THE MiC iGAN DAILY PAE T&tFI Battered Varsity Pucksters Tackle London AllStars ?-- _ Johnny Speicher's draw with Con- ference champion Bob Meyers at 118- pounds gave the Wolverines the points needed for victory. The Speicher-Meyers bout was nip and tuck all the way. The Michigan junior came from behind in the clos- ing minutes to turn what seemed al- most certain defeat into overtime. In the extra session Speicher had a little the better of the going, but Referee Fendley Collins of Michigan State called the bout a draw. Cameron Loses Paul Cameron, weakened by a constant siege of illness this winter, lost a very odd decision to Scotty Sefton in the 126-pound class. Sef- ton had only a 56-second time ad- vantage at the end of the bout, but Referee Collins called the Hoosier the winner i)ithout consulting the timer. Cameron went out after a fall and piled up a 4:01 advantage in the first four and one-half minutes, but Sefton came back very strong late in the bout to win the nod. There was no doubt the Thomas- Tom Bryce affair at 135 pounds. Thomas held the upper hand through most of the bout and had a 6:07 ad- vantage at its conclusion. Sophomore Nichols met a very ag- gressive 145-pound foe in Cliff Bass- ham, and the bout was fast and close all the way. Nichols finally eked out a1:20 win on time. Bissell Wins Again Captain Bissell kept his slate for the year clean by trouncing John Keeler at 155 pounds. The Miciigan leader came out fast, wasted little time in tossing his man to the canvas and spent the rest of the match striv- ing desperately for a fall, just falling short several times. Danner also remained undefeated at 165 pounds when he gave Chaun- cey McDaniel, heralded Hoosier soph- omore, a terrifice lacing in a bout that went into overtime-the Wol- verine holding only 44 seconds of1 advantage at the end of the regular 10 minutes. Hampered all week by a cold, theĀ° aggressive Michigan sophomore had his opponent bleeding freely at the nose and fully exhausted at the end. McDaniel was carried from the mat. It was the ability of Danner to whirl out of the grasp of the larger and stronger Hoosier that brought the fans to their feet time after time. Tasch Is Pinned Dick Tasch, Michigan 175-pound-; er, found a desperate Chris Traicoff too much to contend with and bowed to a fall in 8:04, falling victim to a half-nelson and scissors. With the five points that would] come with a fall enough to give In- diana victory, the gargantuan Haak went after Lincoln with a vengeance in the unlimited class. Outweighing his Michigan foe by' more than 30 pounds, the Hoosier sophomore al- most pinned Lincoln on several oc- casions. Jim called upon every ounce of strength and courage he possessed, however, and lasted the distance to1 give Michigan a brilliant win. Big Ten Standings Little Johnny Speicher, flashy junior 118 pounder, came from be- hind last night to earn a draw with Bob "Two-Bits" Myers, Conference title holder from. I'ndiana, in a thrill packed tout at the Yost Field House. The two meet again in the Conference meet, to be held here March 12 and 13. Indiana's Lash Whips Becalli At Seton Meet NEWARK, N.J., March 1.-(P)- Don Lash, mighty little foot racer from Indiana, outsprinted Luigi Be- calli of Italy, Olympic 1,500 meter champion in 1932, tonight to win the mile and a half feature of the annual Seton Hall College track carnival. The time was 6 minutes 47.9 seconds,1 10 seconds behind the record for the odd distance. Three New York schools put on a stirring battle in the two-mile relay, Lou Burns winning for Manhattan with b great stretch drive that nipped BASEBALL PLAYERS REPORT All candidates for the baseball team are requested to report to Coach Ray Fisher at Yost Field House immediately.. Hitting drills will start Monday, March 8. Frank Slater of Fordham in the last five yards. New York University was third and last. Manhattan's time was 8 minutes 2 seconds. Glen Cunningham, ace of the na- tion's milers, strutted his stuff in a special 1,000-yard race and made it look easy in beating three middle- Lowrey Opens Windup Series Short Handed Merrill Victim Of Gopher Brawl; Only Eight Men CapableOf Action Bruised and battered, but as Wes- tern Conference Champions by dint of their split with Minnesota at Minneapolis Wednesday and Friday, a rough and ready Michigan hockey club will take the ice tonight against an All-Star amateur team from Lon- don. Tonight's tilt will be the first of a three-game wind-up which Coach Eddie Lowrey has carded for local fans before writing finis to the 1936- 37 season. Saturday night, the great Toronto Varsity will be here to en- gage the Wolverines and one week later the veteran Kitchener sextet will officially close the season. Merrill Injured Jack Merrill will be missing from the line-up tonight when the as- sembed London All-Stars line up for the opening face-off. Merrill was the number one victim of the Galloping Gophers. Merrill is suffering from a bad charley horse and a wrenched knee. Nor did the rest of the Wolverines return from the wars unscathed. Bert Smith sustained a nasty head cut and Captain Vic Heyliger lost a tooth, while the entire squad was pretty well banged up in the fray. With Merrill out, Lowrey will have but eight men to send against the powerful London club. He plans to start his high scoring trio of Heylig- er, Gib James and Johnny Fabello and work in George Cooke and Ed Chase from time to time as stra- tegically as possible. Bert Smith and Bob Simpson will be at the red line as usual with Bill Chase in the nets. Bennett Mainstay Cecil Hill, London mentor, boasts a fast, smooth passing sextet which has as its mainstay, Irish Bennett, the goalie. He is generally recognized as one of the best amateur goalies in Ontario. Best on defense is Jack Barclay, who is regarded as best in the big six group. Paired with him Hill has Bill Arbour who, this season, is the lead- ing goal-getter on the squad. Fans may get a chance to see what might be called a poke-checking bat- tle if Vic Heyliger and Tom Foskett, the London left wing, are both at top form. Foskett majors in tricky stick handling. O.S. U. Tankers To Meet Varsity In Home Final Michigan's intercollegiate swim- ming champions will swing into ac- tion against the Ohio State team to- morrow in the last home meet of the season. The contest is scheduled to start at 4:30 p.m. at the Varsity pool. This will be the second time that the Wolverines have met the Buck- eyes this season. In the meet a week ago at Columbus, the Varsity found more in the line of swimming, talent than they had expected and were able to turn back the Buckeyes by only a 45-39 score. If Matt Mann's charges turn on the steam as they did in Iowal City last Friday night ,however, there is little doubt but what the score will be much more lop-sided. Varsity Seeks Revenge The meet will take the form of a revenge contest. Both Fred Cody and Ben Grady will be out to avenge the defeat suffered at the hands of the Buckeyes. Bill Neunzig pulled a surprise in the first meet when he beat Cody to the finish in the 150- yard back-stroke to set a new inter- collegiate record of 1:36.7. Unless Neunzig has another such perfor- mance in his system, Cody stands a, good chance of beating the fleet Buck. Jimmy Patterson, Big Ten diving champion last year, has proved to be quite a nemesis for the diminu- tive Ben Grady. He finished ahead of him in the collegiates last year and beat him out by a very narrow, margin in the Buckeye dual meet this year. Grady hopes to tutn the tables tomorrow afternoon however. IHaynie After Record Coach Mann has announced that Tom Haynie will attempt to better the intercollegiate mark in the 220- yard swim tomorrow. He will be swimming against Captain Wood- ford of the Ohio Statessquad who, incidently, swims a fast 220 him- self. It was Haynie who cracked the intercollegiate records for the 220 and 440 in 20-yard pools at the Iowa meet last Friday. Mickey Picks Tiger Catcher; It's Cochrane MIAMI BEACH, Fla., March 1.- (P)-Mr. Gordon (Mickey) Cochrane, vice-president and manager of the Detroit Baseball Club, said today a guy named Mickey Cochrane will be the regular catcher for the Tigers this year. "There are some young fellows coming up but I think Mike's still got the stuff," said Mr. Cochrane as he reviewed the prospective lineup. "But I've got Ray Hayworth and George Tebbetts backing him up. You remember Hayworth caught most of the season after Mickey went out after playing only 45 games..,Teb- bets came up from Beaumont last fall. So between these three, I guess we're all set behind the plate. "Hank Greenberg's wrist is okay now and he'll start at first base. Charley Gehringer will be back at second, Bill Rogell at short and Mar- vin Owen at third. If there's a bet- ter fielding combination in the League, I'd like to see it." For the outfield there are Al Sim- mons, Goose Goslin, Gerald Walker, Jo Jo White, Pete Fox, and a new- comer from Milwaukee, Chet Laabs. There are five holdover pitchers- Schoolboy Rowe, Elden Auker, Roxy Lawson, Joe Sullivan and Vic Sorrell and seven new men. Cooper Wins Open ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March 1. -')--Lighthorse Harry Cooper won the St. Petersburg Open Golf Tour- nament at the Pasadena Golf Club here today, defeating Horton Smith and Ralph Guldahl, two other Chi- cago professionals,, in a three-corn- ered playoff. TYPEWRITING MIMEOGRAPH ING Promptly and neatly done by experi- enced operators at moderate prices. O. D. MORRI LL ! 314 South State Street Fresh from their overwhelming de- feat of Ohio State Saturday, the Michigan track team yesterday set- tled down to hard work in prepara- tion for the big dual meet with the University of Pittsburgh on Friday. The Wolverines have scored 129 points in two meets to 61 for Mich- igan State and the Buckeyes. Whe- ther they can keep on outscoring their opponents by this ratio of better than two to one is doubted by many ob- servers, but the Wolverines them- selves will be out Friday night to show that it can be done. Leading the Pitt squad will be two lanky Negroes, Johnny Woodruff and Ed Thomas, and between them they may furnish Michigan with plenty of trouble before the meet is over. Woodruff is Olympic 800 meter cham- pion and here will probably run the 440 also. Thomas is Eastern Inter- legiate sprint champion which means that the battle in the 60-yaid dash between him and Michigan's Sam Stoller will be one of the greatest races on the card. In the quarter Woodruff will have to beat Stan Birleson if he wants a first and the great Chuck Beetham of Ohio State found out what this means. Birleson ran :49.9 to win from Beetham and :49.2 against State. In the relay Saturday he went the route in :48.6 with a run- ning start and if you don't think that is fast just consider the fact that the world record for the quarter in- doors is :48.9. Then in the half, while Woodruff will be favored, Michigan will send Ben Starr and Howard Davidson STROW'S PABST BLUE kIBBON FRIAR'S ALE At All Dealers J. J. O'KANE, Dist. Dial 3500 .1 P:. 'II I' " U. s . Senator class rivals. Ed Brown of the New York letic Club trailed the mighty+ nigham across the finish line says: "Luckies are considerate Ath- Cun- Box Score Michigan (27) Townsend, f ........... Sm ick, f ............... Barclay, f............ Gee, c............... Patanelli, g........... Long, g ...... ........ . Fishman, g ............ Thomas, g ............. 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