TUESDAY, MARCHs8,1938 TIE MICHIGAN DAILY ASIDE * LINES '3y IRVIN LISAGOR - - In Our Opion . . . THEY finally kicked Cappy up- stairs. His appointment as head backfield coach at Princeton is vindication of his reputation. which had been smudged in cold, black type and cruelly damaged by wi'ispering Iagos during the last two years he has served at Michigan. Unjustly painted as the "vil- hAn" of Michigan's recent foot- ball farce, Cappon received the ; stinging barbs without comn- rla nt, with a stoical attitude that disturbed his friends, who knew the intense remorse he must have suffered. Cappy was heartsick because Ile was sub- jected to such humiliation at his alma mater ,the school he served faithfully as both player and coach. Any indiscretions he might have shown were prompt- ed by a devotion to Michigan.I No better indication of the esteem he commands from his associates can be made than the statement Tad Wieman issued to The Daily last night. Wieman played with Cappy, worked together with him in a coach- ing capacity, and therefore knowsI him. Asked how long Cappon's con- tract would run, Wieman said, "I prefer not to reveal that, but we hope it will be forever." Need more be said? Cappon carries The Daily's sincerest wish for success at his new position. There must, after all, be some- thing to this law of compensa- tion. * * * And now if you will indulge your old ASIDELINER another guess . With the basketball coachship va- cant, the question arises as to who will fill it. Logically enough, Bennie Oosterbaan, we think. Bennie has served a long apprenticeship as an assistant coach and is ready, in this department's humble opinion ,to ac- cept the responsibility that neces- sarily accompanies the head man's position. One of Michigan's "im- mortal" athletes, Bennie knows the ropes-and will be able to manipulate them. Also, as another conjecture, we venture that Wally Weber, the other question mark on the coaching staff, will remain in some capacity. Announcements confirming these hunches should be forthcoming shortly, maybe very shortly. * * * *, Varsity Votes ..1 MICHIGAN'S basketball squad se lectedstheir all-opponent team for the past season last week in a special poll sponsored by The Daily. First and second team choices were made, with each first team vote re- ceiving two points, second team selec- tions one. ownsen Captain Breaks All -Time Mark With 135 Total Jake' s 13 IPoints Smashiea Oosterbaan'M Teii Y#o Record Of 129 TialFles (Coutinuc ifrom Page I) were in the first half, they bridled Townsend in the second stanza, per- mitting him only one basket-a loop- ing one handed shot put in as Mannie Slavin, who replaced him, reported to the scorer. Jake had written his name indelibly inConference annal. and stepped off the floor amid a deaf- eniug accolade of applause and cheer-; in . Las-t For Fisthnia. Barclay In three years of play Townsend scored 364 points. and though no one can ascertain the number of assists he has made, the numerical propor- tions would probably be astounding, for he was primarily a team player and passing was his main forte. The Wildcat game also marked the1 end of the cage careers of Herman Fishman and Bill Barclay. It was Fishman's birthday and the Varsity band honored him by singing "Happy Birthday to You," to the accompani- ment of a respectful cheer. Barclay, still slightly lame from a leg injury. played only briefly but received a signal tribute for his gameness. The stolid little guard contributed a long basket in his farewell, while Barclay, barely missed a set-up. Nagode Leads Wildcats Northwestern's star of the evening was Jake Nagode, who spent a busy forty minutes guarding Townsend and scoring 10 points. But neither ' Nagode nor any of his teammates could dent Michigan's defense for 15 minutes of the second half. Les Har-j Leads Little Iron nJt Cagers To 30-22 Wildcat 4 Hoytmen Seek Paul . Cameron Looks Forward Tenth Bi Teti To Return Match With Nenesis Indoor Crowni By NEWELL McCABE hue to fate it was Al Sapora of Il- With a record of 33 consecutive linois.! wins to his credit as a high school Won 7, Lost 1 SlRciious Drills Featured wrestler, Paul Cameron packed his A senior on the squad, his record I In Final Pre atiQnl trunk, left Cresco, Iowa, and headed is similar to that of the WolverineIS. Sfor Iowa State College. After a S- team. Dully of Coach "Billy" Thom- b beed mester in the Corn State sciOCI, s outfit darkened his initial appear- Canmmney" once again lifted his Back on the home cinders after a ;t ;kes. this time comning to Ann Ar- a ce when he pin~ned him in the 1 ws t t a l rbsiug secauds of their match at1 uik-of moppingtup the luli e-Ir As a pre-college wrestler he spent z uomington. From that time on histime working in the 115 poundIh has kept a clean slate, having ay& atChampaign, Michigan's track- class, but in intercollegiate conmpe- taken his next seven matches, three stens yesterday began final prepara- tition, he has wo! n the Wolverine by falls and the rest by decisions. for the defense of their Big Ten, colors in the 126 pound division. In- Paul will end his career as a Wol-I ind~ocr crown at Chicago, Friday and cluded in his great record at high verine -grappler this week-end when _, urday. school "Cammey" had ,nnexedI thl he enters the Big Ten Meet at Evans-t ote title two times, in as many? ton as Coach Keen's entry in the 126 CeCrs. pound class. With Duffy again com- fAf as being more than satisfied with Imncdjalyi3 ;ter c'Ominflh i deUfld peting. Cameron is looking forwardj the rzhowxin s made by his team at the tutelage of Coach Keen the low- with vengeance to a return match I Champaign where they met all but 1 an began working as a regular on the with the Hoosier A.A.U. champion. Iowa of tliei" nine Conference oppon- :1Varsity squad. Since the second fight eas. of his sophomore year, he has taken Watson Wins Shot part in every match that the local The Wolverines breezed through at{teamhhad s Champaign. Bill Watson was with- j Nv Md A Mathh drawn from the 75 yard dash after Up to Saturday night both he and placing an easy second in his trial Co-captain John Speicher were cred- heat. Big Bill copped his usual first item dith having parti ipated in every in the shot and placed second in the # atch sincetey josed thie rsity broad jump, inches of first money. However, because Ohio Universit" i Jimm Kigsly ot di hisel inI failed to bring a man of "Spike's"I thepolemvaul asngseyclearedh13 et weight "Cammey" will be the one the pole vault as he cleared 13 feet' senior who has taken part in every 6 inches for the first time this season. m he m- lie was beaten by Milt Padway of I atch from the time as a memI lie as eatn b Mit Pdwa ofberz of the Wolverine wrestling team. ! Wisconsin who topped 13 feet 10 E inches on the third try after King'sley In his sophomore year he went to had ticked the bar off with his hand. the finals of the Conference meet but Elmer Gedeon and Stan Kelley " was stopped there by Willard Duffy were split in the hurdles, Gedeon do-Iof Indiana. Last year the former ing the highs where he tied the world- Cresco, Iowan followed the course of record to win and Kelley running the the majority of Coach Keen's men in lows to place second, inches behind that he found himself ahead in the Bob Lemen of Purdue, third in the win column when it was time tohang otdoo Cmnferce, thyerd. up his wrestling togs, six wins to outdoor Conference last year. three defeats. Once again he met his There are many fi - I Bad Break In Relay Waterloo in the Conference meet, and Only bad breaks kept Michigan outj coats still in our St Canning Is Chosen Head Cheerleader Michiigan's new head cheerleader for 1938 is Rober J. Canning, '39, of V.nawanda, N.Y. Tn the traditional ceremony be- ;ween halves of last night's basket- ball finale, Robert Williams, '38, of Oak Park, Ill., the outgoing head Theerleader, presented Canning with the silver megaphone, symbolic of the new position and introduced him to the crowd. STROH'S CARLI NG'S FRIAR'S ALE At All Dealei s J. J. O'KANE Dist. Dial 3500 Read Daily Classified Ads Victory Paul t ameron, senior 126-1 pounder, has grappled in every Wolverine meet since the second one of his sophomore year. le will wind up his varsity career at the Big Ten meet in Chicago this week-eud, making a determined bid to capture his class title. Cappon GoesF To Pjincetoti AsWiemalIAid T as Position Of head Basketball Coach And Football Assistant (Continued from Page I) 'b't~t io-spr-n paicwcnstoeg kping al Sale ne Suits and Over- tock from which to man, a sophomore substitute, finallyj March 14,1butiwill returnto Ann broke the ice with an overhand flip Arfch ,.but wirl return to all Ar U .tL~L d ~~L~~U11 d from the center. The victory gave Michigan an even break for the season, a .500 percent- age, with six wins and six reverses. Northwestern finished its season with a record of seven victories as against five defeats to wind up in a third place tie with Iowa. Shot-By-Shot FIRST HALF Player Shot Voights, set-up .... Nagode, hook ...... Beebe, long ........ Townsend, set-up McMichael, flip,.. . Nagode, long ...... Townsend, pivot-hook ....... Beebe, flip .............. Townsend, foul (Vance) Townsend, hook ............ Nagode, pot-shot ............ Fishman, long .............. MeMichael, long ............ Townsend, hook ... ........ Rae, foul (Nagode) ......... Nagode, foul (Townsend) .... Nagode, foul (Townsend) Rae, foul (Currie) ........... McMichael, 2 fouls (Beebe) M N ..0 2 ..0 4 ..2 4 ..4 4 ..4 6 ..4 8 ..6 8 8 8 ..9 8 .11 8 .11 10 .13 10 .13 12 .15 12 .16 12 .16 13 .16 14 .17 11 .17 16 fV o fresume Cresiec ut a Mr. Yost has graciously granted ne a leave of absence for the duration; of spring practice,"' he said. Edgar L. Walker, head coach at Mississippi, will become end coach,l and Charles L. Ceppi, Princeton's star] tackle a few years back, line coach. Cappon will succeed Kenneth E. , Fairman as Tiger basketball coach next season. Fairman is withdrawing from coaching to devote his time to the job of graduate manager of ath-; letics. Fairman and Ceppi, college room- mates, were graduated in 1934. Princeton grads put them down as' one of the Tiger's greatest end-tackle teams. A medical student at Syra- cuse, Ceppi has been helping with freshman coaching there. Ixpe'-s Find Flaw In Baseball Theory WASHINGTON, March 7.-(/P)- Government scientists batted out the theory today that the wallop, not the baseball, is the major factor in home runs. Wheeling their mechanical home run swatter out to Griffith Stadium, Bureau of Standards experts loadedl it up with American and National League balls and aimed it at the farl flung fences. The very first shot was a dandy--- of the win column in the distance medley and two mile relays. In the former Harold Davidson handed the stick to Ralph Schwarzkopf even. The exchange was made on a turn and Schwarzkopf, forgetting the fact as he watched Davidson coming in, ran practically in to the third row seats before he got straightened out, in- curring a loss which not even a 4:16 mile could make up. In the two mile relay Bill Buchanan collided with a finishing Indiana run- ner and crashed to the ground. Bu- chanan and the Michigan anchor man, Tom Jester, were able to finish in fourth place only by a super ef- fort. Wes Allen ,did an encore on his performance in the Michigan-Ohio State meet as he tied the Buck's great high jumper. Dave Albritton at 6 feet 5 3f8 inches. That Happy Ending - 11 FIRST TEAM: Players -r Louis Boudreau (Ill.), Ben Stephens (Iowa), Lewis Dehner (Ill,) Marty Rolek (Minn.) Fred Trenkle (N.U.) SECOND TEAM: Howard Powell (Wis.), Mike McMichael (NU) Jack Drees (Iowa, Paul Maki (Minn.), Ken Suesens (Iowa, Pos. Votes Michigan (30) Townsend, f ..... . Slavin, f ......... Thomas, f ........ B-rclay, f ........ Rae, c .......... Beebe, g ......... Fishman, g ...... Pink, g .. . .. ... . Totals ... . .... Northwestern (22) fg ft 5 3 .0 0 ... .0 0 .0 0 1 4 3 0 1 0 . . . . . . . . .1 1 .11 8 tp 13 0 0 0 6 6 2 3 30 f. f c .g g f c g g .,.. 21 23 .....20 .....20 .....12 9. 6 .....11 ..... 11 ,.. 2 SECOND HALE Beebe, long-flip ...1......... Townsend, 2 fouls (Nagode) Rae, foul (Vance) .......... Pink, foul (Smith) ........ Rae, flip-under ............. Pink, set-up. ......... Herman, flip ............... Nagode, set-up ............. Rae, foul (Herman) Townsend, long-fip ......... Herman, tip-in ..........., ..19 .21 ..22 ..23 ..25 ..27 ..27 ..27 ..28 ..30 ..30 16 N Nine Cagers Win Varsity 'M' Awards Immediately following Michigan's victory over Northwestern last night, Coach Franklin C. Cappon an- nonnced the award of varsity letters to nine of cagers and reserve letters to four. Varsity award winners are: Capt. John Townsend, '38, Indianapolis, Ind.; Herm Fishman. '38, Detroit; Leo C. Beebe, '39, Dearborn; Edmund Thomas, '39, Ishpeming; James Rae, '40, Toledo; William Barclay, '38, Flint; Manuel Slavin, '38, Cleveland; Charles Pink, '40; Detroit and Dan Smick, '39, Hazel Park. The following men won reserve awards: Russell Dobson, '40, Ann Ar- bor; Robert Palmer, '40, Grand Rap- ids; Fred Trosko, '40, Flint and David Wood, '40, Detroit. German Tennis Ace Held I For Moral Delinquency BERLIN, March 7.--(/P)-Baron Gotrifried Von Cramm, the world's second ranking tennis player, re- inained in custody tonight for exam- ination "on suspicion of moral delin- quencies." Authorities were reluctant to discuss his case beyond admtiting that he was being held for examina- tion. KALAMAZOO WINS GRAND RAPIDS, March 7.-(A') Virtually sweeping hope College offl its feet by speed and accurate pass- ing, Kalamazoo College won the play- off game here tonight for the basket- ball championship of the M.I.A.A, 44 1 to 31. 140 WORDS A MINUTEV ON A PORTABLE Says Albert Tangora Worlds Typing Champion STUDENTS ! The sky's the limit! Smooth, effort- less, big-machine features and a full- sized keyboard put Royal in a class by itself for speed and convenience. Yet Royals cost no more! $37.50 Value $35.00 Value $27.85 $23.85 Suit M .85r $26.85, $30.00 Value O'Coat. Suit $40.00 Value $40.00 Vaolue 'C0oat 0.. choose - You will be greatly pleased at the Saving you will make in buying during the remaining days of our sale. $35.00 Value O'Coat,.. 9 . . 0 ! 1g 16 16 16 16 18 20 20 20 22 it cleared the centerfield fence, soared IMcMichael, f ............2 over the bleachers and fell beyond Harman, f . ......... .2 the wall-the longest base hit ever Smith, f . . .............0 banged out in the American League Gerkin, f . . ..0 Park. Currie, f ............ . . 0 They came to the conclusion--that Kowalski, f ..............0 the much-talked of difference be- Melchior, f 0 tween the two big league balls is Nagode, c ................. 4 not enough to count scientifically. Vance, g...............0 1 Voights, g ...............1 ft (ji 2 6' 0 4 00 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 10 S0 0 0 2 S 4 22 Suit 0 09. $31.85 129#85 Boudreau's votes were split between forward and guard position, but prac- tically every player voted for him for at least one position. Non-conference players were not in- eluded, but the cagers unanimously selected Chuck Chuckovits of Toledo and Marty Hutt of Michigan State as the two best they'd faced all year. * * * DOTS AND DASHES: Herm Fish- man's whole family was in the stands last night, to celebrate his birthady and watch him climax his college basketball career. . . The crowd was in a remarkably good humor, too good, in fact, for the cheerleaders, who couldn't an- nounce their new head, Bob Canning, for several minutes . . . Charley Pink,I strapped up to protect a healing charley horse, forgot all about his injury several times in plunging headlong after a loose ball or inter- cepting a pass . . . a great competitor, Charley... $45.00 Value $45.00 Value .* a I ijuries May Force Star PIickster Out For Seasoll An infection which kept Ed "Smack" Allen, Michigan's flashy red-headed hockey center, out of the, line-up in the team's last two games, may force him out for the remainder of the season it was learned yester- day. Smack received a split scalp against Western Ontario two weeks ago which required 19 'titches to close. Playing two games while this was healing, he performed brilliantly. In the third game against Michigan Tech he was forced into the boards and at the same time suffered anoth- er gash two inches above the first on his forehead which took five stitches and aggravated the first suture. I _ - ---.-_-- I Rig J , fSIr wd U, 1 ..9a it 0 0 0 FINAL Purdue . . 10 Minnesota .,.. 9 Northwestern . 7 Ohio State . . , 7 Michigan......6 Iowa..........6 Wisconsin .... 5 Indiana . ..... 4 Illinois ........4 Chicago ...... 2 2 3 5 5 6 6 7 8 8 10 .833 .750 .583 .583 .500 .500 ,417 .333 .333 .167 511 393 407 458 403 416 439 463 428 389 J1alf-Lime score: Michigan 17, Northwestern 16. 4 'ersonal fouls--Nagode 3, Voights 2, Vance 3, Currie 3, Kowalski, liar- 8man, Fishman, Townsend 2, Beebe; $ Rae, Thomas. Free throws missed--Smith 2, Na- Sgode, Vance, Townsend 2, Beebe 2, 9 Fishman, Pink, Rae. X01 Referee-Nick Kearns (DePauw). 5 Umpire--George Higgins (Minnea- 7 polis). $x85 *85 $50.00 Value $50.00 Value O' oat.0. Suit . .0. r Co MICHiAELS-STERN FINEST CLOTHES Our prices, you will find . C m pa you make the greatest saving here. $37.85 $42.85 I1 FRANK MEDICO PIPES ! We feature a complete line of FRANK MEDICO Pipes for the particular pipe-sfioker. CALKINS-FLETCHER SU ITS TOPCOATS I PRICES have been sliced to the utmost - in our Boy's Department - Outfit him now for months to come at these 818 South State 324 South State $30 $35 Suits now Suits now I-- SMOOTHEST SMOKE YOU EVER ENJOYED I $22.50 $26.25 $30.00 $31-75 $40 Topcoats $35 Topcoats $30 Topcoats $23.95 $21.95 $19.75 $40 Suits now $45 Suits now Disposal Prices. Two-pat Student Suit $15 NEW SAPES & FINISHES SMEDICO CHOICE OF STOCK I 4A. a . OVERCOATS ' o m ^ - Fl IOnly ® few cents a da y! Ask about Inew Easy-Pay Plan. sensationall II 0 n^AuAIT&)7AJLQ - 0 m. i! I I