THURSDAY, JAN. 14, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TH n THURSDAY, JAN. 14, 1937 PAGE TlIRH1~ Puck Jinx May Keep Jonny Fabello From Minnesota Tilt Flu Threatens Hard Skating Varsity Star Lowrey's Weakened Crew Prepares For Important Gopher Ice.Series Merrill To First Line By BONTH WILLIAMS The grim jinx that insists on pur- suing Michigan's scrapping hockey team from year to year struck yester- day for the second time this season when Johnny Fabello, hard skating right winger on the first line was confined to the Health Service with a severe cold. Whether or not the flashy junior will be able to take the ice in the Coliseum Friday night when the Wol- verines face the rampant Minnesota Gophers in the first of a two-game series is still problematical. Merrill Moves Up Jack Merrill took E'abello's place on the first line in the final practice session of the week last night and in- dications are that he will continue there if Fabello is not in shape to play. Coach Eddie Lowrey, thinking no doubt of that great series with the Gophers here last season when his little seven-man squad outbattled three Minnesota forward lines for an overtime victory in the first game only to be beaten by a galaxy of sub- stitutes the following evening, voiced his own hope and that of the team when he intimated that there was a good chance Fabello might be able to play at least a part of the all-im- portant series. Should Fabello be kept out of both games, Michigan will face the invad- ing Norsemen with but eight men. One of these, Ed Chase, is a com- paratively unseasoned campaigner. Dick Berryman, senior winger, has been forced to quit the squad due to scholastic complications. Gophers Undefeated In utter contrast, Minnesota brings a seasoned band of 15 performers to battle it out with the Wolverines. Un- defeated in 5 games, the Gophers under the tutealage of Coach Larry Armstrong, have scored 18 times while their capable net minder, Bud Wilkinson, who incidentally was the smartest quarterback in the Western Conference this season, has held the opposition to five goals. The Gophers boast a triumph over Carleton College and two wins each over Dartmouth and a semi-pro club called the Alaska Polar Bears. Of the 15 men whom Armstrong plans to bring here for the Michigan series, all but three learned their hockey in one of the fast stepping high school leagues which are prom- inent in the Twin Cities. Carlson High Scorer The leading Gopher scorer at pres- ent is Jimmy Carlson, second line center, who leads the parade with three goals and four assists. Wally Taft is in second place with four goals and one assist, and Ed Arnold, diminutive but veteran flanker, who has tallied three times and has been credited with one assist, is third. Coach Lowrey plans to rest his lit- tle squad tonight in preparation for the tough two-game series Friday and Saturday. The Wolverines have looked good in practice all week and will turn in a great performance against Minnesota. If Fabello is kept out of the series however, it will mean that Michigan's first line, plus George Cooke and possibly Ed Chase, must match the pace of three shifts of Gophers for 60 heartbreaking min- utes. The Wolverines are in a tough spot. GOLF COMES HIGH The world's three million golfers annually spend upwards of fifty-four million dollars in the direct pursuit of their beloved pasture billiards.' 'The PRESS ANGLE -By GEORGE J. ANDROS - We're Forced To Laugh ... A THOUSAND PARDONS while we laugh at the Michigan Amateur Ath- letic Union . . . Yesterday we learned that the fourth annual A.A.U. Relays had been cancelled because this auspicious body lacked the 500 smackers necessary to finance the meet . . . Even though realizing fully that what the A.A.U. does with its funds is quite definitely none of my business, I am forced to utter something more than a snicker at this estimate of the meet's expense . . . Yost Field House would be donated for the evening, except for lighting and heating expense which certainly wouldn't amount to much . . . Awards to winners of separate events have not been of high quality in previous meets . . . Other expenses are minor . . . The net profit from the gate receipts last year was $204 and yet the A.A.U. claims it can't finance the meet . . . I'm wondering just what the A.A.U. can do? Santa Clara, the Pacific Coast college whose football team last fall lost only one game and finished the season by beating powerful Louisiana State New Year's Day, has an enrollment of only 475 . . . Ray Goodman, Daily basketball expert, was correct on six out of his nine Conference predic- tions last week end ... Monday night he hit four out of five . .. Merle "Butch" Kremer, Michigan outfielder who hit better than .350 last season, still aspires to be a pitcher . . . He is a southpaw and claims that a sore arm kept him from making good on the mound last year . . . Bill Yearnd, soph- omore golfer, gets greater distance on his drives than any Michigan man since golf became a Varsity sport, including both Johnny Fischer and Chuck Kocsis. * * * * But What Of It?.-. ARNOLD DANIELS, stooge on the editorial staff of The Daily, has devised a table of difficulty of Big Ten basketball schedules . . . You can take it for what it's worth . . . He has rated the playing ability of the various teams as follows: 5-Purdue; 4-Michigan, Indiana and Iowa; 3-Northwestern and Illinois; 2-Wisconsin and Ohio State; 1-Chicago and Minnesota .,. . He then, totalled the ratings of the three teams which a team does not play, divided that total into the rating of the team, and emerged with the difficulty of the schedule as it appears in relation to the playing ability of the team ... By this method Purdue, Indiana, Iowa, Michigan, Illinois, Northwestern, Wisconsin, Ohio State, Chicago and Minnesota have schedules varying in difficulty in that order with Purdue's the toughest ... It may also be inter- preted as showing hdw the teams will stand up against their schedules and thus how they will finish. We should have stated yesterday that Matt Mann does not need another, assistant . . . Charles McCaffree, Varsity swimmer in 1928, '29 and '30, helps Matt with his national champions . . . He has an enviable coaching recordI of his own, having turned out six championship teams in six years at Battle Creek high school between his graduation and his return to Michigan asj assistant, coach . . . Jewell Young, Purdue forward, has made 13 out of 14 free throws in three Conference games this season ... Johnny Townsend is twelfth in the Big Ten scoring race but 10 of the 11 ahead of him havej played in one more game than John . . . A survey of six of the country's leading race tracks shows that the favorites finish first only a third of the time . . . Dark horses win 47 % of the races so we advise playing the long shots ... But which ones? -De Lano. Keen Chooses Nine Matmen To Make Trip' Nine Varsity wrestlers will embark this afternoon at 3:45 p.m. for an in- vasion of'the East where they will meet Lehigh Universty at Bethlehem, Pa., tomorrow and Franklin and Mar- shall University at Lancaster, Pa., on Saturday. Coach Cliff Keen has selected the following men to make the trip: John! Speicher, 118-pounds; Paul Cameron'. and Ed Kellman, 126-pounds; EarlI Thomas, 135-pounds; Louis Mascur-I uskus, 145-pounds; Captain Frank I Bissell, 155-pounds; Frank Morgan, 165-pounds; Harland Danner, 175- pounds; and Forrest Jordan, heavy- weight. Thomas' knee is apparently suffi- ciently recovered for him to wrestle against the powerful Lehigh aggre- gation, and the other injured grap- plers are all expected to see action. The condition of these men may well determine the outcome of the two meets, for both Lehigh and Franklin and Marshall rate among the best of the college teams in the country. Keen stated that both meets were toss-ups as far as he could see, with breaks and condition determining the final outcome. Capacity crowds of well over 1,500 are expected to watch the matches, with top price for seatz, being $1.50. Golden Gloves Officials Raise Price Of Finals The committee in charge of Ann Arbor's fourth annual Golden Gloves tournament has found it necessary to raise the prices of seats for the finals on Feb. 3 to one dollar for ringside seats and 75 cents general admission, since the seating capacity of the local Armory has been reduced from 1,200 to 1,000. Admission prices for all other nights but the finals will be kept the same at 50 and 75 cents. The committee feels that fight fans should not object to paying a little more for the championship battles since they are always the best and since the Golden Gloves prices in other cities are in general much higher than those in effect here. It is estimated that with full houses on all three nights, the profits would just about equal those of last year's tournaments which cleared $300. Students may purchase tickets at Moe's Sport Shops on North Uni- versity and State Street and at the Michigan Union. They can be re- served by calling 3419 at any time. Yawkey Hears 'Wolverine Cagers Depend On Cronin's Plan Next Three To Polish Offense To Aid Boston !" By RAY GOODMAN With two games of the first half of Manager Could Use Either the Big Ten schedule behind them. the Michigan cagers began practice in Vosinik Or Solters, Who earnest yesterday in preparation for Are Not For Sale their ramblings this week-end and Ohio State's btsketball ten days away. NEW YORK, Jan. 13.-(UP)-Tom Because this year's Conference is Yawkey, who has $3,600,000 invested probably tougher than it has been in the sixth place Boston Red Sox, in a decade with seven definitely first listened today to Manager Joe Cron- rate teams, there is no such thing i a,;nreally easg schedcule. Therefore in's plans for making the investment good. Joe recommended two players, two lineup changes, and lots of patience, and Yawkey, the happiest sixth place club owner in business, agreed to! everything. Joe wants either Julius Solters of the Browns or Joe Vosmik of the Indians. He also wants to change Pinky Higgins from third to second base and make room for a couple of youngsters in the outfield, but, as Yawkey pointed out, Solters and Vo- smik are not for sale. 1 Is Strong For Cronin Yawkey took time out to squelch rumors that he has sold out on Cron- in. "I think the purchase of Cronin is the best deal I've made and I'd make the deal again tomorrow at twice the figure!" he said. He was asked if he meant he'd pay $500,000 for Cronin. "Sure," he replied, "he's one of the greatest guys I ever saw." Nothing could down Yawkey's en- thusiasm. Billy Evans, manager of the club's minor league affairs, came into the meeting and reported that the $50,000 spent by Yawkey in the minors last season won't produce a single player for the Red Sox this year and probably not one next. Evans did say, though, that year after next they might get "two or three prospects." Yawkey was*pleased about that. {~ ab u tchy Druy bulluuiu. 'Thulufel it has come to the point where the order of the games is an important factor in the final outcome of the campaign. For Michigan the order of games is an aid as well as a detriment. Varsity Meets Badgers Saturday night Coach Cappy Cap- pon takes his squad to Madison, Wis. to meet the Badgers, a second divi- sion team that has yet to win -a de- cision in three tries, although it did come close to the erratic Illini. Mon- day the Varsity takes on Chicago who also has not won a Big Ten game, but whom some observers seem to be- lieve have a game of basketball in them that will show up one of these days to extreme embarrassment of some unsuspecting first division five. Because of the trouble that Cap- pon has been having in shaking off the anti-Townsend defense that he is running into in Big Ten circles this let-up comes as a distinct relief. Both of the week-end's opponents will use this defense which works like a mob scene with Jake Townsend the vic- tim at pivot. Wolverines Fail To Click The Wolverines know how to work when this mobbing occurs but so far have been unable to get going. The games with Maroons and the Badgers should give them a chance to smooth out their new offense to counter- balance the effects of this imitative attitude of the Big Ten coaches. Ohio State, of course, won't be any team to practice on but by that time KODAKS the Wolverines should be ready for any tactics. The second semester Michigan really runs the gauntlet, meeting Indiana, Northwestern. Purdue, Ohio State, and Indiana in that order within a two and a half week period. This is point at which most Varsity basketball teams hit their peak so the, schedule may be considered in a better light from this angle than it seems upon first consideration. Cappon's job for the next week or so will be to fight off over-confidence which made such a difference last year then a seemingly weak Minne- sota team upset the Wolverines. Both Wsconsin and Chicago have the abil- ity to play a winning ball game and a good case of over-confidence would give them the opportunity that they are looking for and at the same time put Michigan out of the race. Lee Ramage Scheduled To Fight John H. Lewis LOS ANGELES, Jan. 13.-(P)-One year after starting a comeback, Lee Ramage, young San Diego heavy- weight, received an offer today to fight John Henry Lewis in New York's Madison Square Garden next month. "Pop" Foster, veteran manager who took over Ramage last January, said Jimmy Johnston of the Garden made the offer. MI LTONS SHOP FOR MEN ODD TROUSERS (r 2 DR UGS. Vines Leaves Hospital To Rejoin Net Troupe Ellsworth Vines, world's No. 1 pro- fessional tennis player, will leave the hospital in Chicago today where he has been "taking a rest" and fly to Pittsburgh for his scheduled match tomorrow night with Fred Perry, for- mer world's amateur net champion. Vines, who has been able to win butj one set out of the ten that he has' played with Perry in their presentI barnstorming tour, is expected to be in good shape for Friday's match. The lanky Californian will come to Detroit Saturday for his scheduled encounter with Perry at Olympia. The Detroit engagement-was orig- inally planned for last Tuesday but Vines' illness forced a postponement Despite his poor showing in th6 first three meets, 'Ellie' is still the best tennis player in the world to the greater number of American fans and if the Californian is fully re- covered, the betting odds will prob- ably be on him. Finances Lacking, RelaysCancelled It was announced yesterday by Lloyd W. Olds, chairman of the Mich- igan A.A.U. track and field commit- tee, that the fourth annual Michigan Relays, originally scheduled for Feb- ruary 16, have been cancelled be- cause of a lack of funds. The Relays were to have been staged in Yost Field House and would have been marked by the first ap- pearance in competition of the 1937 Wolverine track team. It is believed that the A.A.U. will be able to renew the meet next year but the $500 said to be necessary to stage the meet this year is not availaple. The first local meet of the indoor season thus becomes the dual affair between Michigan a n d Michigan State, Feb. 20, which the Wolverines will be top-heavy favorites to win. The A.A.U. Relays have grown in popularity each year since they were first held Snapshots at night withanycame a\ with ny camCer I Ii !II' i. SPECIAL! Still Going Strong! 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