'N THE MIC IIGAN DAILY. TUESDAY, FEBRUA Y 12, *a Strong Michigan Defense Shuts Out Ontario Aoggies. 2-0 Bill Chase Stars In Nets; Sherfg Heyliger Score Team Protects Sub Goalie Effectively In Ragged Defensive Battle By KENNETH PARKER Bill Chase, the other half of the gaunt Chase twins, substituted for incapacitated Johnny Jewell in the 1Miichigan nets last night at the Coli- seum and was good enough to score a shutout over the none-too-hard- skating-or-hard-shooting Ontario Ag- Aggies, of Guelph, Ont., 2 to 0. It was Chase's initial appearance both as a Varsity player and as a goalie, but he duplicated the auspicious first performance of his brother Ed, who scored a goal against Wisconsin in his first game. A fair-sized crowd which had as- sembled as much to see if all the Michigan pucksters had survived the exams as to watch the new goalie cavort in the nets, showed none too much confidence in the lean substi- tute, expressing unusual delight when he stopped the few hard shots which got past the Michigan defense- Well Protected The work of Larry David and Red MacCollum, body checking, back checking and driving the opposing forwards into the corners, kept Chase pretty well protected. Seven saves were recorded in the first period, seven in the second, and five in the final period for the Michigan goalie. In contrast to this, the Wolverine wings rifled long shots all evening at little Normie Scott, tender for the 4ggies, and kept him busy turning away 40 shots, one of which caught him in the throat in the third per- iod, laying him out for a short time. The night's scoring bracketed a drab exhibition of hockey, the first goal coming midway in the first per- ipd on a solo dash by Johnny Sherf, and the second very late in the third period when Heyliger took the re- bound on a bullet-like shot by Sherf, and pushed the puck past Goalie Scott. Sherf Opens Scoring The Wolverines played economical hockey in theafirst period, counting on the one real opportunity Which,; presented itself. Sherf picked up the rubber in the middle of the ice, when a shdt was blocked by one of the Michigan defense men, skated around the Aggies' defense, and sent a hard,, fast one past the goalie. The second period found neither side able to break through for a goal; and most of the third period was a duplicate of the second, until the last few minutes of play when Heyliger got hold of the puck while the Card- inal wingmen were deep in Mich- igan ice, passed to Sherf, who. rifled a hard drive at the' goal. Rieyliger, following up nicely, took the re- bound from close in and fairly pushed Scott as well as the rubber into the net. Last night's contest besides extend- ingMichigan's string of victories to seven games, put a stop to all fears that Coach Eddie Lowrey would lose STAR DUSTRT DUST.CARS T.EN3 i s t Gophers Handj Michigan Fifth Big Ten Defeat Wolverines Bow, 29-26, As Meyers Garners Eleven Points To Lead Attack (Continued from Page 1) R ECEIVED from the sheriff of Ash- tabula County, Ohio. Gentlemen: Harry Kipke is going to be with us this month and I would appreciate it very much if you could send me a couple of mats of Kipke so I could get a story and the picture in our local paper. We expect this to be one of the' outstanding events of the year. I (Signed) Jerry Benson, Sheriff, Ashtabula County... Maybe he'd like a complete set of finger prints, too? Michigan's baseball team's hopes of going to Japan again this summer as they did in 1932 are temporarily dashed by the invitation extended to the Yale University team by the Jap- anese authorities. The Eli board in control has not yet accepted but will probably do so since Harvard went last year, breaking the Big Three's traditional aloofness from such trips. The Wolverines made the trip in 1929, and '32 and expected an invi- tation this year. WHILE MICHIGAN'S track teami was giving a good account of it- self in the highly successful Michigan A.A.U. relay carnival held Saturday in Yost Field House, Jesse OwensI was amassing a total of 18 points in a dual meet between Ohio State and Indiana at Columbus.! The Buckeyes' sensational sopho- more star garnered firsts in the 60- yard dash, the 70-yard low hurdles, broad jump and a second in the 70- yard high hurdles, but comparative records fail to show outstanding su- periority over performers in the Mich- igan meet. Owens' time in the dash event was 6.3 seconds, identical with the times recorded by Willis Ward and Sanit Stoller of Michigan in the A.A.U. meet. Ward was given first after al- most a dead-heat finish in which the judges disagreed as to the positions. Comparisons between Owens' time of 7.7 seconds which set a new field house record in the low hurdles with the time of John Mullins of Western State who smashed'YostsField House records in winning the 60-yard lows in 7.1 seconds are impossible because of the differences in the distance and number of flights, as are the times of Ward in winning the 60-yard highs1 here in 8.2 seconds with the winning GR!DDERS TO PRACTICE Football practice will be held next week Monday at 4 p.m. in the Intramural Building, instead of 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Field time in the 70-yard highs at Colum- bus of 8.7 seconds. Owens demonstrated his strength; in the broad jump, however, when heE won the event in setting a new record of 24 feet, 612 inches. This event is not included on the Conference in- EVENTS OF TIRE WEEK Ba sketball Saturday - University of Iowa at Iowa City. Indoor Track Friday - University of Minne- sota at Miinneapolis. Hockey Friday and Saturday-Michigan College of Mines and, Technology at Houghton. Swimming Saturday, 8:00 p.m. - British Empire Champions at the Intra- mural swimming pool. .. ... ....W restling .. .. . ... Saturday - University of West Virginia at Morgantown. Max Baer Will Aid ire 7 W-b XIr " lnterfraternity Swimming Meet Preliminaries Begin Wednesday Fifteen fraternities have entered Monday, Feb. 18, the state handball teams in the annual Interfraternity singles tournament will begin. It swimming meet, which in the st will be played in the Intramral has been one of the outstanding ath- cors Thiry-d inate haveren ietic events on the Intramural pro- courts. Thirty-two players hate cn- gram. In this meet all fraternities tered including a large delegation compete at one time as distinguished from Detroit. Local entries arc Al from the dual meets which were held Hilburger, Bill Bates, A. W. Smith, carlier in the year. John Spiecher, and Bob Kunitz. The preliminary events will be.gin The University extensions depart- at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday. and the ment is offering class instruction in finals will be at 5 p.m., Thur jday. six sports, namely: swimming, squash, There are eight events of which one tennis, fencing, archery, and badmin- man can enter only two and a relay. ion. The course starts tonight at For entrance points a team must havc 7:00 and is open to all men and at least four men competing. vwomen. The fee is $5 for 16 lessons. The'Intramural gym floor bas Twelve men have entered the All- door meet program. I couldn't connect. Dick Joslin attempt- ed 10 shots in the fifteen minutes THE SPORT STAFF of The Mich-I he was in, revealing his usual tend- igan Daily is in dire need of a ency to try impossible shots rather curling expert. We've been caught than pass to a teammate. stranded up the proverbial creek by The lead changed three times in the the announcement that the Detroit first nine minutes, Stelzer opening the Curling Club will give an exhibition scoring with two free throws. Baskets at the Coliseum February 19 or 26. by Gee and Meyers and Evans' free Apparently the Michigan Alumni in throw gave the Michigan team five Detroit feel that the lack of a Varsity points and the lead which they speed- curling team is regrettable and must ily relinquished when Baker connect- brmed e immedtely. sed for his first two field goals. Part of the letter sent to Eddie Roscoe, Baker and Stelzer collected Lowrey by J. Fred Lawton, author of goscin Bikesin efe ey- sundry college songs, perennial alum- goals in quick succession before Mey- nus-at-pep-meetings, and father of ers got his second bucket. Stelzer the present senior class president, is offset his own one-handed basket reproduced here: when he fouled Meyers who made! We will probably send our "ice" good on two free throws.3 man out to mark your ice and Baker ran his point total to 10 with "pebble" it. We will bring a truck load two more baskets and Meyers made of curling stones, Scatch costumes, his third free throw before the half and maybe a bag piper for Scotch ended with the Gophers leading, 18 toI atmosphere. 10. (Maybe Dean Bursley should be Patanelli gave Michigan three warned to look into this ."Scotch points points with a free throw and atmosphere" stuff.) a field goal to open the second half,, Anyway, the Camels are coming, but from then on until the entrance of my friends, and anyone of you who the Wolverine substitutes they were can speak intelligently of "pebbled" held scoreless while Norman got threeI ice, curling stones, etc., will be very consecutive baskets from his pivot po- I welcome as The Daily's correspondent sition. pro tem. Michigan FG FT TP P SA Meyers, f........3 5 11 0 22 Sir Malcolm Campbell Plmmer, f .....0 0 0 1 11 Sets New Speed MarksGaee cg.........1 0 2 1 9 Patanelli, g. . .. ..1 0 2 1 6 DAYTONA BEACH, FLa., Feb. 11 Evans, g ........0 1 1 0 2 -(,P)--Sir Malcom Campbell, world's Ford, f ..........1 0 2 0 1 automobile speed king, set new ( Solomon, f ......0 0 0 0 2 American stock car records on the Joslin, e........1 0 2 0 10 beach here today while forced to Tomagno, g ......1 0 2 0 2f leave his record-holding Bluebird in Rudness, g . . .0 0 0 0 3 its garage beacuse of inadequate Rieck, g........0 0 0 0 0 beach conditions. Jennings, g ..... 2 0 4 1 7 He boosted the flying start rec- 10 6 26 4 75 ords as follows: One mile from 86.295 Minnesota FG FT TP P SA to 88.202. Five miles from 86.237 to Stelzer, f .......2 2 6 4 11 88.051. Baker, f ........6 1 13 0 15I Campbell set the new records in Norman, c... 4 0 8 0 18 a new 1935 Hudson sedan.i Roscoe, g..... 0 2 1 8 The flying start records Campbell Seebach, g ......0 0 0 0 1 broke today were set on Muroc Dry Kupperberg, f .0 0 0 1 2 Lake in 1934 by'Tony Gullotta. Wallblom, f .....0 0 0 0 0 Following Campbell's record- Freimuth, c.....0 0 0 0 0 breaking performances, Buddy Marr Svendson, g.....0 0 0 1 2 did some smashing runs, setting a Kane, g ........0 0 0 0 0 new mark for stock cars (Hudson) 26 3 29 9 57 from a standing start and bettered Score at half, Minnesota 18, Mich- his old mark of 67.969 by doing the igan 10. mile in 68.188. His old mark was Missed free throws: Michigan - made in 1933 on the beach here. Meyers 2, Joslin 1, Patanelli 1, Rieck t E i 1 fi Dead Boxer's Wife been relined and uevarnihecl and theiefore will not be opened until SAN F.RANUi CCO, eb. --Wednesday, 7:30 p.m. At this tine A the Interfraternity basketball c n- Five years after his crushng Xsts petition will resume with 20 game7 battered Frankie Campbell into in- scheduled for the opening night. Campus codeball tournament which begins at 4:15 p.m. today. This tour- ney will be followed by the State A.A.U. and the National A.A.U., all of which will be played in the Intra- mural courts. sensibility and later death, Max Baer is ccming to a San Francisco rin to tcss punches for the unfortunate fighter's widow. Through his managzr, Ancil ErUT- man, the heavyweight chamnion has agreed to meet Stanley Poreda, of Jersey City, in a four-round bout Fri- day. Six-ounce gloves will be used.1 It will not be an exhibition. Proceeds of the prcgram, except for the barej expenses tC cover preliminary bouits and Poreda's purse, will be turned over to Mrs. Campbell. . . .: . , ly. ,,Yr f. k h { 9 a' ._,Y M1 . ,_ ~ IF YOU WRITE, WE HAVE IT" TYPEW RIT ERS SHOP FOR MEN 119 South Main St. Among men, women admire most those who have all the attributes and qualities of the actor and yet are not actors by profession. Continuing our Pant Sale of Suiting Materials. $5.00 and $6.00 Values CLOTH ES $16.50 and $22.50 119 So. Main Bi,') wbere )ou can see all snakes in a co'inpletc range of prices. New L. C. Smith and Corona, Silent, Noiseless, Remington, Underwood, Royal. Recondi- tioned. All makes bought, sold, rented, ex- changed, cleaned, repaired. a ndP E NC"; I L S Waterman, Sheaff er, Wahl, Parker. Service work a specialty. CORRESPONDENCE STATIONERY Plain, Michigan, printed and engraved. Many styles and shapes. LOOSE-LEAF NOTEBOOKS, TYPEWRIT- ING PAPERS and SUPPLIES. GREETING STUDENT CARDS for all occasions, and OFFICE SUPPLIES, CHINA ENTERS AGAIN t 1. Minnesota - Kupperberg 2, Nor-j man 1. Referee, Getchell, St. Thomas. Umpire, Molony, Notre Dame. 314 South State St. The Typewriter & Stationery Store House, as previously announced. China, which has not entered Davis Coach Harry Kipke Cup competition since 1928, will have a team competing in this year's play. Michigan Track Team Shows Great Promise In A.A.U. Meet' I , i ..._ I 1111 11 111 j i, ti 1 i any playersbythine iigllyroute. Paced by Willis Ward and Cap- Last minute reports on make-up ex- 3 ams by Sherf and others were satis- tain Harvey Smith, Michigan's track factory. Gil McEachern and Johnny team provided outstanding perform- Jewell are the only losses sustained ances in the Michigan A.A.U. relay thus far, the former leaving school and the latter recovering from an carnival held Saturday in Yost Field appendectomy. House. SUMMARIES With Johnny Mullins of Western State Teachers' College and Bill M~ichigan Pos Ontario Chase, Bill ....Goalie ........Scott Zepp of Michigan State Normal, David.. .RD. GamboulWard and Smith accounted for three acCollum.....D......Doucette records shattered and another tied. Heyliger.......C.......Ready Mullins acounted for the biggest Berryman.......RW ........ .Graper personal slash in records as he broke Berym........LW........Warner the Field House record in the 60- yard low hurdles in the afternoon Michigan spares: Courtis, Ed. preliminaries and in the finals cut Chase. - another tenth second from his mark Ontario spares: Ferguson, Sloane, making a new record of 7.1 seconds. Gagnon, Armstrong. In the half-mile run Smith ran First period - scoring: Sherf 13:42. the field into the ground op the last Penalties - none. lap to break the record set by Otto ecdperiod-scoring: None. Pongrace of Michigan State, creat- SecoPenalties: Graper (tripping).ng a new mark of 1:55.8. Zepp trailed Tom Ottey of Mich- Third period - Scoring: Heyliger igan State, national cross-country (Sherf) 19:50. Penalties: None. champion, for 14 laps in the twoI Saves - Chase .........7 7 5 1.rmile run but put on a sprint for the Saves - Scott .........12 15 13 last two laps which left Ottey far Referee - Percy Traub, Detroit. behind, smashing the Spartan's rec- ord time, set last year, with 9:21.8. Besides tying his own 60-yard high SORT OF A SHRINE hurdle mark of 8.2 seconds, Ward The suits of famous Indiana track garnered a first in the 60-yard dash stars are being placed in glass trophy in a close finish with Sam Stoller, cases. _the Wolverine sophomore star, in 6.3, and tied fqr first in the high jump at 6 feet, 2 inches. The Michigan mile relay team, composed of Fred Stiles, Howard Davidson, Harvey Patton, and Cap- tain Smith easily bested teams from Chicago and Wisconsin, in the Uni- versity relay division. In the pole vault Dave Hunn went over a 13 feet, 3 inches to tie for first with Lowry of Michigan Nor- mal. Howard Stein, a Michigan freshman, was credited with a vault of over 12 feet, but did not place. All Second Semester "k w FEBRUARY Clearance Sales $tatb &Zani~ ?fo S'tictvr to &vie ' .4/d/1 309 SOUTH MAIN ST!2EBT THE DOWNTOWN STORE FOR MICHIGAN MEN $2.50 Shirts, Now $1.95 2 for $3.75 --3 for $5.50 $1.95 Shirts, Now $1.55 2 for $3.00 COLORED and WHITES PAJAMAS SWEATERS - SCARFS ' rA n f' S T -ti -/\ TT 7 .T I E TE anI athe In the City! A HUGE SUPPLY OF USED BOOKS -- We have the answer to. all your second semester requirements. I .ALL TEXTBOOKS, BOTH NEW AND USED At Reasonable Prices. BUYan SAVE! I-. 'i RITZ SHIRTS with DUROTEX COLLAR * Starch Collar Smartness with soft collar comfort. * Will not wilt or wrinkle. Il II II U 11 I 0