PAGE Sil THE MIC HIGA N DAILY SUNDAY, NOV. 28, 193 ARMY NAVY . . . .6 . . . . . . . . () JNOTIRE DAME .. 13 PITTSBURGH . . 10 FORDIHAM.... 20 RIICH. STATE . . 14 TEX. CHISTIAN . 3 HOLY CROSS . . 20 STANFORD SO CAL....... 6 DUKE.......... 0 N.Y.U.......... 7 SAN FRANCISCO .0j SO. METHODIST.0 BOSTON COL. .. 0 COLUMBIA ..... 0 1 ..,. _..a , .. _., Wolverine Sextet Easily Con q ters Western Ontario 3 To 0 U------- Puckmen Show Xli Hockey Summaries F OTB AL 14 B R I F S ( 'I '1ntg 1 HeMichigan Pos. W. Ontario E. James ...... G ......Richardson In. S con Lion R. Simpson . .. D ........... Lawson Smith .... D .............Webb E. Allen ....... C ..............King Gib James Scores Twice Fabello ....... W ............Gillen itG. James ...... W ........ .W. Allen 'I Lead Victory March Michigan spares: E. Chase, Chad- Of Varsity In Opener wick, Doran, Hil1herg. -___ Western Ontario spares: Killoran, T)I K. Simpson, Matheson, Stewart, Mc- 1,709 Pack Coliseum Naughton. Referee: Roy Reynolds, Chatham. i fr P 1 First Period Pitt [Iarches On Ibu,s iwrs Nab Tille w (Contnueda romr agei ) participants wound up their hockey sticks for action, nothing material- ized, to the accompaniment of the crowd's disappointed groan.h I Michigan tallied once in the first period, and twice in the second, with Gib providing the latter two markers. Score After 14.20 The first goal came after 14:20 of the first stanza had elapsed, with the second line actively engaged. Evie Doran swiped the puck at center ice, passed to Hillberg within the blue' line and received an immediate re-1 turn which he converted into a score. He rode in rast upon John Richardson, the Canadian goalie who made several circus saves during the l evening, and punctured him with a blazer. Not until 12:40 of the second period; did the Wolverines flare again. This time Allen crashed through the West- ern Ontario defense, parried with Goalie Richardson awhile and then let fly. But the puck rebounded. off his shin guard. Gib James alertly retrieved it and pushed it past the sprawled net-minder. Jax~ne Tallies A few minutes later, with 15:051 gone to be exact, Gib captured the I disk in a mixup behind the Ontario l nets, skated up to the edge and sneaked it past the goalie with a clever backhanded flip. Near fistic fireworks developed in the last period as the invaders strove to dent Spike James' armor. Swipes of the sticks weren't exactly gentle, especially when Bill Allen, wing tan- gled with Smack briefly, and Joe, King parted Hillberg's hair with a fling of his stick. During a late flurry an impulsive judge raised his hands 1 on a Canadian shot, then decided Spike had repulsed it. Cam Hilloran, defenseman, protested 'violently but, tie referee ignored him. With thel game almost over, the visitors rode in on the Wolverine goalie in droves, but he proved unyielding.I sPass I "E DIZZY ONE SPEAKS Dempsey Returns Home Dizzy Dean wired a challenge to John iWith Pitomaine Poisoning (1a~ i~u ~ujp~ Montague today seeking to draw the ag mystery man of golf into a match NEW YORK, Nov. 27.-(/P)-Jack e .with him in the second annual Dizzy Dempsey, taken ill while on a wres- ' 1 * fl "* sfj]l Dean tournament to be staged De- tling refereeing trip in Canada, ar- cember 11 on the Bradenton Country rived here tonight. His ailment, Club course. thought originally to be appendicitis, -d-iga State Basketball Dizzy said "I think I can promise was diagnosed as ptomaine poisoning. .Jyou a good workout because my golf The former heavyweight champion Squad G 'ives Exhibition game's not exactly minor league got off the train at Yonkers, 20 At Prep ('linjc stuff." 1 miles out, and drove into the city i Penalty--James. Penal ty-Killoran. Scoring (1), Doran (Ilillberg) Penalty-James. Penalty-Stewart. Second Period: Scoring (2)-James (Allen) Scoring (3')-James (unas 15:05. DUKE STADIUM, DURHAM, N. C., MANHATTAN, Kans., Nov. -27.-- Nov. 27.--(/P)-The Golden Panthers (JI-Lowell English, a guard, dropped; of Pittsburgh cashed in on two op- back to the Kan,.es State 23-yard pertunities afforded by Duke fumbles line in the final 20 seconds of the sec- this afternoon to finish an undefeat- end quarter today and on a snow- ed season with a 10 to 0 victory. glazed field placekicked Nebraska to Captain Frank Souchak of the Pan- its third straight Big Six football thers kicked a 23-yard placement championship. field goal just before the first quar- The alert Huskers capitalized on a ter ended. He had paved the way by break for their score. Kansas State, covering Honey Hackney's fumble with the ball on its six-yard line, on Duke's 20-yard line. Hackney attempted to kill time by nudging the dropped the slippery ball when hit line. On the second plunge Bob hard by Ted Schmidt as he tried to Briggs fumbled and Gus Peters and catch a punt. Paul Amen recovered for the Huskers Dick Cassiano made the only touch- I enlthensasSte 1. down of the game about four min- -hK1s __. utes later when he swept wide off his right end, cut back and raced 14. Tie Of (ogias yards to score standing up. SouchakI converted. IATLANTA, Nov. 27--(P)-Georgia'sJ j I t 14:20. 12:04. sisted) Third Period:; Penalty-Webb. 100,000 Watch D e Correvont In Final Game CHICAGO, Nov. 27.--UP)-Bill De Correvont, the nation's highest scor- ing football player-prep, collegiate or professional-thrilled more than 100,000 spectators in Soldier Field to- ' day by giving Austin High School a 26 to 0 victory over Leo for the city' championship. The game, booked as a fund-raiser for Mayor Edward J. Kelly's Christ- mas Charity Chest, served as justifi- cation for 19 year old De Correvont's yards of press notices. He skipped, dodged and darted his way to three touchdowns in the 35 minutes h. played. His efforts gave him a scoring total of 204 points in nine games besides proving his speed and ability in the open, with a 47 yard touchdown runj and numerous lesser jaunts, De Cor- revont showed he could hit the line and pass, by bucking over twice from the one-yard line, and passing nine yards to Sunny Skor for the fourth score. De Correvont spoiled Catholic' League champion Leo's only genuine scoring opportunity by knocking down a pass in the end zone in the first quarter. 1. r l In a program which included a basketball clinic, an honorary lunch- eon to the founder of the game, Dr. James Naismith, a speech by the in- ventor, a discussion and revision of the rules and a motion picture show- ing the finer points of the sport, the, high school basketball coaches of{ Michigan and some of their players convened here yesterday at the Four- teenth Annual Basketball Rules Meet- ing. In the morning Coach Ben Van Al- styne sent his Michigan State squad of basketeers through a demonstra- tion of fundamentals and drills at the Intramural Building. Illustration of various types of offense and de- fense, both from the individual and team standpoints, was included in the clinic. Naismith Talks At noon about 250 men attended a luncheon at the Union which was held in honor of Dr. Naismith who is now Professor Emeritus of Physical I! ' Smart Linens for Christmas A fine assortment of lovely guest towels is our answer to your Christmas 'problem. 25C to $1.50 "ALWAYS REASONABLY PRICED" GAGE LINEN SHOP 10 NICKELS ARCADE 0 Another fumbied punt by Hack-' ney, who saw the wet pigskin slide through his hands on his 13-yard line, paved the way. Ed Spotovich covered the ball. Pitt rushed out nine first downsl while Duke was getting seven but the Panthers gained 237 yards by rush- ing while the Devils were getting only 60. Pitt tried only five passes, com- pleting two for five yards. Duke tried the air 21 times, gaining 66 Bull Dogs and the Engineers of Georgia Tech, arch rivals of the grid- iron since 1893, battled to a 6 to 6 stalemate today.; Featuring the somewhat suprisingI outcome which brought the deadlock to a Georgia team that failed to pene- trate Georgia Tech territory a single time was Capt. Bill Hartman's 93- yard touchdown run on the opening kickoff of the third period. Georgia Tech had to capitalize on a yards on five completions. Georgia fumble for its lone score Education at the University of Kan- when Oliver Hunnicutt fumbled and sas. Rams Take N.Y.U Georgia Tech again recovered on the Hill Auditorium was the scene of 17. the afternoon meeting which about NEW YORK, Nov. 27.-(IP)-Ford- The Engineers then connected with nine hundred attended. Dr. Nai- ham's "Rose Hill to Rose Bowl" foot- one of their surprisingly few com- (mith spoke on the Origin and De- ball express roared through its last *t)leted passes when Capt. Fletcher velo,"etrofthfrGmeoBe n way station today with a 20-7 vic- Sims laid the ball into the hands of ball," tracing it from the beginning tory over New York University, and 'Dutch Konemann, who got to the through to the present day. then looked ahead for the signal from one. At the conclusion of this talk the Pasadena and the post-season classic. meeting was taken over by C. E. For- Pe b a ls cl n fsythe, director of the State High backs,ed byr au aclassy collection 0f , . Whip s Tigers School Athletic Association, who led ski, who galloped 60 yards for the LOS ANGELES, Nov. 27. -- a discussion and eventual vote on second touchdown, after Dom Prin- revisions of rules recommended by cipe pounded over to climax a for- General Kenny Washington, dusky the rules committee. ward and lateral-passing 50 yard halfback sensation of the University Rules Passed drive in the second period, Fordham of California ac Los Angeles, led the Rulings which were passed by the took sweet revenge for the 7-6 beating Bruins to a 13 to 0 victory over the coaches included an automatic for- by which the Violets crowded the Missouri Tigers today. feit rule in case of interference with Rams out of the Bowl picture a year The Bruins capped a game, dull for the backboards during a game, an ago. three quarters, with a final burst of I agreement to use a sewed-seam type Although the violent Violets sty- energy. Their first touchdown came ball, the use of numbers on front and mied the Fordham march through- on a 56-yard march led by Washing- back of players' jerseys, no time out out 'the 'first proi a lil ton. after a field goal, and that tie games ou h frtperiod, it was plainlytn.n State tournaments should 'be de- evident that it was only a question The second brought 20,000 fans to ided after one overtime by the point of time. In the final analysis, the their feet in the final 30 seconds of syster o oi Rams made only eight first downs to play. It came when the "General"s seven ,but gained a net of 155 yards grabbed a Tiger pass on his own ten Showing of motion pictures which by rushing, compared to 29%/2 for yard line, galloped pell mel for about dealt with various styles of play. their neighborhood rivals. 88 yards and lateralled, just as he was play diagrams, and teaching tech- tackled on the 2-yard line, to center niques of a half dozen outstanding Lo.rilJohnny Ryland. Ryland fell across college coaches from all sections of ons prise the goal for the score. the United States, concluded the pro- NEW YORK, Nov. 27.-(1P)-Co- gram. lumbia, doormat of the Ivy League, P l 1 '1,7aI i1 VIERTLER BROS. 210 South Ashley Street Phone 2-1713 I Sidelights On Hockey Opener The S.R.O. sign was out last night at the Coliseum . . . but that didn't keep some 200 overflow fans from cooling their toes . . . The crowd at the first game recalls rumors about; tearing out the north wall to make f room for more seats .. . Seen from the lineups the game appeared strictly a brother affair .. . There were the two James boys and the Chase pair of Michigan . . . and then there were two Allens, one the worn it three years and after you take one look at it, you won't doubt it . . . Either every other jersey has a history behind it too or the Ath- letic Association is cutting down on expenses and starting early . . . The first score of the game was offered by the referee. . . He obliged when he knocked himself for a goal by slipping, time 1:17 . . . The ice was so soft in the third period that it became a pleasure to fall . . . The finished its season with a rousing' hurrah by battling the Stanford In- HOUSTON. Tex., Nov. 27.-(IP- dians to a scoreless tie before 20,000 Sophomore Ollie Cordill, raw-boned rain-soaked fans at Baker Field to-, west Texan, nudged Rice Institute day. j closer to the Southwest Conference Not only did Sid Luckman and his flag today with a pair of touchdowns valiant comrades avert the rout that ;that dropped Baylor, 13-7. had been expected, but they actually Once by air and once by ground outplayed the Huskies from the coast Cordill struck and Baylor, scrapping HOCKEY MANAGERS All sophomore and junior hockey managers are asked to re- port to Sam Palinski at 7 -p.m. to- morrow night at the Coliseum. Skates Sharpened 25c Campus Bike Shop 510 East Williams 1 i i Wolverine's center, the other Wes- Mustangs coach. Ernie Pettinger is most of the afternoon. They missedl tern's wing . . . But not stopping a brother of Gordon Pettinger who a touchdown by only two yards in the there the Simpson name entered in, started for the Red Wings earlier closing period and twice before one a defense for Michigan, the other in the season . . . Pucks weren't the nudged their way inside Stanford's the same for the visitors. only things that hit the Ontario 20-yard line. The ragged jersey and outfit that goalie, Don Richardson . . . In the Smack Allen wore with the No. 1 at- third period the whole cage came tached to it somehow has a history down on him . . Before this Vic Heyliger had BEN MOORS TEIN. back in the dying minutes of play, couldn't overcome the work of the 195-pound halfback who finally1 limped out of the game to the cheers of 20,000 numbed fans. MAKE { 3I I LAST WEEK - s i Sale Closes Saturday, Dec. 4 OVERSTOCKED on MEN'S and WOMEN'S fine- HOCKEY Winter is here and with it comes the thrill- ing sport of Hockey! For the most enjoy- ment, you need a good pair of skates that has been well-sharpened. G T .,. SHOES I I We are forced to take DRASTIC ACTION at once! 650 Pairs MEN'S Shoes 850 Pairs WOMEN'S Shoes Reduced for 15 days to $388 $488 $588 $688 All New Styles included- v.. -- CA AIE ... a (2 n - ..f C.C.M. SKATES WOMEN'S and MEN'S Have Them MI RACLEANED, and RETEXTURIZED by - 6la- $750 $10-50 $12-50 -$17,50 Five FREE sharpenings this season for. each purchase. Hockey Sticks . . 25c - 50c - 75c - $1.00 lII