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December 09, 1936 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1936-12-09

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

WEDNESDAY, DEC. 9, iii 4

TIIL MICHIGAN DAILY

PAGE TfMfV,

WEDNESI~AY, DtC. 9, 19~4 TIlE MIChIGAN DAILY PftOE TTTT~EV

Hockey

Team Hits Stride

To

Trounce

Western Ontario, 84

G

'Heyliger Tops
Scorers With
Four Counters

Returns To Form

Gib James Is

Star

Bill Wood Stars In Net As
Wolverines Completely
Outclass Foes
Simpson And Smith Prove
Capable Defensemen;
Play Is Rough
By BONTH WILLIAMS
Paced by their black headed cap-
tain, Vic Heyliger, who rammed home
four goals and was credited with two
assists, the Michigan hockey team
swung into high gear in the Coliseum
last night and pasted a big Western
Ontario sextet all over the ice. The
final reckoning was Michigan, 8
Western Ontario, 1.
It was a big night for the Wolver-
ines as they turned on a display of
hockey that completely outclassed2
the husky bunch of Mustangs fromr
across the border, and it proved a
whole lot to loyal supporters of thes
Varsity club.
Wood Stars
Bill Wood earned his spurs last
night as he kicked, swatted andf
batted out every puck that came in<
his direction. The only shot thatf
got by him all evening was a re-..
bound that George Cooke knockedt
into the cage while attempting to
clear from in front of the net.
The entire Michigan team was a
much improved hockey club as they
outskated, outfought, and outchecked
the Canadians who played some ofs
the dirtiest hockey ever seen in Ann
Arbor.
Heyliger and James were working
to perfection and continually crossed
up the Mustang defense to ride in
close. Johnny Fabello was back-
checking like a demon and both?
Cooke and Jack Merrillwere con-'
stant threats. Dick Berryman was
the most improved forward on the ice
as he raced up and down the rink to
lead the second line on both attack'
and defense.
Defensemen Good
Bob Simpson -and Burt Smith
looked like a real pair of defense-
men at the red line last night and
proved a tough problem for Western.
forwards to solve. Simpson was rid-
ing his man to the boards and keep-;
ing everybody in front of the goal
covered while Smith cleared the
puck, and took care of his side of
the ice.
Heyliger started the Michigan scor-
ing parade after nine minutes and 12
seconds of the first period had
elapsed when he and Gib James
broke up a Mustang sally at center
ice. Michigan was playing a man'
short at the time due to a penalty to
Simpson. Heyliger caught the Mus-
tangs flatfooted as he broke alone'
and blazed home the first goal of the
game from in close.
Misses Shot
Fabello missed a wide open net a
minute later and then Michigan went
on the defensive as Western put on
the pressure. Bill Wood was equal
to everything they slung at him,
however, and the attack ended when
Dick Berryman caught one of Art
Moore's skates under the eye and had
to have first aid.
The second score of the period
came when Heyliger, taking the puck
behind his own goal, skated the
length of the ice. Forced wide by
the defense, he slipped a pass to
James and the Ottawa Ottoman
swatted it in.
George Cooke got his first goal as
a Wolverine with less than two min-
utes of the period left. Jack Merrill
stick handled through the defense

Old Knee Injury Puts
Smick Back In Hospital
Danny Smick, sophomore foot-
hall star and a member of the Var-
sity basketball team, is resting
easily in the University Hospital
with a recurrence of the knee in-
jury that he suffered in the North-
western football game.
Technically, he has a strained
internal ligament of the knee and
is expected to be in the hospital
for at least four or five days.
Smick was sent to the hospital
after practice yesterday afternoon
when he aggravated the old in-
jury.
Frosh Basketball
Squad To Be Cut

Captain Victor Hleyliger returned !When Coaches Ray Fisher and Ray
to old time form in the Coliseum Courtright announced that the last
last night whm he led hisWol- freshmen basketball cut had been
verines to an 8-1 victory over the made, they had no idea of what would!
University of Western Ontario follow. Since that time last week,
hockey team. The Concord Flash enough new frosh candidates have
chalked six points for himself with come out that the coaches find they
four goals and two assists to lead will have to cut the squad again in
the parade. order to keep it down to workable
size.
Having been reduced from over 801
and passed to the Windsor sopho- to 20 within only the last few days,!
more who was coming in fast. George the yearlings pracicing now at the!
took the pass perfectly and rifled a Intramural courts total well over that
shoulder high drive past goalie Aiken number. Recruits from the frosh
to make the count 3-0. football teams who did not show up
Rough It Up earlier feeling they needed a rest and

By RAY GOODMAN
Revenge will be the motif Saturday
night at Yost Field House.
With memory of three ignominious
defeats, broken down goal posts, and
several victory-mad Michigan State
crowd, the Michigan basketball team,
fresh from its record-breaking vic-
tory over Michigan Normal, 61 to 12.
is out to win back some of the pres-
tige lost on the gridiron on the hard-
wood court.
And according to Ben Van Al-j
styne, the Spartan basketball coach,
it's as good as done already. Van
Alstyne was in the stands Monday
night and when we saw him after the
game he was singing his song of woe
in C flat with all signs pointing to
his reaching high C before his boys
took the floor Saturday night.
Watch His Sleeve
As usual Van Alstyne gave every
sign of having something up his
sleeve. His only hope was that
Michigan State would at least look
good against Cappon's Wolverines.
Injuries, graduation, and other mis-
fortunes have weakened him to the
point where the Spartans are just
"cannon fodder."
Now if anyone else had told us
that we'd feel sorry and hope that
it didn't come out too badly. But
we've too much respect for Ben Van
Alstyne to harbor any such feelings
until after the game. Too often has
he sung the blues before only to send
his charges out on the floor looking
like a mob of Purdue forwards after
Wolverine pelts.
Garlock Only Veteran
Rumor, however, doth sustain Van
Alstyne's piteous claims. The only
veteran on the team is Capt. Ronny
Garlock, who has had Michigan cag-
ers in hot water for two years
His center, Ben Dargush, is only a
sophomore and worse than that he is
six feet one inch tall. Bud Nelson
the center who was supposed to re-
place Miraculous Maurice Buysee
who finally graduated, will not be

playing because of his activities on
the football squad.
The tallest man on the proposed
starting Michigan State five is Len
Oristnk who tops the six feet three
inch mark and plays one of the for-
ward posts.
Besides lack of height Van Alstyne
also has injuries. He says that all
the boys are banged up and that Gar-
lock still hasn't completely recovered
from his shoulder injury of last year.
Seeing Is Believing
We'll listen to anything but be-
lieve nothing until we actually see
it. Van Alstyne is one of basket-
ball's cagiest coaches and he realizes
full well that this year the Michigan
boys are out for a little of that sweet
revenge that the Spartans have been
enjoying for a discouragingly long
stretch. And he'll do anything that
he can to keep the Wolverines from
striking back, even going so far as to
draw a red herring across the trail.
At least the game will be interest-
ing and more of a test than the Ypsi
quintet offered.
And we still want revenge,

To Swim At Festival

Van Alstyne Sounds C Flat As Tiff Denton Wins In
Billiard Tournament
He Visions Michioan Revenge CHICAGO, Dec. 8.--(/)-Tiff Den-

I

OVERCOATS
in Stock

25%

Off

ton, Kansas City veteran, won his
fifth game of the World's Three Cu-
shion Billiards tournament today, de-
feating Allen Hall of Chicago, 50 to
43 in 60 innings. Denton had a high
run of five to four for his opponent.
The match, only one of the after-
noon, was close most of the way, but
starting in the 43rd inning, Hall went
scorless for 11 innings and then had
too much ground to make up.
Denton's victory kept him in fourth
place. He has lost three games.
M1

Walk a Few Steps and Save Dollars
KUOHNeS
205 E. Liberty Phone 8020

Webb and McInnis, Mustang de-
fensemen, who continually made use
of illegal checking and high sticks
tangled with Gib James near the end
of the period, but Paddy Farrell
chased both Webb and James be-
fore the fireworks got well under-
way.
Captain Heyliger scored the
fourth Michigan goal before the
second stanza was a minute old
when he caught the Western forward
line, still short a man, flat footed.
The Beaver jockeyed around the de-
fense and rode in on Aiken who had
no chance to save.
Johnny Fabello made it 5-0 after
almost seven minutes of play when he
batted in his own rebound from a
scramble -in front of the Western
goal while Webb looked on once again
from the cooler to which he had
been banished for spilling Berryman.
Scores Again
Heyliger did it again a minute
later when he converted on a nice
pass play from James and Berryman.
Webb drew his third penalty of the
evening when he dropped The Con-,
cord Flash with a dirty slash, and
from then until the end of the period
Michigan lay back and tried long
shots, content to rest with a six goalj
margin.
Back to the wars in the final stanza,
James and Heyliger went to work
again. Gib took a pass from Vic at
the red line and circled to the left of
the defense. The sly Canadian cut
looseda beautifulbackhand flip that
caught the far corner as Aiken dovej
desperately.
Cooke's second goal of the evening
robbed Bill Wood of a shutout. Math-j
eson was credited with the score. I

others who were just plain late in
appearing formed the new bunch.
Enough promising material has been
found to justify the trouble taken in!
looking over the new aspirants.
A Beaver Tale

Michigan Pos.
Wood..........C....
Simpson ......D...
Smith ........ D ....
Heyliger ....... C ....
Fabello ....... W ....
James ........ W ... .

Western Ont.
.....Aiken
.....Webb
..... McInnis
........Moore
. McNaughton
.........Gunn

Michigan Spares: Berryman,
Cooke, Merrill.
WesternrSpares: Gillen, Seager,
Matheson, Calvert, Simpson, Willis,
McCallum.
Referee: Paddy Farrell.
First Period:
Scoring: Heyliger 9:12.'
James (Heyliger) 14:36.
Cooke (Merrill) 18:35.
Penalty: Simpson (tripping).
James (roughing).
Webb (roughing).
Second Period:
Scoring: Heyliger 00:30.
Fabello 6:57.
Heyliger (James and Berryman)
8:14.
Penalty: Webb (cross checking)..
Webb (tripping).
Third Period:
Scoring: James (Heyliger) 1:00.
Matheson 9:52.

Ja,,k Kasely (above), varsity
co-captain and record holder in
practically every breast-stroke
event, and Tom Hay'nie, a soph-
omore on Coach Matt Mann's Na-
tional Collegiate champions and
Nationa'l A.A.U. 220-yard free-style
champion, will be two of the fea-
tured performers at the annual
Swimming Festival to be held Fri-
day night at the Intramural pool.
I'diihioran State
Q uintet Pl1a ys
AlbionTonigrht
EAST LANSING, Dec. 8.-(jP)-An
inexperienced Michigan State College
basketball team opens the season to-
morrow night against Albion College.
Coach Ben Van Alstyne of State said
he would start four sophomores.
Ronald Garlock, veteran of two
campaignsunder the Spartan ban-
ner, will be the only experienced
player in State's lineup. A guard for
two seasons, he now is appearing this
year at a forward berth.
The balance of the starting team
will be composed of Len Osterink,
Grand Rapids, forward; Ben Dar-
gush, Amsterdam, N.Y., center, Wil-
liam Carpenter, Lansing, and Leo
Callahan, Schenectady, N.Y., guards.
Albion, will have a veteran com-
bination. Santini, Kroeze and Rou-
mans were members of the quintet
that gave the Spartans a lot of
trouble here a year ago before bowing
in a closely played game, 36-28. Dean
Loye, a fast forward, and Ed Oke, a
sophomore, round out the team.
PR IN TING
LOW RATES - FINE WORK
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Downtown, North of Main Post Office
The ATHENS PRESS-
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12 NICKELS ARCADE

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Women's Swim Club
Defeated By O. S.U.
Results of the telegraphic swim-
ming meet held last Thursday be-
tween Ohio State University and the
University Women's Swimming Club
were announced yesterday, by Helen
Harp, '39, women's swimming man-
ager.
Ohio State University defeated the
women's club 13-10, winning the
medley relay and the breaststroke
events.
A CHRISTMAS GIFT
that will take first place with
4 any man, and really a marvel-
ous value at $2.00 and $2.50.
4A
By MANHATTAN
FANCIES and WHITES
CHENEY NECKWEAR
Retailing $1.00 and $1.50
THE DOWNTOWN STORE
FOR MICHIGAN MEN
StaevJ, & ?Ya
309 SOUTH MAIN

PHONE 6040

eA NNOUNCING -
The New December
GAB GYLE
featuring:

11

Heyliger
Penalty:

(James) 14:42.
James (tripping).

Preposterous People -
Sophisticated Cartoons
will be presented to

- Campus Chatter
- Jolly Jokes
its admiring public

k-

MAGAZINE SUBSCRIPTIONS
A Christmas Gift which lasts a whole Year
Bring Us Your Order and be assured
BEST CLUB PRICES
at
WAHR'S BOOKSTORES
316 South State Street Main Street Opposite Court House

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THURSDAY, DECEMBER

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for the slight consideration Of ONE DIME

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