MARCH 1, 1935 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wolverine Six Renews Feud With Michigan Tech Championship Of State Hangs, On Last Series Team Of Veterans Is Only Collegiate Six Boasting Win Over Wolverines MichiganIs Favored Fast Play From Start Is Anticipated; Tech Band ReportedComing With the State title at stake, Mich- igan's Conference hockey champions will tangle with the Michigan Col- lege of Mines sextet in the last two- game series of the local schedule to- night and tomorrow night at the Coli- seum. Both games will start at 8:30 p.m. Tech is the only collegiate team that has been able to defeat the Maize and Blue outfit this year. In the two-game series at Houghton two weeks ago, the teams split even, Tech losing to Michigan 2 to 1 the first night, and winning the second, 3 to 2. To Open With Rushj Coach Eddie Lowrey and his skat- ers will lose no time this evening. Lowrey has planned. to put on pres- sure from the opening minute of the game, hoping to build up a score be- fore Tech can get started. Presenting a line-up composed of experienced players most of whom have appeared here before, the in- vading contenders will put up a dang- erous struggle for the title. In the forward line, Captain Mor- ton Croze, right wing, will be sup- ported by Latimer at center and C. Ferries at the other wing post. Croze has been scoring ace of the invaders' squad this season, and has teamed with Latimer to form an accurate passing combination. Veteran Goal Tender Goalie Maki is a veteran in the nets, having turned in stellar per- formances at that post for two years. Guarding the Tech territory in front of the goal are two more veterans, Olson and Mullins. The latter cap- tained the Miners last season. Coach Savini, hailed by Lowrey as being responsible for all the good players turned out of the north coun- try, is acting as mentor to the Tech aggregation. He replaced Noblet, for- mer coach, this year. Savini, incidentally, was coach of the Calumet high school squad which Captain Johnny Sherf of the Wolv- erines captained for three years. Playing on their home ice, the Wolverines are favored to win. A comparison of scores with the Min- nesota sextet also gives Michigan the' edge, as the Gophers defeated Tech four times, while the best they could get against the Maize and Blue was two ties. It was reported yesterday that the Tech band was accompanying the team to Ann Arbor. A group of Tech alumni from Detroit, 200 strong, has requested reservations for the games, and the advance sale of tickets at the Athletic Administration Building, indicates a capacity crowd. Michigan Line-ups Techk W. Chase ... G....... Maki David......... RD ........Mullins MacCollum ....LD.........Olson Heyliger ........C......... Latimer Courtis ........ R W...... Croze (C) Sherf .........LW ........ Ferries CHICAGO'S STARS USHER Jay Berwanger and Bill Haarlow, Chicago's stellar athletes, are ushers! for the university's symphony con-! certs. Basketbaii, Swimming Teams Leave Today . - I * - STAR* *DUST Mann To Take Fourteen Men To Ohio State Buckeyes Are Stropg In! Sprints; Wolverines Are Heavy Favorites Fourteen members of the VarsityI swimming squad and Coach Mann leave by automobile at 3 p.m. today to meet the Buckeyes of Ohio State in, a dual meet Saturday night at Col- umbus. St. Thomas Repiaces Brantford As Puck Foe A change in the last game of the hockey schedule was announced yesterday by Eddie Lowrey, Mich- gan mentor. St. Thomas A. C., of St. Thomas, Ont., will make the trip to Ann Arbor March 7, instead of the Brantford, Ontario, team. Owens Leads Ohio Thinelad AgainstVarsity *-By ART CARSTENS-- ' TOMORROW has been officially set aside in Michigan and Ohio as "Show No Mercy" Day. The occasion is the conflict between teams repre- senting the state universiites of the two Commonwealths in four sports. "Show No Mercy!" became the fa- mous slogan of Buckeye fans last fall when they saw that their football team was going to "Mangle Mich- igan." Tomorrow four Wolverine teams will have an opportunity to show whether that "mangling" was due only to a temporary debility or may become a permanent affliction. The way things look now the schools will break even, Michigan winning the swimming and track meets; Ohio I the basketball and wrestling. The only team conceded a chance to do much mangling is Matt Mann's swim- ming aggregation which Pas prom- ised to "shoot the works" in seeking retribution for the 34-to-0 catastro- phe on the turf of Memorial Stadium last fall. The Buckeye basketeers have al- ready beaten Michigan once this sea- son and are now a much-improved team over what they were then, if we consider their upset of Purdue as meaning anything. Michigan's de- fense ought to save them from "mang- ling" however. Both wrestling coaches have been emitting agonized moans about in- juries and ineligibilities, and one1 might think the meet would end in a scoreless tie, each team having been forced to forfeit every match. On past performances we must given the Bucks an edge. The real piece de resistance of the day is the track meet in Yost Field House. Star Dust predicted on Sun- day that Michigan would win by 12 points or more. Although Coach Chuck Hoyt characterized that esti- mate as "pretty optimistic" we're sticking to it. Some of the other ex- perts give Michigan a minimum mar- gin of 15 points. N THE WELTER of inter-state rivalries it will not do to forget the little intra-state matter which is to be disposed of at the Coliseum to- night and tomorrow night. Rumor has it that the Michigan Tech team was not such a perfect host on the ice as off it during the recent series at Houghton. Rumor goes on to state that maybe there will be a couple of good fights at the Tech- Michigan games for the championship of the State. We are as much opposed to fight- ing at hockey games as the next per- son but do think that the noble res- traint shown by Messrs. Sherf, Hey- liger, David, and MacCollum in the Minnesota series, is too much to ex- pect for tonight and tomorrow. They wanted the title more than they wanted a poke at Gophers Russ, Gray, or Wagnild, but there is a strong possibility that no punches will be pulled this heek-end. MARGARET FERRIES, '38, whose two brothers, from Houghton, appear here in tonight's hockey game, has no problem of conflicting loyal- ties over the impending battles. When asked which team she would pull for she promptly replied, "Mich- igan Tech."L Co-captains Bob Renner and Tay- lor Drysdale lead the Michigan squad which includes five sprinters, two Ward, Stoller, And Ohio distance men, two breast-strokers. two back-stroke swimmers, and three Flash Will Contend In divers.{ The Wolverine performers should score heavily in the breast-stroke, medley relays, while Ohio State is expected to pile up points in the sprints, with the diving and sprint relay a toss-up. Aiding Renner in the 50 and 100- yard free-style events will be Ogden Dalrymple, Bob Mowerson, Ed Drew, and Paul Keeler or Dick Blake. Tex Robertson and Frank Barnard will meet Ohio's Dexter Woodford in the 220 and quarter-mile with some good times expected. Drysdale and Fred Cody will have' their hands full with sophomore Charlie Salie of the Buckeyes in the 150-yard back-stroke, but breast- strokers Jack Kasley and Bill Crit- tenden will probably not be pressed by Captain George Colville in the 200- yard event. Coach Mann has picked Ned Dief- endorf, Frank Fehsenfeld, and Ben Grady as divers for Saturday's meet. Diefendorf and Fehsenfeld will prob- ably compete officially in the event which is to be held off the high board. Michigan Mat Team To Meetj Ohio Saturday Dash Feature A. squad of 25 Ohio State tracksters. led by the brilliant Jesse Owens, will invade Yost Field House tomorrow night to meet Michigan in a dual meet which is expected to be a pre- view of the Western Conference team championships to be held next week in Chicago. Some of the outstanding stars of the Conference will appear in tomor- row's meet, and observers have gen- erally predicted that it will be the feature event of the indoor season. Hoyt to Take 24 Men Coach Charlie Hoyt has named 24 men to represent Michigan in meeting the Buckeye invasion, led by Captain Harvey Smith in the half-mile and mile, and Willis Ward, "the one-man track team," who will be entered in the 65-yard high hurdles, 65-yard low hurdles, and 60-yard dash. The meet will mark the first ap- pearance here in competition of Owens, hailed as the most brilliant star on the American track horizon. Owens, who has tied the recognized world mark for the 100-yard dash outdoors in 9.4 seconds, will be en- tered in the 60-yard dash, 65-yard high hurdles, and 65-yard low hurdles. Owens last week established a newI }world's mark of 6.6 seconds in the 60-meter dash at the National Senior A.A.U. meet, as well as a new world's# indoor mark for the broad jump of 25 feet, 9 inches. The broad jump is rot scheduled for the Michigan-Ohio State meet, however, nor for the Con- ference meet which follows next week. Ward faces Owens Owens will be faced in the dash by Willis Ward, making his final home appearance indoors, Sam Stoller, who has met the Buckeye sophomore in competition which has extended over five years, and Davey Barnes, Wol- verine dash star who last year went to the finals in the Big Ten meet., In the hurdles events Owens willl meet Ward, who has announced anj attempt to smash his own Field House Secord of 8.2 seconds for the high! hurdles event, Moreau Hunt, who holds the dual meet record in the lows c of 7.5 seconds, and Bob Osgood. Records for dual meet encounters between the two schools are expected to be broken in practically every event, while several Field House rec- ords will meet concerted onslaughts. I-M Winter Activities j Last F Und Cap Buckeye Clinch Confe Michigan 10 players leave on th ternoon, fo will play Oh final game igan will c Monday nig Going int en wins an will be figh for second p ing upon a sustained b Purdue, the place, in on games. Accordin editor of t Michigan's easy victim eyes. Mich F up down ar prise is in Michigan's basket tom Ohio Sta ly improved battled to a over the thrilling ga season. - Ins Since tha sen has ins C regular line tion clicked est find is sophomore the pivot li to many of Buckeye cr with Wilmn all-Confere Whitling ace, arid R Laybourne Whitlinger Ten scorer has a tota diminutive ond only t points scor t regulars, W play their k Coach C eral alterat morrow. T start at the ers and P center, wit guards. T the trip ar forwards, S and Oliver, jackso M.I GRAND Hillsdale an tle the ba the Michig Association ioa 1irip I Hurlers Seek To ertaken By Test In First rpon' Team. ' By FREDERICK BUESSER Preparing for the rattling war clubs s Will Attempt To of the infielders and outfielders in the batting cage at the south end Second Place In of Yost Field House next Monday, 1 rence Coach Ray Fisher is grooming his batterymen in daily drills. The pitch- ers will be able to toss them up with s basketball entourage of enough stuff so that they are not t and Coach Cappon will knocked down by eager sluggers lin- eir last road trip this af- ing groove balls back to the box, ac- 9 r Columbus, where they cording to Fisher. io State in the Buckeye'sArt Patchin heads the list of mound Saturday ight. Mich- candidates afid has already displayed lonclude its season here a fast ball that is better than last ;ht against Illmnois. year. His curve is beginning to show o their last act with sev- the hop it had most of last season, d four losses, the Bucks and Art is managing to break it close ting for a four-way share to the corners. If he can develop his lace in the Big Ten, hing- change of pace he should have a very n Ohio victory and losses successful year. by Illinois, Indiana and George Butler, lanky sophomore three occupants of second right hander, has showed a fair fast ie of their two remaining ball and a good curve in practice so far, but a sore arm that developed g to Harry Volk, sports several days ago has resulted in his the Ohio State Lantern, confining himself to work on his curve lowly Wolverines will be and his change of pace, with the re- s for the powerful Buck- sult that his fast ball, that needs more igan is regarded as a set- attention than anything else, has ound Columbus, but a sur- been neglected. His arm should work store for the Buckeyes if itself out quite soon, however, and forwards start hitting the the flaws in the fast ball delivery orrow. smoothed over. te's quintet is now a great- Practice Begins Monday 3 team over the one which Official practice will begin in the n overtime, 33-30 triumph cages Monday, but many of the play- Wolverines in the most ers depended upon to hold down regu- me in the Field House this lar berths on the Varsity will not be out until the conclusion of hockey erts Four New Mien ( and basketball seasons. t game, Coach Harold Ol- From the ranks of the pucksters erted four new men in the will come the wings of this year's -up, and the new combina- championship hockey team, Dick Ber- * from the start. His great- ryman as a catcher and Vic Heyliger Earl Thomas, 6 foot-2 inch as an outfielder. Both bays are rated center, whose fine play on as excellent *prospects and their names ne has set up Whitlinger may well be in the startling line-up his scoring opportunities. when then the ball team opens its 'itics are comparing him eastern road trip. er (Bill) Hoskett, Ohio's Cappy Cappon's cage squadwi once center two years ago, alsoayild Capweanh'sfcaensquad wil ne Ohniwo yates scorig.baseball team when this rather dull er, Ohio State's scoring season reaches its conclusion. Ferris ed Wilson, have replaced Jennings and George Rudness are and Smith, forwards. both promising outfielders, Russ Oliv- is the fourth leading Big er, George Ford, and Jack Teitel- with 127 points. Wilson baum are three infielder who will be l of 98, and Tippy Dye, in the thick of the fight for Varsity guard, has 84 points, sec- berths. o Gunning of Indiana in Pre-season dope on the personnel ed by a guard. Of the of a ball team is mostly guesswork, Vhitlinger and Wilson will but a good guess at prseentswould ast game for Ohio State. find Johnny Regeczi, Vic Heyliger, appon has also made sev- and George Rudness in the outfield, ions in his lineup for to- Dick Berryman catching, and Art 'amagno and Evans will Patchin as starting pitcher. 'In the forwards in place of Mey- infield either Joe Lerner or Matt Pat- lummer. Gee will jump anelli at first, Clayt Paulson at sec- h Rudness and Patanelli, ond, Jack Teitelbaum at short, and he other five men making either George Ford or Russ Oliver e Teitelbaum and Meyers, at third. olomon, center, Plummer Veterans To Play guards. ' Regeczi, Patchin, Paulson, and - -- -I rv -- 0- - ... The wrestling meet with Ohio State Saturday will be one of four athletic events with the Buckeyes to be held on that day. The track, swim- ming and basketball squads will also be going through their paces againstI the scarlet and gray teams. Coach Bernard Mooney's Ohio State znat team has had a very successful ,eason so far. The Buckeye grapplers have been defeated only once and .hat was by Indiana, who put up anI impressive showing in beating Mich- igan 22-6 last Saturday. Both teams will be endeavoring to get the undisputed right to second place in the Conference. In the Con- ference, the Buckeyes have defeated the same teams as have the Wol- verines and by nearly similar scores. Northwestern and Chicago have fallen before both mat squads. The Ohio State team which de- feated Northwestern last week with three substitutes in the line-up was composed of the following men: 118- pounds, Leonard Fauver; 126-pounds, Don Rhotun; 135-pounds, Bill Rob- bins; 145-pounds, Len Faurot; 155- pounds, Co-Captain Downes; 165-1 pounds, Dave Schuger; substitutingI for Co-Captain Walt Cramer who is out with an injured leg; 175-pounds, Walt Heiser and Heavyweight.Char- l ey Black. )n Will See .A.A. Title Tilt RAPIDS, Feb. 28 -(/P)- id Albion Colleges will set- sketball championship of an Intercollegiate Athletic Wednesday night in a Oliver were regulars on last year's team. Lerner played several games at first base when Wistert pitched, t ' k l Reach Season's Height ~post-season game at Jackson. The play-off, under a rule adopted Winter sports activities at the I-M by the Association last year to pre- building are now in their final stages vent titular ties, became necessary with several All-Campus tournaments when Hillsdale defeated Albion last in progress or planned to start within Tuesday, 39-35, in a double overtime the next two weeks.d t game that closed the regular season. Ihree men have advanced to the quarter-finals in the indoor tennis competition. They are Kasabach, Elkes. and Anderson, last year's Friday & Saturday champion. In handball Bates, runner- up last year, is in 'the semi-finals and Kunitz and Rosen are quarter- SS finalists. E BACK IN THE FIGHT We hope the athletic administration -__ After four years of inactivity China will take this slight suggestion in the A.A.U. meets was eminently satisfac- has decided to enter the Davis Cup spirit we offer it: Couldn't we please 1ory, and far superior to Coach Ken+ tournament again in 1935. In all the have a public address system installed1 Deherty's voice through a megaphone, years of competition, China has not for the track meet Saturday night? the method used at the triangular yet won the coveted cup. . The system in use at the recent! meet last week. - ,. _ . . ... .-. -. ,- r- - t r ... i , LI //'< QU P Li I ,.-.-_...., AET EASE- REACHING NEW HEIGHTS OF VALUE TOPCOATS $3450 Others $15.75 Up WE INVITE YOU to come in, try them on if you care to ... and compare. 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