F THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE MONDhAY.flDEC.14. 1936 - - , - - aLaa .a saa a 1 1111 111 V 111-V-La - Cagers Go Through Final Preparations For Seat tle Trip o -- Matmen Meet New York A.C. December 22 Keen Holds Tryouts Tlis Week To Choose Squad Making Trip Eight Varsity wrestlers, with pos- sibly one or two alternates accom- panying, will leave Ann Arbor Fri- day, New York bound to meet a crack team representing the New York Athletic Club on Dec. 22. The squad will motor to New York arrivng some time Monday. Coach Cliff Keen announced yes- terday that the all-campus wrestling meet, completed Saturday, gave him an excellent lineup, on the material this year, but that he expected to hold tryouts Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday of this week to ascertain definitely what men would make the trip. Coach Keen also stated that he doubted whether any Varsity letter- men would be displaced by the other candidates, for the added experience of last year merits their choice, for the trip.' The New York Athletic Club team is coached by Murl Thrush, a Mich- igan alumnus and a former wrestler under Keen in 1927 and 1928. Thrush took over the coaching of the New York team in the latter year and since then they have lost only two dual meets, Michigan beating them on Jan. 3 last year. This was also the only meet they had ever lost to a col- lege team. The feature match will be between Joe LaTout, a former national cham- pion, and Earl Thomas in the 135- pound class. Thomas just missed an Olympic berth last year and should battle on even terms with LaTout. Another lumniary will be Ben Bishop, at 155 pounds, former national in- tercollegiate titleholder and Olympic wrestler at Berlin. o Wrestlers Regret That Coach Cappon With Nary A R Iowa Isn't Their Home To Take Squad Huskies, Pitt I The greater portion of coach Cliff Of 10 Players B EKeen's ;wrestlers are lamentingI the RO ETH fact that they weren't born in Iowa,iiBRO HET Lhat middle-western state where the As the Washington Huskies and the wrestlers grw,especially in a little Need For Counter Attack Pittsburgh Panthers enter the Rose section around Cresco. Shown InaiGame Bowl for the 22nd renewal of the Three of the brightest lights on the Spartan original New Year's day football varsity this year, the Nichols broth- Huskies Are Strong classic, the thought uppermost in the ers Donald and Harold, and James minds of both teams will be "We're Cameron, claim Cresco, Iowa as their Michigan's Varsity basketball team about due this time." birthplace; while Frank Morgan, All- will begin drills this afternoon for its Although these teams have entered Campus titleholder in the 155-pound extensive vacation tour that will take the Bowl five times between them, glass, hails from Decorah, a town it to Seattle, Wash., for a three-game Pitt three times and Washington hardly 20 miles away from the Nich- series with Hec Edmundson's Uni- twice, neither have ever had the pow- ols biothers' home. - versity of Washington five, then back er or the breaks to emerge on the use Bowl Win, Feel About 'Due' Will Go 9,000 Miles Local Townsend Plan Netters Practice f f Y f t c i t t . I . . c Cameron, wrestling in the 126- to Toledo and up to Indianapolis. - long end of the score. pcund class, was one of the most con- Twelve men will make the western Sailors Pass Well sistent winner : on the Varsity mat trip, including 10 players, senior The 1924 battles saw the Navy pass- team last year, his only defeat com- manager Hubert Bristol, and Coach ing combination of McKee to Cullen gin in the Conference meet. Cappy Cappon. They will entrain for take command early in the game to Harold Nichols, touted as one of Seattle Thursday. roll up a 14-point lead over the the best 146-pounders ever to grapple Learn Lesson Huskies. Soon after this, Washing- for Michigan, won his numerals last The Wolverines learned a much ton halfbacks Abel and Wilson start- eason as a freshman and proved needed lesson Saturday night against ed things moving with a few passes that he was the class of his division Ben Van Alstyne's Michigan State on their own account, Wilson taking when he pinned Louis Mascuruskus team. Their screen plays are not a flip from Abel in the third to score in the recent All-Campus tourney. unbeatable and a well-developed de- with Sherman converting. Sherman -- ----- - fense can stop them, momentarily at incidentally, played the game with least, unless they develop a counter boils on both of his knees. Puc en1i1 attack. Van Alstyne did only what In the fourth period another pass any other smart coach would have from Abel to Dubois netted another Yl * l done. He dropped his guards back in- touchdown, Sherman again putting 8($1(30 9 Y to Jake Townsend at pivot, stopping the ball through the uprights to tie rMichigan's set-up plays but giving the score. Washington stiffened to D u in R ecess the back line an opening for long stave off the best that Navy could shots and Townsend an opening for muster and gain their tie. pivots. In their second appearance at the Now that his highly geared hockey Jake took advantage of this open- Rose Bowl in 1926 Washington had machine has definitely come into its ing for 12 points and he might have the bad luck to run into the most* own, Coach Eddie Lowrey will take collected more if he had tried more successful of all the visitors to the no chances for a set-back to occur shots. The guards, on the other ! Bowl, the Crimson Tide of Alabama. in the playing form that has netted hand, did not take many longs and Wilson Is Star the Wolverines two consecutive vic- hit only two of those that they did The Huskies started out in ,a fair tiaes. .way to win with their now All-Ameri- Th ere is a standing order posted in State Was Tough can back, George Wilson, rammingf the Coliseum for practice each night On the whole, however, the Varsity ! home a pair of touchdowns in theM this week, and for those members of played satisfactory ball, for a team first half before he succumbed to in- the siuad that will spend their holi- that beats Michigan State, 34 to 21, j juries which he had sustained in the' days im Ann Arbor there will be a has done a good job. season's regular campaign. daily scrimmage session. The bewildered Southerners came After a slow start against McMas- back in the third quarter to literally' ter on Saturday evening, the sextet a game the Washington Huskies will ticked up speed as they went, and play. Last year they were champions T in the last period repeatedly brought of the northern division of the Pa-: N8 aitors To Spend ' t'.he crowd to their feet with their in- ific Coast Conference, l.ng to Florida 'icate plays. Stanford in the play-offs. In the v acatY on InFlrd With both defensemen using their Olympic play-offs they went to the ,veight to the best advantage, a big semi-final round of the finals, losingh problem has been solved, and if the to the Globe Oilers. Gone from \nVith the swimming carnival past two attacking lines maintain their last year's team, nowever, is Ralph n go r a an'sp a are present effectiveness, Sarnia* will be Bishop, star center; though Ed LOv- 1kehm ng for a vacation trip that will in for a real battle here in the next erich, Bob Egge, and Bud Wagner alke in suthemonnya Florida.unt to F Both Varsity ame scheduled for January 9. are back again. I6c!qne in sunywFlorida iBthbarity ame fiswhnman swmmrs~ will be in- in ba f f h B t. d b t r t i ' i t t 1 ill the California air with passes i w rom halfback Pooley Hubert to W andsome movieman, Johnnie Mack f rown, and cross the Huskies goal w hree times. Two of these touch- I A .owns were converted by Bill Buck-1- er to put the Tide out in front to he tune of 20-7. In the fourth, Washington, operat- tng without the services of Wilson., managed to gain one more counter I but the chance for a tie faded as the attempted placement went wide and he Crimson tide trickled over Wash- ngton by one point. Pitt Fares Badly Pittsburgh took Mr. Greeley's ad- vice for the first time in 1928 and 'Went West" to start on of the most disastrous Rose Bowl records on the books. Their first game with Stanford was a hard fought affair from the whistle to the gun in which the Indians tripped the favored Panther to annex one of their few wins out of many tries. In the fourth period Biff Hoffman led the Indians down the field to the Panther 10, flipped a short pass to Sims who ran a few yards and fumbled, whereupon Wilton went from 'goat' to 'hero' as he grabbed the ball on the bounce and scooted across for the Indian's only touch- down. Hoffman's toe made the score Stanford 7, Pittsburgh-6. .Trample Panthers In 1930 the University of Southern California, full of the belief that Stanford had not properly impressed Dr. Sutherland's teams with the might of Pacific Coast football, set a, new Bowl record for top-heavy scores as they trampled the hapless Pan- thers deep into the turf with a score of 47 to 14. The Trojans simply passed Pitt off their feet, gaining 287 yards by the air lanes alone. In 1933, despite her ties with Ne- braska and Ohio State, Pitt was fated) to feel again the heavy hand of Troy. The Trojans outweighed the boys I from Pitt 14 pounds per man and outplayed them by an even greater margin. The stars of the game were Grif- fiths and Warburton of U.S.C. who passed, ran, intercepted, and kicked while 'the Troy line bounced every Pitt thrust for a loss. When the sun went down over the Rose Bowl the frayed Panther staggered from the field on the short end of a 35-0 score.) =li{I FREE! With Every Pair of Skates SSharpenings " " This Season) Michigan's own "Townsend Plan" the person of John Townsend, star l asketball forward and shot-putter, ill cover over 9,000 miles in the next our months, going to Seattle this eek as a cager and to California in pril with the thinclads.i II-.M Gymnasium Five of last season's seven tennis lettermen, led by Captain Miller Sherwood, have been working out in the Intramural Sports Building gym under the tutelage of Coach John Johnstone. Practice will con- tinue all winter. MOE Spo'rIShops 711 North University 902 South State ---------- -- III! a i _l -, IO t I WATCHES and Jewelry Repairing at Reasonable Prices. Crystals 35c FISHOW'S 2:31 S. State - Paris Cleaners SEASON'S GREETINGS and BEST WISHES ROG E RS Men's Wear 1107 So. University Ave. - - - 4i. f lYl ," luded on the squad making the trip. * * The tri will serve as a fievca- eW Oe U eS ~ nlnR uan nd at the same timefaiown he New Hockey Rules Eliminate ;Tiin tri llseveasa in mci men to get in a great deal of 'Packed Defense' And Stalling racice and give the younger me ersof hesquad a chance to go _rough the experience of perform- By GLEN PHELPS Coming under the head of an 'anti- before rge gallees. 'I'The tankers are also looking for- Now that the boys are away on defense' rule the 1936-37 code of ward to the eastern trip in the early what looks to be a big year in in- ethics provides that not more than hart of February which will take tercollegiate hockey, maybe it would three teammates shall be in their de- mem first to New York where they fenivezon whn te pck s nt i jwill meet the New York A.C., then to be a good idea to have a look into fensive zone when the puck is not i I the rule book and see what changes that zone. This extraction is de- jhoetheytangle with the Red Raid- have been made in the list of 'dont's' signed to do away with a 'packed de- ers. Th z journey will be the long- for the current season, and take a fense' and to prevent a slow and est to be taken by any swimming back glance at a few of the old lstalling type of game. jsquad in 'he Conference this season. Along the ongm These eastern meets and the others standbys that still have a lot of us Along the long road of develop-on the schedule except the one with puzzled. ment from the 'shinny' stage, the i Indiana in January are in the sec- The change that will probably be game of hockey has picked up many ond semester. the most apparent to the majority of innovations, but the present status of fans has to do with the return to geometrical figures being employed h A This SPACE is taken.in this Special GOODFELLOW EDITION of The MICHIGAN DAILY, not for ad- vertising purposes, but because we are heartily in favor of The Mich- igan Daily's Ideal in this Special. m ~rry the ice of a player w banished for one reaso C hato serve a time penalt: Cnrlsrmas new order of things, t must proceed at once t fensive zone before he+ to A llin any offensive play. behind this requiremen inate the otherwise ad sibility for a man tos dog house to the ice, Success to and go tearing in on h minder. the Worthy PERSONAL STA Cause of the 100 Sheets. Goodfelloiv- 100 Envelopes .$ Printed with your Name dtoTHE CRAFT E Etion 305 Maynard SI fComl STADEL & A. C. Ba WALKER 619 East Will 1st Nat'l Bank Bldg. 1 Home of Fine 7 rho had been n or another, y. Under the his ex-violator o his own de- can take part The method nt is to elim- existing pos- step from the take a pass, his enemy net TIONERY 4 . and Address PRESS treet in the layout of the playing surface, sets a new high in something or other. At the present time there are some six circular figures, and two linear constructions to be found on the well appointed rink. Starting at the nets, a 'crease' of seven foot radius is inscribed across the front of and extending behind the posts of the cage. It is, thoroughly unlawful for any player to go into that crease, take a pass ,and shoot. Shoot At Goalies Mid-way between the goal and the sideboards, and 15 feet in front of the cage mouth at each end of the ice is located what has been labeled the 'special spot.' It is from this spot that face-offs are made, as penalties for certain technical viola- tions. Thirty-eight feet in front of the nets are found 10-foot circles, whose purpose is to provide a place from which a 'penalty shot' must be made. For infractions of certain rules, the puck is placed in the cen- ter of this circle in the belligerent's defense zone, and a member of the offended team has the privilege of taking a pot shot at the enemy net minder who must be all alone in his efforts to prevent a score. This latter condition gives rise to the one perennial stickler in the rule book. Presented briefly,-no player shall cross his opponent's red line ahead of the puck. BUY AT LEAST ONE COPY and don't be stingy, give at least a Quarter - and a Dollar, if you can afford it. It's a splendid cause; get back of it whole- TINKER & CON 342 South State Street at William Street Serving Michigan Men With Dependable Tai- lored Clothes For More Than Thirty-five Years l/fments of 3rtl liams Christmas To You All . railOring :111 t ..tea _ _ Ili i The MICHIGAN UNION Extends :. ' 11111 I El" I I 1 1111