THE MICHIGAN DAILY THUJRSDAY, Buckeye Five, Hopes To Stop VarsityAgainr Olsen To Rely On Height For Victory; Fishman Is Fully Recovered Has Birleson To Beat Beethan, Birleson To Assault 440, Mark In Saturday Clash Campus Relay Teams Picked Veteran Sutherand s Urged To Stay At Pitt The Michigan basketball team's field day at Purdue's expense, con- trary to. popular opinion, does not cinch a part of the title for the Wol- verines. Saturday night, invariably a bad night for the Varsity, Ohio State, one of the two Conference teams that have defeated Michigan this year, will be waiting for the Wolverines at Columbus. Monday the Cappon squad will travel to Bloomington, Ind., to take on Indiana's disgusted' Hoosiers. And a week from this Saturday Mich- igan closes the season against the lowly Wisconsin Badgers. Long Shot Win Ohio State beat the Varsity, 37 to 32, before finals. The game was played on a Satur- day night and as has been usual on most Saturdays the % Wolverines played a miserable brand of ball. Despite the Buckeyes' inferior height they domin- ated the backboard and capitalized on their long shots to> deprive Michigan of anychance of an: undisputed title. f - x'" And Columbus FISMAN fans also capital- Michigan ized on the victory to assure all in- terested that they have a team that is definitely superior to the Wolver- ines. Well, they have every right to believe it for Ohio State did win. And Ohio State can repeat if Michigan relaxes into one of its intermittently poor games. Coach Harold Olsen will probably put his biggest five on the floor. This will be made up of Earl Thomas at center, Jim MacDonald and Bud Hull at forwards, and William Henry Har- rison (Tippy) Dye and Jack Raude- baugh at guards. Plays RoUgh Game . Thomas played a good game in the first game, hitting his long shots and looking tough under the basket. Mc- Donald, a football player who plays much of the same type of game as Michigan's Matt Patanelli, although not as smooth, will' be guarding Jake Townsend, and like Patanelli, he will probably go out on fouls. The strength of the Buckeye team is, however, really in its guard. Dye, all-Conference last *Y......... year and a prob- able repeater, has a good long shot, - plenty of speed, as McDONALD well as defensive Ohio State ability and leader- ship. Raudebaugh is also a good shot, dangerous from any spot on the floor. Michigan should be considerably strengthened by the return of Herm Fishman, who came from the sick bed Monday to start against the Boiler- makers. Fishman, along with Bill Barclay and Ed Thomas, Michigan's "sixth man," should have their hands' full with Dye and Raudebaugh Sat- urday and Ken Gunning and Bob Etnire' at Indiana Monday. The. Varsity looked bad yesterday in its scrimmage with the second five composed of Thomas, Bill Lane, Dan- i& Smick, Dick Long, and Leo Beebe. In a 10minute workout the reserves scored nine points to the first team's three. IA of PITTSBURGH, Feb. 24. (I)-Men1 By FRED DELANG third place. Harvey Patton of the For Pitt M eet who made Pitt athletic history on. By FED E LNO hir plce. arvy Ptto ofthethe gridiron and cinder track joined In the Western Conference indoor Wolverines was second. toda i ging thei vete foal track meet last March Ray Ellinwood Last season i the mdoor dual meet Eig To coach Dr. John Bain Sutherland to SCBeetham set a new Field House recordEght SquadsTOCompete "stay with us." ofwhiago astuned urt e l hee beating Sta in :50.3 secon, During Varsity-Panther They acted formally, but feelingly, with a phenomenal quarter mile vic-~ a record that stood until last Satur; m I' dpigareouinadesdt tory in :48.9 seconds to be one of the day when Birleson erased it with a Cinder Clash a pting a resolution addressed to first men ever to break 50 seconds on decisiveness that was not to be de-t h cigm an indoor track. Saturday night in nied. Then on the outdoor track it Twelve fraternity and seven ind- "Not only that it not accept Dr. Yost Field House Ellinwood's record was Birleson who again hit the tape pendent relay teams battled it out in Sutherland's resignation if tendered, may be crossed from the books. first, being clocked in :49.7. preliminary heats at Yost Field House but that it take immediate steps to Capt. Chuck Beetham of Ohio Beetham has never competed in the last night for the privilege of run- remove any obstacle which might State's thinclads and Stanley Birle- 440 in Conference meets, confining fning in the finals of the contest at the stand in his way." son, Michigan. senior and ace quarter his efforts to the half mile in which Pittsburgh-Michigan dual track meet Talk of resignation of the Silent miler on. the greatest track team in he is national champion. It is ex- March 5. Eight squads, four frater- Scot began with discussion of a rift Wolverine history, will furnish the pected, however, that the Buckeye nity and four independent, those between Sutherland and W. Don feature attraction of the Michigan- captain will compete in both events making the lowest times, qualified. Harrison, Director of Athletics. Ohio State dual meet when they in Saturday's dual meet here. Running for the All Stars "A" Harrison has remained mum since team Car, CverFrak Coerdenying any outright break, saying match strides in what may prove to I Albritton Will Compete team, Carl Cover, Frank Cover, hen ing of plak, a be the fastest quarter mile ever run Beetham is not the only star onthe Golden, and Laskey established a new he knew nothing of plans for a on an indoor track in this State, per- Ohio State squad and Coach Larry independent record of 1:36.2 in the' d haps even in the world. Snyder's Buckeyes are expected to half-mile distance to set the pace for- - Bound To Be Exciting give the Wolverines their first stiff both divisions. The old record estab-I* Last Saturday Birleson, competing battle of the season. Dave Albritton' lished by them in 1935 was 1:36.9. against Michigan State, was clocked and Wendel Walker of Ohio should The fraternity record of 1:38 estahi- Ann Arbor's Own in :49.2 for the 440 while Monday stage one of the best battles'in the lished in 1929 by the Phi Kappa Sig- ! night in the Buckeye-Indiana dual high jump ever seen here. Albritton is ma team remained unbroken. CA D . ,IA C meet Beetham= was an easy winner in co-holder of the world record at 6 The All Sta "B" team proved it-{[ :49.8. When two quarter milers who feet 93/4 inches while Walker is cap- self almost as good as their mates can break:50 this easily clash there able of clearing 6 feet 6 inches:and by qualifying second with 1:40.1. The SUNDAY, FEB is bound to be plenty of excitement better. other two independent teams to qual- N and no local track fan will' miss Sat- Michigan will enter the meet a fa- ify were the Wolverines, who covered (Weather urday's battle. vorite but because the Buckeyes de- the four laps in 1:43.1, and the For- Birleson and Beethan have faced feated Indiana's powerhouse in a dual estry Club who ran it 1:47.8. 65 each other three times in the last two meet this week fans are expecting a Best of the fraternity men were years, with Michigan's ace winning close fight all the way and will prob- the Phi Gamma Delta runners, Bill ADULT FARE twice. In 1935 in the -Michigan-Ohio ably be treated also to a number of Knecht, Bob Holt, John Appleton, outdoor dual meet Birleson won the spectacular perf ormances in several and Jimn Rae, who negotiated the dis- SKIlI NG - TOBOGGA N I N 440 in :49.2 with Beetham trailing in of the 11 events on the card, tance in 1:40.1. Theta Xi and Ti- ICE FIHIN(N 440-angle tied for second in this division ICE FISHING o __rwith 1:43.2, and the Psi Upsilon squad SKATI NG and, Rappert Stands Firm In Yank Hold-Out War CHICAGO, Feb. 24.-(P)-CoL Jake Ruppert, owner of the world cham- pion New York Yankees, asserting that "Somebody has to take a stand an this salary business and I'm taking it," said today his star first baseman, Lou Gehrig, would be paid $31,000 for next season's work-or nothing." Ruppert said that Gehrig, reported to be demanding a $50,000 contra.ct, and Joe DiMaggio and other Yankee holdouts, "have my ultimatum-take the contracts offered them- or leave them." TYPEWRITERS All mainkes and models Bought, Sold, Rented, Exchanged Repaired. 0. DMorrill 314 SOUTH STATE STREET SNOW TRAIN to I I I - Associated Press Photo This picture shows Capt. Chuck Beetham of the Ohio State track team as he flashed across the finish line to a new Big Ten remord in the half mile- last spring in the an- nual Conference outdoor meet. His time was 1:52.4. Saturday night in the Michigan-Ohio dual meet in Yost Field. House Beetham will compete in the a440 as}wel[ as the half mile. Hockey Summaries Michigan Pos. Minnesota W. Chase .. , .... G....... Wilkinson- Simpson.......D......R. Carlson Smith.........D..........Kroll Heyliger.......C.........Bjorck James.........W........Arnold Fabello .........W ........GAnley Spares: Michigan-Merrill; Cooke, E. Chase; Minnesota-J. Carlson, Taft, Anderson, Randall, Wallace, Bredesen. First Period MICH IGAN WARY 28, 1937 permitting) $1'3-5 CHILDREN G- SNOW SHOE HIKES nn Lake Mitchell BOB-SLEDDING s . Cappon Chooses Two Johns On Star Team "Credit where credit is due" was the motto of Coach Cappy Cappon yesterday as he named in his choice of the Big Ten All-Star team, to be used in the Chicago American poll, two of his own Wolverine basketball- ' ers, John Gee and John "Jake" Townsend. Cappon went on to create a scoring avalanche as he chose Jew- ell Young of Purdue, Marvin Rolek of Minnesota, and Harry Combes of Illinois as teammates of Gee and Townsend. Cappon is backed up in his selec- tions by the scoring statistics, for with the exception of Rek all of the Wolverine mentor's choices may be found in the upper 10 of Con- ference scorers, while Rolek's air- tight defensive tactics undeniably place.him in the select circle of Big. Ten basketeers. Cappon's second team consists of Mike McMichael, Northwestern, and7 John Kundla, Minnesota, at for-; wards; Bud Riegel, Illinois' captain; at center, and Tippy Dye, Ohio State, and Ken Gunning, Indiana co-cap-; tain, at the guards. Former Star Features I-M Hfandbal ard Following the appearance last week of the world's foremost badminton player, Howard Davidson, the Intra- mural Department is sponsoring the appearance of Al Banuet, considered to be one, of,, the, leading hand ball players in this country. Banuet will give an exhibition at 8 p.m. this evening at the Intramural Build- ing, opposing Fred York. Banuet, who is considered to be the greatest player ever to appear in Ann Arbor, was National- A.A.U. champion in 1929, '30 and '31, finally retiring undefeated in order to give the younger players an opportunity to win the crown. The State Doubles Handball Tour- nament will also be' played at the Intramural Building at 8 p.m., with the semi-finals scheduled for Friday and the finals for 4 p.m. Saturday afternoon. Al and Lou Zerbo, city champions of Detroit, are favored to annex the meet, rounded off the quartet of Greek letter teams qualifying for the finals with the time of 1:44.5. Besides. the qualifying teams in the meet,? others to run in the fraternity section were Sigma Alpha Mu, Phi Kappa Sigma, Lambda Chi Alpha, Theta Chi, Phi Sigma Delta, Delta Sigma Pi; and Chi Psi. The Sigma Chi squad would probably have fin- ished as one of the winners had not the anchor man tripped and fallen when but some 20 or 30 yards from the tape. The other Independent squads to run were the' Penthouse A.C., D.D.'s, and the Jay Hawks. Leave Ann Arbor 7:30 a.m., A.A.Rd. Arrive Cadillac, Mich. 1 :00 p.m. Return to Ann Arbor Sunday night. Advance Reservations necessary Get tickets at Randal Trav-el Agency, Nickels Arcade or The -An-n Arbor Ra ilIroad Co It scoring: J. Carlson (Unassisted) 13:10. Penalties: Simpson. Second Period. Scoring: Fabello. (Heyliger) 8:52. Penalties: Kroll (major), James.1 E Third Period Scoring: Taft (J. Carlson) Wallace (Unassisted) 8:21. Penalties: R. Carlson. Officials: Tony Conroy and ningham. :51. ives fawn. . .,.+.yxw..,V Cun- Grid Official Favors Interference Ruling I NEW 'ORLEANS. Feb. 24.-(AP)-- R. "Bill" Crowley, veteran footbe official, said today he was oppos to the change in the forward passir rule which says bodily contact shd W. all ed ng all not be termed interference. Crowley, attending the convention here of the Department of Superin- tendence of the National Education Association, said he believed the lift- ing of this rule might lead to serious results. He added he intended to take a bold stand against it at the inter- pretation meeting of the football rules committee in September. l L r l l i J :, { HATS FOR SPRING Wider Brims Lower Cowns, II Wagner's New Spring Line of Stetson, La Salle, Penn Craft Hats gives one plenty from which to choose. Cards were sent to users of elaotria ranges and these are, some of the re- plies. Forty-one thousand of your neighbors now cook electrically. 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