U THURSDAY, JAN. 7, 1937 T HE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Alumni AreSatisfied With Kipke; Any Change Will Be Yost's Large Majority Of Grads Back Football Head Hyde, Leader Of Alumni, Finds No Dissension In Association Ranks Aigler Sees No Action Chicago Group Supports Grid Mentor; T. Hawley TappingIn Accord (Continued from Page 1) lege or university accustomed to winning football elevens gather after a disastrous season, there are rumb- lings, a few sincere moans, many hearty growls, and even demands of 'fire the coach.' That's what made this gathering unique. Not a rumble. not a moan, not a howl, not a single voice for any major change in ad- ministration of athletics." Individuals Give Support Personal sentiment of important alumni in that Chicago group, in- cluding Judge R. Jerome (Duke) Dunne, captain of the 1922 Michigan football eleven, was almost unani- mous in support of Kipke. The same feeling toward the Wol- verine mentor was manifest among eastern alumni who gathered in Philadelphia last fall for the Michi- gan-Penn game. They sought no one's scalp and left an impression of complete approval of the present staff. Tapping In Accord Hyde deprecated the "newspaper route" method of creating disturb- ing rumors about the whole situa- tion. "It's a matter for university authorities," he averred. It was also learned that T. Hawley Tapping, alumni secretary, now visit- ing in Puerto Rico, is thoroughly cognizant of the support given Kipke and in complete accord with it. Frick Expects Close Pennant Race In 1937 Clubs Foresee Increased Attendance; Giants Seeni Weaker Than In '36 NEW YORK, Jan. 6.-(P)-A year of "renewed prosperity"-as Presi- dent Ford Frick calls it-and of a tighter pennant race among five and possibly six clubs appears in store for the National Baseball League in 1937. As the hot-stovers begin to disband their winter proceedings and ground- keepers start readying training camps for the southern invasion, those two factors loom above all others, not- withstanding such sidelights as Dizzy Dean's war of words with the Car- dinals, other threatened holdouts and the New York Giants' chances of re- peating their miracle. Giants Weaker There seems little reason to doubt that the large crowds which sky- rocketed major league baseball far out of the red last year won't be back. With the expansion of the profitable night ball to St. Louis, new personalities in the game, young- sters taking over key jobs on most clubs, and what appears to be a more even distribution of playing strength, thedturnstiles should click at an even merrier pace. The Giants are definitely regarded as a weaker club than the one which . staged its amazing climb to win the '36 pennant. As a result, the 1937 title chase shapes up as anybody's affair, with the Pirates as the stand- outs, and the now experienced "kid team" at Cincinnati also rated a pos- sibility. Bees Dark Horse And you can pretty well put the Boston Bees down as the "dark horse," while the Phillies and Dodg- ers again look to be the "weak sis- ters."I With Bill Terry on the bench for keeps and Travis Jackson managing the club's new International League farm at Jersey City, the Giants' in- field needs rebuilding. At the same time, the chances of Carl Hubbell's repeating his remark- able 1936 pitching record are ques- tionable. Perry Upsets Dope To Beat Vines In ProD ebut - Associated Press Photo I Winner in his first match as a professional, Fred Perry (right) formerI world champion amateur tems phyer, inghs with his opponent Ells- worth Vines after the game last night at Madison Square Garde'n. Perry took his opponcnt in 4 sets, 7-5, 3-6, 6-3, 6-4. The match was the first of several that will be played between th^ two in a nationwide tour. Vines, three-time American champion, was ceded the victory by most experts before the match, due to his previous experience in professional competition. A capacity crowd of 17,630 paid $53,000 to watch the %event. Perry's contract calls for 37? per cent of all gate receipts, while Vines is to get 12, per cent. George Lott, Jr., Bruce Barnes, and "Big Bill Tilden also appeared on the program. The first two will tour the country with Perry and Vines. PRESS ANGLE W. GEORGE J. ANDROS Seven Championships W E TAKE OUR HAT OFF to Chuck Hoyt, Varsity track coach.. In six years as head of the thinclads he has won seven Big Ten championships, including both indoor and outdoor meets . . . His 1935 team took both titles and we think his present aggregation will be strong enough to do the same thing . . . Hoyt's charges work hard and love it . . . They know it's no fun to be a loser .. . The professional tennis troup starring Ellsworth Vines and Fred Perry will appear Tuesday night in Detroit . . . Anyone wanting to see the net game as it should be will be there. Ann Arbor boxing fans ... and there are plenty of them . . . are awaiting the annual gore splashing battles late this month that will open the Golden Gloves tourney . . . The first round of fights will be staged Jan. 26 in the Armory . . . If schedule arrangements mean anything Northwestern should rate as the main contender for the Conference cage title . . . The Wildcats are the only recognized contender not playing either Purdue or Indiana ... Michigan and Illinois, play them both-. Fisher Looking Forward A TWIN BILL is on the Wolverine athletic card for Saturday . . . The wres-! tlers face Dearborn at Yost Field House . . . and Sarnia invades the coliseum to battle the hockey sextet . . . Jewell Young, spectacular Purdue forward, appears headed for the individual scoring crown of the Big Ten --* Against Wisconsin Monday night he scored 27 points . . . Saturday he will have his chance against the Wolverines . .. and we're betting that he'll be stopped far short of that amazing total. The New York Giants, National League champions, seem to be out to duplicate the extensive farm system of the Cardinals . . . They recently added Albany to the list . . . And while speaking of baseball Coach Ray Fisher of the Michigan nine is already looking forward to his 1938 season ... Ray thinks it will be one of his best . . .Thti coming '37 club should be a powerhouse also . . . Joe DiMaggio says he's through swinging at bad balls ... If he could hit .345 his first year . . . even though he did swing at the wide ones . . . what will his mark be this year? Scholastic Strictness PETE LISAGOR. . . sophomore on the sports staff . . . returned from Chi- cago with the.report that.Chelso Tomagno, last year's cage captain, is alternating his time between selling humidifiers and playing basketball in the Windy City League, a semi-pro circuit . . . Recently against a whirlwind colored quintet Chels was assigned to guard the center, a tall fellow who was uncanny in handling the ball . . . Tamagno, driven to exhaustion by the man's wizardry, walked off the floor after the tussle muttering, "Black Jake!" Professor James Weber Linn of the University of Chicago . .. who has a penchant for expressing his views in the Voice of the People columns . . . wrote to a Chicago sports editor, pointing out that the three schools exacting strict scholastic requirements in the Big Ten were Michigan, Chicago and Wisconsin . . . It was an unkind vag, if not Prof. Linn himself, who added, "yes, and look where they finished in the 1936 grid standings!" -DeLano. Week-End Tilts To Test Ability Of Varsity Five Title Hopes May Depend On Wins Over Purdue And Northwestern By RAY GOODMAN Michigan's basketball team runs the gauntlet this week end. If the Varsity comes through unscathed there will be a n1w favorite for Big Ten title honors, if it splits Mich- igan will be the Conference "dark- horse," but if the Wolverines lose both games their name will be mud, and mud of the darkest complexion. Saturday evening the Varsity cag- ers travel to Lafayette, Ind. and take on the Conference's perennial nee- sis. Purdue. Monday night, North- western, victor over Illinois' Boud- read and Nesbit, comes to Ann Arbor. Still Favorites The Boilermakers and the Wildcats are, along with Indiana, prime fa- vorites df the "experts" to cop the title. The two Hoosier teams are un- doubtedly strong and the Evanston outfit is favored by a weak schedule. Michigan is really the only team con- sidered strong enough to defeat Northwestern and the hopes of the other eight teams in the Big Ten will be with the Wolverines. More important at present, how- ever, is the collision with Purdue. The Varsity looked sour at Indianapolis Tuesday night. The boys' minds seemed to be someplace else beside in the Butler Field House and Coach Cappy Cappon has a strong suspicion that that someplace was the Jef- ferson High School gym, home of Piggy Lambert's firehorse troupe. Looked Sluggish Jake Townsend, although playing satisfactory ball really had an "off" night. His shots refused to drop. For a while the ball seemed more like a watermelon than a basketball and the basket bore a close resemblance to a peanut sack. the whole team was sluggish. But- ler was picking tp most of the loose balls because Michigan refused to go after them. The Wolverine set-up shots declined to be set up. Young Too Much Lost Monday night when the Boil- ermnakers opened their Big Ten cam- paign for retention of their crown only one man looked especially good. But he was so good that the mediocre performance of the rest of the quintet was forgivable The hero, of course, was Jewell Young who hit the basket for 11 field goals and five free throws and an almost unprecedented total of 27 points. Wisconsin, who tried to present the competition, played good basketball but Young was too much for the Madison five and the outcome was never in question. ANNOUNCE PURCHASE NEW YORK, Jan. 6.-(/P)-The New York Giants today announced the purchase of infielder Tommy Thevenow from the Cincinnati Reds. Pre-Inventory Suit and Overcoat Sale SUITS and OVERCOATS formerly selling at $25 to $37.50 Now 20% to 25% Discount OUR ANNUAL MANHATTAN SHIRT and PAJAMA SALE Now On. (10 days only) $2.00 values Now By BUD BENJAMIN Working out nightly in an obscure ccrner of the Yost Field House are 35 or so well built athletes with a pur- pose-Michigan's varsity wrestling squad. "Working out" is, at best, a mild term to describe the type of physical exercises which these candidates un- dcrgo during the week. Perhaps no other sport requires the amount of continually applied physical energy and stamina as does the mat game, and only a well-conditioned body is able to stand up under this nightly strain. Is Technical Sport These men, however, enjoy their work. One might safely say .they revel in it. To them wrestlinig is much more than a contest of brawn and power. It is a highly technical sport, embodying a great degree of coordination, agility, speed and clear :hinking. They wrestle because they like to, and when they do so they exemplify aggressiveness and deter- mination. The aforementioned purpose of the squad this year is not entirely one in terms of victories. Needless to say the men are out to win, and intend' Golden Gloves Matches Here MayDraw 70 With the deadline for entries only a few weeks away, the fourth an- nual Ann Arbor Golden Gloves tour- nament is rapidly gaining momen- tum. About 70 contestants are ex- pected to fight in the elimination bouts which are scheduled for Jan. 26 and 27. The finals will be held on Feb. 3. The contestants will engage in 16 divisions-eight for novices and eight open divisions for more experienced boxers. The 16 winners will go to Grand Rapids to compete in the state tournament and the Grand Rapids champions will be sent to the national Golden Gloves tournament in Chicago. Last year, Ann Arbor's welter- weight titlist, Barney Gemelli, went on to win the statechampionship but was unable to leave his job long enough to make the trip to Chicago and the national tourney. Ann Arbor fight fans will be look- ing for local talent to follow in the footsteps of the Urso brothers, Patsy and Jimmy, who went on to boxing glory in the amateur ranks after getting their start in the local tour- nament. Jimmy was the bantam- weight representative for the United States in the Olympic competition. PRE-INVENTORY SALE 20% Off SUITS and Overcoats SHIRT SALE One lot $1.59 values $1.19 or 3 for $3.45 One lot $2.00 values $1.39 or 3 for $4.00 FAULTLESS PAJAMAS One lot $2 and $2.50 Values Now $1.39 or 3 for $4.00 STADEL& WALKER 1st Nat'l Bank Bldg. to expend every possible effort in doing so. Ranking on a par and per- haps even surpassing this aim is a determination to cvercome the ob- scurity which has been dogging wres- tling at the university ever since its existence. Drew No Gate This obscurity is not difficult to ex- plain. Wrestling in this sector of thet country is thought of almost wholly in professional terms. The hokum and scandal which has, of late, been attached to the pro racket has not aided the simon-pures in their effort to gain some measure of attention from sport fans. Then too, varsity wrestling at Michigan has not enjoyed much luck as far as wins and losses go. This cer- tainly has not aided the gate, for mediocre teams in any sport have difficulty drawing This year appears to be a different story. Although it is much too early to predict any future for the team, it undoubtedly is considerably better than any in recent years. It's true merit will be tested this week and next when it will engage three of its toughest opponents of the current year. Tough Foes Listed On Saturday the varsity meets the Dearborn Athletic Club, a powerful aggregation of ex-college stars and amateur luminaries, in the Yost Field House at 7:30 p.m. The following Friday, January 15, the team travels t.o Lehigh, where wrestling enjoys a position similar to football at other colleges, for a dual meet. The Le- high outfit is considered by many as the best wrestling team in the East, and should the varsity eke out a victory they will be hard to stop later. The following night . Michigan tackles another eastern team not far behind Lehigh, Franklin and Mar- shall. The fact that these two meets fall on successive nights won't help she cause much either. But then there's that purpose we were talking about. Daily Will Offer Intramural Award As an added incentive to intra- mural sports participants The Daily is this year offering an award to the individual making the outstanding record in the year's program. The award will be known as The Daily I-M Individual Performance Award. Fraternity men and independents alike will compete in the various.in- tramural sports in an effort to win. Points will be awarded to the indi- vidual performers in the same pro- portion as they are awarded to the teams with which they are compet- ing. Varsity Matmen Aim To Shake Obscurity Of Former Seasons 'a n, 2 Wagner S Select Sale Value Now $2450 50 $3950" Your Last Chance to Buy at Such Prices Ae State Street at Liberty Big Field Tees Off In Los Angeles Open LOS ANGELES, Jan. 6.-P)-Op- ening guns of the $8,000 Los Angeles Open, richest event of California's winter golf campaign, sounded on scattered fronts today as 200 am- bitious players sought to qjualify for the tournament. A trimmed field of 128 will go into the 72-hole battle Firday with a check for $2,500 awaiting the win- ner in the final 18 holes Monday. 29 top notch performers, including ex- champions of the event, were ex- empt from today's qualifying round. 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