SATTJ'I AV.irs UI11i, TH Ml THlE MICHIGAN DAILY Michigan To Meet Opponents In Three Sports Favored Cage! Team Set For Gopher Battle Cappon Names Same Five To Start Which Opened Against Indiana Michigan's basketball team will take the floor favored to chalk up its first Big Ten win, after losing to Indiana in the Conference opener Monday, against the speedy Minne- sota five at 7:30 p.m. tonight at Yost Field House. Coach Cappon has named the same quintet that started against Toledo and Indiana to open against the Gophers. It will include Jake and Earl Townsend at the forward posts, Johnny Gee, center, and George Rud- ness and Earl Meyers at the guard positions. Meyers will start in Capt. Chelso Tamagno's place. Tamagno who suffered an injured leg muscle against Butler last week, will not see action. Tries To Find Speed Coach Dave MacMillin of Minne- sota has been experimenting all week, since losing to Illinois in the Goph- er's Conference opener by a 42 to 19 score, trying to find enough speed to make up for what the Norsemen lack in height. He has named George Roscoe and Jimmy Baker, forwards, Jones, cen- ter, and Halverson and Seebach, guards, as his starters. Roscoe, hard hitting Minnesota fullback, and Ba- ker have played good ball for the Gophers all year and if they are hitting can cause the Varsity plenty of trouble. Jones has been dividing .the- center assignment with King. The pivot position is the weakest spot on the Minnesota team. Whether Gee, Jake Townsend, or Matt Pat- anelli jump Michigan can be sure of dominating the tip-off. It will be in height that the Wol- verines will hold the greatest ad- vantage, topping the Minneapolis five by several inches a man. Push-in shots should account for much of the Varsity's scoring. Fans will have a good opportunity to see whether Cappon has been successful in working out a system of bringing the ball down the floor despite close checking. Minnesota will probably guard the Wolverine guards in the same manner that Stout and Gunning of Indiana so ef- fectively broke up the powerful Var- sity offense last Monday. Cappy has been working all week to diagnose the trouble and still retain Jake Town- send's effectiveness in the passing plays. Gophers Are Tough Minnesota proved that despite sev- eral losses during the pre-Conference season it can be dangerous when it lost a thriller to the powerful Notre Dame by a 27 to 26 score. Notre Dame's superior height failed to stop the Norsemen. Monday night the Michigan team will meet Purdue at Lafayette, Ind. in what should be one, of the fea- ture games of Conference season. Purdue has a weak schedule with only Michigan and Ohio State as real obstacles in the way of another Big Ten title. The Boilermakers have al- ready defeated Warren Whitlinger and company so that the encounter with the Wolverines is of major im- portance to them and the rest of the Conference. Again it will be a battle of height against speed. Remembering the weak Purdue defense it seems prob- able that the Lafayette team will be unable to pull another "Indiana" and that height will prove the greatest advantage. The starting lineups tonight will Star Defenseman Hockey Team Plays Host To Chatham Club' Wolverines To Attempt To Avenge Overtime Defeat Of Last Season The Chatham Maroons, character- ized by CoachkEddie Lowrey as the ,strongest hockey team in Western Ontario, descend upon the Coliseum tonight to meet Michigan's Wolver- ines in what promises to be the out- standing hockey tilt of thehseason thus far. The memory of last year's en- counter with the Maroons still re- mains fresh in the minds of the Wolverine team as they recalled Art Sadlier, giant Chatham defenseman who scored the goal that sent the game into overtime after Johnny Sherf had put Michigan out in front with a brace of tallies. Sadlier Won Game The same Mr. Sadlier rammed home the winning counter mid-way in, i hn nuveima Oie i iiIIn4 raiu The powerful Chatham sextet that meets Michigan in the Col- iseum tonight will find Capt. Larry David one of its greatest obstacles in scoring for the stalwart Wolver- ine defenseman is one of the best in collegiate circles. Michigan will be after its third win of the season. Major League Schedule For 1936 Chantoed1 Eliminate 4-Game Series; Intersectional Play To Start Earlier NEW YORK, Jan. 10. - (A") - Radical changes in the major league baseball schedules for 1936, including earlier and increased intersectional play, were announced today after a conference of League executives. The big league season will open on Tuesday, April 14, and close its 154- game run on Sunday, Sept. 27. The fourth annual game between all-star teams of the American and National Leagues will be played on Tuesday, July 7, at Braves Field, Bos- ton. Besides calling for the start of in- tersectional play on April 28, within two weeks after the season's opening, the schedules provide for four inter- sectional series instead of the cus- tomary three. This involves the vir- tual elimination of the old four-game series. The games per series will be on a 3-3-3-2 basis this year instead of 4-4-3 as in former years. Road trips thus will be shorter and the rivalry speeded up to such an extent that each club will play every other league opponent, at home and on the road, within the first monthM of the season.f Opening games on April 1, 14 are slated as follows: American League -St. Louis at Chicago, Detroit at Cleveland,sNew York at Washington, Philadelphia at Boston. National League - Brooklyn at New York, Boston at Philadelphia, Pittsburgh at Cincinnati, Chicago at St. Louis. The principal change from ordi- nary rotation here is that the Brook- lyn Dodgers gave up their privilege of opening at home in preference to starting the season at the Polo Grounds. Three days later, onl April 17, the scenes will shift to bring about a second series of openers -another innovation -as follows: American League - Cleveland at St. Louis, Chicago at Detroit, Wash- ington at Philadelphia, Boston at New York. National League - New York At Boston, Philadelphia at Brooklyn, Cincinnati at Chicago and (on April 18), St. Louis at Pittsburgh. KEIFER FRENCH Adolph Keifer, young American swimmer, is claimed as a Frenchman in France because his father was born in Alsac-Lorraine. in the overtime period in a game which had the entire crowd on its feet most of the time. Presenting practically the same line-up as last year, Chatham, per- ennial O.H.A. contenders, will keep the Michigan defense and goalie Low very much occupied and the Wol- verines will be hard put to best the invaders. Lowrey will start Vic Heyliger at center, flanked by Dick Berryman and Jack Merrill. Captain Larry Da- vid and Bert Smith will start on the red line and Reed Low will be in his accustomed position in goal. The Chatham game will be the last scheduled tilt for the pucksters before opening of the Conference sea- son at Minneapolis with the ram- pant Gophers next Tuesday night, and their last home appearance for ten days. Only One Big Score Chatham-Michigan hockey games of the past have always been closely contested with the exception of 1933 when the Wolverines, aided by Keith Crossman, Emmy Reid, and Jack Tompkins outscored the Canadians, 6-2. Last year's game bore out this statement when Sadlier's two late goals downed Michigan 3-2. Peardon, Maroon goalie, is one of the best amateur net minders in the business and the Concord flash will have to be at his best to continue his scoring fest. Lowrey hopes for a couple of early goals and thinks that if Berryman and Heyliger can work as well to- gether tonight as they did against Ilderton, Michigan will be able to forge ahead early in the opening stanza. With Fabello, Griggs and Simpson all available for frequent relief duty, Lowrey plans to keep his starting team fairly fresh for last period stands against four or five man sallies. Lowrey also announced yesterday that the proposed game with .the University of Toronto would not be played due to difficulty in arranging a date, but added that he would probably schedule a game with Brant- ford to conclude the season. Tonight's game, the fourth for the Wolverines, will commence at 8:30 p.m., directly after the basketball encounter with Minnesota. Probable Line-Ups The HOT STOVE By BILL REED - Michigan Vs. Notre Dame ... EDITOR'S NOTE: The following column was written by Fred DeLano. DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS FIELDING H. YOST justly takes pride in reviewing the athletic record of the University of Michigan in inter- collegiate competition that has been amassed since his coming here at the s turn of the century. The famous Michigan gridiron juggernaut that reigned e the football world from 1901 through 1905 would be enough in itself to s justify the lauding of Wolverine athletics by Michigan men. However, t that was only the beginning and over the long period since Michigan actually a started competing with other schools in various athletic contests her record c has become incomparable in all fields of sport. Football attracting the greatest attention every year as far as college athletics are concerned, Michigan can be particularly proud of the fact i that it stands head and shoulders above all other teams in the Western 5 Conference, the toughest league in football. Only a very few teams boast of an edge over the Wolverines in the won and lost columns and Pennsylvania l is the only one of those that has played Michigan more than two or three b times. Incidentally, that edge was piled up while Michigan was out of the 1 Conference and Penn officials, so we're told, cared neither who was in their lineup nor whether they were scholastically eligible as long as they were plenty tough on the gridiron. But despite this grand record of Michigan's, this record that h would seem to automatically rate the Wolverines "tops" in football I primarily, what about Notre Dame? It seems illogical that another great educational institution should exist barely 150 miles from Ann Arbor, in the heart of the Mid-West, and yet due to alleged differences between the athletic administrations of the two schools they do not meet on the athletic field. b References to the alleged differences in the last few years cite them as being largely concerned with Notre Dame's eligibility and training rules - that they do not adhere exactly to those which govern Western Conference teams. It is probably quite true that the rules are not the same and it is true that the Fighting Irish put out teams to be feared by their opponents, but other Big Ten teams have successfully met the men ,from South Bend in recent years and appear none the worse for their encounters. Ohio State, Wisconsin, and Northwestern played the Irish last fall; Indiana, Purdue and Minnesota have been met recently. Illinois has scheduled a home and home series with them to open in 1937. Notre Dame holds an edge over those teams, but then -so does Michigan. As for differences in the rules Mr. Yost can easily recall the series with Pennsylvania when the twentieth century was in its 'teens and decide that if the highly regarded athletes directly under the tutelage of Harry Kipke were to meet Elmer Layden's charges it wouldn't be so much worse than his own lads facing Penn's power- house that according to observers echoed a definite "ringing" sound when it met the Wolverines. Michigan actually has met Notre Dame in the past and out of the 62 times they have met in six different sports your own Michigan has won 44 times while dropping 18 decisions. On the gridiron Michigan holds a seven to one edge (the last game was in 1909). In baseball Michigan has taken 24 out of 36 starts, the last battle coming in 1924. Michigan also is tops in track and tennis; in basketball the count is even and Notre Dame's only edge is in hockey, three and two. Michigan took these two games in 1923. As much as Michigan's grid record stands out, the Irish can also point to a record that compares with Michigan's. From 1920 through 1924 the Irish won 46 games, lost three and tied one which really isn't bad at that. Altogether the immortal Knute Rockne, perhaps the greatest football coach of all time, registered 105 victories in the 13 years he coached at Notre Dame. At the same time the Irish dropped only 12 games and tied five for a per- centage of .897. Over those same 13 years, Michigan won 75 games, lost 20 and tied five, a .789 rate. A Michigan-Notre Dame rivalry would be one of the greatest in athletics, what with the two schools practically neighbors and both standing on top of the heap. Besides, for those always glancing at the pecuniary angle, there is little doubt but what the two mammoth stadiums of the two schools would be nearly --if not completely -filled to capacity whenever their football teams would meet and "money" gates are highly valued these days. We are not expecting to see the respective athletic directors of the two universities, Messrs. Yost and Layden, jump up now and promptly arrange for the Wolverines and Irish to meet on the grid- iron, hardwood, diamond or track because of this column; but we would (and don't think that thousands of others wouldn't also) appreciate seeing the differences ironed out and friendly relation- ships established between Michigan and Notre Dame. Certainly Michigan has no fear of meeting Notre Dame. Or has it? Choral Union Concerts HILL AUDITORIUM ST. LOUIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA VLADIMIR GOLSCHMANN, Conductor Tuesday, January 14 FIRST TIME IN ANN ARBOR THE KOLISCH STRING QUARTET. RUDOLPH KOLISCH, First Violinist FELIX KHUNER, Second Violinist EUGENE LEHNER, Viola BENAR HEIFETZ, Violoncellist Monday, January 20 BERNARDINO MOLINARI GuestyConductor, The Detroit Symphony Orchestra Friday, January 24 FiI Ii [Michigan Low Smith David Heyliger Berryman Merrill Referee: Pas. Goalie LD RD C LW RW Paddy Farrell. Chatham Peardon Heath Sadlier Hales Dawson Stoddard be. .Michigan J. Townsend E. Townsend Gee Rudness Meyers Po3. F F C G G Minnesota Roscoe Baker Jones Seebach Halverson A WEEKLY AFFAIR Al McCoy, light heavyweight box- er, fought a three-round bout every Friday night for two years in his home town, Waterville, Me., receiving 50 cents a contest. Keen Orders Drills For Varsity Matmen Hoping to make a clean sweep of the Eastern invasion, Coach Cliff Keen ordered practice drills to be held at 3:00 p.m. today and Sunday. Some have even dcided to work out in the mornings which was the pro- cedure followed previous to the New York meet. The Wolverines plan to leave about the middle of next week for the Franklin and Marshall and Penn State dual meets scheduled for Jan. 17 and 18 respectively. Keen's pro- teges are out to break Penn State's record of not having lost a dual match in two years. Although Michigan's grapplers did not make an Eastern trip last year, they have a better chance of im- proving upon the 1935 Southern) 4i-.mf xxthinh Pdpriin In,922-8%lwin IF Mi 1869 1935 JOIN OUR CHRISTMAS, CLUB BEGIN SAVING NOW FOR NEXT CHRISTMASI