TUESDAY. JAN. 12, 1937 '1" 1-1 E Al ICAJIGAN DAILY PAVE THREE . ,.. ..., _..., a as tJ i.a a. 1_. a..a ,... s MichiganRallies In Final Minutes To Down Wildcats, 34-31 Bill Barclay's. Follow-In Shot Clinches Game Purple's Attempt To Stop Jake Townsend's Passes Proves Boomerang Is First Big Ten Win (Continued from Page 1) 'in the first half the Wildcats hit ap- proximately 48 per cent of their long shots for five baskets out of the seven that they made In the second half they cooled off, but still hit enough to pull ahead to what seemed to be a winning margin. Al- together the Purple team made but four shots in the whole game. Speed Injected Michigan, on the other hand, was playing with the top on the basket. Time and again its long shots re- fused to drop. But the Wolverines hit enough of their shots to draw in the Northwestern defense and open up Townsend and the backboard. But it was the sudden injection of speed into the Varsity offense that won the ball game. The over- cautious, sloppy ball that has marked Michigan's play faded away when the situation got serious and the Wol- verines started covering loose balls, passing sharply, and playing with a pnch that couldn't be stopped. Lonborg started Guy Mercer and Hi Bender, substitute guards, in place of his regulars, Bob Voigts and Duke Vance, in hopes that they could give his squad enough speed to ruri the big Michigan team into the ground. But the Wolverines, in top physical condition, could not be run into the ground and the strategy proved a complete failure. Battle See-Saws Fred Trenkle opened the scoring with a basket from the foul circle but Townsend tossed an assist to Pata- nelli to even up the score Then Gee hit a follow-in and McMichaels made his first basket to tie it up and hit a free throw to put Northwestern ahead. Barclay and Trenkle traded shots and Herm Fishman made two points from far out on the floor. Then Bender tied up the score at 8-8 with a foul shot and McMichaels put the Wildcats back in the lead. At this point Northwestern began to foul Townsend, who collected five free throws in the first half, and the lead continued to change with the Evan- ston team ahead, 20 to 16, at the half. The lead changed eight times ir the first period and the score was tied six times. Object To Referees Jake again sunk a hook shot tc put Northwestern ahead six points at the opening of the second half. Townsend assisted Fishman as he went under and then picked up a free throw. McMichaels hit anothe long, Trenkle got loose and weni under the basket alone and Gene Smith made a foul shot that was the result of Gee's fourth personal. Meanwhile Barclay and Townsend had each hit another free throw an Gee had made a long shot to make the score 30 to 23 for Northwesterr when the Michigan team suddenl3 got going and fought its way to its seventh victory of the season The Varsity made 10 out of 14 fre throws, while the Wildcats hit nin out of 12. The crowd was dissatisfied with the refereeing job turned in by Nicl Kearns of DePaul, who had a har ,I The PRESS ANGLE By GEORGE J. ANDROS Another Suicide Schedule MICHIGAN STATE, Northwestern and Minnesota will be Michigan's first three grid opponents next fall . . The only intersectional clash will be with Pennsylvania,. again at Philadelphia, and we understand that the Quakers may also be added to the 1939 and 1940 schedules ... Ross Faulkner, sophomore from Montclair, N. J., was never out for track until he came to Michigan . . . Now lie is considered one of the leading quarter milersj on the Wolverine cinder squad and with a little experience should be a sure point winner . . . Johnny Smithers, Varsity halfback, is back in the hos- pital because of the same leg ailment that kept him out of the final with Ohio State last fall. In 1912 Michigan was leading the Pennsylvania football team, .21- 20, with three seconds left to play ... Michigan punted and the final whistle blew while the ball was in the air but, according to the rules, play must continue until the ball is downed . . . Marshall, Penn safetyman, caught the ball and ran to a touchdown, the Quakers, winning, 27-21, after a successful attempt for the extra point . . t Now that young Bob Feller has signed his 1937 contract the ball yard scribes will turn their attention to holdout Luke Appling of the Chicago White Sox . . . Appling is the American League batting champion and J. Louis Comiskey will be forced to offer a highly substantial sum before getting his star short stop into the fold. Benny, The Greatest BENNY OOSTERBAAN is considered by Fielding H. Yost to be the greatest natural athlete he has ever seen . . . Benny was one of Michigan's few nine-letter men ... There is an interesting story about Ben and the 1926 Ohio State grid battle . . . At the end of the first quarter the Buckeyes were leading, 10-0, and the Wolverines had not even threatened as yet ."..Watly Weber, present backfield coach but Varsity fullback at that time, was trying to pep up the Michigan eleven ... At the conclusion of Weber's oratory Oosterbaan said, "Hell, Wally, why worry? We haven't had the ball yet." .. . Michigan won the game, 17-16 ... From 1901 to 1905 inclusive Michigan won 55 football games, lost one and tied one . . . When the 1937 United States Davis Cup team is picked there will be tremendous repercussions if "Bitsy" Grant is again omitted .:. The Atlanta midget, with his characteristic love of pulling the unexpected, Sat- urday bowled over Don Budge, America's No. 1 amateur, in straight sets and thus added another scalp to his long list of upset victims . . . Notre Dame made 145 substitutions while beating the Navy, 26-2, in 1930 . . . To me the proposed boycott of the Jim Braddock-Max Schmeling heavyweight title bout next June is ridiculous . . . Politics should be kept out of the athletic Illinois Turns Back Indiana Quintet, 4a-31 Purdue Beats Iowa, 35-31, To Keep Conference L .ea d BckevesIn Townsends Lacking, Gopher Sextet Features Goalie But Frosh Cagers Wilkinson And Veteran Offense Reveal Ample Skills_______ Despite the fact that the freshman basketball squad boasts no Townsend and still needs to be worked on, Coach Ray Fisher believes that the squad this year can easily compare with the average of the last few years and out- CHAMPAIGN, Ill.. Jan. 11.-k P)- class many of them. Illinois handed Indiana its first de-' With nearly two months of solid feat of the Big Ten basketball sea- practice behind them, the frosh ag- sor before 7,000 fans tonight, turning gregation is developing into a smooth back the highly rated Hoosiers, 40 to working, fast, shifty, ball team. The 31, with a fast-breaking offense and several offensive plays that were first a defense that tightened up to choke handed out have been augmented by off a last-minute rush by the in- more and by several defensive tactics vaders. besides. With Lou Boudreau sinking three Ray Stands Out field goals and Henry Combes play- Working around tall Jimmy Ray as ing just as effectively, Illinois sbuilt a pivot man, the fast breaking for- up an 18 to 7 lead at the half. The wards have been going hot in practice Hoosiers, who won their first two against the second team. Ray plays Conference starts from Iowa and his position with a rhythm not us- Chicago, missed numerous short his pon st arytm nt n shots by inches. ually found so early in first-year men, The Illini continued to dominate Charley Pink, who stands consid- play during the first 15 minutes of erably less than six feet, makes up the second half, building their mar- for his lack of height by his brilliant gin up to 34 to 15. Then Platt, basket-shooting and speedy floor play a sub guard, sank three field goals works well with Ray, taking hi in a row, and Etnire and Gunning passes for many close-in shots. immediately followed with five more Herb Brogan, although a little field goals between them. At this wanting on his follow-up of shots point the Illini defense, led by Riegel, and pivot passes, is responsible for lanky center, braced to halt the Hoo- many baskets made from beyond the sier charge. foul circle. Freddie Trosko, who played with PURDUE TRIPS IOWA the Michigan state championship IOWA CITY, Jan. 11.-(A)-Pur- high school team two years ago, i due's nifty ball handling and free- proving a real ball hawk and does a throw shooting gave the Boilermak- great deal of the work in bringing ers a 35 to 31 victory over the Iowa the ball down the floor. basketball team tonight as the win- Height Available ners remained undefeated in the Bob Palmer's easy ball handling Western Conference race. and his quick breaks add to the well- ; -_oiled appearance of the team. Russ i' t 5) S S t. P t S By GLEN PHELPS i first attacking line are Ed Arnold Coach Larry Armstrong will lead and Ridge Baker. Another trio of his Gopher hockey champions into veterans makes up the second line, Ann Arbor on Friday of this week, and reads from left to right, Joe for the local end of a four-game Schwab, Jimmy Carlson and Wally home and home series that annually Taft. features all that is goodand a lot The newest pride of Minneapolis that isn't called for in the way of is the so-called 'pony line', com- real hockey. posed of Loarne Randell, Ken An- To date this winter, the choice derson fand Ray .Wallace-first-year morsel in the Minnesota 'shinny' dish men all, but duly tried and proven. is a double victory over Dartmouth's In fact Coach Armstrong states that Eastern Champion Indians. In this Wallace is the man behind the series, the men of Armstrong were "hardest shot in amateur hockey!" far and away the better, and in par- Trouble At befense ticular, the grid quarterback, and On the line of defense, however, incumbent goal keeper, Bud Wilkin- the Gophers plead. trouble. Most son, was a whole powerhouse in him- severe of the losses has been that of self. The Indians were able to 'get Bill Loomis, a promising sophomore, to' Bud only once during the 120 who was rerioved from competition minutes of play. by ineligibility. Johnny Ganley, Bill Ten Veterans Present Bredensen and Dick Kroll, a 185- But Wilkinson's goal sweeping isn't pound sophomore round out the de- the Gophers only claim to strength. fensive brigade. When they arm for battle, 14 men The Gophers became champions of appear on the official roster. Of the Big Ten last winter when they these 14, 10 are experienced cam- took three games out of a possible paigners in Big Ten circles. four from Coach Eddie Lowrey's ther At thehelm is the veteran center reigning champion Wolverines. Capt. Ray Bjorck. Completing this t i l' t ., If Y .e n e ,s r e HOME-TOWN CLUB The Chicago White Sox have more home boys on their roster than any other American League club, six al- together, Pitcher John Rigney, Catchers Skoronski and Kenneth Sil- vestri, First Baseman Frank Houska and Second Baseman Tony Piet, in Clearance! Entire Stock of Finely-- Tailored Ready-for-wear Ove rcoa ts addition to Coach Billy Webb. b f (ai S R L I I 1 1~ 1 5 J world. -De Lano. ., w. time keeping his eye ern. on Northwest-I Athletie Board 'Studies' Grid Coaching Setup (Continued from Page 1) earning with $4,285; but after ex- penses were paid the cagers were about $6,500 in the red. Tennis showed the smallest loss of all sports despite the fact that the sport had no income. Track proved to be the worst money-making sport of the University, showing no earnings and expenses of $10,500. Items included in the disbursement side of the bal- ance showed $148 for cheerleading and $360 for Olympic tryouts. The receipts side showed an income of $4,000 for radio broadcasting rights and $1,245 for stadium concession. Patton Lauded The profits for the year were not large enough to enable the Board to retire any of the stadium bonds, but $10,000 was paid toward the liquida- tion of bank loans and $6,100 went into plant additions. The outlook for the next year ap- peared bright, as the report stated that "since the income of the Board outside of football and its expendi- tures generally are fairly consistent, it is to be expected that the financial report for the year 1936-37 will show a considerable increase in opera- tion profit." The report lauded Harvey Patton, winner of the Conference Medal for all-around excellence and scholar- ship in athletics. It said, "The dimu- nitive Mr. Patton made a remarkable record in his favorite event, the 440- yard dash. His record in scholarshipj is one to cause pride." Del Prete's GREATEST MICHAELS STERN Suits Overcoats TOPCOATS, averaging 331/3% Off $30 SUITS $21.75 $35 SUITS $25.75 $40 SUITS $27.75 $45 SUITS $29.75 TUXEDOES $25.00 TAILS $30.00 OVERCOATS $21.75.to $37.60 TOPCOATS. $21.75 to $28.00 20% OFF on Diz Has A New Version Of Old 'St. Louis Blues' CHICAGO, Jan. 11.-(P)-Dizzy Dean dusted off his boss-baiting actv again today. "OP Diz" in Chicago tohwork on one of his sidelines, said he wouldv welcome being traded off by the Car- dinals who haven't done right by "mev or the St. Louis fans" and that he ° figured his services worth more than Babe Ruth ever got from the NewV York Yankees. "If the Cardinals did the right thing by me," he said without the trace of a smile, "they'd pay me more than Babe Ruth got. Then the fans could brag St. Louis had the highest- priced ball player in history. "I'll make this proposition," he said, still wearing a straight face. "They give me a contract for $50,000 and I'll guarantee to win 25 games. If I don't win 25, I'll work for noth- ing." POSTPONE MATCH The Vines-Perry professional ten- nis show has postponed its scheduled. performance in Detroit tonight due1 to the illness of Ellsworth Vines, whot is confined in a Chicago hospital withT influenza. I Fred Perry, the Briton who' recent-I ly succumbed to the lucrative offersZ of tennis promoters and forsook am- ateur ranks, had beaten Vines, hith- erto tops in the pro game, in three' matches on their present tour, which included contests at New York, Cleve- land and Chicago. BOMBER BOMBS AGAIN BUFFALO, N. Y., Jan. 11.--(,P- Joe Louis of Detroitknocked out Stanley Ketchell of Bloomfield, N. J., in the second round of a scheduled' four-round fight tonight. Iowa connected with 15 gift tosses', but couldn't match the ball hand- lers of last years co-champions. Pur- due shot 17. Paul Malaska, Purdue's junior guard, kept the home team on the short end throughout the contest, whipping in four baskets and 2 free throws to tie for scoring honors with Iowa's Wally Gaddis, and two of his teammates. GOPHERS TOP MAROONS MINNEAPOLIS, Jan. 11.-(P)- iVinnesota opened its Western Con- ference basketball season tonight with a 30 to 23 victory over Chicago. After the first minute of play, in which Chicago scored on a free throw, Minnesota stepped ahead for an ad- vantage that was retained through- out. The speed of Gordon Addington, which made him high-scorer with a total of 12 points, saved the game for Minnesota. The loss was the second in as many Conference games for Chicago. BUCKEYES WIN OPENER COLUMBUS, O., Jan. 11.-(P)- Ohio State University launched its Western Conference basketball cam- paign tonight with a 28 to 22 victory over Wisconsin The defeat was the third straight in Big Teri competition for Wisconsin which previously had lost to Purdue and Illinois. Dobson, another tall boy, takes over the duties of Ray on occasions and shows up to advantage under the bas- ket. Horace Adams, the tallest man on the squad, standing around six-four or five, has shown remarkable im- provement since the opening of prac- tice but still lacks polish. Joe Savilla, frosh football star and another giant. also is displaying a great deal of ad- vancement in his performance but is a trifle slow in comparison with the smaller members of the team. THE JOHN MARSHALL ,LAWCOURSES (40 weeks per year) SC H OO L Afternoon-3years SC~~ HL days... 4:30-.:30 FOUNDED 1899 Evening - 4 years Mon. Wed., Fri., AN 630-920 ACCREDITED Post-graduate LAW SCHOOL lyear..twiceaweek Practice courses TEXT and CASE exclusively. METHOD All courses lead # to degrees. For Catalog, recom-. Two years' college mended list of pre-legal work required for subjects, and booklet, entrance. "StudyofLawandProper New classes form Preparation"'address: in Feb.and Sept. Edward T. Lee, Dean. 315 Plymouth Ct., Chicago, Ill. READ THE WANT ADS Formerly Formerly Formerly Formerly Formerly 45.00 40.00 37.50 35.00 30.00 $27.50 and $25.00 NOW Now Now Now Now Now ' Suits $37.50 $32.50 STROH'S PABST BLUE kIBBON FRIAR'S ALE At All Dealers J. J. O'KANE, Dist. Dial 3500 and $35.00 NOW and $30.00 NOW Come in. It will be a pleasure to show you our merchandise. THE DOWNTOWN STORE FOR MICHIGAN MEN $t!b9 &rT MAI Nb 309 SOUTH MAIN I' BIG TEN STANDINGS Purdue .......... Ohio State ....... Minnesota ....... Indiana .......... Illinois ........... Michigan........ Chicago ........... Northwestern ... . Iowa ........... Wisconsin...... W L . .3 0 ,.1 0Q . .1 0 . .2 1 . .2 1 ..1 1 . .Q 2 . .1 2 . .1 2 . .Q 3 Pet. 1.000 1.000 1.000 .667 .667 .500 .000 .333 .333 .000 Attention: FRATERNITIES, SORORITIES, STUDENT ORGAN IZATONS - $27.50 $23.50 $19.50 33.50 30.00 28.50 27.50 23.50 Story Book Finish Michigan (34) Townsend, f ....... Barclay, f........ Gee, c ............. Fishman, g ........ Patanelli, g ........ Smick, f........... Lane, c ............ Thomas, g ......... . fg ft ..3 7 ..2 2 ..2 1 ..1 0 ..2 0 ..2 0 ..0 0 ..0 0 a 2 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 Totals.. Northwestern (31) Trenkle, f........ McMichael, f..... Smith, c..,........ Mercer, g.......... Bender, g.......... Blume, f .......... Nagode, c......... Vance, g........... Voigts, g ........... Totals......... .12 10 4 fg ft a ..3 0 0 ..3 3 0 ..3 2 0 ..1 0 0 ..0 20 ..0 00 ..0 20 .0 0 0 pf t 2 13 1 6 4 5 2 2 2 4 1 4 0 0 0 0 12 34 pf t 1 6- 0 9 3 8 3 2 1 2 0 0 0 2 1 2 1 0 For 'ROYALS' See S302 5. RI DER'S State TYPEWRITERS Your group picture and 11 may desire to appear on your page in the 1937 Mich- &iii any additional Shoe Sale iganensian must be taken before Avoid delay and arrange today with JANUARY 24th. pictures you Messrs. Spedding, 11 9 01031 Officials: Nick Kearns (DePaul) and John Schommer (Chicagol. Score at half: Northwestern 20, Michigan 16. Free Throws Missed: Michigan 5 (Townsend 2, Barclay, Gee 2); Northwestern 3 (McMichael 2, Na- gode). NUNN-BUSH SHOES $10.00 Values $ 9.00 Values . Now $8.45 Now $7.45 Now $6.45 Rentschler or Dey for your sittings. The 1937 MIC GNESA $ 8.00 Values . . I-M BASKETBALL SCORES Kappa Nu (A) 9. Sigma Phi (A) 17. OTHER MAKES at $4.95 I U