.SDA Y NOV. 18, 1936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SDAYaNO.18, 19. 1HE I HaN A L Smithers Pronounced Definitely Out Of 0 hi0 v 4 Phillips Takes Injured Back's Post Saturday Blocking Prowess Sophomore Nod; Ritchie Pass Well Gives Hook, With Johnny Smithers pronounced definitely out of Saturday's game, yesterday's practice session devoted its attention to the selection of a capable substitute for the star right halfback. Bob Campbell worked out with the first team backfield in place of Smithers and spent most of the afternoon throwing laterals and for- ward passes. Campbell does not throw his passes with the finesse that Johnny has shown and had sev- eral of them intercepted. Despite the fact that Campbell was with the first team today, Coach Harry Kipke intimated that he in- tended to start Ed Phillips against Ohio State and had him working out' with the second team backs. Phillips is reputed to be the best of the block- ing backs after Smithers and since Stark Ritchie, Wally Hook and Alex Loiko are all ready to step into John- ny's passing duties, Ed seems the log- ical choice for the right halfback- the blocking back position. Learn New Plays While the Varsity with till Bar- clay, Ced Sweet, Bob Cooper and Campbell ran through passing drill, the second stringers learned some new plays, particular interest being attached to the running and passing of Ritchie and Hook. Stark and Wally were both getting off long, accurate spirals and every- body on the second team was catch- ing them. Elmer Gedeon and Art Valpey at the flanks looked espe- cially good on the receiving end of the passes. Gedeon can cover ground faster than any other man on the squad and was forced to slow down and wait for the passes many times. Paquette Moves Up Don Paquette, who has moved up in the tackle rankings to a second string position, and Ed Greenwald in the tackle positions, George Mar-. zonie and "Dutch" VandeWater at guards, John Jordan as the center, and Ritchie, Louis Levine, Ed Stan- ton and Phillips made up the second team. Doug Farmer and Wally Hook alternated with Levine and Ritchie. Bob Campbell and Ced Sweet closed the session with someN very good punting-a good many of the kicks going between 50 and 60 yards. Ritchie and Chuck Gray were on the receiving end of the punts. HOCKEY SCHEDULE November 28-Chatham, here. December 5-Brantford, here. December 8-Kitchener, Western, or Port Colburne, here. December 12-McMaster, here. January 9-Sarnia, here. January 15, 16-Minnesota, here. January 22, 23-Michigan Tech. away. January 26-Ontario Aggies, here. February 15-London A.C., here. February 19, 20-Michigan Tech, here. February 26, 27-Minnesota, away. March 2-Western, away. March 5-Toronto, here. March 10-St. Thomas, here. March 13-Galt, here. Teams Gather For Field Hockey Meet With 18 teams arriving and sev- eral other teams not heard from yet, the fourth Great Lakes Field Hockey tournament will begin at 8 a.m., continue until 4:30 p.m. Satur- day and conclude with an 8 to 10:30 a.m. program Sunday at Palme Field, it was announced recently. The teams competing are grouped in to three classes: club teams, uni- versity teams and high school groups The club teams include a group from Ann Arbor Hockey Club, two teams from Chicago, two teams from Cleveland, a group from Columbus, O., two teams from Detroit, tw( teams from Pittsburgh, a group from Toledo, a team from St. Anne's in Hamtramck, and a team from Wit- amacheck. A Michigan team, one from Michi- gan State Normal College and on from Battle Creek College will com- prise the college group, while An Arbor High School and University High School in Ann Arbor will play in the high school section. CGhe nnrcr . I 41 A AT 7U 169. . A. I edal By BUD BENJAMIN these departments tomorrow. The "Go-Go" and the "Who-Who" Guy Houston, Fred's high school put on a real "rasslin" bout down at 'Stop Trosko' is the battle cry of coach, influenced him to come to Ferry Field yesterday after football Coast Pro Leads the Frosh football squad as they pre- Michigan; he is enrolled in the Phys- practice. It was a no-decision Spare for their annual game with the ical Education school and hopes to th, but the audience was none k ; agen Fails Phys. Eds tomorrow at Ferry Field. make a career out of coaching. He - By GEORGE J. ANDRO . the less appreciative of the exhibit To Qualify in Fred Trosko the Physical Edu- also played basketball and baseball (Daily Sports Editor) put on. Ication eleven has one of the most in high school and expects to con- To the uninitiated, the "get some PINEHURST, N.C., Nov. 17. -(4) promising freshmen backs in many tinue these activities in the Univer- Indirect, But *.*.*,go-go" cry has long been heard on Fay Coleman, who was one of the years, and the success of the year- sity. ICHIGAN'S LINE (which started the Wolverihe practice field as CoachF lings will depend on their ability to In his senior year in high school, ICHdWally Weber spurred on the back- Pacific Coast's ranking amateurs as stop this 150 pounds of dynamite Saturday'sebegamerboastinghethree-his team was undefeated although Saturday's game boasting thr field men to greater heights. And recently as five years ago, won the from Flint, Mich. seniors, two. juniors and two soph-felmntogaerhits Ad I they were held to a tie in the open- s shou o ud of islf. the "get some who-who" cry of Coach qualifying medal of the Professional Trosko's work this year has re- ing game. During his final season No one can deny that on defense Harvey Emery as he assisted the Golfers' tournament today with a 36- peatedly brought words of commen- Trosko personally accounted for over he Wolverine septet more than held coaching staff on the line this year, hole aggregate of 143, one under dation from Frosh mentor Wally We- 70 points, a number of these being its onaginsetet orestern f has threatened the supremacy of por thedae , ler Ha- ber who labelled him one of the best points after touchdown. Many of his ward wail-and now here comes Burt Wally's battlecry. These two wererhnt backs in the University"; he is ex- touchdowns were scored on long runs, Ingwersen, the Wildcat line coach, the principles in yesterday's main gen, five times former titleholder, pected to make a definite bid for a for he is the "swivel hip" type of run- ,o say that his present troupe is one bout. failed to qualify for the first time Varsity berth next year. ner and is very dangerous in the open of the two best he has ever coached. Wally had a 10-pound advantage in the championship proper. Trosko matriculated from Fnt field. (And Burt has coached plenty of over line coach Emery's 190 pounds, The 31-year-old, Culver City, Calif. Northern High School where he He played amateur football last lines.) but the former Michigan center shot-maker added a 75 to snatch the played halfback for three years land- year while completing a final semes- He says: "The other great line I reckoned without the wily Harvey Alex Smith Memorial medal with two ing an all-state berth as a senior. ter in high school on a team com- had was the 1929 Iowa forward wall, who, according to Cliff Keen, had strokes to spare, while the veteran He combines passing and kicking posed mainly of ex-high school stars. - and I give this one at Northwestern plenty of experience while a regular Hagen, last year's medalist at Okla- with a fine broken-field running abil- I Freshmen competition is not a great a slight forward edge because of su- member of the "grunt and groan" homa City, missed the boat by one ity, and he will probably have a deal harder in Trosko's opinion than r perior reserves. In weight, speed and squad at Princeton. stroke. The qualifying limit was chance to prove his mettle in all of high school, but he readily admitted smartness that Hawkeye line was Emery more than held his own 156 and "The Haig" had rounds of---- - that he had gained a great deal of i up to this Wildcat one. Only 28 with the freshmen coach, but he su- 77 and, 80. I-knowledge under Coach Weber and tht"With a 77 to work on, Walter looked Jones Forced To Qut Istaff. points were scored on it that year. ceeded in getting only one fall as liheastg ontmateradeJsoklhoaT o achtis 1 ds ol Well, boys, indirectly that's a com- Wally applied the knowledge that like he was going to make the grade As Oklahoma Coach His 150 odd pounds is solidy dis- pliment. But they tell me Ohio State when he turned in 38 with a brilliant tributed over his 5 feet 9 inch frame, also has quite-a line. Lets see what made him one of the best centers to eagle three on the 467-yard 5th, but WASHINGTON, Nov. 17.- (') - and from all appearances his com- you can do down there Saturday. wear the Maize and Blue to the bat- starting the final nine he ran into a Orders issued by the war depart- paratively light weight will not be a tle royal. He kept his center of bal- flock of trouble and 5's and came ment today assigned Major Law- serious handicap to him' in collegiate ,oance low and kept Emery at bay home in 42. Only once before, in a rence (Biff) Jones to the com- competition. o Smick Outmarts Em . . . throughout the match. sectional test in 1930, has he failed mand and general staff school at TWO WEEKS AGO when the foot- to qualify. Fort Leavenworth, Kans., for the s! b a ll te a m sp e n t th e w e e k -e n d in B u t H a g e n h a d p le n ty o f h e a d lin e : 1 3 7 -1 9 3 8 c o u rse , th u s p re v e n tin g h l d l h aI e' STea*o n n t e s d l n . n o d c m R Philadelphia, Danny Smic en onn D U.s Theta company n thehieie.A l corhan-ei fo acin asfotbpallent coachSBCINE a shopping tourand wound up in petitive rival and also twice form er at the University of Oklahoma nextCsa a onCEAamETEfAd, a watch and chain for $2 with a watch also took 157 in the two-day test, as year-SOMETHINGWONDULGOSONINSIDE -and a ring thrown in for good meas-1did Sam Parks, Jr., of Pittsburgh, The course at Leavenworth, de- n d ghspeed all Foes surprise winner of the 1935 U.S. signed to afford army officers post T y Dannyahurried to another pawn- Open Championship; Phil Perkins of graduate work in militarytscienceE C y broker and was offered $10 for the Cleveland, former British Amateur and tactics, opens next September. whole mess. Thus he returned to Lambda Chi Alpha Beats king, and Joe Turnesa. Byron Nel- Jones made a wide reputation as pgpgg Ann Arbor with his purchases ahead son, promising young Ridgewood, N. football coach at West Point and at CIGAREM $8 and a hefty amount of confidence Delta Sigma , Chli 12-4 J., professional, also faded with 158. Louisiana State University. A i CIGAR HOLDERS SIn Touch Football six sharp-shooters got under reg He was one of 100 officers elected FINEST BRIAR MONEY CAN BUY e Last Sunday Kipke's sophomonettulation figures, two others equalled for assignment to the Fort Leaven- _TE____YPATENTED nd drove home to Hazel Park, Mich., Lambda Chi Alpha galloped over par, but Coleman was the only man worth school. Last Saturday, Jones' de with his laundry tied on the side. He to shade par for the two-day test. team dropped a close 21-14 decision - arrived in Hazel Park still owning Delta Sigma Chi 12-4 yesterday af- Out in 35 to be five under par for to the University of Missouri. - h his watch chain, ring and watch, ternoon to win the third place play- 27 holes, Coleman lost his putting to__ -cUniversit- ofMissouri. - (minus the hands, by now), but with- off of the touch football tournament. touch on the back nine and blew y out his laundry which had dropped e himself to an incoming 40. r off on the way. Now he's behind The triumvirate of champions, t about $25-but he still has confi- med the Commodores by the top Johnny Revolta of Chicago, the de- e dence in his own judgement. heavy score of 13-0 in a semi-final fending titleholder; Tony Manere tilt for the right to meet the D.D.'s of Greensboro, N.C., the U. S. Open - r 1u1E for the championship of the inde- King, 'and Gene Sarazen of Brook- c, - field Center, Conn., three times for- ! o ) pendent division. The game will be mer PGA titlist and winner of the CITY CIGAR STORE played at the intramural touch foot- Australian Open Crown two months Arra n e m ent s l ball field Friday afternoon at 4:15 ago, were two strokes back of the 106 East Huron Phone 7289 p.m Front-running Coleman with 145's. h Nearly Closed The finals of the inter-fraternity ,J speedball championship will get un- der way Thursday afternoon at 4:15 d NEW YORK, Nov. 17.-(A')-No p.m. featuring the teams of Theta r contracts were signed today for a Chi and Delta Upsilon. Jamest . Braddock-Joe Louis fight Should Be Close m' Atlantic City, but signs point to The game promises to be one of the something being done, one way or best to be played during the current the other, in the next 72 hours. fraternity speedball campaign. The Herman (Muggsy) Taylor, Phil- D.U.'s started the tournament with adelphia promoter came to town a bye and in their first and semi-final with $100,000 in $10,000 bills which contest nosed out the S.A.M.'s in fast he waved under the nose of Joe and furious battle in which their star0 N EW 'Go-Go, 'Who-Who' Sub-Par Game Wrestle To Draw i Wins Coleman As Gridders Watch_ 7 Trosko Threatens Supr macy Crowd Of 60,000 To Watch Ohio Gam According to officials of Ohio Stat' University a crowd of approximate ly 60,000 people is expected to watcl the Buckeyes clash with the Wolver ines Saturday, announced Hiarve: Tillotson, Michigan ticket manage yesterday. Officials stipulated tha this would only be true if favorabl weather was in force. In the 1935 game at Ann*Arbor 55, 000 fans witnessed the annual classic while at Columbus in 1934, 60,00 were on hand. STUDENTS STRIKE More than 2,000 students of Soutl Hills High School, Pittsburgh walked out of their class rooms yes terday protesting a decision reache f by a coin toss which deprived thei football team of the city title. 'Color' Of Last Year's Quintet Increased Gate Receipts Here By RAY GOODMAN Since 1933, or thereabouts, there has been a feeling around the Mich- igan campus that Michigan basket- ball existed principally because the school was expected to have a bas- ketball team and for practically no other reason. There was no one reason for this attitude although the major cause was undoubtedly the very poor ma- terial that made up the Varsity in 1933, '34 and '35. The absence of color also was responsible for the drop in enthusiasm. Everything overshadowed basketball including library dates. There isn't much use in elaborat- ing on the situation. Suffice it to say that while the sport was gaining such an amazing popularity through- out the country it was dropping off to an afterthought around Ann Arbor. Had Color With the 1935-36 season the situ- ation changed. The material changed for the better. Every man on the Varsity possessed real basketball skill and plenty of color to boot. John "Jake" Townsend, Earl "Camel" Townsend "Long" John Gee, little George Rudness, and Chelso Tamag- no, the human iceberg, gave the Michigan five plenty of color and even a nickname, "the Goliaths." Cappy Cappon's aoility as a coach was given a chance and proved itself; with every game interest grew; every game was truly worth seeing and gradually crowds grew until 9,500 fans crowded into Yost Field House on March 6 to see the Purdue fracas. Needless to say they got their mon- ey's worth. But really that enthusiasm is still in its youth. No matter how the victory and loss columns shapes up WOOL TIES 65c I at the end of the coming season Michigan really will have a basket- ball team this year. The boys know basketball, Johnny Gee is out of the woods; the passing is going to be something to write home about; the boys know how to bring the ball down the floor; they can stall, they can really play basketball. Gee Looks Good Right now Gee looks better than at any time in his college career. That of course was to be expected for he has been learning and improv- ing all the time. After each prac- tice it seems more certain that he will repeat Ed Garner's feat of 1933, when he placed third in the Confer- ence scoring with 104 points despite the fact that he had never played basketball before coming to Michi- gan. It all adds up to the conclusion that Michigan's Houdinis are going to supply plenty of conversation no matter how the season ends up be- cause they have the stuff that bas- ketball teams are made of. Gould, Braddock's manager, and de- clared he was ready to close for the, fight then and there. Gould requested a three-day de-: lay to see what can be done about; ironing out possible legal entangle- ments. The champion's manager was not represented by counsel, but Taylor and Mike Jacobs, who is to be as- sociated in the promotion, both had lawyers on hand. They advised the promoters they are running a risk of injunctions and court actions which, although they might even-I tually be defeated, likely would cause delays. -During the next three days ef- forts will be made to win the consent of Madison Square. Garden, which has Braddock under contract to fight Max Schmeling next June. Col. John Reed Kilpatrick, presi- dent of the Garden, has said that if Louis and Braddock meet in any- thing but an exhibition match, the Garden will consider its contract vi- olated and may take steps to protect it. player Elbert Haight received a brok- en nose but stayed in the contest to lead his mates to a 19-17 victory. This win broke the 14-game winning streak of the favored S.A.M.'s. Theta Chi has breezed through two opponents to reach the finals trimming Pi Lambda Phi 6-2 and crushing Phi Psi beneath a 13-2 score. Outstanding for Theta Chi are Bill and Rod Howell and Harry Tillotson. Faculty Organizes Faculty members who wish to par- ticipate in an athletic program I which involves a chance for the best man to win something substantial for his efforts now have the opportunity according to Earl N. Riskey, Assistant Director of Intramural activities. Riskey's latest scheme to pit the faculty against each other, will form the members of the departments de- sirous of competing into four team leagues. Get the Habit - Shop at Staeb &Day's $27.50 The TOWN LEY We present gentlemen's Formal Attire that is distinguished for -u .._., 7Vatk. OUFA BUCKINGHAM bulky British brogue ' Y -Sal Half & Half' is a saf combination for any pipe. Cool as a bank-teller scanning your ten-spot. Sweet as his look that means it's okay. Fragrant, full- bodied tobacco that won't bite the tongue-in a tin that won't bite the fingers. Made by our exclusive modern process including patent No. 1,770,920. Smells good. Makes your pipe welcome anywhere. Tastes good. Your password to pleasure! 1 Soto Not a bit of bite in the tobacco or the Telescope Tin, which I WE 11 1