wnsf Michigan, 48-43, In First Conferenc a gh Contest is Michigan, storyStreak Hapec Paces Floor 20 Points; Rae For Wolverines ontinued from Page 1) skets and Evers again with fouls built up a 19-17 lead ,conds before the half end- Illinois, 24, Michigan 17. ose remaining ten seconds rew in the longest shot of from near the middle of the Herb Brogan, second high Michigan, with nine points, d an Illini pass and dribbled court to throw in a left- ush shot. The teams left and hope was still aglowin : panting breast with the Rae Talies 16 Points a 4 r. ti ? : 3 4 i Y i R.. Grapplers Try To Forget Loss I.- IN THIS CORNER' Michigan AAU Indoor Traci Meet To Be Revived In Ma I y MEL FINEBERG Prepare Here To Meet Wildcats This Saturday h a-, rhat hope mounted higher in the st two minutes when Rae, single- nded, caged.two baskets and sank foul to pull the Wolverines up in nt 26-25 as a comparatively agre crowd of 4,800 looked far in- the future and saw glimpses of a g Ten crown. Those hopes went' mmering when Evers tipped in a ssed Drish foul shot and Hapac ik two baskets in a hutry. Illini Hold Lead There were 15 minutes of play re- wining and the Wolverines were ver able to pull even. Two min- es later, they had sneaked up to 31 but after that they were never the running. That man Hapac )k care of eight more points per- ially although outside of him, the olverines managed to stay even. t they still count all the points. For Illinois, Evers and Colin Hand- i were tied for, second scoring hon- i with 10 points apiece. But in the end it was an Illinois im that outran and outmaneuv- d the Wolverines that. gave them eir second win in four league starts. was the first time .that Michigan d faced a team as well-conditioned. was the first time it met a club at didn't tirea team that kept run- ig,. running, running. Officiating Disliked The officiating was some of the1 rst that the crowd had ever seen.k Michigan's heartbreaking 16-14 loss to the Illinois matmen Satur- day, which carried down with it a record of 16 straight dual meet, vic- tories, was thrust behind them yes- terday as the grapplers began prep- arations to repel the Northwestern in- vasion this week. Terming the defeat "unfortunate," Coach Cliff Keen turned philoso- pher long enough to remark, "It was only our third loss in four years. I guess that's pretty nearly our share." Behind, 16-0, going into the fifth match, after Illinois had taken two falls and two decisions in the first four matches, Michigan started its bid when Harland Danner pinned Illini Ted Seabrooke. The bid stopped there, however, when the Wolverines failed to score another fall. Sophomore Jim Galles was about to turn the trick when the match was stopped to rescue his opponent from Galles' punishing head scissors. Don Nichols came within an eighth of an inch of succeeding when his match ended. The defeat went down in the records after Illinois heavyweight Frank Battaglia did a clumsy, but effective job of avoiding Captain "Butch" Jordan for nine dull min- utes The pressure of maintaining a win- ning streak now gone, the grapplers are working with the intention of starting another this Saturday against the Wildcats. Northwestern's lone Conference start brought them a crushing 28-6 defeat by a strong Iowa squad, and they will be the under- dogs against the Wolverines. Capt. JiMmy Rae, Michigan's greatr center, pictured here on the verge of making one of his deadly shots, played heady and Aggressive ball last night in the rough and tumble game with the fighting Illini to lead the Wolverines in scoring with' 16 poiits. Pucksters Tie were House For Big 10 Lead, Two Victories Over Illini Do It; Gophers Next By virtue of two decisive victories over Vic Heyliger 6 Illinois lads, the Michigan hockey team today finds it- self in a tie for first place in the Big Ten puck race. But: this week, the Wolverines travel to Minneapolis to meet the powerful Minnesota outfit in a pair of contests which will see the Gophers top-heavy favorites. Greatly encouraged by the scoring punch which the Wolverines dis- played in the Illinois series, especially the second game, which they won 5-1, Coach Eddie Lowrey is nursing the hope that his boys Will give Min- nesota a real contest and perhaps even pull out a victory.- One encouraging feature of the second Illini tilt was the aggressive- ness and general improvement of lanky sophomore center Paul God- smith who scored two, goals and ex-j hibited more drive than he had in the past. Charley Ross and Larry Calvert, the always dependable Michigan de- fense men played their usual hard- checking, fast-skating games and Ross was again one of the offen- sive spark plugs of the Wolverines, assisting Goldsmith on both of his scores and tallying once himself. Capt. Eldon "$pike" James, Wol- verine goalie, turned up with a num- ber of sensational saves in the series although he was not forced to extend himself as much as he had in pre- vious contests. If the Wolverines. should' turn in an amazing upset and defeat the Gophers, it will probably be mostly the work of James, Cal- vert and Ross. 1- I Tankers Take It First. Places; Reserves weak i That's Not Cricket . . . Back in 1936, Ohio State had an up-and-coming swimming team. Howie Salie, an all-American back-1 stroker, Dexter Woodford, a fine dis-7 tance free styler and Jim Patterson, future Big Ten champion in the, dive, were the backbones of the team. At that time Michigan was Conference champion, had com- petition only from Iowa (who dethroned the Wolverines that year but who had the tables re- versed in the Collegiates) and Northwestern. But Ohio State was a comer and Matt Mann, coach of the Wolverines, knew that the Conference needed a shot in the aquatic arm and de- cided to schedule the Buckeyes twice. The Wolverines won a pair that year but both were close. And the following year Ohio really had a team coming up. There was Al Pat- nik, Johnny Higgins, Billy Quayle, Ed Sabol, Bill Neunzig, Al McKee and a couple of others. Now swimming is a peculiar sport in that everyone knows how good freshmen are. They swim in A.A.U. and other meets; in fact, many swim- mers reach a peak in high school. In short there was little doubt of how tough Ohio State would be in 1937- 38. They'd be darn tough-too tough for Michigan. Matt knew that he'd be whipped by that club. It"d be close but swimming is such a form sport that it's easy to predict scores. But he scheduled two dual meets again. "I'll get whipped this time but 0 I'll get them again," he thought. Well, he was wallopped twice. Good and proper. There was no doubt about it. Ohio was too good in dual meets and in the Big Tens although Michigan man- aged to eke out a lucky one point victory in the National Colleg- iates. Last year Michigan again appeared headed for a pair of defeats. Ohio was again too strong but Neunzig and Sabol left school and both peets ended in 42-42 ties. In the Big Tens and the Collegiates, it was all Michi-. gan. Enough for the past. This year, it seemed as if the Wolverines would win. When Billy Quayle was declared ineligible, (Ohio authorities say it was because of scholastic deficiency) Ohio coach Mike Peppe suddenly found that he had no place on his schedule for the second Michigan meet. There had been only tentative dates made but now, out of the clear blue sky (as gins had the time of his life trying to shake loose from the fast pursu- ing Michigan sophomore. Another bright spot in the Wol- verine picture was Beebe's victory over Stanhope. In the past, the Michigan back stroker always stayed with the leaders during the early part of the race, but faded in the stretch. Saturday he did an about- face. This time it was Stanhope who dropped behind in the closing yards. DUKE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF MEDICINE DURHAM, N. C. Four terms of eleven wees are given each year. These may be taken con- secutively (graduation in 3% years) or three terms may be takean eachyear. (graduation in 4,years). The entrane requirements are intelligence, charac- ter and three 'years of college work, including the subjects specifed for Grade A Medical Schools. Cata- logues and appllcation forms may be obtained from the Admission Committee. the saying goes), Mr. Peppe finds that there aren't enough days of our years. He cancels the second Wolver- ine meet since he finds that none of the three tentative dates are satis- factory. His schedule is completely. filled and the most attractive meet of the year is blacked out. We wouldn't haave believed it but there is only one conclusion to be drawn. Mike Peppe was afraid to take another shellacking. Ex- traneous reasons are merely ex- cuses. It appears as though he didn't want to be licked. So he cancelled the meet. This won't help Big Ten swim- ming. If, any time a coach de- cides he wants'to run away and play only when he has a good chance of winning, then the Fa- bian swimming policy will dom- inate the Conference. Swimming will go classical and hearken back to Roman days. One way to change that is to have Major Griffith's office do the sched- uling. Take it out of the hands of the coaches, allowing them only to fill in the dates. Football, basketball, baseball, all of them had the same difficulty. Now, once and for all, let the Big Ten office take over the scheduling of swimming. Then, there won't be a repetition of this cozy game. The cancellation of the meet had the Wolverines without a really good home meet but the problem was solved yesterday afternoon. The juniors were tell- ing the sophomores that confi- dentially they you-know-what, and sophomores were informing the juniors that water was some- thing you swim in, not drink. So the sophs challenged the juniors to a dual meet. But the seniors, all three of them, didn't want to be left out and then the freshmen, as is their usual wont, declared themselves in. The outcome is a triangular meet. The juniors on one club, the sophs on another and the seniors and the frosh combined on the third. The juniors have Jim Welsh, Big Ten champ in the 220, Charley Barker, Collegiate sprint champ, Bill Beebe, runner-up in the Collegiate backstroke and others; the sophs have two Share- mets, Dobson Burton, Tommy Wil- liams, Strother Martin-and others, while the three seniors, Capt. Hal Benham, Ed Hutchens, Johnny Haigh, will be supplemented by what Matt calls "a frosh squad that could beat just about any other varsity in ' the country." Mark that meet down on your list. Ls took 27 shots the first in the entire game the ried 58, five more than The Illini had 22 per- I on them. * * * ish failed to start last e, it was the first time ts that his name wasn't ng line-up. He's only a Schwarzkopf, Balyeat And Breidenbach To Enter; Title Held By Michigan By HERM EPSTEIN Revival of the Michigan AAU Indoor Track Championships on a bigger and better scale was an- nounced yesterday by Lloyd Olds, Michigan Normal track coach, who directed the affair the last few times it was held. The meet will take place in Yost Field House, Saturday, March 23. The feature attraction will be the Michigan Daily Special Invitation Two-Mile in which the state will pit her two great distance runners, Ralph Scbwarzkopf of Michigan and Tommy Quinn of Michigan Normal against two or three of the outstand- ing two-milers in the country. Crack Relay Race Planned In addition to this, plans are being made to bring two of the best col- legiate mile relay teams to face Mich- igan's crack quartet of Warren Breid- enbach, Phil Balyeat, Jack Leutritz, and either Bud Piel or Bill Dobson. Other possible speciali events are be- ing considered for the 50-yard dash and the hurdles. The list of track events includes the dash, high and low hurdles, open 880, open mile, the Daily's/ Special Vic Wukovits is a brother of the kovits that starred for Notre me a few years ago. The Irish uts must have slipped up. :r"* * a* lere's the heights of those large s who ran like greased lightening b night. Evers, 6-1; O'Neill, 6-1; ikovits, 6-3; Drish,.6-0; Hepac, 6-2. r i i r I two mile, and a half-dozen or match relays. The field eventE be the shot put, pole vault, and jump. The high schools will con in the dash, high and low hu and match relays. Michigan Won Last Meet The meet was last held in with Michigan retaining the ficial championship. The folki year the .meet was cancelled a last moment due to fins troubles, and has never beer tempted since. Since Olds had in charge of the meet previous] had all the paper work done, ant the readily-given approval o: State AAU Board was needed t the wheels .in motion for the re Enthsiiastic approval was expi by the Michigan coaches Ker herty and Chester Stackhouse. Invitations have been mailed1 men who are being sought fo Daily's Special Two-Mile, an names of the competitors will b nounced as soon as the accept come in, which it is expected v during the coming week. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Purdue 50, Minnesota 34' Ohio State 32, Northwestern Indiana 40, Wisconsin 4 Iowa 41, Chicago 27 Michigan State 48, Marquet Missouri 27, Iowa State 16 They huffed and they puffed and they blew the house of Peppe down in Columbus Saturday afternoon, but still the Wolverine natators' showing was disappointing to the experts who had predicted a 30 point advantage for the Michigan squad. They won the first places all right. There is no kick coming about that end of the meet. In fact, the experts had predicted six victories for the Wolverines and Bill Beebe's triumph over Big Ten champion Harold (Cur- ly) Stanhope even made it seven. Ohio Cops Places But the seconds and thirds didn't seem to fall Michigan's way Satur- day. Their expected sweep of the free style events never materialized. Don Reinicker, the Buckeye sopho- more, finished second in both 50 and 100, while John Patton, another Ohio newcomer, wound up second in the two distance events. As Matt Mann explained.it, "My regulars looked swell, but the second stringers let me down." But then too, Mike Peppe's two sophomores were plenty good. Pat- ton was one of the smoothest swim- mers in the water Saturday, while Reinicker was forced to swim :23.7 in the 50 to beat Bill Holmes who came back fast after a poor start, and the Buckeye lad swam the century in 54 seconds to hold off the fast finishing Ed Hutchens. Regulars Come Through But Matt's "regulars did look swell" Saturday. There is no doubt about that. The brothers Sharemet were especially brilliant. Gus' :52.6 for the century even forced Mike Peppe to call him "the finest free style prospect in a long time who will undoubtedly develop into one of the world's best." Johnny lost, but in a convincing manner. The veteran Johnny Hig- I Shirts Our Complete stock of colored Manhattan shirts reduced to $1.65 All styles and colors. ROGER'S MEN'S WE. -1107 South University Avenue 97nd Anniversary Sale The Illini Jinx 11 t1 I BUY OVERCOATS for this year and next. Our stock has been replenished and new coats in new styles are included Michigan (43) G Sofiak, f ..........2 Wood, f . . . . .'.....0 Fitzgerald, f ......2 Harmon, f-g ......0 Rae, c............5 Pink, g ..........2 ~Brogan, g.......4 Ruehle, g.........0 Totals.......15 Illinois (48) G Hapac, f........9 Evers, f ..........4 Frank, f ........ .1 Wukovits, c.......1 O'Neill, c .........1 Richmond, g ......0 Drish, g.........1 Handlon, g........4 Totals .......21 F 1 0f 0 3 6 2. 1 -13 Pf 1 1 1 1 3 4 1 12' T 5 0 4 3 16 6 S 43 T 20 10 2 2 2 0 2 10 48 Bucke es Down Wildcats COLUMBUS, 0., Jan. 15. -(P)- Coming from behind in the last half and "freezing" the ball in the final 90 seconds, Ohio State edged North- western, 32 to 31, in a see-saw Big Ten basketball game tonight. Center Kick Klein, of Northwestern, the Big Ten's second high point maker, took scoring honors with 10 points. CHICAGO, Jan. 15. -()P)- Iowa's basketball team rang up its first Big Ten victory tonight when the Hawk- eyes overwhelmed Chicago, 41 to 27, before 1,500 spectators. The defeat left the Maroons alone in the con- ference cellar with four losses in as many games. in the sale. $24.50 ip. ._c F Pf 2 2 2 3 0 2 0 4 0 1 0 3 0 3 2 4; 6 22 IMPORTED TWEEDS are included in the suits now on sale. The spring price will be $37.50. Now available at only $29.50. SH,,OES THE SHOE SALE OPENS TODAY. Take advantage of special prices on CROSBY SQUARE, Osteopathic and Net- ers, Drish, Wukovits, Hasdlos, Fitz- gerald, Sofiak 3, Harmon 2, Brwan 2, Rae, Pink, Wood. Referee: John Getchell (St. Thom- as); Umpire: Joe Burt (Manchester). Half time score: Illinois 24; Mich- igan 21. Free throws missed: Hapac 2, Ev- Forml Dress headquarters The FULL DRESS at $35.00 The TUXEDO at $30.00 WHITE or BLACK VESTS at $4.50 - $5.50 The SHIRT ,$2.50 -- STUDS - LINKS 50c up TIE 85c to $1.00 HOSIERY 35c to 50c SUSPENDERS $1.00 COLLAR 35c r Staeh & Day's Patterned Shirts A most welcome opportunity ... Only twice a year these regularly higher-priced shirts are offered at these impor- tant savings! Regularly $j65 $2.00, Now Regularly $ 85 $2.50, Now Our MANHATTAN PAJAMAS are also included in this sale at above prices. tdeton. Prices start at $3.95. SEMI-ANNUAL HATS AVOID WINTER COLDS by wearing a hat. Our hat sale offers good quality hats at only $2.95. SHIRTS Entire stock of FANCY SHIRTS now reduced. Prices start at $1.59. ;: t A SPECIAL RENTAL DEPARTMENT lei i I