TUESDAY, JAN.26, 1937
rT"HE MICHIGAN DAILY
rA E DR
Heyliger Out With Leg Injury
As
Wolverines
Face
Ontario
Merrill Moved'
To Center Post
On First Line\
O.A.C. Sextet Will Seek
Revenge For 5-3 Defeat
Of Last Winter
A re-shuffled Michigan hockey
team, minus the services of Captain
Vic Heyliger who is suffering from a
bad foot infection, will meet the
strong Ontario Agricultural College
sextet at 8 p.m. in the Coliseum to-
night.
The Wolverines, who hopped off the
train from Houghton only yesterday
morning, will be playing their third
game in five days whencthey tackle
the fast skating O.A.C. club.
Merrill Replaces Heyliger
With Heyliger on the sidelines,
Coach Eddie Lowrey plans to move
Jack Merrill, second line center, up to
the first string play-making post be-
tween Gib James and Johnny Fabel-
lo. James will do most of the puck
carrying and Fabello will continue to
be the back checker of the combina-
tion.
Michigan defeated Ontario last year
by a score of 5-2 and the Wolverines
are confident that even without Hey-
liger they can turn back the invaders
again.
Michigan came through the Michi-
gan Tech series Friday and Saturday
without any other casualties.
The Miners took their measure in
the opening contest when Bud Pek-
kala scored a goal early in the first
period and the whole Tech team
p ayed defense for the rest of the
ame.
Tech Goalie Stars
Ed Maki, Tech goalie who returned
to school this year after a season's
toil in the M-O League in Detroit, did
yeoman service that night as he
turned aside everything the desperate
Wolverines slung at him.
Saturday's game was a different
story as the Michigan sharpshoot-
ers finally got the range and slapped
home three goals to beat the Miners
3-2 and even up the series.
Announce Erection
Of 18-Foot Ski Jump
Student winter sports enthusiasts
who have been longing for the oppor-
tunity to do a bit of skiing at Michi-
gan will have the opportunity to do
so in the future, according to Field-
ing H. Yost, Director of Athletics, who
announced yesterday the construc-
tion of a beginners ski jump, now
under way on the University golf
course.
The jump, which is being erected
on the ninth tee of the course, will be
18 feet high with a take-off three
feet high, but adjustable to five feet.
Jumps will be to the northeast. It
will be completed this week.
Packed snow will be used to build
up the 45 degree grade onto which
the jump is to be made. According
to Mr. Yost a tobaggon slide is also
under consideration,
SPECIAL
SALE
Sui
Topcoats
O'coats
Varsity Beats Maroon Five, 32 To 19, To Take Fourth Place
The PRESS ANGLE
By GEORGE J. ANDROS
i
i
Bill rooled Himself
B ILL BARCLAY didn't think he was big enough to compete in Big Ten
athletics when he graduated from Flint Northern High School ... But
he came to Michigan because of the presence of the University Golf Course
Now he is a potential eight-letter man in three sports . . .Herm Ever-
hardus, Michigan's last great running back, is the champion in a Ford
bowling league . . . Tod Rockwell continues to say the University athletic
authorities did this or that while they know nothing about such activities .. .
Because Michigan State has refused to meet the University of Detroit in
football since 1934, it is said that Titan officials are laughingly turning
aside Spartan requests for competition in other sports.
Johnny Fischer and Chuck Kocsis, former Michigan golf captains, have
been named among the country's five best amateurs . . . Bill Richardson,
New York Times expert, made the selection in the winter issue of the Na-
tional Golf Revue . . . Johnny Goodman, Fred Haas,'Jr., and Scotty Camp-
bell were the other simon pures named . . . Three former champions in the
events will be competing against each other in the Conference Indoor two-
mile race next March in Chicago.. . They are Don Lash of Indiana, winner
in 1935, and Michigan's Bill Staehle and Neree Alix, champions in 1936 and
1934 respectively . . . Alix was out of competition last year with a broken
leg.
A Case Of Sour Grapes
STANLEY WOODWARD of the New York Herald Tribune had an inter-
esting article in a back issue of Sports Illustrated I picked up yesterday
The gist of it was that the boys who play football in the Big Ten and
Far West are strong men with a minimum of brains . . . The teams that
play the smart football, according to Mr. Woodward, are Harvard, Yale,
Princeton, Dartmouth and Columbia.. . So what, Mr. Woodward, so what?
The teams of the East who make any sort of a record against West and Mid-
West are the teams Mr Woodward disregards as typical of Eastern football.
He calls them "boiler factories like the Western and Mid-Western
teams".. . You are about 40 years behind the times, Mr. Woodward . . . The
glories of the "Ivy League" are ancient history . . . T is your "boiler fac-
tories" that are winning the games now . . . And isn't it peculiar that Yale
has on it's coaching staff three members of a recent Michigan ("boiler fac-
tory") team? . . . And unless I am very much in the wrong Coaches Fritz
Crisler and Tad Wieman of Princeton, the best in the "Ivy League," came
there by way of Minnesota and Michigan, two quite typical examples of the
teams Mr. Woodward derides.
Townsend And
Barclay Pa ce
Both Quintets
Chicago Keeps Lead For
First Fourteen Minutes;
3,000 Watch Game
(Continued from Page 1)
only on nine out of 30 short shots
attempted.
Altogether Michigan took 52 shots
from the field, making good on 13,
or one-fourth of them. Chicago
dropped in but six out of 39 tries. .
Barclay was breaking loose for
more setup shots than any other Var-
sity player, but cashed in only three
times.
Ken Petersen was the best Maroon
defensively and proved a thorn in the
side of Townsend throughout the
time the Varity star was in the
game.
RUNNING SCORE
FIRST HALF
Michigan
Barclay-.....
Barclay .....
Townsend ...
Townsend ...
Townsend ...
Gee ........
Smick .......
0
0
2
3
3
4
6
8
10
10
12
Spartans Here Lambda Chi Alpha Takes Lead
For Swimming In I-M Interfraternity Program
1
3
3
3
5
5
5
5
5
6
6
Chicago
...Mullins
Amundsen
.......Mullins
Tilt Tomorrow;
The Varsity swimmers will be seek-
ing their second victory of the season
at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow night when
they play host to the Michigan State
natators. The Spartans although
stronger than in previous years, will.
be swimming with the odds greatly
against them.
Matt Mann has announced that the'
same team that scored a grand slam
victory over the Indiana tank team in
the season's opener will oppose the
State aggregation. Co-Captain Frank
Barnard, who was kept out of the
440-yard swim in the Hoosier meet
because of a slight illness will be back.
in the line-up against the Spartans.
Jim Harryman, co-captain of the up-
state squad, will be his chief op-
ponent in both this event and the
220-yard distance.
Co-captain Jack Kasley of the Var-
sity will probably find himself with-
out an opponent in the 200-yard
breast-stroke unless Coach Jake Dau-
bert finds a man to fill the position
which has been left vacant by Alan
Black. Black, the number one breast-
stroker of the squad, has been ill with
influenza and is not sufficiently re-
covered to compete in the meet Wed-
nesday night.
Bill Bell who last year scored the
only first place that the Spartans!
have gained against Michigan in 10
years of competition, will be back to
attempt to duplicate the feat in the
century dash. Bell will encounter a
great deal of difficulty however. Bak-
er Bryant, a transfer student, who
established his eligibility just before
the Indiana meet proved in his first
Varsity competition that he is a very
hard man to beat in the dash events.
PING PONG FINALS PLAYED
Zeta Psi won the ping pong tourna-
ment when it defeated Phi Epsilon
Pi 3 to 1, last night at the Union. The
winners will be given free dinners
and dances at the Union.
STATIONERY
100 SHEETS
100 ENVELOPES ..
Printed with your name and address
THE CRAFT PRESS
305 Maynard Street Phone 8805
Taking 100 points by winning the
fraternity volleyball championship,
Lambda Chi Alpha took the lead in
the Intramural fraternity league
standings with 486.
Out of the 10 teams leading in the
race seven of the top have over 400
points and, the other three are
grouped around the 330's.
Besides winning the volleyball title
the Lambda Chi's garnered quite a
few points in all other parts although
they did not take any sports cham-
pionships. Speedball gave them 100.
and track, swimming and water polo
added to the total.
Psi U Is Second
Only six points behind the leader
is Psi Upsilon with 480. The Psi U's
have not won a title in any of the
sports that they entered but have1
consistently been up among the lead-
ers in all the contests. Their 120
points in speedball and 84 in track
gave them their necessary total plus
their other places.
In third place with 473 is Chi Psi,
winner in wrestling. The Chi Psi's,.
like the Psi U's have been right up in
there all along and are looked upon
as threat to the rest of the contenders
for the championship.
Theta Chi Takes Speedball
Theta Chi, with the championship
of the speedball event in their fold'
are in fourth place in the standings
with a total of 460 and intent on
advancing. They have taken points
in every other event but the 150 given
them last fall in speedball have kept
them among the leaders.
The 429 of Theta Xi was made
without a title in any sport either.
They too have been consistent in ac-
cumulating markers and all added to-
gether have put them inefifth.
S.A.M. Drops Lead
In the early part of the race Sig-
ma AlphaMu hadthe fraternity lead
but have dropped since then and may
drop still farther if the way the other
teams in the league are advancing.
No championships in any event have
held them down somewhat but they
are adding points right along. They
are in sixth with 427.
STOLLER TO RUN IN BOSTON
Sam Stoller, Michigan's "fastest
white," will compete in an invitation-
al 50-yard dash in the Boston A.C.
Games Feb. 13, Coach Charlie goyt
said yesterday.
Among the opposition at Boston
will be Marty Glickman, Syracuse
sprint star
STROH'S
PABST BLUE kIBBON
FRIAR'S ALE
At All Dealers
J. J. O'KANE, Dist. Dial 3500
Amundsen
i
SECOND HALF
Golden Gloves!
Card Features
Eighty Battlers,
Eighty amateur boxers will swing
into action at 8 p.m. tonight in the.
quest for fistic glory at the fourth
annual Ann Arbor Golden Gloves'
tournament in the ring of the local
Armory.
Interest in the novice division will
center around Cedric Sweet and Don
Siegel, fullback and tackle respec-
tively on Michigan's Varsity football
team,. both of whom are entered in
the heavyweight class.
Siegel demonstrated his ability
when he took the heavyweight bout
in Coach Vern Larson's freshman'
boxing show. Sweet has been work-
ing out in the Intramural gym ever
since the close of the football season
and will be in excellent physical con-
dition for the tourney.
Going Up!
Michigan (32) fg
Townsend, f ............4
Smick, f, c.............2
G ee, c ..................2
Lane, c ................0
Barclay, f ..............3
Thomas, f .............0
Long, f .................0
Fishman, g .............2
Jennings, g .............0
Patanelli, g .............0
Beebe, g ................0
ft
1
0
1
0
2
0
1
1
0
0
0
pf
1
2
1
0
1
0
0
0
0
2
2
9
pf
0
0
0
2
0
0
3
1
tp
9
4
5
0
8
0
1
5
0
0
0
32
tp
4
3
0
1
5
3
2
1
Townsend ... 14
... . . . . . 14
Fishman .... 16
Fishman .... 17
.............. 17
Gee .........19
Barclay......21
.............. 21
Gee..........22
Barclay ......24
............. 24
..............24
Fishman .... 26
Townsend ... 28
Barclay...... 29
..............29
..............29
..............29
Smick .......31
.............. 31
Long ........ 32
L
6
8
8
8
10
10
10
11
11
11
12
13
13
13
13
15
17
18
18
19
19
Eggemeyer
Eggemeyer
.......Rossin
... Petersen
.......Meyer
.Cassells
......Cassells
.... Petersen
.......Cassels
JI
I
Totals .. .
Chicago (19)
Eggemeyer, f
Mullins, f ...
Fitzgerald, f
Meyer, f ....
Cassells, f .
Amundsen, c
Petersen, g
Rossin, g
... 13 6
fg ft
...........2 0
11
. . . . . . . . . . . .0
..1 ..... 0
1
0
1
1
1
2
1
4
lE
r r
-4-J
Totals .............6 7 6 19
di
I '
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Values $2.00
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BUSINESS
OFFICE
"111
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