the strong Ben- gals. Final For Stanford Stanford, with eight wins and one tie, is expected to take the final step to the Rose Bowl today in the game with California that features the West Coach schedule. An intra-state rivalry in the West reaches its peak today with Washington and Washington State clashing and furnishing the ex- perts one of their toughest games to pick. Washington is a slight favorite, however. Rice meets Texas Christian in the Southwest. The big attractions in the South are the Georgia-Auburn and Florida-Georgia Tech games. In the Mid-West Michigan State tangles 1 with Kansas in what seems to be a toss-up game. Detroit and Marquette meet in Milwaukee where the Titans of Dorais will try again to regain their winning ways. DANCE at GRANGER'S TONIGHT GALE HIBBARD and His 12-PIECE BAND U I ____j Scores of past western games: 1892-Mich. 1893-Mich. 1898-Mich. 1901-Mich. 1917-Mich. 1919-Mich. 1924-Mich. 1925-Mich. 1932-Mich. 1933-Mich. 8 72 6 29 12 16 27 2 15 13 Michigan-North- Northwestern 10 Northwestern 6 Northwestern 5 Northwestern 0 Northwestern 21 Northwestern 13 Northwestern 0 Northwestern 3 Northwestern 6 Northwestern 0 D 6 5. 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