SUNDAY, JAM. 10, 19217 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE o SUNDAY, JAN. 10, 1937 PAOE THREE Michigan Grapplers Vanquish Dearborn A thletic Club 28-8 Varsity Tallies Five Falls To Take Easy Win Opponents Are Outclassed As Matmen Make Initial1 Home Appearance Danner Stands Out By BUD BENJAMIN There was action galore last night at the Yost Field House as Mich- igan's up-and-coming wrestlers de- cisively defeated the Dearborn Ath- letic Club 28-8. Taking five of the eight matches by falls, the Varsity came through in grand style to win easily in their initial home bow of the current sea- son and served warning that they will be ready for Lehigh and Frank- lin and Marshall whom they meet next week. Speicher Wins By Fall Johnny Speicher started off activ- ities for the evening in the 118- pound division by pinning George Chang, his lanky Chinese opponent, with a half nelson and a body press in 4:37. Speicher dominated the fight throughout and handled his op- ponent with ease. Dearborn came right back in the 126-pound bout to tie things up. John Chosoff threw Ed Kellman of Mich- igan with a headlock and a body press in 8:16 to win the surprise decision of the evening. Kellman had much the best of the early part of the bout and proved to be a real crowd pleaser with his colorful and aggres- sive tactics. With only two minutes of fighting left, however, Chosoff suddenly threw a headlock on Kell- man and before the crowd or Kell- man realized what had happened the match was over. Cameron Meets Schoolmate Paul Cameron, who was not ex- pected to wrestle due to illness, made a surprise appearance in the 135- pound bout and pinned his oppo- nent Marvin Gustafson in 6:18 with a body bridge. An interesting side- light to this bout was the fact that Cameron and Gustafson both are Cresco, Iowa, boys and wrestled to- gether in high school. Cameron used a figure four and a body scissors very effectively to mount up a four-minute time ad- vantage in the early part of the match. Whenhis opponent retal- iated and put a body scissors on him later in the bout, Cameron bridged back and pinned his opponent to bring the match to an unexpected and thrilling close. Louis Mascruskus ran into a tough opponent in the 145-pound di- vision in Bill Combs, former high school champ. of Oklahoma. Combs, exceedingly fast and tricky, tied up his opponent's legs and rode along very easily to pile up an impres- sive time advantage of 5:35 and a victory. Captain Frank Bissell ignored the fact that his opponent, Flip Kay, was an ex-weight lifter in the 155- pound bout, pinning him easily in 3:34 with a bar arm and a half nel- son. Frank was master of the sit- uation throughout. Frank Morgan threw Joe Berry, Dearborn grappler who hails from far off Arabia, in the 165-pound division in 4:44. Morgan worked a wrist-lock on his opponent after mounting up an advantage with a body hold, and followed this with a keylock which ended the bout and gave Michigan another fall..Y Danner Pins Foe Harland Danner of Michigan met George Williams at 175 pounds and the two put on the best bout of the evening. The match started very fast, and the men brought the crowd to their feet, as first one and then the other gained an advantage. Sev- eral times it seemed as if one or the other would be pinned, but each time the hold was broken and action started all over again. Suddenly Danner clamped a wrist lock on his opponent, followed it up with a keylock and Williams was through. Forrest Jordan defeated Johnny Tipa of Dearborn, mounting up a time advantage of 6:55, in the heavy- weight division. Cagers Lose To Boilermakers; Hockey Team Defeats Sarnia O The PRESS ANGLE By GEORGE J. ANDROS He Got Nowhere Fast JOHNNY MAULBETSCH, one of the greatest backfield men turned out by Fielding Yost in his many years at the helm of Michigan athletics, gained about 300 yards against Harvard in 1914 . . . Each time the Wol- verines got within the shadow of the Crimson goal Quarterback Hughitt signaled some other back to carry the ball . . . Harvard won, 7-0 . . . For some time the issue of the lively ball has been up for discussion before the baseball solons and recently they voted to deaden the horsehide . . . For those of you who don't know, this will largely be done by simply winding the pellet a little less tightly . . . It looks like the Ruthian fence busting era is past its hey day. There are at the present time eight Moores in the major leagues . With one more they could have a complete team among themselves and we understand that several new members of the clan will be trying out as rookies in the training camps late next month . . . Rather a dirty trick on the scribes, we'd say . . . Walter Gaddis, forward on the Iowa basketball team, was a very nervous. man just before game time a few weeks ago despite the fact that he was not even with the club . . . At the time his teammates were swinging into action Gaddis was becoming a very proud father of a husky baby boy. Two Fighting Heats-i THERE ARE NO GREATER fighting hearts anywhere than those of Kimmy Williams and Neree Alix . . . Williams, captain of the 1937 baseball team, has been out of school since last February because of a serious malady that kept him near death for weeks and only recently was he able to leave his bed . . . A catcher, Kimmy formerly weighed 180 pounds but dwindled away to 115 . . . He has gained 11 of them back and is deter- mined to reenter Michigan next semester and lead the ball club to a Big Ten title . . . Alix, a great two miler, broke his leg while running in this event against California two years ago and to all appearances his track career was finished . . . He spent weeks in a California hospital but still had his heart set on being a great distance runner . . . Back in school, Neree is working hard for Coach Hoyt and has apparently picked up where he left off in April, 1935 . . . Michigan track opponents will see a lot of Neree's heels this season. The practical jokers on the Wolverine basketball squad will be the death of Leo Beebe if they keep on . . . On the way home from Butler early this week the tall sophomore climbed into his berth only to find that someone had filled it with ice . . . Leo, a very serious individual, suspected Coach Cappon of the deed . . . He then climbed out, took several pieces of the ice, and decided that turn about is fair play headed for Cappy's berth . . Just as he opened the curtains and was about to shove the chilly particles between the coach's sheets who should saunter down the aisle but Coach Franklin C. Cappon himself . . . "Why, Leo," said Cappy, "what's all this about?" . . . Beebe, failing to find a proper answer, mumbled his way back to his own berth and then spent a sleepless night worrying whether Cappy would bounce him off the squad . . . The matter was laughingly cleared up in the morning.--eLano. Pro Gate Receipts Skyrocket As 'Ellie' Vines Falls Before Perry Michigcan Falls Before Purdue Speed. 37-26 Boycott May Stop Braddock- Schmeling- Bout Young Tallies 14 Points NEW YORK, Jan. 9.-(P)-The To Remain Number One boycott of the James J. Braddock- . Te SMax Schmeling heavyweight cham- Bpionship fight picked up momentum 1 (Continued from Page 1) connected for his "first field goal on a tip-in and Fishman made a one- handed shot from the foul circle.' Anderson tied up the game from the field. Then Young dashed by Herm Fish- man to put Purdue ahead. Anderson hit from the field again and Gee followed in to make the score 16 to 14 for Purdue at the half. Fishman opened the second period with a score from the field to tie up, the game and Patanelli put the Var- sity ahead with a freetthrow.kThen Anderson went under the basket by himself on a fast break and Downey dropped a hook shot from the left side of the floor as Michigan took time out. Then Purdue began its stalling ,tactics. Seward, the Boilermaker center went to the back line and slowed the game up but to no avail. Gee took a pass from Patanelli and went under to put the Wolverines back in the lead. But that ended Michigan's scoring for a long spell. Young collected seven points and Sines made one before Barclay finally put the ball through the basket with a one-handed shot. Then Sines, Malaska, Young, and Hutt made eight points to bring the Purdue total to 37 points as Lambert and Cappon substituted freely, but for different reasons of course. Thomas ended the scoring with a basket on a pass from Long as the gun sounded. All freshman boxers report at 4 p.m. tomorrow at boxing room, Waterman Gym. I-M Ice Hockey And Basketball Tourneys Open Two annual I-M tournaments will get underway Monday night imme- diately following the Michigan- Northwestern basketball game as eight teams clash in the opening round of the inter-fraternity basket- ball tourney on the intramural courts and Phi Kappa Tau tackles Alpha Delta Phi's pucksters at the Coli- seum in the initial ice hockey tilts. The four basketball curtain-raisers will match the following teams: Delta Tau Delta vs. Phi Sigma Delta, Phi Alpha Kappa vs. Alpha Rho Chi, Sigma Phi vs. Kappa Nu, and Alpha Sigma Phi vs. Phi Delta Phi. There will be only the single ice hockey game played Monday night. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Notre Dame 25; Butler 24. Iowa 33; Northwestern 26. Indiana 46; Chicago 26. Ohio 39, N.Y.U. 32. Illinois 31, Wisconsin 28. LASH WINS IN 3,000 New York, Jan. 9. - (P) - In- diana's Don Lash, America's premier two miler, turned in a remarkable exhibition over the flatboards to win the 3,000 meter invitation run as the Columbus Council of the Knights of Columbus opened the indoor track and field season in the 106th Infan- try Armory tonight. Lash ran the distance in 8:32.4. today. The Jewish war veterans of the United States, 250,000 strong, threw their support to the non-sectarian anti-Nazi league, the A. F. of L. and various Catholic and Protestant or- ganizations seeking to stop the fight from being held in this country. Boycott Is Nation-Wide Harry H. Schaeffer, commander- in-chief of the veterans, announced here he is notifying the 150 posts throughout the country to withhold support from the fight. Although Madison Square Garden and the 20th Century Sporting Club, joint promoters of the fight, con- tinued to withhold comment, belief was general along Broadway that the battle is doomed. Jim May Not Fight Joe Gould, manager of Braddock, reiterated his statement that if the boycott goes into effect he will not permit Braddock to fight the Ger- man. "My job is to make money for Jim," he said. "We can't do it under con- ditions like that." If a Schmeling fight is definitely out o fthe question, the New York State Athletic Commission may des- ignate Joe Louis the No. 1 challenger and pave the way for a meeting be- tween the negro and Braddock'and a possible million dollar gate. Max Replies BERLIN, Jan. 9.-(P)-Appeals to American fair play came from Max Schmeling today when newshof a movement to boycott the forthcom- ing heavyweight championship fight between Schmeling and Jimmy Brad- dock reached Germany. "I believe the American public is too fair to be influenced by a polit- ical campaign against a sportsman like me who never went in for poli- tics," Schmeling said. Young Too Good Purdue (37) rg ft pf t Young, f.... ..........6 2 0 14 Anderson, f............3 2 3 8 Seward, c ..............0 0 2 0 Malaska, g.............1 0 1 2 Downey,g..............2 1 0 5 Zink, f .................0 00 0 Sines, f...............1 30 5 H utt, f .................1 1 0 3 Holloway, c .............0 0 1 0 Dean, g...............0 0 10 Mihal, g ................0 0 0 0 Totals............14 9 8 37 Michigan (26) fg ft pf t Townsend, f ............1 3 2 5 Barclay, f ..............2 0 2 4 G ee, c .................4 1 0 9 Patanelli, g .............0 1 4 1 Fishman, g .............2 0 2 4 Thomas, f.............1 0 0 2 Smickf................ 0 0 0 0' Jennings, f .............1 0 1 1 Beebe,g..............0 0 0 0 Long ..................0 0 0 0 Totals............10 6 11 25 Score at half, 16-14, Purdue. Three In A Row Michigan Pos Pt. Edward, Wood..........G........Harris Simpson ........D.........Clute Smith .......... D ........ France Heyliger........C......Manning James .......... W.......Prudence Fabello ......... W ........ Levan Michigan Spares: Cooke, Merrill, Ed Chase. First period: No scoring. Penalty: L. Ruter (holding) Simpson (illegal body check). Second period: Scoring: Manning 10:24. Penalty: Heyliger (tripping) Grant (tripping) France (high stick). Third period : Scoring: Cooke (Heyliger) 12:45. Penalty: Guttridge (tripping) France, major (fighting), Hey- liger, major (fighting), France, 10-minute misconduct penalty. Overtime: Scoring: James (Fabello and Heyliger) 7:01. Michigan Wins 2-1 Thrilling Overtime Game Heyliger And 'Red' France Draw Major Penalties In Last Period Brawl (Continued from Page 1) outstanding net minder that will be seen here this season, smothered Fa- bello's shot as he rode in close. Bob Simpson dropped to the ice a moment later when he caught a hard shot from the stick of Red France flush in the groin, but the hard-hit- ting Duluth defenseman was able to continue after receiving first aid. The lone Pt. Edward score was de- cidedly a fluke. Jack Manning let go a shot from about 15 feet out that Bill Wood. stopped. Both Wood and Bert Smith attempted to clear the puck as Manning came in after the rebound and the disc dribbled into the corner of the net. Harris out-guessed Heyliger and James when they broke into the clear a moment later and a minute after Heyliger broke through again. Red France smacked the Beaver with his stick and was promptly penalized. Coach Eddie Lowrey sent out four forwards but Harris was too good as the Wolverines tried desperately to knot the count. A Michigan goal was called back in the opening minutes of the third stanza when Bill Guttridge spilled James. Another four-man Michigan attack failed when Goalie Harris out- guessed George Cooke who was en- tirely alone. France an~d Heyliger staged their fist fight with 14 minutes left and as a result both teams played a man short for the next five. Bill Wood made another beautiful save when he dove twenty feet out of his cage to smother a bounding puck. Johnny Fabello broke away with the puck and circling the rugged Pt. Edward defense, blazed a drive that Harris just turned aside. Fabello crashed into the boards and time was called while he was helped to his feet. The Wolverines finally got to Har- ris on a beautiful play by Heyliger and Cooke. Vic slipped the Windsor sophomore a pass out on the right flank just as he hit the defense, and George picked the far corner with a terrific drive to tie up the game. Bill Wood, performing like a vet- eran, matched save for save with the brilliant Sarnia goalie, and Mich- igan's improved defense combination that functioned perfectly all night kept the Pt. Edward threats from materializing during the overtime period. The first five minutes of the extra stanza had elapsed and the cash cus- tomers were settling down for a sec- ond overtime when Heyliger let one go from the red. line. The puck hit the board in back of the cage and Johnny Fabello, pouncing on it like a cat, passed it out in front to Gib James. The Ottawa star was wait- ing, and with one sweep of his stick slapped the rubber home for the win- ning goal of the game. PRINTING LOW RATES - FINE WORK Dial 2-1013 . . 308 North Main Street Downtown,North of Main Post Office The ATHENS PRESS SEE US FIRST Veteran, High Scoring Wildcat Quintet Invades Wolverine Lair By CARL GERSTACKER With two matches already played in the barnstorming tour ,#of Ells- worth Vines, world's professional net champion, and Fred Perry, late ruler of the world's amateur tennis circles, the prestige of last year's net pros in general and 'Ellie' Vines in par- ticular has dropped considerably. Perry, one of the greatest match' players of all time, is leading the lanky Californian by a score of five sets to one and seems to have no in- tention of doing anything else but' keep on winning. Briton Upsets Dope When the black-haired dynamic Briton upset the dope bucket and the Broadway betting experts by taking four out of five sets from Vines in his professional debut in New York city, it was, as Californians would say, "unusual" but at the same time it was very good business. Until Perry came along, Ellie had had things all his way in the pro tennis world and had run out of com- petition and likewise big money gates. The former world's No. 1 amateur player, by his victory, proved that Vines was not unbeatable and con- sequently revived the waning interest in pro net matches. When Perry took two straight sets from the lanky pro king in Cleveland Friday, it was still good business for the box office and the British star but Fred's victory held in it an ominous note for Mr. Vines. Vines Losing Prestige These matches mean bread and butter to "Ellie." Unless he can jcome out of the present tour with a sizeable margin over Perry his days is the No. 1 professional player and box office attraction are over. On Vines side, it must be said that he has been weakened by illness and seems to be in very poor physical Shape. It is unfortunate for him that she tour started at this time because the moralaffect of the beatings that he has taken may tell on him even after he recovers physically. Perry says that he is playing pro tennis to support his wife-beautiful Helen Vinson of picture fame-and whatever his reasons are for entering the professional field it is certain that he is out to 'clean up,' and there- fore will be hard to beat. Ellie has the advantage in that he is accustomed to the grind of a barn- storming tour and should be betteri able to stand up under the strain of the 40 matches than the Briton; but Perry is probably the greatest match player in the tennis world today and has fooled the experts many times before. By IRVING LISAGOR Coach Dutch Lonborg will bring a squad of seasoned cagers to the Fieldhouse Monday night when his Northwestern Wildcats tangle with the Wolverines. In fact, Lonborg's material is so replete that he has five last year's lettermen gracing the bench and only one newcomer in starting lineup. This plethora of reserves, along with a high-scoring first team, has made the Purple five a leading con- tender for the Conference top spot. They feature Mike McMichaels (leave the "s" out) and Fred Trenkle, two sharp-eyed veterans, at the for- ward posts. Against Illinois last week, both men netted eight baskets apiece. Evanston critics claim that McMichaels will be second to no one in the Big Ten scoring race. Vance Is Good For his center, Lonborg can choose between Jake Nagode, who laced 10 points against the Illini, and Jean Smith. Both men were available last year. Although Nagode occupied the pivot job most of the 1935 season, Smith pushed him back to the bench in the early games this season. How- ever, on the strength of his perform- ance against Illinois, the Wildcat's Jake is likely to be in the starting five against Michigan. The guard positions are ably handled by Duke Vance, co-captain of last year's quintet, and Bob Voights, husky football tackle. Voights is the only new man in the Wildcat ranks, having pushed both Babe Bender, also a gridder and regu- lar on the '35 cage squad, and Guy Mercer, another vet, out of the im- mediate picture. Vance is general- ly regarded as one of the most con- sistent performers on Big Ten hard- woods. Cleo Diehl, who also played on the Purple's championship eleven, is a capable forward replacement and does considerable alternating with Trenkle. Tug Blume, co-captain with Vance in '35, is another excep- tionally able forward at Lonborg's disposal. Wildcats Defeated Once Northwestern came through its pre-conference schedule with only one blemish on its slate, that against Notre Dame in a game in which ob- servers say the Purple were definitelyI off. 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