AC 101 1938T F ,j AEIIE . ASIDE " Michigan Icers Stop ec , 2-1, To clamp State Title 3y IRVIN ISAGOR - Prayer Out .. LIKE buttoned shoes, Prohibition and the dodo bird, "Michigan" football passes finaly into the limbo of the obsoete. And unless the i- reverent neurotics who peddle half- truths and run the government in the smoky back room, have altered their formula,' they will greet the de- mise with such an indignant rasp as, "Ain't it a doity shame!" Yesterday, they described the Michigan system as outmoded, 20 years behind the streamlined offerses of this era. Today, they lament in a manner which re- calls the maudlin Sweeney at the funeral of his avowed enemy, Murphy. A friend tried to console Sweeney by telling him that Murphy would laugh uproarious- ly if he knew Sweeney was cry- ing like a big baby. Whereupon Sweeney paused a moment, looked at Murphy's bier and said, "Yeh, but lie don't know it." Then be resumed his bawling. When Fritz Crisler selects his line coach, whether it be Mike Getto, or some other non-Michigan man, the old influence will be gone. No one then associated with the. Varsity squad can be accused of being in a rut from which there's no escape. Maybe even the old slogan will be displaced by a "punt, pass and pro- gress'' saw, consigning the "prayer" to a more proper department, as the church. for example. /1A nclor man Ilriti .. rJOM H ARMON can run like a striped .iackass, if anyone had any doubts about it. In the intrafraternity relay race during the Ohio State-Michigan meet Saturday, Harmon, running as anchorman for the Phi Delts, lost his opponents in acloud of dust. The De Correvont of his high school days, Varimen was the storm center of the "Tulane Ex- pose" during Michigans hectic football situation last fall. In the relay, Harmon received the baton from Frater Bob Cooper, who won the Chicago Alumni Award as a freshman and who was touted as the panacea for Michigan's grid de- pression. That arouses the hope that Harmon doesn't get that award this spring, because it has developed a "jinx" aspect. Something always happens to the winner of it. John Jordan faded, and Cooper had to quit because of injuries. Only Fred Trosko, of the recent recipients, sr - vived the bugaboo. BILLY QUAYLE, the Buckeye sophomore who beat Capt. Ed Kirar in the 100-yard free style event down at Columbus with a :52.5, rivals Stepin Fetchit when not competing. IHis greatest ambition is to recline under a large tree with plenty of shade and let the passing travail take care of itself. To repeat a legend, it is said he enrolled in Ohio State because he heard the coach had a large, comfortable sofa in his office. Ben Grady told us Quayle was undecided whether to enter Michigan or Ohio State, and flipped a coin to solve it. Matt Mann's faith in a twirling dime must have. diminished ap- preciably, if the story be true. *,* * LEROY WEIR, Michigan's squash champion, who has returned from a round of tourney in Detroit and the East, was absent from tennis practice last week because his studies demanded attention. Weir is doubling as coach and student. )ots and P.aslcs: Iloosiers, Junie Andres and Bill .Johnson, were interviewed on an Indiana radio program, Wednesday and each named as the toughest op- ponent of their entire playing careers-John Townsend, who played against them at Tech Hligh in Indianapoliis... F .-- - Allen Injured; Cook Drives In Winning Tally IRolghhllse Simack Ost After Crash With- Wall I Reopens Scalp Injury I~ "% Tl"rfT MI h0 lt Hits Wall Natators SeekI Revenge Here A( ainst O.S.U. 3ucks Favored In Return Swiaem Ma tchilt'omorrow. First Event At 4:00 Week-End Sees Puck, Mat, Tank, Track Teams Win; Cagers Lose !J'orstIBuck Mat Loss P eturning from a victorious match with Ohio State on Saturday night, Coach Cliff Keen gave his Varsity wrestlers a rest before starting finall preparation for their match with Ohio University this week, followedI r. s i 1 i Y t Ck t9 4 . l , t t t HOUGHTON, Feb. 28.- (A: - jMichigan'sdetswimechain-a University of Michigan won the i idby the Big Ten meet March 11 and 12.1 Umtiy coe hckey cmon-thepions will attempt to regain their pe- Lead by Co-captains John Speicher mythical college hockey chiampion- destal of prominence tomorrow after- and Earl Thomas, the Wolverines ship of the state tonight by defeat- 5;.noon when they clash with t er- ad Erl their worst defeat ing Michigan Tech, 2-1. at the Am- State Buckeye natators who conquered of the season when they downed them straight. vitory i thgf'sr-game them a week and a half ago. by a score of 192 to 102. Paul a ystraight victory in the four-game t 1 aeo t16pudToa n series. The finale will be played here The meet will commence at 4 p.m. Caeron at 126 pounds, Thomas in Wednesday night. Mike Peppe's "Invincible Armada," the 13 iviion, and sophomors Don The Wolverines grabbed the lead confident after a clean-cut victory Nichols fighting at 175 pounds, all in the second period on a fluke shot. against Michigan in its home Waters, won their matches by virtue of a pin. Fabello knocked the puck from be- will invade the Intramural Pool to The outstanding match of the eve- hind the Tech net and it struck an- meet a foe smarting from the in- ning was the Harold Nichols, of other player in front of the cage, juries dealt to its pride in the last Michigan, versus Mindli, of the bounding into the twine. s encbunter. Buckeyes, in which neither was de- Long Drills cared winner after going into an The Huskies' lone tally came at the ~ Capt. Ed Kirar and company have overtime period. 4:10 mark in the third session when b Pekkala scored from right wing on' - been putting in long work-outs and Pekara'sored fr rigt win on be at full strength for the all- s I McCarthy's pass. Michigan's win- DE'. ,it '[tI ning goal was scored five minutes s later when Cook beat Goalie Gustaf- Skipper Peppe, the Ohio aggrega- Swimming-Mannmen won their son from scrimmage near the Tech tion's able leader will use a trio of fifth victory capturing five firsts net. Michigan touted iermen i the first skirmish, against Iowa in the Intramural pool Allen, Michigan center, was ns ured last night in the 300-yard medley race. Intercol- before a capacity crowd. Wolverine to leave the game in the third period the Michigan-Michigan Tech hock- legiate champion Bill Neunzig will Capt. Ed Kirar led his mates with a when he crashed into the boards at ey game. This rugged sophomore's paddle the back-stroke, Conference record-equalling and a record-break- the end of the rink, receiving a scalp play has stood out all through the runner-up in 1937. Al McKee. will ing performance in two races. Kirar wound which required medical at- year, climaxed by scoring iour sprint the breast-stroke. and the tied the pool and Conference marks tention. goals in the recent Minnesota game. amazing Bill Quayle, will plow into with a :23.4 50-yard effort, surpassed HOCKEY SUMMARIES !-the finish line at the anchor lap. This the I-M pool standard in the ceni- Michigan Fos Mich. Tech. trio is favored to give the Ohio dread- tury, finishing in :53 flat. E. James ......G .... . Gusta fson -e r rs .of nought a victory. The effects of long ti'avel told on S.D.Alvord A pair of reliable "seamen" will put hitherto "Tireless Tom" Haynie when impson ... D.. . . McIntyre lCoach Mann's Michigan galleon in le lost a 2:16.5 220 to Christains of Alltn C.. ..D.. McCarhy the lead with places in the 220-yard Iowa. Haynie came back to nose out . James ......F. .........Stack ATrace, and two more aquatic-minded the Iowan in a quarter mile thriller. abJo..s....F........Pekkala " Wolverines will add to the home Arnie Christen, blond Iowa diver, Michigan Spares-Cook, Doran, C. team's margin of comfort with 50- gave the best of four shoddy exhibi- Michigan ecs-Cawikiend, ddashtallies. The four able- tion in that event to eke out a two- Chase, Hillberg, Chadwick.By STEWART F1TCH bodied men are Tom Haynie, Ed Hut- point victory over Michigan diver Michigan Tech Spares-Villeneuvecheus, Ed Kirar and Walt Tomski. Ferstenfeld. Walsh, J. Hascall, Briden. Muscles creaked and eyes grown aBack Divers Tops Sophomore Johnny Haigh had too First Period bit rusty from disuse sharpened up . . Scoring-None. Penalties--McCar- yesterday afternoon as a mixture of The visitors are assured of the two much for the visitors as he sped to a thy, fighting; G. James, fighting; G. Varsity and Freshman baseball slug- top positions in the fancy diving ------------ James, holding. gets lined up to take their cut at the event in which Al Patnik and Jim ARMSTRONG FLATTENS BURNS Second Period slants dished up by the pitchers Patterson, two of the nation's top: MINNEAPOLIS. Feb. 28.-(IP) - Scoring--Fabello 4:50. Penalty- Coach Ray Fisher has had in train- ranking performers, will represent the Henry Armstrong, world's feather- Hillbcrg, tripping. ing for the last few weeks. Buckeyes ofl the high diving board. weight champion, made it 34 knock- Hiliberg, tripping. 1 ~~~Patnikhaamzdsetorwi.+ Third Period . With the nets completely surround- a ias amazed spetators with outs out of his last 35 starts by put- Scoring--Pekkala (McCarthy) 4:10: ing the small area, it was a bit liffi- his graceful splashless" dives, and is ting away Charley Burns of Johns- ton Cook 9:50. Penalties--none. cult to ,judge the quality of the bat- a sure bet to awe the audience at the town, Pa., in the second round of Referee--Al Jacobson, Marquet te. ted balls but a few of them appeared I-M pool tOmOrrOS their scheduled 10 round non-titl to be labeled for extra bases. Don Billy Quayle, twice the conqueror fight here tonight. Brewer dus his toes in and blasted of Ed Kirar, will renew relations with a couple high in the upptr corner of Ihe Wolverine captam in the 1-y10 ard BASKETBALL SCORES Four rce Krraternenity.,okizgfo ! the nets as did Forrest Evashevski, race. Kirar has becn working for Ohio State 41, Northwestern 36. now a first semester sophomore ;nd this race, and the pool record which Wisconsin 34, Indiana 32. Teams1 ii Icatching prospect. he set last Friday Minnesota 30; Iowa 29. victory in the breast-stroke. Michi- gan's 400-yard relay quartet avenged a loss in the medley race' with a runa- way triumph in the free-style event. Uninspired Inaccuracy Inaccurately described as "concien- tious but uninspired" in pre-meet stories, Ohio State two-miler, Paul Benner ran a concientious and in- spired race to defeat touted Michigan two-miler, Ralph Schwarzkopf by five yards, create a new Field House rec- ord of 9:19.7 for the distance. Just as concientious but not so in- spired were Benner's Buckeye team- mates who tallied 40 points while Wolverine cindrmen were amassing 55 giving the revamped Michigan team their second topheavy dual meet victory, a bright outlook for the Big Ten indoor championships at Chi- cago, March 1L. Season's First First, Michigan's first Big Ten first of the year came Saturday night when Smack Allen scored four goals against Minnesota to defeat the Gophers' hockey team 5-3. Winning gave Michigan a tie for the Conference crown with Minnesota. It gave Minnesota a serious defen- sive blow in the loss of 'the guardian of its most vital department, the nets. Goalie Earl Petrich suffered a frac- tured skull when he couldn't gt out of the way of a long distance shot driven from the stick of Johnny Fabello. The inexperienced Bill Bredesen who subsituted proved no bulwark against the onslaught of Al- len, Gib James and Fabello as three goals were chalked up on: him. CChi PsiEnters Hockey Finals Her) Kilner's The eGoals Bring Defeat To Trigon By IRVING GERSON Cheered on by Chi Psi's noisy root- ing section of a half dozen spectators, Herb Kilner performed the well- known hat-trick last night, enabling Chi Psi to eke out a 3-2 win over Trigon in the semi-finals of the In- terfraternity Hockey League. The battle started out at a fast, high scoring pace, four goals being chalked up in the first five minutes. Eugene Klein bagged the first mark- er of the evening in the opening minute of play when he rounded the defense and .sent a low shot past goalie Brown of the. Chi Psi sextet. Kilner Retaliates Seconds later, Kilner retaliated with the first of his three goals, shoot- ing the puck just inside the post of the Trigon net. Several plays later, he gave his team a momentary lead by flipping' a high shot that caught the far corner of the opposing goal. Dick McGarth, burly defenseman of the Trigon squad put his fraternity back in the running with a solo dash down the left wing, outmaneuver- ing the defense and slipping the puck past the Chi Psi goalie. This ended the scoring until mid- way in the final stanza when Kil- ner snared the deciding tally while both teams were a man shy, Mc- Grath and Lillie having been penal- ized for roughing. Lovett Hot Although he did not score, Jim Lovett played a stand-out game for Trigon, consistently, breaking up rushes and often leading dangerous offensive attacks into* Chi Psi terri- tory. On Thursday night, Trig6n will meet the winner of the Phi Kappa Psi-Sigma Phi game, which will be played tonight, for the fraternity championship. The victory will en- counter the independent winners for the campus hockey crown. l + E. r T L .5th Loss, 5th Place As unpredictable as the local' j weather, Michigan's-traveling basket- ball team slumped again Saturday night to drop a 37-25 decision to Iowa's in-and-outers. It was the Wolverines' fifth loss in 10 Conference games and relegated them to a tie for fifth place in the Big l Ten standings, The oft. fouled Michigan captain, John Townsend, was held to two bas- kets by Iowa's Erwin Prasse but add- ed five fouls for nine points, Benny Stephens, the' lawkeyes crack shot forward, rang in seven baskets and two fouls for 16 points to lead the scorers. -JL -ML JIKJIL Jw- .41 1 - 1 CenlIer Gedeon, who has definitely P lcIy&) decided to hang up his running shoes, after the indoor track season is con- Theta Xi will meet Alpha Delta eluded in order to cover the first base Phi, and Sigma Nu faces Chi Psi, in sector for the nine, took a few min- the semi-final round of the fraternity utes off from his track duties to pick 'A' basketball league. The two win- up a few batting pointers from Coach ners will play for the title, as a fea- Fisher. ture of the annual Intramural Open Doing most of the work in the box House, March 16. were Tom Netherton, one of the ace Chi Psi, defending champions. hurlers on the Frosh nine last spring gained a place in the round of four 1 and Ed Andronick, reserve from last) by nosing out a fighting Alpha Tai year's Varsity. Both were making Omega quintet, 12-10. Leading the good use of a slow-breaking curve) victors was big Ed Greenwald, who but neither bore down against the caged 10 of his team's 12 points. Bill relatively green batsmen. Black and Ted Fraser were Alpha Many Absent Tau's best bets. Les Brauser and Forest Evashevski A desperate last-minute rally gave did work behind the plate and will Theta Xi a 10-7 victory over Psi continue to do so until Leo Beebe, Upsilon. Behind 7-6 with hardly a veteran from last year's squad, con- minute to play, Paul Simpson sunk cludes his activities with the cage two consecutive baskets from in close, team. to spell victory for his team, and A large number of prospects, both cinch a coveted semi-final berth. Paul veterans and new 'men, still have not Keller, Psi Upsilon's lanky center was reported for practice but are ex- his team's chief threat, and led both pected out within a few days. Notably teams in scoring with five points. absent are the candidates for the Simpson, his brother Clarence, and first base post, only Howard "Hank" Ted Black, divided the victor's tal- Greenberg being on hand at the lies. present time. R WRESTLING SUMMARIES 118: Speicher M ) defeated Var- ney (O.S.) 126: Cameron (M) pinned Hind- marsh (O.S.) 135: Thomas M) pinned Tuckey (O.S.) 145: H. Nichols (M) and Mindlin (O.S.) drew in overtime. 155: Meyer (O.S.) defeated Danner Purdue 64; Chicago 33. (M). 165: (M). 175: Boehm (O.S.) defeated Tasch D. Nichols (M ) pinned Hucid- son (O.S.) Hvywt; Downes (O.S.) defeated Hird (M). COMPLETE SELECTION of FRANK MEDICO PIPES at SWIFT DRUG CO. 340 South State A. C. Barth "The Home of Fine Tailoring" GENWINE FILTERS PACKED ONLY IN THIS RED AND BLACK BOX MADE MEDICO WORLD'S SMOOTHEST SMOKE i I CA(W SUMIVMAIES Michigan (32) Townsend, f..... Thomas, f....... Smick, c ........ Rae, c........... Slavin, c......... Beebe, g......... Fishman, g....... Trosko, g.... To tals Illinois (36) lapac, f . Nisbet, ........ Phillips, f....... Dehner, (. Davies, T aandlon, g Lasater, lFrank, g .2 0 ..........2 0 ..........0 ..........I ... .. . I .. . ...3 . --- 0 ' 2 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 14 4 gxf 6 3 . =3 1 10 0 0 0 2 2 0 O tp 6 5 0 13 0 2 6 0 32 tpt 15 7 2 6 0 0 6 0 FILTIRe-COOLID Choose Your O Wn Fabric and Style From a selection of every fabric pattern and every popular style, choose your New clothes PNES 4 SOMETHING WONDERFUL . 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