KENTUCKY .. 431 DE PAUL .,... 36 GA. TECH. ... 54 DRAKE ..... 35 N.C. STATE ... 30 DETROIT .... 54 KANSAS S. .. 59 S TENNESSEE .. 26 EVANSVILLE . 25 U. OF SOUTH . 32 IQWA STATE . 20 DUKE ......27 HAWAIIANS . 39 S'western .... 30 P SUNDAY, JAN. 24, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Fast Breaking0. S.U MarkseDown Varsity Cagers YRACUS ... 45 RINCETON .. 35 PAGE SEVEN ,37-32 Speed Topples Height As Ohio Beats Mikhigan Pivot Shots Of Capt. Gee Keep Team In Running As Mates Falter (Continued from rage 1) Fishman, Bill Barclay, Ed Thomas, and Matt Patanelli was offensively ineffectiVe. "Gee and Townsend carried the scoring burden and with the latter suffering the ravages of an "off" night, the Varsity couldn't score. Tcam-Play Lacking The figures do not seem to bear this out, as Barclay and Fishman made seven points apiece, but these points were made more as the re- sult of indvidual ability than because of team-play. Time and time again Dye, Rauda- baugh, and Jim Hull broke into the Michigan backline passes and went down the floor for points unmolestet. In the last minute and a half of play the Buckeyes were almost un- beatable. With the Wolverines gambling on an offensive tip Jim Mc- Donald stole the ball twice as Thomas and Raudabaugh hit long shots to pull away and put the game on ice. O.S.U. Makes 8 Of 21 Ohio State was defiinitely "on." Six minutes of the ball game elapsed before the Columbus team finally missed a shot as they made their first four shots, three of which were long and one a dog on an outside play. Ken Kitchell hit the Bucks' sixth shot after they had finally missed one and it was from far out on the floor also. The first half O.S.U. made eight out of 21 shots. Five of these were long; and three were shorts. Michi-I gan, on the other hand, while working the ball in well, connected only seven times in 40 attempts, and 33 of these were shorts. Michigan In Fifth Place In the second period the Wolverines took only 19 shots and made good on six while Ohio State tried for the basket 34 times and dropped eight. The Varsity was also weak at the foul line hitting only six out of 13 free throws while the Bucks missed but three foul shots out of eight. The defeat, Michigan's second in Conference play this year, shoved the Wolverines down to a fifth place tie with Indiana on a record of three wins and two losses. Ohio State went up to third place. Matt Patanelli and Tippy Dye were forced to leave the game on personals. It was the fourth consecutive time that the former had been ejected and the seventh time this season. The scoring went in this manner: (4' Jake Powell Joins James J. Braddock Numbered Amonggoutpointin a "igood big man,tlths ; atsk t ballTeam i ll Ranks Of Holdouts Jdisproving an old ring adage. Meetaroons tea A short time later Lavandowski WAHINGTNJn. .-)- O f M B oxing C oach broke off his ties with the profession- ma t last appearance of the Jake Powell howled loudly and joined Val ring and was added to the staff of t hek e h etr a ns.o fwt eshaldut s w e n h eey D I C K SfRo f semester tomorrow night whente hernreaterhodot wenh the Intramural Department. He has emstr omrrw igt he te heraksofth hldut wenheBy DICK SHROTH greater honors. After compiling a but at the time of his first engage- rnddu eprmevieh Wolverines take the floor against received his 1937 contract from the Matn L k ah rs tnr.Atrcmiigabta h ieo i is nae rounded out two years of service here the Chicago Maroons at Yost Field New York Yankeesin this morning's Martin Levandowski, at the res- ring record of some 50 amature bouts, ment with Levandowski he' was 27, and is now in his third. House. ent, is a rather obscure member of he decided to try his skill in the and possibly nearer his prime than Conducts I-M Class Despite the fact that the Windy Te fleet outfielder intimated that the Intramural Department, rarely National A.A.U. turnament in 1929. at present. Five days a week from 4-6 p.m. he City five has dropped all five of gaining the limelight he once held. Soon proving himself the class of A Natural conducts a class in boxing instruction its ig Tn sartsit as sownthe Yanks' business office must have is Big Tben starts it has shown throYanks' hess te lean Overshadowed here at Michigan by the meet, he won the crown in the Levandowski who terms himself a at the Intramural Building. Thirty- considerable strength forcing orgotten that he was the leading the numerous greats and former lightheavy weight division. This vic- "natural lightheavy physically," tip- five men regularly attend and are kanintotofermee slugger ' of these lastworldd seriesgreats on the catching staff, he recol- tory marked the upward limit for ped the scales at 175 pounds at the making excellent progress. Like all week and losing to the Conference Don't those guys read the pa- which he could strive; however, his time of his first encounter with the other intramural activities, the in- leaders, Illinois, by a 28 to 22 score pers?" he inquired with an aggrieved lects the day when his name ranked ambition was not yet satisfied, for he champ, in comparison with his op- struction is free to all students, and in a hard fought game. air. high in the annals of his sport, for could see future fame beckoning him; ponent's 185 odd pounds. However, a large attendance is encouraged ns Though he declined to name the Martin has the distinction of hold.I consequently, he altered his course the difference in height is even more a more complete program may be figure the contract contained, he ing a decision over James J. Brad- and joined professional ranks. i impressive, for Jimmie stands six carried on. Illinois Takes made plain he had scribbled "no go" dock, World's Heavyweight Chain- Met Braddock At Prime feet three inches, a good half foot The coach stresses the fact that the on it and mailed it back. pion. In boxing, as in numerous other taller than his rival. course is not offered in order to pro- Ter's L d Powell's .455 batting average in the Martin, as all boxers, had an ob- sports, the participant usually Chicago was the scene of the first duce material for the prize ring, but T n)ea , encounter with the Giants last fall scure beginning, fighting as an am- reaches his peak around the age of of two bouts in their ring war. The only to teach the novice how to main- ( topped all others. ateur in his home town. However, he 26 or 27, although, of course, there champ managed to gain the nod over tain good physical condition, in ad- eat Cs nieatO "They gave me raise, but not as soon surpassed his rivals in Grand are exceptions. Jimmie Braddock is Martin in 10 rounds. However, a few dition to learning the manly art of Smuch as I wanted," he said. Rapids and appeared destined for in his early thirties at the present, weeks later in St. Louis, the decision self-defense. CHAMPAIGN, Il., Jan. 23.-A)- Illin o is to o k u n d is p u te d p o s s e s s io n --_--- -_o f fr tpl a c ei nth e B i gTe nba s k et of first place in the Big Ten basket- bal ltitle scramble by defeating Chi- cago 28 to 22 tonight, but only after a hard battle from the low-standing W Maroons. The Illini missed numerous shots, .. both short and long, and at half- - time Chicago held a 12-11 margin, . with nine minutes to play the Ma- rcons led 13 to 15, but Tom Nisbet, sophomore Illini guard, then caged °i a field goal and free throw to know the count an dseconds later dropped{y< . in two foul shots and another field goal to start his team toward victory. Chicago failed to score a free throw a . team its fifth win in six conference starts. It wa Chicago's fifth straight - loss. Maple Leafs Liek Rangers In 4-) Shutout' Y TORONTO, Jan. 23.-(AP)-The To- j Tonto Maple Leafs gave the New York Rangers their worst licking of the national hockey league season, a 4-0 .- shutout, tonight. The Rangers had won their two previous encounters. : U The New Yorkers, going through their fifth straight game without a z victory and their second without a goal, played good hockey, but the Leafs' persistent checking and Har- vey Jackson's sharpshooting was too much for them. s Jackson scored three goals, a feat he has not performed in three years, to help disorganize the Rangers. He started the scoring in the final min- ute of the first period, then rapped k+ r home two more tallies in the third. A /«' Sylvanus Apps added the fourth goal seven seconds after Jackson's last tally, and drew assists on two of the other three. A third-period melee brought ma- jor penalties to Art Couiter of the Rangers and Bill Thoms and. Red Horner of the Leafs. , A - Michigan Barclay ...... Gee, FT ...... Townsend .... Patanelli, FT Gee ......... 0 2 0 4 2 4 3 4 5 4 5 6 5 8 6 8 8 8 8 10 8 11 L 11 2 11 Ohio State Raudhbaugh ....Thomas ..........Dye ......Thomas .... Ritchell Raudabaugh Barclay Fishman Fishman .... . 1 1 r t ............ec ............. Townsend.... Gee, FT.. Se Gee. FT.. Gee ........ Gee ........ Gee ........ Gee ......... Fishman .. Fishman .. Barclay, FT. Barclay ..... 14 11 ............ 14 13......... Dye 14 15..... Thomas 14 17......... Dye 16 17............ 17 17............ 17 19 . Raudabaugh cond Half 17 21 . Raudabaughl 18 21-............. 18 23...... Thomas 18 25 .... Hull, FT 24 25............. 22 25............. 24 25............. 24 26 . MacDonald, 26 26 ............. 26 28 ..........Dye 26 29 . Thomas, FT 27 29............. 27 31 .. MacDonald 29 31 ............. .30 31 ............. 30 3~3 .. MacDonald 32 33............ 32 35...... Thomas 32 37 . Raudabaugh 1 , Ohio State (37) Ritchell, f .... McDonald, f .. Hull, f....... Thomas, c .... Dye, g ........ Baker, g ...... Raudabaugh, g Totals .... Michigan (32) Townsend, f . Barclay, f .... Gee, c....... Smick, c...... Fishman, g ... Thomas, g .. Patanelli, g ... Totals ..... fg ft .... ......1 0 2 1 ...........0 2 .......... 5 1 ...... ....4 0 .... ......0 0 4 1 ..........16 5 fg ft 5 3 31 0o ... . . .0 1 pf 1 2 2 2 4 0 0 10 pf 0 1 1 0 1 0 4 t 2 5 2 11 8 0 9 37 t 4 7 13 0 7 0 1 Box Score 0o give health and life to tiny child bodies .,.. ATTEND THE PRESIDENT'S BALL NEXT SATURDAY NIGHT 'o lend color and joy to the Tresident's $all 13 6 7 32 > t Score at half: Ohio State 19, Mich- igan -17. SEE GREENE'S MICROCLEANERS BEFORE SATURDAY NIGHT GREEN E'S CLEANERS & DYERS ICROCLEAN II E E I