iunuaYtI, 1,. s THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wolverines Stop Bucks 38-28 In Rouglhous pc1~ 1~ ' C TopsScorers Fighting Withl1Tallies~ - Officials Laxness Draws Boos From Spectators; Hull LeadsBuckeyes_ _ (Continued from Page 1) Rough Stuff .. . the Wolverines began to click im- CINCINNATI University plans to mediately. Smick weaved through, go out and get them, as the took a neat pass from Rae and sank cigar store boys say. Lured by a set-up. "Stretch" then dropped a large "kitties," the. southern difficult one-handed flip from the school has severed associations in corner, and Michigan started mov- its conference, acquired a Notre ing. The next few minutes were Dame coach, Joe Meyer, and crammed with pushing, shoving and avowedly seeks bigtime oppon- wild shooting. . ents. In pursuance of this policy, There was a moment of speculation they have signed Hunk Anderson, when Smick went into the game and as an assistant to Meyer, and the was taken by Jarring Jim McDonald, ex-Wolvreine line coach, should for last year at Columbus the two fit into his new surroundings, for boys came to blows. Nothing pugilis- he certainly knows most of the tic, developed, however. Incidentally, football angles. the "Jarring Jim" appended to the big * * Buckeye guard's name proved no mis- Speaking of lax basketball officiat- nomer. ing, as everyone who saw last night's When Townsend returned to the basketball game is, John Schommer bout, the referee, for the first time, spotted McDonald clinging to Jake's and Nick Kearns let the Buckeye- arm and called the foul. , The crowd Wolverine clash go completely to pot., relished that bit of astute officiating. Schommer, who bears a sharp like- Ohio State exhibited a higgledy- ness to the late Will Rogers, called a piggledy attack in the closing. min- technical foul on Michigan early in utes, but the Wolverines were mas- the game for the booing of the crowd. ters of the situation and finished We thought it was- poor sportsman- strong. ship at the time, but when Schommer Smick and Rae revealed their com- closed his eyes to obvious fouls later bined ability to handle the pivot po- in the bruising tilt, we hardly think sitioi when Townsend is unavailable, the crowd should be castigated for although "Stretch" destroys some of its behavior. Personally, we like a his effect by his extreme cautious- hard-fought tussle, without the of- ness when on occasions more crash ficials being captious, but there's a would help. limit. And it was reached by the Only Fishman and Center Bill Messrs. Schommer and Kearns. Sattler were removed on personals, The most apt appraisal of the and that indicates the laxity /of the body works last night was that of officials, for many more fouls were Bob Campbell, Varsity gridder committed, but overlooked. and ballplayer. He whispered: "I # Michigan took a total of 44 shots, I 14 of which were good. Ohio State banged away at the hoops 52 times, victory was doubly important to the Wolverines in view of Illinois' start- ling upset of the undefeated Puruer five last night, and Indiana's equally surprising victory over Minnesota. Hoosiers Trip Shot - By - Shot Gopher Squad, FIRST HALF Win Is Second In Biv Teln Illini Snap Purdue's Victory String 51-43 -- ... INES ... by Irvin Lisagor hear they make those Ohio State basketball players charge a tack- ling dummy twice before every practice . . . " Al Nagler, WJBK's broadcaster, was pouring out a rapid-fire account of the game, and throughout the first half his operator plaintively tugged at his coat, trying to tell him some- thing. But Nagler waved silence as he continued his breezy announcing. When the half was over, Nagler leaned over and asked his assistant what he wanted. "You've been off the air." . . . Something had gone wrong with the wires. During the heated second half, the same operator stood upon a, bench in the pressbox, trying to fix things, when he suddenly slipped. He was toppling off the high girders when Nagler reached out and snatched him. He sus- tained only a skinned proboscis, but it might have been tragic ... Horses, Horses.. . WE VIEW with interest the efforts of O.S.U.'s Ebony Antelope, Jesse Owens to become a simon pure after having dabbled in sordid com- mercialism., Jesse says he didn't get his palm crossed with silver or even currency for running. A.A.U. Moguls say he did too- he raced a horse down in Havana and anybody but a sap knows a haybag which does any racing is no amateur. Therefore they reason, with some logic, Jesse is a pro right along with the horse whether he got paid in good hard U.S. currency, Cuban pesos or Havana cigars and that's that. Of course other Olympians have raced horses if that's what the argument ;urns on. Take For- rest 'Spec' Towns, Georgia hurd- ler and Olympic titleholder. He raced an Army (Cavalry not West Point) plug over the 120 yard highs and beat him. Nobody is popping up with the ar- gument that Towns is a professional. It might be that the A.A.U. thinks the difference in eligibility rules in the Army Athletic setup and those at other places, Havana race tracks for instance, makes the cases of Owens and Towns horses of different color as it were. Outside of the horse incident Jesse maintains he didn't get a cent for running in competition. It is rumored that he was forced to do a bit of running when he had the temerity to address a Harlem Democratic rally on be- half of Mr. Landon, Republican martyr, but that doesn't count. To us it seems like a matter of in- tent. Towns didn't say he intended to reap monetary reward on the track and so far as we know he didn't. Owens said he was going to but he didn't, or, so it appears. That makes Jesse a professional. -Roy Heath. '4 I Beats Minnesota Sacks Ten Player - Shot M O Beebe, foul (Sattler) ......1 Sattler, short overhand .. 1 Hull, flip-short.......... 1 Hull, foul (technical) .... 1 Sattler, set up........... 1 Townsend, hook ......... 3 Fishman, long-side ....... 5 Rae, tip in .............. 7 Schick, overhead ........ 7 Rae, setup .............. 9 Fishman, set up ..........11 Schick, hook shot ........11 Lynch, long side ........11 Rae, 2 fouls (Sattler) ....13 Hull, hook-corner .......13 Fishman, long-side ......'15 Lynch, long-side .........15 Rae, tip in ..............17 Hull, foul (Fishman) ... .17 Beebe, foul ,Schick) ......18 Baker, pop shot ..........18 SECOND HALF Townsend, long-side.....20 Hull, flip-corner .........20 Rae, foul (Sattler)......21 Sattler, set up.........21 Fishman, flip..........23 Fishman, 2 fouls (Hull) ..25 Smick, set up .............27 Rae, flip-corner ........29 Schick, foul (Smick) .... 29 Townsend, foul (M'Don'd) 30 Thomas, flip-short ......32 Townsend, setup ........34 Schick, flip-center ......34 Thomas, foul (Lynch) . .. .35 Sattler, foul (Smick) ... ..35 Smick, foul (Sattler) ... .36 Townsend, tip in.....38 0 2 4 5 7 7 7 7 9 9 9 11 13 13 15 15 17 17 18 18 20 20 22 22 24 24 24 24 24 25 25 25 25 27 27 28 28 28 Title Race For Indiana MINNEAPOLIS, Jan. 10.-(/P)-The Minnesota basketball team dropped its second consecutive Western Con- ference game tonight, 39 to 38, to a slow-breaking Indiana quint. The victory was the second win in three loop starts for the Hoosiers. The Gophers, unable to get their fast-breaking offense working, were trailing during almost the entire game, and by a 20-15 score at the half. They drew even with eight min- utes of the second stanza remaining and tied the count again with less than two minutes left, but never were in front. Ernest Andres and Marvin Huff- man, both guards, paced their team with 14 and 11 points, respectively, while Paul Maki counted 11 for the Gophers. I-M BASKETBALL Alpha Tau Omega 13, Sigma Chi 8. Tau Kappa Epsilon 10, Phi Sig- ma Kappa 7. Delta Kappa Epsilon 14, Delta Tau Delta 11. Theta Chi 20, Zeta Psi 16. Hockey Squad Meets Gophers Twice In Week With two victories over Michigan Tech safely tucked away, Michigan's conquering hockey team is looking to its meetings Wednesday and Friday with its other arch-rival, the Minne- sota Ghopers. Up to this year, the winners of this series would capture the mythical Big Ten title, but the University of Illinois has entered a sextet this season, add- ing new life to the race. The Wolverines came through their 5-2 and 7-1 wins over the Miners in good physical condition. Gib James, star wing, who -over the week-end added three goals and the same num- ber of assists to his already amazing point total, still hav an ankle injury but will not be hampered by it. The complete squad of eleven men will leave this afternoon for Minne- apolis. Ir II HERtM FISHMAN I .' I I FISHOW'S WATCH and JEWELRY REPAIR 347 Maynard Cor. William Watch Crystals 35c A. C. Barth The Home of Fine Tailoring" I I Tailored to .a r+ I BE WISE and have your new suit specially fitted. With our expert work- manship and the finest of EI