Y, NOVEMBER 30, 1940 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Hockey Team Faces London A.C. InOpener Here Tonight Tom Harm on To Get 'The lierries-To Eat v Three Starting. Positions Held By Newcomers Wingmen Kemp, Bahrych, Goalie Loud Scheduled To MakeVarsity Debut (Continued from Page 1) Michigan squad, will play though the majority of the game' without re- placements. Stodden and Ross are both rough, hard-checking hockey players and both can be counted on to furnish an occasional thrill with solo dashes down the ice. The second forward line will be made up of Jim Lovett and Johnny Corson, both veterans, with newcom- er Jimmy Anderson completing the trio. Bob Collins and Gil Samuelson will team with Fred Heddle or John- ny Gillis on a third front line. Hugh McVeigh, spare goalie, will be in uni- form and stands a good chance of getting into the fray before the night is over. While the Wolverines are improved, the Londoners are not to be consid- ered a soft touch since they will also present a vastly improved lineup. With only four veterans present on a squad of 13, youth and speed are the keynotes of the visiting club. Pat Barrett, husky defense man, Bill Legg, speedy right winger, and Stan Butler, high-scoring center, will provide the bulwark of the visitor's opening lineup. Butler scored two of London's three goals against the Wol- verines last year. Hal Moffatt will be in the nets for London while new- comers'Taylor and McLoud will com- plete the starting lineup. STARTING LINEUPS Michigan Pos. London A. C. Loud G Moffatt Ross D Taylor Stodden 'D Barrett Goldsmith C Butler Bahrych W Legg Kemp W McLoud All prospective Varsity pitchers who would like to loosen the kinks in their throwing arms for the coming baseball season are urged to work out daily from 1:15 to 3:30 at the Yost Field House. Ray Fisher, Varsity Coach Wolverine Stalwart f 7 fi : U S l 1 t t 1 1 Intramural Angles By Gene Gribbroek Twelve Residence Hall hockey teams have started play in their first, season of regular competition. Three four-team leagues are battling for playoff positions, two in the West' Quadrangle and the third including the three new East Quad undergrad- uate houses and Fletcher Hall. The Independent touch football grown, only one of the fall sport titles yet undecided, will be on the line Sunday morning when Robert Owen League A champs, face the Hillbilly eleven, League B winners defending the championship it won last year. The tilt will take place at 10:30 at Wines Field. Owen advanced to the finals by virtue of a 25-0 win over the C & C Packers, League C entry. Werner Wassmansdorf, Owen end, added three touchdowns to his 19 point sea- son's total in the game to lead the division's scorers. Harold Ehlers, halfback, tossed two passes to Wass- mansdorf and one to Bernie Tauber to take part in three scores. * * * Williams House won its first championship Monday when it took the West Quad League II volleyball title. Williams is scheduled to meet Wihchell House,-League II winners, for the right to face Fletcher Hall's League III champs for the Resi- dence Hall crown. The entire play- offs will take place Monday night. ** * Lloyd House has gotten away to a lead in the race for the Michigan Union Bowling Trophy, with a record of 14 wins against one defeat thus far. George Jaquillard, of Winchell House, has carded a 237, the highest individual game of the young season. Hilarious Antics Delight Spectators' At Matt Mann 's Annual Swim Show (Continued from Page 1)Y smooth, powerful butterfly stroke car- ried him to the finish a good fivet lengths in front of the field.L In the 75-yard free style event, Gus Sharemet, the sensation of the1 nation last year, just nipped formerj National titleholder Charley Barker in 38.5 seconds. Claire, Morse was third. When the back stroke race was about to start, a fully clothed stran- ger toppled into the water followed by no less than seven varsity men. After five minutes of frantic searching they gave up. This touched off the fun- fest. At the latest reports they were calling out a dragnet for the stranger, who it is rumored was Bill Holmes. Beebe Wins Backstroke But this excitement didn't phase Capt. Bill Beebe who streaked his way across the pool in 1:04.2 in the 100 yard backstroke, leading Dick Riedl and Ted Horlenko. The crowd's attention was then drawn to a plumber who started pounding the diving board unmerci- fully. Matt Mann pointed high up to the ceiling where a light was out. "There's the trouble," he said. Two minutes later a satchel dropped out of the roof followed by two legs and a body. It was the plumber all right, and he chased his tool kit into the pool from his lofty perch 'to the delight of the blood thirsty mob. Comic, Diver Pleases Clayton Mains, the comic diver, lived up to all expectations as he burlesqued his way to the audience's heart in a peppermint-striped, pat- ched up beach suit. His "Swan Dive" and "Flat-foot-floogie-with-a-skid- skid" were sights to behold. When he belly-flopped into the water on his "half-gainer" the reverberations must have been felt in Ypsilanti. T-Bone Martin, Bill Beamer, Al Canja and Lou Haughey put on a dazzling display of collegiate caliber diving that left mouths gaping and hands clapping. Earlier in the eve- ning Betty Burton, Martha Blair, because someone pulled Prof. Fries' mustache.j Will Garvey and Paul Clifford add- ed insult to injury as they teamed together to upset the prexy duo of Frank Walaitis and Barny Hughes in the tilting contest. The faculty raft sprung a leak in the second round and they limped to shore-badly beaten. Youngster In Exhibition Bill Gail and little Peter Fries were just two more personalities who had the audience in an uproar. Bill put# on a courageous diving exhibition doing the front dive, half gainer, and one and a half gainer with near- perfection. Peter Fries, however, wasn't so anxious to display his wares. Three years old, standing not more than three feet high, little Pete didn't go for the audience. His brother hadI to shove him into the water and asI he treaded after his dad across the' pool, the hushed crowd could hear him pleading, "I don' wanna." But he made the length and retired for the evening. In other races during the evening Louis Kivi won the freshman 100 yard free style race in 54.1-Jim Welsh, Bruce Allen, Jack Patten and Kivi presented the "Evolution of Swim- ming"-Patten beat out Welsh and Dobson Burton in a thrilling 200- yard race in 2:02. Charley Barker pulled his team from behind to tie Gus Sharemet in the 150 yard medley relay. MINNEAPOLIS, Nov. 29-.P)--Af- tcr a debate conducted with mock solemnity, City aldermen approved a motion today to send two crates of raspberries-the edible variety-to Tommy Harmon. Recently in a radio talk Harmon said that Michigan should have beat- en Minnesota by three touchdowns. Minnesota won, 7-6. Before approving the motion, the aldermen amended it to have the two aldermen who proposed it foot the bill. Aldermen Stanley Anderson and W. J. Meagher cheerfully agreed. * * * FRATERNITY 0 *$ * JEWELRY 0 0 s is the 0 O S 0 Perfect gift i * 0 * 0 0, 0 Burr, Patterson & Auld 1209 South University 0 Ruitt ANN OAKES, Mgr. 0 0 0 Bert Stodden, veteran defense- man, will probably be called on to perform an iron-man role in the Varsity's opener, against the Lon- don A.C. tonight because of a shortage of defensemen. Navy Favored To Sink Army In Grid Classic NEW YORK, Nov. 29.-(A)-Ex-' pept for a few scattered engagements between beaten teams next week, college football bows out tomorrow and leaves the various "Bowl" com- mittees to put on their annual tug- of-war for the prize elevens. But the big game of the day will have no bowl significance. It will bring together Army and Navy for the 41st time at Philadelphia's Mu- nicipal Stadium with a sell-out crowd of 102,000 in prospect. Army Holds Series Edge The Cadets hold a 22-16 margin, with three ties; in the series that started in 1890, but the Middies are favored to make it two straight over an Army team that has beaten only Williams and tied Harvard this sea- son. At least one participant in the Rose Bowl on New Year's Day probably will be decided beyond doubt in the West Coast meeting between unbeat- en, untied Stanford and the Califor- nia Bears. Stanford is strongly fa- vored to complete a perfect season and become an automatic choice for the big blow-off at Pasadena. Vols Meet Vanderbilt The Tennessee Volunteers, strong contenders for the honor of either representing*the East a second straight time in the' Rose Bowl or playing in the Sugar Bowl, complete their schedule against the weak Van- derbilt Commodores and appear a ,inch to wind up their third consecu- tive perfect season against southern opposition. Boston College, all victorious up to this point and heading straight for the Sugar Bowl in New Orleans on New Year's Day, finishes against its old rival, Holy Cross. The cru- saders do not look good enough to check Coach Frank Leahy's Huskies. The Fordham Rams, practically certain of an invitation to Miami's Orange Bowl despite their single loss to St. Mary's in mid-season, hope to make an impressive showing against their local rivals, New York Univer- sity, at Yankee Stadium. COACH MATT MANN ... swim impressario Michigan AAU champ and Raymond Root also put on a beautiful exhibi- tion. The faculty, as motley a crew as ever wriggled into a bathing suit, turned the pool into a thrashing mad- house with their water polo match. They had more fun ducking each other than playing polo-although they finished the game in a 1-1 tie. The battle was played under protest Matmen At Work .. .Four Lettermen Return By STAN CLAMAGE v- DO YOUR, CHRISTMAS SHOPPING EARLY! The grunt and groaners are at it again at the Yost Field House as Coach Cliff Keen is preparing to present the 1940-41 edition of his varsity wrestling squad. Led by Capt. Bill Combs, the men are gradually getting into shape for the coming season. Coach Keen's present job of get- ting together a team is no easy task. It is obvious that the loss of last year's wrestlers will be felt. It isn't every day that men like Captain "Butch" Jordan, Harland Danner, and National Intercollegiate Cham- pion Don Nichols come around. Keen will have as a nucleus four returning lettermen: Tom Weidig, Bill Combs, Jim Galles, and Johnny Paup. The men who are working out for the coming season number over 50 and it appears that the competition for positions on the team will be keen. Varsity tackles Rudy Sengel, Al Wistert, and Jack Butler, in addition to John Wilson, are competing for Champ Billy Conn Beats Savold In Non-Title Bout NEW YORK, Nov. 29-(A)-Billy Conn of Pittsburgh punched out a twelve-round dedision over Lee Sa- vold of Des Moines, Iowa, before a crowd of 12,000 fans in Madison Square tonight. The fight was a slow affair through the first eight rounds, but wound up in the stretch as a tough, bruising battle of left hooks. the heavyweight post. At 175 pounds are Emil Lockwood and Jim Galles, last year's sensational sophomore. Ed Wight, dnd Marvin Becker. Ray Deane and Bob Begle are the 136 pound aspirants. Fred Klemach ap- pears to be the only prospect at 128 pounds. a class which has been a problem for Coach Keen for the past two seasons. Tom Weidig and Har- vey Littleton head the 121 pound group. As yet, no definite schedule of dual meets has been arranged, but Coach Keen says that one will be drawn up at the annual coaches meeting, December 4. Keen is anticipating sending a team to compete in the Midwestern AAU tournament which is to be held in Chicago December 13-14. This is the largest tournament of its kind in point of competition that is held. Iiu Don't wait until the last minute - select these gifts NOW! * Genuine Leather Zipper Note- books - $'.99 to $10.00. " Stationery -= 25c to $2.50. * Bill Folds - 50c to $5.00. " Scrap Books - 50c to $3.95. " Photo Albums - 50c to $3.50. " Michigan Felt Animals - 97c to $3.95. " Michigan Jewelry - 75c to $3.00. " Fountain Pen & Pencil Sets - $1.95 to $19.95 (Shaeffer and Parker). Hundreds of other things to choose from. We Will Pay the Postage & Mail All Gifts Purchased at FO LLETT'S CAPT. BILL COMBS ... leads grapplers Competing at 155 pounds are Cap- tain Combs, "Hap" Langstaff, Waldo West, Johnny Paup and Art Brady. At 145 pounds are Phil Detwiler, 1111 U moeildlimmililllion inmoniummmnimuI SPORTS CLINIC SCHEDULE SATURDAY, NOV. 30 Basketball Clinic ......10:00 a.m. ......Main Gymnasium. 17th Annual Basketball Rules Meeting, three sections: 10:00 a.m.-Sports Building. Demonstration by "Bunny" Leavitt, of Harlem Globe Trotters. 12:15 p.m.-Michigan Union Ballroom. Speaker: Former Governor Wilbur M. Bruck- er, "Athletics in the Mich- igan Program for National Defense.", 2:00 p.m.--Rackham Build- ing. Motion Pictures and Rules Discussions. f ITS A W RK. O0N 114A M tc+.- SUNDAY SUP'PE R December 1, 1940 Golden Brown Waffle Maple Syrup Grilled Sausage Pattie Baked Apple or Ice Cream Beverage 50c Chef's Salad Bowl Toasted Cheese Sandwich Pineapple Layer Cake or Pistachio Nut Ice Cream Beverage 50c Chicken Tetrazzini in Casserole Brussels Sprouts Plum Pudding or Cherry Pie Beverage 60~e Consom me Roast Leg of Lamb, Mint Jelly Mashed Potatoes Baby Green Lima Beans Cocoanut Cream Pie or Strawberry Sundae Beverage 75e GOOD FOOD Excellent Service 6 to 7:30 o'clock MAIN DINING ROOM I 'I wan~t a gift that will KEEP ON GIVING jef eaSco me. "I believe in giving my wife something sensible for Christmas. She's a practical person . . . says she wants something that she'll use every day, that won't be forgotten after the holidays. "Well, she won't forget THIS gift. An electric range is a gift thatlasts. She's always wanted one-and it tops the list for usefulness. Do I sound selfish? You're wrong. There's sentiment wrapped up in my choice. Anything that lightens her job of cooking meals shows thoughtfulness and consideration. I know-I've tried getting meals myself." The man's right. When you bring the magic of elec- tricity into your home, you open up a whole new world. Tireless, quiet, inexpensive servants take over your household drudgery. Electric cooking and electric water heating lift two major burdens from your wife's shoulders. This Christmas, be one of the thousands who have learned a simple truth: The gifts that give the most are the gifts that serve the best. . .The Detroit Edison Company. It's the last of the I I "R" Months From the clear, cold waters on the coast of Maine we bring you the choicest lobsters. From the waters of Chesapeake Bay we YOUR DEALER has electric ranges and water heat- ers on display. Stop in today-on sale at HARDWARE STORES, FURNITURE AND DEPARTMENT STORES, AND ELECTRICAL DEALERS. 1 bring you the finest peak of flavor during Blue Points. These delicacies reach their the 'R" months, so enjoy them now before Ii the season's gone. I II i