IV SATURDAY, JAN. 16, 1937 T'll E M 1 C1lIG A 1N ) A 11L Y PAGE THREE Michigan Natators Open 1937 Season Today Against I ndiana Varsity Hopes To Win Place In Each Event Kirar Is Aiming At World Mark In 50-Yard Dash; Sprinters Are Strong Wolverines Favored Meet To Start At 4 P.M.; Kasley, Barnard Lead Home Swimmers Michigan's Varsity swimming team swings into action today meeting In- diana at 4 p.m. in the Intramural pool in the first dual meet of the 1937 season. One of the strongest aggre- gations ever to swim for Michigan will take to the water this afternoon against the Hoosiermermen.Ks Led by Co-captains Jack Kasley and Frank Barnard, the natators will seek places in every event and, ac- cording to dope comparing the two squads, Michigan should have no trouble in attaining that end. Al- though it is impossible to crack con- ference records in a dual meet, at least one of the Varsity natators will be out to smash a world record. Kirar Seeks Mark Ed Kirar, entered in the 50-yard dash, has his eye on the official world's record of 22.8 seconds forthe event and has announced that he will definitely attempt to crack the existing mark tonight. Also entered in the 50-yard event with Kirar are Mannley Osgood and Bob Mowerson of the Varsity and Capt. Bob La- Plante and Jim Herdrich of Indiana. Kirar has unofficially bettered the world mark in previous attempts. Thec200-yard breastsrkewnl find Jack Kasley and Bill Crittenden, teaming up against Fred Speichert Kasley is the record holder in prac- tically every breast stroke event The 440-yard free style swim should result in a victory for Frank Barnard, Big Ten champion in that event. Coach Robert Royer has en- tered three men against Barnard in the 440; Jim Coon, Gabriel Danch and either Bill Jacobson or John Visher. Jacobson will probably get the call. Barnard and Bill Wreford will en- ter the lanes for Michigan in the 220 ADMISSION ANNOUNCED Matt Mann has announced that the price of admission for students and faculty members will be 25 cents and 40 cents for persons not connected with the University. against Jim Coon, Jacobson, and Danch of Indiana. Bjorck Tallies There will be plenty of speed in the century dash. Ed Kirar and Bob Emmett, both- competing on the Var- sity for the first time should kick up quite a wake for Sam Klezmer and Bob LaPlante of Indiana to plow through. These two stellar perform- ers will team up with Mowerson and Osgood for the 400-yard free style relay, the last event of the meet. -Cody Will Swim .Fred Cody, who did not compete last year, .is back again and will be entered along with Bob Sauer in the 150-yard backstroke. Lucas, Coon and Bill Davis will furnish the op- position. Cody, Kasley and Emmett swim- ming the back stroke, breast stroke and crawl in that order are Matt' Mann's selections for the 400-yard medley relay. Bill Lucas, Speichert and Herdrich are Coach Robert Roy- er's choices for the event. Ben Grady, who placed in both the Big Ten and National meets last year, and Phil Haughey will represent Michigan in the diving division of the meet. Indiana's only entry is Lester Logue. Co-Captain And Star Th PRESS ANGLE - By GEOGE J. ANDROS -- Daily Cage Expert Wires Predictions Of BigTen Tilts Spending last night in Chicago I ith tha VAr ity basketball tenm an Minnesota Team! John Smithers Aivaits Beat Pucl Goalie 32 Shots ,s Michigan _I Report On Knee InjuryI j John Smithers, crack Varsity foot- sters, 3. -0 baller and baseball player, laid up at University Hospital for the past week with a recurrence of a knee Wilkinson Makes injury which caused his exit from the Northwestern game on a stretcher, Saves; Wolverine also caused him to listento thetOhio Foiled State game on a radio, was released vpsprdv on annroval. w eWIL sJ U V UI OL.. UU-b .taaA J'UCLs Back Again (Behind The 8-Ball) . .. its way to Madison to meet Wi; 0 UT OF THE HOSPITAL at last your editor will try to carry on againsn, Ray Goodman continued with a pair of weak knees and two pounds more avoirdupois . . . Many night desk again is in receipt thanks to Freddie De Lano who did a swell job of emulating his future boss telegram of predictions on the (he hopes), Arch Ward of The Chicago Tribune . . .And now he has me ference tilts of this week-end. doing it . . . And it's a swell idea . . . Johnny Smithers, the boy who takes it is: 0scon- what J the of a Con- Here out the end for Coach Kipke's Varsity eleven, was a fellow inmate of the big building that overlooks the Michigan Central main line . . . He's up there wondering if they'll operate on the knee that caused him to be carried off the field during the Northwestern game . . . Missing the Ohio State battle was the Elkhart junior's first absence from the starting lineup in two years ... That is quite a record when you consider how many changes have been made in the Varsity eleven during the past two seasons . . . John likes to Ja,^k Kasley, who co-captains the block and he has been doing a swell job on the tough wingmen that gracej Varsity swimmers this year along Big Ten teams, but he impressed me in our long talks on everything from with Frank Barnard, will be heavy freight trains to nurses as having the brains and temperament of a good favorite in the 100-yard breast- stroke this afternoon when Mich- quarterback ...But who am I?gysn igan meats Indiana at 4 p.m. in the Ray Goodman, whom I will put against any other correspondent in Intramural building. these here parts as a basketball writer and observer, is on the road again with the Varsity five.. . His wire of predictions just came in from Chicago-. Ray told me an interesting fact yesterday . . . It seems that the Associated Lehigh M atm en Press dispatch from the Michigan-Purdue game last Saturday had the score 37 to 26 in favor of the Boilermakers, but the official scorer gave BMeat M ichioran Cappy's men only 25 points . . . Ray had the right score in his wire from the press box at Lafayette, but our night editors believed the AP and put " ' the wrong figure in The Daily's account of the battle . . . Despite the resulting In Final Bouts mixup in the box-score ... And another error . . . Jake Townsend, who is . being credited with 19 points in Conference competition, has made only 18 . . . Speaking of basketball, have you noticed the decline in the prestige Break 13-13 Tie To Win of the vaunted New York quintets? . . . It is no longer a feat to trim 23-13; Bissell Scores Long Island University, and little Wayne came within two points of taking U I O . .the once formidable City College of New York team the other night - - - Upset In Overtime It is the Pacific Coast aggregations that are coming up from comparative T ' T- .r obscurity now. i A lc z1 f a t k 1 c i 2 t t t t t , G BETHLEHEM, Pa., Jan. 15.-(Spe- cial to The Daily)-Coming through in the closing bouts Lehigh's wres- & * .g x Plenty Of Pitchers For Ray *. . tlers shattered a 13-13 deadlock and COACH RAY FISHER is going to have quite a pitching staff for hisi went on to win their third consecu-,A defending championship nine next spring . . . If ineligibility and the< tive dual wrestling meet in less than sore-arm jinx do not strike too heavily . . . Ray has a pair of tried and a week, defeating the University of true campaigners in John Gee and Herm Fishman, the three aces of an Michigan before a capacity crowd I outstanding sophomore group in Danny Smick, Elmer Gedeon and Charlie, here tonight. Lehigh won five of the McHugh, and two worthy flingers who were ineligible last spring in Bertj eight bouts, scoring falls in three Smith and Johnny Smithers ... Indiana's wrestling team, perennial Big Ten of them. The score was 23-13. champions. is singing the blues these days, because only one veteran is at Two big surprises -featured the1present available for the starting lineup . . . He is Robert "Two-Bit'" Meyers,' bouts. Tommy Reider, wrestling his diminutive 118-pound star who is back to make it harder for Johnny first varsity season for Lehigh, pinned Speicher, Coach Keen's up-and-coming star at that weight . . . But when Earl Thomas of Michigan, former Johnny wrestles, he wrestles for keeps, so don't be surprised if the little National A.A.U. champion in the junior goes places before the year is out . . At last the Eastern sports lightning time of 42 seconds. Equally writers- are beginning to give Sam Stoller thecredit due him ..'.They are as sensational was the 155-pound; naming him at the top among the sprinters due to succeed Jesse Owens and class bout in which Capt. Frank Bis Ralph Metcalfe . . . The mention of sports writers to Sam brings back pic-j ing te ortme tures of the literal scores who haunted him in Berlin and in New York best of the going in the overtime bout, reversed positions in the second hotels after the stocky senior had returned from his unfortunate experience overtime period and pinned Tommy with the American Olympic team last summer. King, Lehigh's sophomore Olympic Fred Perry and Ellie Vines renew their professional tennis matches in finalist. Detroit tonight---Vines now safely recovered from influenza . . . The battlesI Jordan Is Injured have been all Perry to date, and I'm going in expecting to see the sameJ Lehigh's other falls were accom- happen at Olympia . . . Yet I'm patriotic enough to hope I can wire back plished by Mark Wolcott and Wal- a squib saying Vines cleaned up . .. I see by the Michigan State News that ter Wells, the latter also a sophomore Coach Ben Van Alstyne has taken a tip from the hockey managers and is us-' and wrestling his first varsity season. ing four forwards in his basketball lineup . . . And Van has at last put into in the heavyweight bout, Forrest Jor- the center slot big Swede Nelson, the boy who never played football before dan of Michigan, after several min- this season but whom the Spartan publicity men are already boosting for' utes of hard wrestling with Myron an All-American end position .. . Illinois will be trying to break it's "home- Sterngold, suffered a knee injury and floor" tradition against Purdue next Monday night at Lafayette . . . It has was unable to continue. been 14 years since an Illinois quintet has won at Lafayette and seven years The Michigan squad 'entrained im- since Purdue overcame the Illini at Champaign . . . Illinois leads Purdue, 27 mediately after the match for an- to 25 games in the all-time record . . . Let's go Illini! other dual affair with Franklin and -____ Marshall University tomorrow night at Lancaster, Pa. Indi na Mets-Purd'e Todaj COMPLETE SUMMARIES Andy-Another week on this limb and I'm going to build a tree house. After all, the weather is due to break. For tomorrow night's games I'm looking for Indiana to hand Purdue its first beating. The reason-the fiasco is taking place at Bloomington and the Hoosiers have been waiting to do this for a long time. I have $1.75 saying that they will. No mar- gin. Illinois to take the Hawkeyes. It's being played at Urbana and the Il- lini don't lose at home-well not often. Three to five points. Ohio State to hand Minnesota its first loss and remain undefeated itself. Five to seven points. Northwestern over Chicago. Fif- teen to 20 points. And Michigan to drag Wisconsin through the dust. Seven to 10 points. Monday night Iowa over the Badg- ers. Ten points. Minnesota to lose its second game to Northwestern. Seven to 10 points. Indiana, still fighting mad, to beat O.S.U. and this should give every team in the Conference at least one defeat. Five to seven points. The Ilini, Boudreau, Combes, and all, losing at Lafayette because Pur- due doesn't lose in its match-box gym. Three to five points. And Michigan to win its third game in a row over the Maroons here in Chicago. Ten to 15 points (I hope). And so good night. Nice being engaged, isn't it, Andy? RAY. Varsity Quintet Meets Badger Squad Tonight' Bud Foster's Team Seeks First Big Ten Victory, Will Use Fast Break By RAY GOODMAN CHICAGO, Ill., Jan. 15.-(Special to The Daily)-Despite Wisconsin's poor showing in its first three Con- ference games the Michigan bas- ketball team is expected to run into a tough team to beat when the Wol- verines take the floor against the Badgers in Madison tomorrow night. The Varsity. will be out for sec- ond Big Ten win while Coach Bud Foster's quintet will be seeking its first victory and seeking it with all the vigor of a team on the rebound. Lineup Is Same Coach Cappy Cappon will start the same five that has opened all of the Conference games. This will, as usual, give Michigan a sizeable height advantage over the suppressed Badgers. Wisconsin's major threat is its two forwards, George Rooney and Hod Powell. Rooney is fifth in Con- ference scoring with 10 field goals' and five free throws for a total of 25 points. Farther down in the list is Powell, who had been going great guns until he ran into Ohio State last Monday and was held scoreless, with 18 points. Badger Center Is Weak ,The weakest point in the Badger attack is the center postion which is being held down by Bud Bell, who took the spot vacated by the ineligi- bility of last year's pivot man after playing first string forward last sea- son. Like hPurdue and Northwestern, Wisconsin will try to stop Michigan with a fast break for which the Wolverines are supposedly suckers. If the Badger's speed starts func- tioning the Varsity may find plenty of trouble ahead for them. Monday night will find Coach Cap- Pon and his squad back in Chicago to meet the University of Chicago Ma- roons who take on Northwestern tomorrow night. The Maroons time are keeping Wisconsin company in the cellar with two losses in as many tries. But like the Badgers they have plenty of potential dyna- mite and if they ever get the jump they'll be hard to beat. Probable lineups . for tomorrow night's game: Michigan Wisconsin Townsend ......F...,...:.. Rooney Barclay .........F.......... Powell Gee ........... C............ Bell Patanelli.......G........ Mitchell Fishman..... ....G........... Frey (Continued from Page 1) he rode in on Wilkinson, but the veteran net minder outifoxed the Michigan captain and beat him to the punch. Two minutes later Vic got through again. Bob Carlson, beefy Minne- sota defenseman, clipped him just before he got the shot away and time was called while Trainer Steve Bron- son brought Heyliger back to his senses. The Beaver ustained a couple of nasty ieaG cuts but con- tinued in the game withou't a rest. Carlson Scores With less than three minutes to go in the same period Jimmy Carl- son stickhandled his way into Mich- igan territory and cut across in front of the defense. As he crossed he cut loose with a drive that Wood just missed and the score was 2-0. The Wolverines staged a valiant rally in the final period but Wilkin- son turned aside puck after puck to hang up a shutout over a Michigan team that had scored 24 goals in its five previous games. Pile-ups meant nothing to Wilkinson as he dove out into the midst of two and three swarming Wolverines. Ray Bjorck got Minnesota's third score of the night late in the final period. The Gopher captain and first string center caught Michigan with four men down the ice. He was forced wide by Bert Smith but his drive from a difficult angle blazed past Wood. Michigan will be back in force to- night for their second clash with the high-stepping Gophers. Vic Heyliger is suffering from a bad charley horse he got early in the last period and Johnny Fabello, who played more y y.,bjtuay f.. 1 'p vSa. According to doctors in, charge of his case, it will be six weeks before it will be/ possible to tell definitely whether an operation will be neces- sary. An operation would mean the end of Smithers' baseball hopes for the season, a possible end to the ath- letic career of a man who until the Ohio State game had been in every Varsity football starting lineup in, the turbulent last twoseasons. than 40 minutes last night after being released from the health serv- ice at noon, will not be too sprightly. Nothing daunted, however, the Wolverines are confident that they will all be in shape tonight and stand a good chance of evening the series. SUMMARIES Michigan Pos. Minnesota Wood .......'... G...... Wilkinson Simpson........D..... Carlson, R. Smith .........D........... Kroll Heyliger ........ C .........Bjorck Fabello ........W ........ Arnold James ......... W.........Baker Michigan Spares: Merrill, Cooke, Ed. Chase. Minnesota Spares: J. Carlson, Schwab, Anderson, Randall, Wallace Bredeson, Ganley. Referee: Paddy Farrell. First Period: Scoring: None. Penalty: Bredeson (tripping) Second Period: Scoring: Wallace (Schwab) 10:26. J. Carlson 17:10. Penalty: R. Carlson (tripping). Simpson (tripping). Third Period: Scoring: Bjorck 16:52. Penalty: Ganley (tripping). c-wnue Aion Eac SHIRTS ... THE AMERICAN WAY The more popular shirts pictured below have gone far to establish American supremacy in the field of shirt designing. Comfort as well as style are the keynote and you'll find the well-dressed college man careful that his, neck-wear will har- monize with the color and pattern of the shirt worn. .>. : . ,; ' j' :''s.rt,.i r: v:%.:ti;)v:: C; '{^+; : ' y;;F;i:;: .,{ . r ti } ''.f: 1n ::'. '" {iii:::;'; :L :. ;:fA ;::: ; . . _... .? ..,.. c A bit of Yankee ingenuity is the fused collar that gives all the much desired effect of starched matching collars .. . and is a cinch to launder. 118-pound class: John Speicher, (Michigan), defeated Walter Allen, (Lehigh), on referee's decision. Time advantage 4:48. 126-pound class: Captain Rudy Ashman, (Lehigh) defeated Ed Kell- man, (Michigan), on decision. Time advantage 8:18. 135-pound 'class: Mark Wolcott, (Lehigh), threw Paul Cameron, (Michigan), with a bar arm and chancery. Time 9:40. 145-pound class: Tommy Reider, (Lehigh), threw Earl Thomas, (Mich- igan), with a bar arm and chancery. Time 42 seconds. 165-pound class: Harland Danner, k.Michigan), threw Curtis Ford, (Le- high), with keylock hold. Time 7:16. 175-pound class: Walter Wells, (Lehigh) threw Frank Morgan, (Michigan), with a bar arm and a chancery hold. Time 6:39. Heavyweight: Myron Sterngold, (Lehigh), won from Forrest Jordan, (Michigan), by forfeit. "Stop Purdue," the cry that has. tra practice in shooting long shots gone unheeded in three Big Ten yesterday. The Purple, although stroghods ad i contanly bingthey dropped their last two games to strongholds and is constantly being I Iova and Michigan, are the favorites, echoed in the others this year can I easily be heard in Bloomington, Ind., Iowa, Northwestern's unexpected today. 6,800 fans are going to see stumbling block will try to what can be done about it. The last, add to the Illini's worries. Illinois, one bought his ticket two weeks be- although fresh from upsetting In- fore Christmas. diana will probably be playing with- Tout the services of Wib Henry, vet- The question raised last year whenran guard, who is down with the the Boilermakers and the Hoosiers flu, and Tom Nesbit, who is suffering were co-champions of the Confer- from a pulled tendon. ence as to which was the better team In the other conference game to- may be partly answered tonight. In- night Minnesota and Ohio State clash diana has the home floor advantage, gat Columbus. Neither team has As far as past scores show, the ad-mtoms.weatherbte as vantage seems to be with Purdue, al- much to show although both are at thouh te raherweakscoingthe top of the Conference with wins though the rather weak scoring over Chicago and Wisconsin respec- punch of the Hoosiers might have tively. The big game Monday night been due to tightening up in antici- will be between Illinois and Purdue. pation of this game. Should the Boilermakers lose tonight Northwestern takes on Chicago to- the odds may change perceptibly, but night at the Midway. Both teams, now the Hoosier team is favored. especially the guards, were given ex- The other games Monday aremore or less breathers for the higher rank- ing squads. Northwestern is host to Minnesota, Iowa journeys to Madison and Indiana meets Ohio State. ZTS - ALL SHADES VINES WHIPS PERRY $2.50 Reduced to $1.85 PITTSBURGH, Jan. 15.-(P)- Ellsworth Vines, National !Profession- E N'S W EAR al Tennis Champion, handed Fred Perry, former czar of the amateur '1 University courts, his first defeat as a profes- sional tonight, 6-3, 5-7, 6-4, 6-1. : l C I ,C r t I . l I - *:. ~ t.;zi ;. :: f;,: r~ '. "ruj. . ks, The white laundered collar finds modern use as a con- trast to colored shirts. ,; ,- N:S_::i Be Smart - Buy Now! MICHAELS STERN Suits and Overcoats averaging 3 1/3% Off $30 SUITS $21.75 $35 SUITS $25.75 $40 SUITS $27.75 $45 SUITS $29.75 $30 OVERCOATS $18.95 TUXEDOES $25.00 FULL DRESS $30.00 I Pleated bosom shirts in new shades serve as an effective background opening. in the vest I MEW'd r' f i $30-$35 Topcoats Shirts, Values to $1.95 $21.75 -7 American inventive genius comes through to eliminate the cause of much early m-nrnn ,, ,z .V f; $1.39 . , Wo nro nffnrinn Cox/arnl "i irArorl \/nli imoc rf Ctnrrlrrrl I ;+- -,+-. -4. '°