MR 16, 1934 THE MICHIGAN DAILY r .y. , r _ r-., Varsity Cagers Defeat M.S.C. Tean, 31 To; 25 Gee's Play At Center Is Feature As Wolverines Lead Throughout (Continued from Page 1) his brilliant pivot shots within the foul circle. Gee also fed the ball consistently to his teammates on quick breaks and blocks, and controlled the tip- off to give the ball to the Wolverines. Although displaying the lack of polish which observers have generally held lis greatest drawback, Gree's play gave credit to Coach Cappon's con- sistent efforts to develop the big sophomore. George Rudness furnished several of the thrills of the game with his flashy defensive work, twice cutting in to take the ball away from a Spar- tan dribbler, once taking the ball the length of the floor after such a re- covery to make An easy goal. The victory was the first for the Wolverines over State in two years and extended their record for the season to three wins. Michigan will meet Western State Wednesday night at Kalamazoo. * * *"4TA DU T ByART CARSTENS THE END of the farcical major- ments. They alleviate neither of league meetings this week in New what I believe are the two major York gives me an opportunity to caUses of baseball's financial ill- ruminate about what I've seen, and ncss today. These causes: heard.' the crux of the whole situation ap- 1. Major-league franchises are be- parently lies in the fact that most ing kept in cities unable to support major-league club owners are losing them. St. Louis is the most notorious money, particularly those of the Na- such city, but attendance figures in tional League. This is undoubtedly Philadelphia, for instance, are prob- the most serious problem baseball has ably anything but encouraging. to face, and the battle of the con- . _T__ uey'sTeam Wins From Oregon, 14-13 BATON ROUGE, La., Dec. 15 -0P) - Snapping back with scoring thrusts after being outclassed for nearly half the game, Louisiana State Univer- sity's gridmen overcame a two-touch- down lead today to shade Oregon 14 ~to 13. The accurate extra-point kicking of ";Ernie Seago, plus an Oregon decision that put misjudged faith in a pass instead of a kick for conversion, ac- counted for Louisiana's triumph. Oregon led the southerners, 13 to 0, at the half. EVENTS OF THE WEEK Basketball Wednesday. Western S t a t e Teachers College, at Kalamazoo. Hockey Wednesday, 8 p.m., McMaster University (Hamilton, Ont.,) at theI Coliseum.j Wrestling Wednesday, 3:30 p.m. (prelim- ?naries) and Thursday, 4:00 p.m. (finals) All-Campus Meet at the intramural Building.j Ray Morrison, grid coach at S.M.U., has been offered the post at his alma mater, Vanderbilt, it was learned yes- terday. HEWITT ON ALL-PRO TEAM Two members of the Detroit Lions professional football team, five New York Giants and four Chicago Bears were named on the all-pro team of the Associated Press, announced yes- terday. Bill Hewitt, former Wolverine star playing with the Bears was named at an end. Winter Means a Heavy Coat. Have Last Year's Altered and Cleaned at John's Tailor Shop j Ann Arbor's Popular Tailor" 609 Packard servative club owners and the younger and more radical ones is not solving it in the least but only creating other problems which, although admittedly less serious, are highly disrupting. The club-owners aren't losing morey because they can't hold deg races in their parks, or be- cause they can't play games at night. Perhaps some wouldn't lose as much with dog-racing and night baseball, but still I can't believe the adoption of any new policies such as these are es- sential to prevent the financial failure of baseball. Certainly they are not constructive improve- ,HE OBVIOUS REMEDY for this is the territorial reallocation of franchises. Time should take care of this in some measure, for most ob- servers agree that major-league base- ball on the West Coast -in Los An- geles and San Francisco -will come with improved and speedier trans- portation facilities. 2. A large percentage of major- league box office'talent is being wast- ed. Cincinnati and Pittsburgh fans have no opportunity to see the Ruths. Gehringers; and Werbers of the Amer- ican League, and Detroit, Cleveland, and Washington fans see nothing of the Warnekes, Waners, and Bergers of the National League. Moreover, there would be a gre4ly increased in- terest in New York if Brooklyn and the Giants should meet the Yankees, in Boston if the Braves and Red Sox should meet, and in every city which supports two major-league teams. The scheduling of one home- and-home series between every every National-League team might well bring in the receipts that mean the difference between pro- fit and loss. GR EENE'.5 CLEANERS BOX SCORE Michigan Jablonski, f ..... Tamagno, f. . . Joslin, f ....... Ford, f .......... . . . . ..0 . . . . . . Meyers, f...........o Gee, c ...............6 Patanelli, c.. ......0 Plummer, g ..........2 Rieck, g .............. 0 Rudness, g ...........1 Evans, g ..............0 Totals ..........13 State FG Irizzo, f ..............3 . eck, f ..............1 White, f............. 0 Rolen, f ..............0 Vaydik, c ............1 Scholtz, c,........... 0 Rogers, c............1 Herrick, g ............3 G FT PF TP 2 3 2 S0 0 0 0 0 8 0 0 0 o 1 0 1 3 13 0 1 0' 0 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 4i 0 0 0 5 8 31{ FT 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 2 0 5 PF 1 0 0 0 4 0 2 2 1 10 TP 7 2 0 0 3 0 2 7 4 0 25, Stoller, Aikens Are VieIor In Time Trials A nip-and-tuck race between Sam Stoller and Chester Barnes in the 60-yard-dash featured the first time trials of the season held by Coach Charlie Hoyt's trackmen yesterday in the Field House. Stoller, a sensational sophomore, who has been timed in :06.2, and Barnes both won their heats and were pitted against each other in the final heat. Stoller sprinted away to an early lead, but Barnes finished so strong that light between the two was barely perceptible as they broke the tape. The time was very fast. In the half-mile trias, Frank Ai- kens; sophomore, took the lead at the start, and finished several yards, ahead of Lewis Kaufman and Ed De- vine, who finished second and third respectively. Four heats were run off in the quarter-mile with Stan Birleson, Har- vey Patton, and Howard Davidson, I running the fastest races. Of the three, Birleson was the most power- ful. CAMPUS TRAVEL BUREAU Vacation Specia Fares to all points Tickets and Information at CHUBB'S 12-8 P.M. Phone 5672 (2-3450 after 8 P.M.) 11 _1 I DeHorn, g. Rouse, g ... Smith, g . .0 .1 .0 Totals ..........10 fuck Team Loses In Overtime, 3-2 CAMPUS TRAVEL BUREAU (Continued from Page 1) portunities to steal the puck and race down upon the undefended goalie. In both cases his shots floated in waist high for easy saves. After pulling the game out of the fire Sadlier came back in the over- time period to score the winning goal on a pass from Al Stevens. Mich- igan's forwards were too tired to make any dangerous offensive threat. LINEUPS Michigan Pos. Chatham Jewell.........G........Peardon David ..........RD ........ Sadlier MacCollum.....LD.........Heath Heyliger .......C..........Hales Berryman ......R W...... Stoddard herf.........LW.......Dawson Michigan spares - Courtis, Me- Eachern. Chatham spares - A. Stevens, W. Stevens, Wilson, Burry, Piefer, Tay- Referee -Percy Traub, Detroit. First period - Scoring: Sherf 17:03. Penalties:, none. Second period- -Scoring: Sherf 6:04. Penalties: MacCollum (board- ing), Sadlier (boarding). Third period - Scoring: Dawson 12:41. Sadlier 14:15. Penalties: Heyliger (tripping). Overtime period --- Scoring: A. Stevens (Sadlier) 4:50. 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