, ,_, :. ..: TIHE MICHIGAN iAiiX . _ ... .. .. ... a ay. s . s Cagers Invade Gopher Camp ; S artan Wrestlers Need Victory To Remain In BigTen Race Extra Height Is Expected To Bring Win; Chicago Is OpponentMonday With victory a necessity if it is to remain an outstanding threat in the Big Ten cage race, Michigan's Varsity basketball team will meet a vastly improved Minnesota five tonight at Minneapolis. In their first meeting with the Gophers two weeks ago at Yost Field House the Wolverines won easily, 38 to 28, despite the efforts of a fighting, but obviously out-classed, Minnesota team. Since then, however, the Norse- men have come within two points of upsetting Indiana, Big Ten leaders, and have succeeded in beating a highly-favored Northwestern team, 30 to 29. The Wildcats were forced into a tie for third place with Mich- igan Monday night by virtue of that defeat. George Roscoe, Minnesota's ace half back and sparkplug forward who was forced out of the Michigan game with four fouls before the end of the first half, scored six field goals to lead the Gophers in their victory over Northwestern. Height Greatest Advantage Height is the Wolverines' greatest advantage against a team like the Gophers with control of the ball boards virtually assured. It was this superiority that was the most im- portant factor in the Varsity first victory over the Minnesota team. Coach Cappon named his regula five to start against the Gophers with the two Townsend brothers at the forward posts, John Gee, center. and Capt. Chelso Tamagno and George Rudness filling the guard positions. As in the past three weeks, Tam- agno, still hampered by the leg in- jury he sustained against Butler Uni- versity, did not take part in yester- day's short practice. Earl Meyers worked in the veteran guard's posi- tion. May Break Tie With Northwestern playing but one game this week-end, meeting Chicago tonight, the Wolverines can break the third place tie by defeating Minne- sota and then beating the Maroons in the Varsity's last game before the final exam lay-off. In their first en- counter with Bill Haarlow and his mates the Michigan squad ran up 51 points to the Chicago quintet's 33. Jake Townsend and George Rud- ness, who are ranking third and fifth respectively in the Conference indi- vidual scoring race, will get their final opportunity to fatten their totals against the Norsemen and Maroons until February 17th when the Wol- verines meet Indiana at Bloomington in the crucial games of the season. Probable lineups tonight: Michigan Po's. Minnesota E. Townsend F Roscoe J. Townsend F - Baker Gee C Jones Tamagno G Seebach Rudness G Rolek WILSHERE SIGNS BLOOMINGTON, Ind., Jan. 24. - (P) -Vernon (Whitey) Wilshere, of. Skaneateles, N. Y., who will be grad- uated from Indiana University Mon- day, received his 1936 contract to pitch for the Philadelphia Athletics of the American League today. He said he will sign and return it Fri-'1 day, and report at Fort Myers, Fla., for spring training March 2.] Im DRUGS I. i -._ ___. _____. ___.______. ,y II a 11 I The HOT STOVE ---By BILL REED Contest SliIad, I Champion Boxer Dog Is For 7:30 P. M. Incorporated For $4,000 At Field House MILWAUKEE, Jan. 24. - (R') - The world champion boxer dog John P. Wagner, of Milwaukee, imported Varsity Seeks To Avenge from Germany three weeks ago has Setbacks Inflicted By been incorporated at the purchase i p THE FOLLOWING LETTER has been received from Mrs. Frank C. (Shorty) Longman, wife of the former Michigan gridder and Notre Dame coach in 1909-10 at the time of the Michigan-Notre Dame football split. Mrs. Longman, who is a native of Ann Arbor, defends the position of her husband, who died in 1928, against the opinion that the original break was the result of feeling against him for a betrayal of his old school when his Notre Dame team defeated Michigan, 11 to 3, in 1909. Ann Arbor, Mich. Jan. 24, 1936 To the Sports Editor: After having read the article Jan. 23 in the Detroit News written by John E. McManis, I feel that as the wife of Frank C. Longman it is my duty to defend him-a dead man cannot tell what he knows. I myself know practically nothing about foot- ball, although I knew every rule in the rule book when Mr. Longman was -oaching. I understood all his plays and did most of his correspondence for him. When they say Mr. Longman wa disloyal what can they mean? I did not know him while he was playing )n the 1903, 1904 and 1905 Michigar football teams, but I do know that fo hat great honor he was never fre :rom pain-not one minute. Never vas he able to sleep the night through without getting up to sit in a chair o0 tretch out in some way to relieve the ain in his back and neck. His nose vas broken seven times, his knee re- tuired an iron brace all his life, hi ack was permanently injured and xe died as the indirect result of in- uries to his heart and lungs brought n by athletic competition. Who is t that can sit on the sidelines and fudge a man who gave his life for football fame? He was a man of honor in all things, with a love for children and old folks alike. He radiated tenderness, his Irish wit never failed him. There was seldom a day that he was not called upon to do or give himself or his time to those in need. I never knew him to refuse. He is criticized for bringing the seam he was coaching back to play Michigan and for beating them. He was advised it would not be the right thing to win from Michigan. But in a period in which considerations )f "loyalty," despite Mr. McManis, were entirely secondary to the aim of winning, as Mr. Yost can well at- test, how was it possible for him tc tell his team to deliberately lose tc Michigan when the result of the game showed his team was really superior? I know of plays sent back to Mich- igan when he was coach at Arkansas, and Michigan used them. That is a fact, for I mailed the letters and it was I who finally advised against giv- ing away his best plays. If that isn't loyalty I don't know what is. And Mr. Yost had never done anything for him, because his first coaching job was secured not through Mr. Yost but through the recommenda- tion of Coach A. A. Stagg of Chicago, who called him "a true sportsman, every inch a man." Mr. Yost should have been proud of a pupil whom he taught so well that he not only won from him but from all other Michigan-coached teams he played against -Wooster beating Ohio State with Hernstine coaching and Tulane, coached by Joe Curtis, was beaten by his cham- pionship team at Arkansas. When Notre Dame came to play Michigan they won, and anyone who KODAKS C 7- r ' .; " 'Z .:_. : I saw the game will remember they never saw a better coached team. He was told so by all, except one. That was the man who taught him how to play the game. So it appears that it is really just a personal grudge on the part of Mr. Yost against Mr.. Longman, and through him Notre Dame, which has prevented another game between the two schools. So I why do Michigan and Notre Dame fans have to wait until Mr. Yost is removed by fate from control of Michigan athletics to renew a rela- tionship of good sportsmanship. The year after Mr. Longman's team defeated Michigan the Notre Dame team was stopped on the way to Ann Arbor and told Michigan would not play because of two men on Notre Dame's team. When the con- tract for the game was signed Mr. Longman said he could not play the game without those two men and it was then agreed that the two would be allowed to play. But, after a man sent out by Mr. Yost returned to Ann Arbor to tell him the real strength of the Notre Dame team, Michigan withdrew from that agreement and the game was cancelled. You will also find if you search that :our men, I believe, were removed prom the Michigan squad of 1909 for neligibility. One was a Mr. Smith rho had played against Arkansas in 907 and who told Mr. Longman at :hat time that he had played be- ween 10 and 15 years of football. He was playing on the Michigan team he season that Mr. Yost so objected ;o Dimik and Philbrook of Notre Dame. Today when Mr. Yost says that Notre Dame is not a "fit playmate" for his team he should think of the men who are the heads of that won- derful institution. Never will my memory forget the grand loyalty of the Notre Dame priests, so full of knowledge and of kindness and in whom there is no room for petty jealousies. I prize among my finest memories the warm friendship of the former heads of the school, Father Cavanaugh and Father Mallay who throughout the years since we were there never failed me with their, sympathies and understanding, al- though I am not of their faith. This school and all in charge stand for only the highest stand- ards in living and Michigan State Squad Last Year Led by Captain Wally Heavenrich, veteran 145-pounder, Michigan's Var- sity wrestling team will open its home schedule for 1936 by opposing their arch rival, Michigan State's Spartans at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Yost Field House. The Wolverines seek to avenge one of last year's two defeats suffered at the hands of Coach Fendley Collin's proteges. The meet will inaugurate Michigan State's mat season. Coach Cliff Keen announced his starting lineup as follows: 118- pounds, John Speicher; 126-pounds, Gard Slocum; 135-pounds, Earl Thomas or Wendell Taylor; 145- pounds, Capt. Wally Heavenrich; 155- pounds, Frank Bissell; Arnold Gross will either wrestle in the 165 or the 175-pound division with Bill Low- ell competing in the weight left va- cant by Gross and in the heavyweight bracket Harry "Tiny" Wright. Incligiblity Hurt State Although ineligibility cost Coach Collins the services of Mike Polimac, 175-pound candidate, and Burt Col- lings, 145-pounder, he has a host of experienced men from which to make his final selections. A possible Spar- tan lineup follows: 118-pounds, Lov- ell Genson; 126-pounds, Frank Teske; 135-pounds, Jay Davenport or Rob- ert Mummey; 145-pounds, Perry Co- nant; 155-pounds, Walter Jacob; 165-1 pounds, Joe MacDevitt; 175-pounds, John Kellogg; and in the heavy- weight class either Walter Luecke, Nelson Schrader, or Fred Hunt, three inexperienced grid men. The Wolverines won two of their three dual meets in the recent East- ern invasion, scoring a surprise 19-13 should be honored to play with so great a school. So why does not Mr. Yost forget his loss, his pet- ty jealousy, and be the big man that the world considers him, for- getting the past. It may be that I am crippled where crutches will not help me, but I must defend my husband's name - for he was honorable and loyal, a true friend. This I know, he was ready to meet his God when his time came to go. What more can be said? -Mrs. Edyth Eberbach Lo'ngman. I price, $4,000 with some of the nation's P best known celebrities subscribing to stock at $1 a share. The boxer, named Dorian von Mar- ienhof, of Mazelaine, was imported duty free for the purpose of improving the breed in the United States. Dorian won the World Sieger title at the In- ternational Dog Show held at Frank- fort-In-Main last April. Jack Dempsey is stockholder No. 1. He holds a $10 "piece" of. Dorian. Other widely known stockholders, Wagner said, are Sally Rand, the fan dancer; George Whiting, the song writer; Princess der Ling, the writer; Jack Pearl, the comedian and Olson and Johnson, comedians. victory over a strong New York Ath- letic club aggregation in their open- ing meet of the season, eking out a 18-16 win over Franklin and Marshall and finally losing to Penn State by a 19-11 county. Wright won all of his matches by falls the first two en- abling Michigan to register their two victories. Although he was un- able to make the New York trip due to an attack of influenza, Frank Bis- sell managed to chalk up two deci- sions in the Franklin and Marshall and Penn State battles. Heavenrich Defeated Wrestling in the 135-pound divi- sion, Earl Thomas, 118-pound N.A.- A.U. champion in 1934, scored impres- sive wins in the first two Eastern meets but was defeated at Penn State by Captain Bishop, former Eastern Intercollegiate champion. Capt. Heav- enrich continued his string of eight dual meet wins when he beat Gon- zales, a former Eastern champion from Lehigh, at New York but the streak was broken by successive de- feats at Franklin and Marshall and Penn State. Speicher won two and lost one, Slocum chalked up his win in his first and only start at Frank- lin and Marshall. Scoring four falls, Michigan State defeated the Wolverines 20-14 in last year's opener held at East Lansing and in the return match at Ann Arbor won 18-12 on three falls and a de- cision. Both teams will weigh in at 2:30 p.m. Students will be admitted with their coupon books while the admis- sion charge is 25 cents. t: Tutors! Advertise BANANA SPLIT Special For The Week-End Only 151YA I q P i " i C w = - U U UW = I 11 11