SATURDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE .. ............... ............................ - . ........ . Cagers Open Home Season Onight; Pucksters Meet London M.S.N.C. Team Will Furnish Cagers' T est' Coach Cappon To Start Two Lettermen; Makes Final Squad Cut Michigan's Varsity basketball team will open its home season tonight ir. Yost Field House, meeting Michigan{ State Normal College of Ypsilanti.j The game will begin at 7:30 p.m. Coach Franklin Cappon has an- nounced that he will start a lineup composed of two lettermen and one sophomore, with two juniors ineligibleI last ypar, against a Huron five which will contain three lettermen in its starting lineup.. The Wolverines will be playing inj their second game, having defeated Calvin College at Grand Rapids last week, 25 to 22, while it will be the season's opener for the Hurons. Plummer At Guard Captain Al Plummer, transformed from a forward to a guard this year,j will lead the Wolverines into action, with Dick Joslin, a center on last sea- son's squad, at forward.j At center Wolverine fans will see for the first time in action John Gee, the six-foot eight-inch sophomore who has been heralded as one of the brightest prospects in recent years; but whose ungainly carriage has madej his presence in the lineup admittedly! experimental. John Jablonski, ineligible last year as a sphomore will be at a forward position, and George Rudness, also ineligible last year, will start at the other guard. Hurons Start Three Veterans Cdach Harry Ackerman will bring an experienced team with Captain George Haidt at center, Chuck Han- neman at guard and Jim Dirkse at guard from the team which started against the Wolverines last year. Cappon's starting lineup will aver- age -considerably over six feet, but he has indicated that his reserves, con- sidered faster if not so tall, will see considerable action. George Ford and Dick Evans, both lettermen from last year are both practically certain to see service, Ford at a, forward and the latter at a guard. Evans started against Calvin in the season opener, but was displaced by Rudness, who led a second-half attack which led the Wolverines to a bare! victory. Tamagno Assured Of Action Chelso Tamagno, another letter- man from the 1933-34 squad, will also be assured of action. Although a guard on last year's team, Tamagno has been made over into a center to utilize his superior ball-handling and jump-! ing abilities, and will alternate with1 Stanford And Alaba'ma Gird For Annual Rose Bowl Grid Classic Canadian Team Out To Avenge Last Year's Defeat By Stopping John Sherf At Coliseum Tonight London A. C., of London, Ont., outmatched in the latter respect, for meets Michigan's hockey club to- Lowrey has but two spares which he night with one idea in mind, to stop can dend u in Gil McEachern Johnny Sherf. The attempt to stop Hill brings a greatly altered lineup Sherf will take place between 8:30 from that which appeared here in and 10:30 p.m. in the Coliseum. It the final game of last season. Only will cost students and faculty mem- Pook, regular wing, C. Hodgins, de- bers who present athletic coupon fense, and Hawley, spare, remains books 35 cents to see what happens of the squad which played here be- - all others, 75 cents. fore. Coach Cecil Hill, of the London Lowrey has been drilling the for- team, makes no bones about his in- s wards on passing all week, and there tention of tying up Sherf and con- should be a better organized offensive sequently licking Michigan and re- shown tonight.. Also knowing the l venging the 4 to 2 shellacking his London sextet to be more aggressive club accepted last year from the than the Essex Frontiers who played Wolverines. At least this is what here Tuesday, the Wolverines have he informed Coach Eddie Lowrey by been practicing a defense against way of a friendly sort of letter re- "dog fights" around the net. ceived recently. Following is the Michigan lineup Can't Blame Hill and a probable starting sextet for And, Lowrey can't blame Hill much, London: r Sherf flipped in three goals Michigan Pos. London A.C. against London last year, but the Michigan mentor is not worrying too Jewell........G........Bennett much about the Hill ultimatum. David .......... RD ......... Arbour Teams have tried to stop Johnny MacCollum .....LD..... C. Hodgins Sherf before, but they haven't always Heyliger........C........Mashall succeeded. If London should be able Berryman ...... RW .......... Pook to sew up the Calumet flash, well, sherf . LW. B Hodgins as Lowrey pointed out yesterday, -. -.+ .- there's Vic Heyliger who is going to score a lot of goals this year. NEW CARS FOR TAXI SERVICE Emphasizing what Lowrey calls x AH "long-legged" players, or in other 0 N N words tall, speedy skaters, Hill also N E carries a goodly supply of spares in CAMPUS CABS Y order to keep a fresh team on the ice2CAMUSEC . throughout a contest. Michigan is 24-HOUR SERVICE ---Associated Press Photo - - Hockey Game To Start Following Cage Contest The hockey game between Mich- igan and the London A.C. will start immediately following the basketball game between Mich- igan and Michigan State Normal College, or at 8:30 p.m. athletic officials announced yesterday. The basketball game in Yost Field House will begin at 7:30 p.m., admission being by coupon books. Admission'to the hockey game When the opening kick-off of the 1936 Rose Bowl classis is spinning thrcugh the air, Coach Tiny Thornhill's great Stanfoid team, led by Bob Reynolds and Jim M scrip, will be attempting to turn aside the threat of the Crimson Tide of Alabama, tutored by Frank Thomas and centered about Dixie Howell and Don Hutson. All four players have rcceived All-American menton. STA USTByART TCARSTENS i The state high school cage tourney ill be held in Flint March 15 and 16 I -- is 35 cents with coupon book or HARRY SOLOMON, who last year 75 cents without. was chosen as the outstanding member of the freshman cage squad, All-Fresh an will be entertaining old teammates .All-Fesh an here tonight, for in 1932 he was a regular on the Michigan State Normal Boxing Shteam, playing with three of the men OW who will help open the Wolverines' home season tonight. Is Scheduled Solomon, incidentally, claims to be the augur of a successful cage season. In five year of high school and col- An all-freshman boxing show of lege basketball he has never played six or seven three-round bouts will be on a losinag team. Gee. Coach Qappon made his final cut yesterday, cutting the squad down to' a maximum 18 which will be carried. Those retained on the squad are Cap- tain Plummer, Joslin, Jablonski, Gee,' Rudness, Jennings, Solomon, Teitel- baum, Ford, Tamagno, Evans, Meyers, Patanelli, Rieck, Powell, Hill, Ever- hardus, and Oliver. Oliver, who reported late, is a let- terman, as is Jack Teitelbaum, who earned his letter in 1932-33, although kept out by injuries and ineligibility.1 last season.I The starting lineups: Michigan Pos. M.S.N.C. Joslin...................Wendt Jablonski ........,F............ Ory Gee ........... .C...... Haidt (c) Plummer (c) .... G..... Hanneman :.udness .........G......... Dirkse Umpire, Powers (Detroit); Referee, Beam (Battle Creek).{ WOME N'S SPORTS Before the Christmas holidays, each of the 33 teams entered in the In- tramural basketball tournament will have played three matches, according to a report made yesterday by Miss Marie Hartwig. During January the elimination tournament will be played. Teams which have won two out of thethree games in the "round-robin" series will enter the A tournament. All others+ will play with the B group. By this plan, each group will play at least four games. This will give ample op- portunity for judging girls to play in the inter-class tournament the second semester.] A final call is being made for women from League Zones 1 and 3 to contact Miss Hartwig if they wish to join teams from those districts. Three general tournament rulings have been adopted for this season.t Two teams may not cancel a game unless they notify Miss Hartwig or Taril Rat " _r , o rm .. n" held at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the! boxing room of Waterman Gymna-j sium, Vernon Larson, freshman box-I ing coach, announced yesterday. The purpose of the show, accrding to Larson, is to givegthe freshman boxers a chance to gain experience in actual competition. The men who will probably fight are: James Spens, Herbert Gibbs,! John Hutzel, John Robertson, Daniel Robertson, Kenneth Gibson, Law- rence Ouimet, Walter Bietila, Albert' Altman, Harry Gitlin, Amos Gloster, 'Gardner Patterson, Forrest Keown,. Melvin Kramer, and Robert Markow. The bouts will be refereed by Johnny Johnstone. High School Cage Officials Meet Here 1 In 1928, '29, and '30 Solomon played with the Northern High team which swept Detroit city honors, winning a state title in 1929, the last year in which Metropolitan schools competed in state meets. On those teams Solomon teamed with Manny Fishman, a Varsity let- terman last year but ineligible for the current semester, and their combina- tion pesen ted one of the most famous offensive threats in recent Detroit high school basketball history. In 1931, playing as a freshman at Ypsi Normal, Solomon was a mem- ber of one of the most outstanding yearling teams which the Hurons hfae ever assembled, and in 1932 was a regular forward on the best Normal squad in recent years. Last year, after having trans- ferred to Michigan as a Physical Ed student, Solomon was picked by this department for the Star Dust award as the outstanding Varsi-ty prospect from the frosh basketball squad. Dickinson published his Big Ten ratings at the close of the Confer- ence season, giving Illinois a tie with Minnesota for the title, basing his rating according to his system, upon the caliber of teams met and defeated rather than on victories alone. NOW we are convinced that so- called "touch" football is quite as strenuous as the regulation game. It comes out rather late, but it appears that Carl Savage, Varsity guard on last year's squad and net especially noted for his tim- idity of approach to the game, may well agree with us. For en- gaging in a perfectly innocent, however serious, game of "touch" Thanksgiving morning, Savage was so forcibly reminded of the game's seriousness as to have to be confined to the Health Serv- ice for treatment of an injured k received in the scrimmage, unil this Thursday. Savage, Playing in the line for the Alpha Kappa Kappa eleven, twisted his vertebrae in the second quarter of the game against the Sigma Nus and is still not in perfect con- dition. The Turkey Day game, which the Sigma Nus won, 7-0, at Burns Park, also had another casualty. Fred Fehlman, another Medic lineman, was carried off the field in the last quar- ter with a chipped kneecap and has been confined to the hospital since. Savage, while in the Health Service,, was elected to the presidency of the freshman class in the medical school. I-M BASKETBALL COURTS Basketball courts may be re- served for one hour between 1 and 5:30 p.m. today at the In- tramural Building. Fraternity and independent teams are urged to{ take advantage of this opportu- nity for practice. READ THE WANT ADS A FIFTHL OF A CENT an Hour to conserve your eyesight Perhaps in the kitchen of your home you have a lighting fixture in the ceiling with a single lamp in it. That lamp may be a 60-watt bulb-it often is. But a 60-watt lamp does not provide sufficient light for the average kitchen. "Nonsense!" you say. "I can see perfectly well in my kitchen. That bulb gives me plenty of light." Here is a peculiar fact. Your eyes know but they do not tell you when they have insufficient light for seeing. Too often, eyes do not give warning of failing vision until you are in actual need of glasses to help you see. There is no substitute for the services of an eyesight specialist, but good lighting helps to protect eyes. "How big a lamp do I need?" you ask. The proper size in most cases is 100 watts. "100 watts?" You throw up your hands. "But think of the cost of using such a big lamp!" Here is the most unfortunate part of the whole situ- ation -that so many people have a wrong impression about cost. The difference in the cost of using a 60-watt and a 100-watt lamp amounts to just ONE-FIFTH OF A CENT AN HOUR. Is this too great a price to pay for safeguarding your most precious possession -your eye- sight? The DETROIT EDISON COMPANY Between four and five hundred high school basketball players, coaches and officials of this state will gather here tomorrow for their an- nual basketball meeting. Buck Reid's Western State five will Indiana, the "mother" of basket- open the day's activities at 10 a.m., ball in the United States, contributes at the Intramural Building, with a only two members of the Varsity cage demonstration of the fast-breaking squad this season. Capt. Al Plum- offense. A luncheon will follow, and mer is from Wabash and Matt Pat- the program will be concluded with anelli claimns Elkhart as his home a discussion of the new rule changes. town. However, Coach Ray Fisher's t Pi Lambda Phi Enters Fraternity Swim Einals The Pi Lambd'3 Phi fraternity swimming team Thursday earned the right to compete in the interfraternity finals next week by beating Theta Chi 22-19. By defeating Lambda Chi Alpha 6-5 in water polo the same day Pi Lambda Phi also advanced. to the finals of this meet. The other semi-final meet in swim- ming will be held Monday at thej Intramural pool between Psi Upsilon and Chi Phi. The winner will meet Pi Lambda Phi Thursday. The Psi Upsilon water polo team will meet Phi Kappa Psi the first of the week, the victor to play Chi Phi in a semi-final game. Squash players of the University Club of Detroit opened a meet with the Ann Arbor team Thursday by winning two of three matches. Two more will be played today. Ernest freshman squad boasts several Hoos- iers, with John Townsend the out- standing candidate. Townsend is from Indianapolis and last year was All-State 'center. It is understood' that he came close to enrolling at DePauw University, Green Castle, Ind., and his coming here instead biought loud protest from the De- Pauw campus. Dr. Frank L. Dickinson, noted for the football rating system which bears his name, will broadcast his 1934 national ratings over the Col- umbia Broadcasting System networkI at 10 p.m. tonight, he writes us. Dr. GOING HO CHRISTMAS 0 You'll wantt your best whe family meets yo Let one of Experienced I BL A E to look ena the u. ur four Garbers or this E H OP DANCE at GRANGER'S TONIGHT GALE HIBBARD and His pre pare you fo occasion. ARCAD BARBER S 1111 II E il Ii 111 11 I