R18, 1936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY rM "iEi THRUE T CrippledBasketballTeamMeets Chicago Five Here' Fonight 'V [aroons Rank As Underdogs Against Cagers Six Varsity Swimmers W ill Compete In Detroit A. C. Gala i ----4 O Here Monday Night Bill Haarlow, Last Year's High Scoring Champion, Will Head Invaders Lineup Is Doubtful Iowa Here Monday Night For Last Home Contest Until March 2nd Despite being rated as top-heavy favorites against the Chicago basket- ball team in their fourth Big Ten game, the Wolverines are set for a real battle with Capt. Bill Haarlow and his four assistants. Coach Cappon will be forced to put a crippled Michigan quintet on the floor against the Maroons, who de- spite three losses in Conference com- petition have shown that they can be a dangerous threat to any team. In their first encounter against Wisconsin, defending co-champion, the Maroons lost in an overtime 38- 36. Purdue drubbed the Chicago five by a large margin, but the Windy City team came back last Monday night to be nosed out by Indiana by a 33 to 30 score despite a desperate last- minute rally. Both Indiana and Pur- due are tied for the Conference leadership. Second In Scoring Bill Haarlow, all-American forward in 1935, paralleling in basketball the perfomances of Jay Berwanger in football, led the Big Ten in scoring last year with 154 points and is sec- ond this year with 39 points, two be- hind Warren Whitling of Ohio State who has played in one more game. Chicago's offense strength depends almost entirely on its star. Purdue held him to four points, hence the large margin of victory. However, if Haarlow has one of his hot nights, and he ishot most every game, the Maroons are a team to be reckoned with., Bill Lang, Haarlow's running-mate. at the forward position, has made 22 points to tie with Jake Townsend and John Barko of Iowa for ninth in the Big Ten scoring race. Paul Amund- sen, the Chicago center, tops the six- foot five inch mark and is slated to give the Varsity plenty trouble on the tip-off. Names Tentative Lineup Cappon was not certain what his lineup would be but named Jake and Earl Townsend, John Gee, George Rudness, and Capt. Cheslo Tamagno as tentative starters. Gee is still weak from the severe cold that kept him out of the Michi- gan State, Western Reserve, and Mt. Union tilts. It was the remnants of this cold that ruined Gee's effective- ness in the Indiana and Purdue games. Cappon laid off his big cen- ter all week in hopes that a rest bring him back to normal, but it is not known as yet if the vacation did it work. Captain Tamagno is a certain starter, but it is doubtful whether he will be able to last the full 40 min- utes. Tamagno suffered a recur- rance of the leg injury which he re- ceived in the Butler contest against Purdue. Led By Barko Monday night the Varsity will make make its last home appearance until March 2nd against the strong Iowa five that dropped its first game to Wisconsin Monday and is in third place in the Conference. Led by Capt. John Barko, who will complete his three years of Varsity competition at the end of the semes- ter and will be forced to drop out of Conference competition, the Hawk- eyes surprised cage fans by defeat- ing Illinois in their first game and winning their second by a large score. The Hawkeye quintet is made up of three sophomores, who have shown up well so far, and two veteran for- wards, Barko and little Sid Rosen- thal. The sophomores, Jack Dress, Joe Van Ysseldyk, andnKen Suesens, average six feet two and a half and use their height with great effective- ness. The probable starting lineup to- night : Michigan Chicago J. Townsend F Haarlow E. Townsend F Lang Gee C Amundsen Tamagno G K. Peterson Rudness G Fitzgerald Fate Of Gloomy Gil In Alumni's Hands NEW YORK, Jan. 17. - W11) - Cor- nell University athletic officials, seek- ing to satisfy their demands for win- ning football teams, have placed the pressing issue of retaining CoachGil Dobie in the hands of the alumni. Capt. John Barko will lead the strong Iowa quintet against Mich- igan's basketball team Monday night at Yost Field House in the Wolverine's final appearance in Ann Arbor until March 2nd when they will return to play Illinois. Grid Coaches Veto Proposed Scoring Plansl Cody To MeetI Adolph Keifer In Main Event Capt. Fehsenfeld, Barnard, Kasley, Diefendorf And a McCarty Are Entered t Six Michigan Varsity swimmers will r be among the pool of cbampions com- peting in the Detroit Athletic Club's f gala invitational meet tonight. Coach w Matt Mann has named Capt. Franka Fehsenfeld, Jack Kasley, Frank Bar-t nard, Fred Cody, Ned Diefendorf andi Mark McCarthy to make the tripn early this afternoon.h Stars from Chicago, Detroit, Cleve- land and Toronto will go into action with the Wolverines in the meet that will see a 100-meter back-stroke event as its feature. In this race Cody will be compet- ing against Adolph Kiefer, 18-year old Chicago high school lad and holder of every world's record for this type of stroke. Taylor Drysdale, three-time National Collegiate cham- pion from Michigan and figured to be Kiefer's closest rival after push- ing the young star to the limit in1 the National A.A.U. outdoor meet, andc Sandy Sienkiewicz, youthful D.A.C.P star, will complete the all-star entry list. Kasley will be meeting an old rival in the 100-meter breast-stroke when he clashes with Max Brydenthal of the Lake Shore A.C. of Chicago. Bry- denthal, representing Loyola Univer- sity, was second to the Wolverine ace in the N.C.A.A. meet last March. Dick Degener and Elbert Root, the only man to beat Degener in the past four years, will see action with Diefendorf and Capt. Fhsenfeld in al diving exhibition, while Barnard will compete against Bob McKinstrie, sen- sationial Detroit Northwestern per-l former over the quarter-mile distance. McCarthy will have his hands full in the 100-yard free-style event with Charlie Flachman, ex-Illinois holder of the Big Ten and National Col- legiate records for the short dis- tances. Concord Flash' Is Threat To Sherf's Hi ih ScoringMark Well on his way to rival Johnny Sherf's mark of 33 goals and 16 as- sists for a total of 43 points, an all time season high for Michigan scor- ers, Vic Heyliger, Wolverine star in five games played to date has banged in 12 goals and has been credited with six assists to bring his scoring ag- gregate to 19. At the rate the Con- cord flash is going he should eclipse Sherf's record before the end of the season. The present professional flanker averaged 2.53 points per game over the entire year, while in the five games in which he has participated, Heyliger has accounted for 3.8 points per game. Heyliger, while collecting his total, has also set two scoring records for the Coliseum. Against London, he made five goals unnasisted, and against Ilderton he had a hand in the tallying of each of the nine count- ers Michigan made, getting five goals and four assists. Last season as a sophomore Hey- liger finished the hockey wars with a record of 33 points. This season's statsitics to date in- eluding the first Minnesota game: The HOT STOVE By BILL REED II 11 MICHIGAN'S swimming fortunes have been singularly affected since Coach Matt Mann returned from Florida with 16 tanned champions two weeks ago, but it seems that in certain quarters the reverberations arising from he natators' trip to the South have not yet reached the point of inaudability. Several of the more staid Michigan fans have for some unknown reason raised their voices against such holiday excursions for Wolverine athletes. For these obtuse critics, Coach Mann has one very good answer. The riendships and good will toward the University his swimmers established while on the first Floridian training tour any Michigan team has ever made are worth much more than any person not included in the party of 26 that made the trip can ever hope to appreciate without personally coming into contact with them in the southern state. It remains for Michigan men in the future to reap the fruit of the seeds of friendship that Matt and his boys have sown in the South. The Wolverine swimmers had plenty of invigorating workouts in the sunny clime, were able to pit their ability against scores of competitors from the East and South, but at the same time had plenty of good times. It is very doubtful if any of those in the party will forget the sight that Jack Bell, as enthusiastic a "synthetic" alumnus as Michigan has, presented to them at Miami. The former Milan man had eight gallons of orange juice and a yard-high pile of sandwiches prepared for the Michigan entourage. At Melbourne the party was given board and room for three days at the huge Inter-Atlantic Hotel absolutely free through the generosity of the owners, Mr. Smith and Mr. Renner (no relation to the present crop of Michigan Renners but a former "Rough Rider" under Teddy Roosevelt). The swimmers were also guests at a huge banquet given in their honor by the mayor of Melbourne. At Fort Lauderdale, where the coaches forum was held and the competitive swimming took place, the Wolverine party was the largest present and attracted attention for their personalities and attitude as much as for their superlative ability in the water. -G.J.A. II Discovery Quitter, Jockey Woolf Says LOS ANGELES, Jan. 17. - (P) - Jockey George Woolf, who may be a little biased in his expression, de- clares Discovery, A. G. Vanderbilt's great horse, is "chicken-hearted." Commenting on the prospects of Discovery in the Santa Anita $100,- 000 handicap Feb. 22, Woolf, who rode Azucar to victory in the rich event last year, snorted: "Discovery, Discovery - that's all I hear. Get me 15 or 20 to 1 and I'll bet Discovery doesn't run one-two- three-four in the Handicap. Woolf is riding Cavalcade in the classic, and is confident the big 1934 champion will win the race. Mentors Register Disapproval Of In A-P Poll Michigan Golf Team May Travel South This Spring The University of Michigan golf team may take a southern trip dur- ing the spring vacation, if present plans of Coach Ray Courtright ma- terialize. Courtright is attempting to schedule dual meets with several of the Dixie schools. Chuck Kocsis, captain-elect of the Michigan golf team, who has been out of school the first semester, plans to return in February and will be available to lead the Michigan golf team to another Big Ten and Na- tional Collegiate championship. tional Collegiate championship. Last year Kocsis tied Fischer for Big Ten medal honors and was a major fac- tor in winning the National title. Strong Scheme NEW YORK, Jan. 17. - (W) - A rousing chorus of "noes" today greet- ed the proposal for a new football scoring system involving the abolish- ment of the try for extra point, the award of a point for each first down and a five-minute overtime period to break ties. Football coaches in all parts of the country, polled by the AssociatedE Press, vetoed the idea with emphasis and by a 9-to-1 margin. Their oppo- sition to other proposed rule changes, including return of the goal posts to the goal line, was less pronounced. Walter R. Okeson, of Lehigh chair- man, and other members of the Na- tional Collegiate Rules Committee, were non-commital on the radical alterations proposed yesterday by Bill Crowley, of New York, former pres- ident of the Eastern Association of Football Officials. Judging from current reaction, there is no chance whatever that the rules-makers will tinker with the scoring system when they go into an- anual session at Palm Springs, Calif., Feb. 14. Coaches for the most part, ridiculed the scoring proposal and insisted it would rob the game of its present- day thrills by putting emphasis again on the old "rock 'em and sock 'em" style of play. It would, in the opinion of Al Mc- Coy, of Northeastern University, Bos- ton, "destroy the Haughton and Mich- igan theories of kicking and letting the other fellow take the offensive, with the idea of capitalizing on breaks or mistakes." SHARES CAPTAINCY CHICAGO, Jan. 17. - IP) - De- Paul University's 1936 football team was without a captain again today. Harold Carlson, tackle, who was re- cently elected by a close margin over two teammates, called a meeting of letter men last night and tendered his resignation. He explained he be- lieved a captain should be appointed before each game. POLO SUPREMACY Hockey Summaries Twenty American polo players are nandicapped at seven goals or better, a figure no other polo-playing na- Michigan Po Minnesota tion can match. Shalek G Wilkinson ----- .- -- David D W. Smith B. Smith D Bredesen Heyliger C Bjorck MAN'S Berryman W Arnold Fabello W Baker RACCOON COAT Spares: Michigan-Griggs, Mer- $100.00 rill, Simpson. Minnesota-J. Carlson, Mitchell, Brudie, Schwab, Taft, Ber- ry, Ganley, Seidel, R. Carlson, Wal- Like new, size 38-40; dark lace. northern, well-matched skins; First Period: Scoring, none. Penal- original cost new $500; a real ties, Arnold, J. Smith. bargain at $100.00. P. J. Cooley, Second Period: Scoring, Bredesen 320 West Fort Street, Detroit. (Unassisted) 12:35. Penalties, Heyliger. Third Period: Scoring, none. Penal- ties, none. Stops: Shalek, 5 12 8-25. Wilkinson, 11 10 12-33. Officials: F. Goheen and E. R. Gar- rett. ChoralUnion Concerts ______H ILL AUDITORiUM- THE KOLISCH STRING QUARTET. RUDOLPH KOLISCH, First Violinist FELIX KHUNER, Second Violinist EUGENE LEHNER, Viola BENAR HEIFETZ, Violoncellist Monday, January 20 BERNARDINO MOLINARI Guest Conductor, The Detroit Symphony Orchestra Friday, January 24 JOHN CHARLES THOMAS Baritone Monday, February 17 MYRA HESS, Pianist Monday, March 16 TICKETS for Individual Concerts.On Sale at The University School of Music, Maynard St. $1.00 -$1.50 - $2.00 -_ -. ----- HOPPE INSURES HANDS Willie Hoppe's hands have been in- sured for $50,000 each for more than 20 years. He would like to play base ball and hand ball for recreation, but it is stipulated in his policies that he must refrain from both sports, or from engaging in any other pastime that might cause serious injury to his valuable dukes. dancing in the but ce-lar 9 to 12 tonight the fingerle the hut operated hut G A Heyliger 13 Berryman ...........5 Fabello ............. 3 M errill ............. 1 David..............0 Smith .............. 0 Simpson ............ 0 Griggs .............. 0 1 1 2 2 0 0 Total 19 6 4 3 2 0 0 0 SENvIORtS! Arrangemuents For Your Senior Pictures Must Be iMade Within Do Not Forget That Your Picture Will Appear Among The Seniors In Your School Or College. January 20th Is The Final Dead- line- Make An Appointment To- day At One Of The Official Piho-U r r t l t ,uI III . Religious Activities a.. + + I FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH at the MASONIC TEMPLE 327 South Fourth Ministers: Williamn P. Lemon and Norman W. Kunkel 9:45 A.M.--Prof. Bennett Weaver speaks: "Literature and the FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Roger Williams Guild R. EDWARD SAYLES and HOWARD R. CHAPMAN, Ministers 10:45 A.M. -- Mr. Sayles will speak on "THE UPLOOK ON LIFE" 12:00 M.-Student study group meets at the Guild House. FIRST METHODIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH State and Washington Streets MINISTERS: CHARLES W. BRASHARES and L. LaVERNE FINCH Music: Achilles Taliaferro 10:45 A.M. -Morning Worship Serv- ice: "MY LIFE- HOW FIND IT?" IL 1 1 III III . I