WEDNESDAY, NOV. 24,1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Phi Delts Win Speedball Title From Chi Psi Front Line Leads Team To Victory; Psi U. Wins Second With Forfeit Returning Basketball Lettermen Hard Pressed By Sophomores By BUD BENJAMIN !ago. His speed and knack of ball1 "Veteranitis," the strange. periodic hawking should earn him a lot of malady common at the beginning of action this year. l a?1 athletic seasons attacked the bas- Russ Dobson, Ann Arbor luminary, is the third of the group. Tall and; ketball squad this week.agile, Dobson has been used in both The disease is well understood. Theageo bond a sieensdanbCth-< front and back positions, and Cap- symptoms are a worried feeling, shak- n,, ,,.vt,, w hwl n ha tu t d Y cide her he~ Vl I Full M.S.C. Squad Leaves For Coast' EAST LANSING, Nov. 23.-(P)- Thirty-four of the Michigan State College football squad's young men went west today, seeking to wind up a successful football season with a victory over the University of Sa n Francisco in the coast team's home town. The squad, rested and in good physical condition, left by train at 1 p.m. after a final home practice of the season on College Field. Prac-, tices are scheduled at Creighton Uni- versity in Omaha, Neb., Wednesday. Ogden, Utah, on Thanksgiving Day,! and in Oakland, *Calif., Friday. '38 Baseball Captain Undergoes Operation Merle Kremer, captain-elect of this year's Varsity baseball team is in University Hospital recover- ing from an appendicitis operation undergone Monday morning. He was stricken Sunday night and rushed to the hospital immediately. "Butch" as Kremer is called by his teammates patrols center field for the Wolverines and is known as the hardest hitter on the team. His powerful hitting in the "clutch" has pulled many a game out of the fire. Kremer is a senior and hails from *Ann Arbor. I I r k h 4 k ti I ti I iz t Led by a quartet of shifty, hard- charging forwards and bolstered by a' stone-wall defense line, Phi Delta! Theta won the Intramural speedball' championship yesterday afternoon: with a decisive 10-2 victory over Chi? Psi, fraternity athletic champions. With a forward line averaging bet- ter than six feet in height, Chi Psi employed a speedy passing attack to~ hold their favored opponents to a 2-1 lead at halftime. Soon after the sec- ond quarter opened Dave Hunn, high scorer for 1937 Intramural speedball, made a free kick good to give his team! a lead they never relinquished. A few minutes later Bill White and Dick Haag each converted on a double foul to end scoring for the half. Up until this time, although the ball had been mostly in Chi Psi territory, the1 outcome of the game was very much in doubt.I Soon after the second half opened: Captain Bob Smith of Chi Psi Was forced out of the game by an injury1 and from then on the fortunes of his team took a sudden drop, as George1 Peterson and Hunn each scored for1 the Phi Delts in rapid succession.I Haag tallied again to keep Chi Psi in the game but Hunn caught an end! zone pass from Joe Barasa and Cap- tain Petersen tallied his second score; to make the count 6-2 at the endI of the third period. The fourth period was all Phi Delt as Barasa registered three points] and Hunn chalked up his fourth goal to end the day's scoring. The entire Phi Delt team deserves praise but the defense work of Tom Harmon and Don Brewer was out- standing along with the ball handling of Hunn, Peterson and Barasa. Ed Greenwald, Chi Psi star, was closely covered throughout the game but' nevertheless played well as did John McLean, Haag, and Neil McKay. Psi Upsilon won second place in the Intramural League with a forfeit win over Kappa Nu, while Phi Sigma Kappa, featuring the playing of tiny; Ray Barnes, won a close 7-5 decision over Theta Xi for third position. HOCKEY MANAGERS CALLED All eligible sophomores and second semester freshmen who wish to try out for a position as hockey manager are asked to re- port at the Coliseum any day this week between the hours of 6 p.m. and 8 p.m. Sam Palinski, Mgr. Hollingbery, Jones To Coach All-Stars COR.VALLIS, Ore., Nov. 23.-1P)- The coaches for the All-Star East- West football game at San Francisco New Year's Day will be Orin (Babe) Hollingbery; of Washington State; L. M. (Biff) Jones, of Nebraska, and Percy Locey, director of athletics at Oregon State, it was announced to- day. Dana X. Bible, coach and athletic director at University of Texas, will continue as a member of the Western Commitee. ing knees, occasional cold sweats, and sporadic nervous paroxysms. The: victims: experienced athletes. The! cause: the usual crop of. sophomore job aspirants. The cure: renewed ; energy, vigor, determination, and: practice. Veterans Jittery h With conditions as unsettled as they are in the Wolverines cage clique at present, the veterans are far from' their usual calm and complacent' selves. Only two of them, 'Capt. John: Townsend and Herm Fishman, are, certain of their jobs. The others keep, glancing at the sophomores and won-; dering just how cold the winter will, be. The recruits have the stuff this year. There is ample material for both front and back lines ,the only! two positions in Cappon's system, and: some of the new men are pushing, their more experienced colleagues for play. I John Nicholson, end of the Wol- verines' grid aggregation this year, is1 the fourth potential regular, al- though inexperience handicaps him , at present. Nicholson played year- , ling ball two years ago, and his height i gives.him a natural bid for the up job. jb Rae Joins Veterans All four of these men were used in last night's scrimmage. Rae joinedE Townsend, Leo Beebe, Ed Thomas, and Fishman on the first squad, while Pink, Dobson, and Nicholson Janke Elected To Lead Eleven For Next Year Continued from Page 1) services in the line would be more valuable than in the backfield, he was shifted back to his old tackle post. and played a short time at this spot against Minnesota. He rounded back into shape and saw action in both the Iowa and Illinois games. Against Chicago, Janke was back in the starting line- up again, and his performance in I this game and against Pennsylvania was highly satisfactory. Again the old injury jinx struck, however. This time it was a leg ail- ment, and Jankewas unablehtostart! against Ohio State, although he did; see service. His play, although lim- ited, nevertheless won him the praise and respect of his teammates, and he was generally recognized as a mainstay of the varsity line. C " kJi With Festive Board Thursday; {{ i i By DICK SIERK played along with Bill Barclay and Thanksgiving Day is not only the Mannie Slavin on the seconds. time for all good men, women, and Other contending sophomores are children to hie themselves to the Fred Trosko, Bob Palmer, and Dave festive board but, in many parts of Gates. the country, to partake of their an- All ratings at present, however, are' nual fare of football as dished up by temporary in nature, and a shift is 1 some of the nation's leading grid probable prior to the opening of the teams. season. When things do start pop- Outstanding from a traditional ping, watch for the men of '40 doing standpoint is the Pennsylvania-Cor- kn as m W I tr _ tw Tha th * ne _tei honors. their share for the Maize and Blue nell battle that always finds the good g Heading the list is lanky Jim .Rae, contingent. burghers of Philadelphia more,7 Toledo product, and a likely lookingI- steamed up than the pudding that!g candidate. Rae, a front man, is a graces their tables. And the follow- th good passer and shot, and handles S ort Leaders ers of the Big Red do not exactlyI the ball much the same as Townsend.'succumb to the lethargy which us- He works well with Townsend under W ill1 address c ually accompanies Turkey Day. K the bucket, and their similar style. IJ Quakers Hold Edge o of play adds impetus to the quintet's ,llThe series of games between the#th play. According to Cappon, he will Prep Athletes two teams began back in 1893 and a bear a lot of watching this season. since then the Quakers have piled up Pink Outstanding a goodly margin of victories over the ar Number two is Charley Pink, di- Mickey Cochrane, manager of the Itha'cans. The last three games be- tl minutive sophomore back line man. Detroit Tigers, Earl "Dutch" Clark, tween the teams have gone to Penn- th Pink is extremely fast and aggres- coach of the Detroit Lions profes- sylvania. " sive, he passes and shoots well, and, sional football team, Director of Ath- This year, however, the program ti reminds one of George Rudness who letics Fielding H. Yost and Coach ,promises to be different, for Carl w played with the Varsity two years Harry G. Kipke will be the principal Snavely has developed a top-flight1 speakers at the third annual High team at Cornell while Harvey Har- t School Athletes' banquet to be given; mon has been having his troubles b Protege To Clear by the University of Michigan Club with his Red and Blue aggregation. m of Ann Arbor for 87 Ann Arbor High South Has Headliner d Goat' Of Rose Bowl School athletes Tuesday, Nov. 28 in On the basis of previous games of the Un this year Cornell should have little!c A This affair is given each year for trouble subduing its ancient rivals, C football players from St. Thomas and but when these two teams face each Nine years ago Roy Riegels ran 80 Ann Arbor High Schools and bas- other on the Franklin Field greens- yards in the wrong direction to give ketball players from University High ward ,anything is liable to happen.s. Rose Bowl football history a dramatic School. Varsity lettermen will also Another traditional game and one anecdote-and himself/ the enduring attend the banquet and will help which is more important in the na- title of "goat." entertain the high school men. tional grid picture is that between Down the years Riegels has borne Attendance to the function is open, Alabama and Vanderbilt in the the jibes with good grace while rising1 to University men, who can purchase South. The Crimson Tide is as yet' to capable heights as a high school tickets from Stanley G. Waltz, man- undefeated, but the Commodores! coach. And. when his alma mater; ager of the Union. would like nothing better than to, lines up in the big bowl New Year's Another football banquet will be ---- Day he may see one of his proteges given by- the University of Michigan' repay in measure for his own mistake. Club of Kalamazoo for high schoolUU California's star back is Sam Chap- Footballers in southwestern Michi- man. The 184-pound pigskin war- gan Thursday, Dec. 2 in Kalamazoo rior, a candidate for All-American at which T. Hawley Tapping, general honors, was coached in 'high school secretary of the Alumni Association, and sent to California by Riegels. will be toastmaster. ------____ _.____ _ __ _ _ _ _ ______ M 9 nock them out of this class as well s out of any consideration for the uch sought after Rose Bowl berth. Vhile this game is not steeped in adition to the extent of that be-, ween Cornell and Pennsylvania, it! as come to be a prize attraction in he South. A little further north the Ten- essee-Kentucky game holds the in- erest of grid fans. This series be- an in 1899 and last year's score of -6 with the Vols the winner is a ood indication of the bitterness of he rivalry. Big Six Too In a Big Six feature, Missouri and :ansas tangle. This is one of the ldest of Thanksgiving Day rivalries, ,he teams getting together 46 years go for the first time. The annual fracas between Denver nd Colorado gains added importance his year because of the presence ins he Colorado lineup of one ByronI Whizzer" White, at present the na- ion's second leading high-scorer vith an even 100 points. With young Mr. White attempting o add to his total, aided and abetted; y his various and assorted team- nates. and Denver's Pioneers en-; eavoring to restrain him to the best f their ability, the Rocky Mountain lassic takes on an added flavor. olorado also takes an unbeaten rec- rd into this contest. -4 Janke is member of society, Hei ,/ /7,4 PLAIN AS PRINT Vision your own future in the ex- periences of others. Will it be a brilliant success? -- or a dismal failure? That's up to you. This is the day of BUSINESS Re- gardless of future profession or job, to make progress in it, you must know BUSINESS. Business or Secretarial Training at this institution will give you your Mart, and will carry you far and fast. Apply for enrollment now. MARGARET SINCLAIR. 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