WEDNESDAY, FEI 9, 1911 THE MAIGA AILY P#aI1 IMF S U, Intl I*1LAL~ Iowa Leads Conference;, Wolverines Are Seventh Tom King Still First in ndividual Scoring; Dick Ives Iowa Sharpshooter, Is Second By HARVEY FRANK Ass't Sports Editor r r. lt" a"r i f _,FFd t, r t With the Western Conference bas- ketball season ct ri n the last lap, the University of lowa's surprising Hawkeyes are on top of the heap with a record of seven wins against no defeats. Since Iowa still must meet its toughest competition of the season, its chances of remaining out in front are problematical. The Hawkeyes square off against a potent Ohio State quintet in a two-game series this week-end, and are also scheduled for a single tilt with Purdue, holders of second place, and two contests with Northwestern't third place crew. Michigan occupies seventh position at present with a fair chance to climb one notch higher provided it can cop its next two games against Chicago and Northwestern. Illinois is en- trenched in sixtli place ahead of the Wolverines but faces tough competi- tion for the balance of the campaign. The individual scoring statistics show Michigan's Tommy King con- tinuing .to head the list, closely press- ed by Dick Ives of Iowa, whose rec- ord-smashing 43-point performance against Chicago placed him only three points behind the Wolverine ace. King has 137 points while Ives has 134. Since Ives has played three less games than King, he is in a good position to finish in front if he can hold his present blistering pace. The only other Wolverine in the top ten is Dave Strack whose 31 pdints over the week-end bolstered his total to 112, good for the seventh slot, Center Elroy Hirsch occupies 13th position with 69 markers and is the only other Michigan cager in the first 20. Individual scoring: King, Michigan ... Ives, Iowa....... Danner, Iowa ..... Grate, Ohio State . Risen, Ohio State . Strack, Michigan .,.: Iloafman, Purdue . Dugger, Ohio State . Patterson, Wisconsin Patrick, Illinois ... Haag, Purdue ..... Bowen, Ohio State . horn, Purdue ..... Hirsch, Michigan . . Smith, Wisconsin Kirk, Illinois..... . G 10 7 7 8 8 10 8 8 7 6 8 8 8 9 7 6 FG 55 59 56 54 49 52 39 38 38 34 33 29 33 24 31 20 FT 27 16 13 12' 19 8 18 15 10} 17 15 20 8 21 6 23 Pts. 137 134 125 120Q 117 112 96 91 86 85 81 78 74 69 68 63 Army -M Cage Tourzey Finishes Second Round The Army finished the second round of its intramural basketball tournament Monday night. Company F defeated Company B, 50-25, and the Reserves were trounced decisively by Company E, .81-34. The Company C team scored 59 points against Sta- tion Complement's 34, and Company G won over Company D in a close one, 62-59. fical bruary Gra tio Announcements U LICH'S Bookstore Opposite the Engineering Arch IL WINTiER SPILE O" F MEN'S CLOTHES ALTHOUGH it brings up a memory which woua loe better off dead, a letter reached us yesterday which we think deserves being printed. It comes from halfway around the world and illustrates just how much': interest there is in sports even among those soldiers on the battlefronts The topic of the letter is the Michigan-Notre Dame game last fall, and it was written by Alfred Hower, who graduated from Mich- igan in 1939. At the time this let- ter was written he was somewhere in Australia, but there were evi- dently some Fightin' Irish fans in the vicinity who took sheer delight in making life miserable for this staunch Wolverine. Anyhow, this poem. entitled, oddly enough, 35-12, expresses his annoy- ance and bewifderment at the out- come. It goes: 35-12! I was shaken to the core When I heard that terrible score! I darn near blew a fuse , When I read that shocking news! Michigan 12, Notre Dame 35- Oh, how I wished I were not alive! Now I am completely glum Atnd demand to know "How Cum?" Did Notre Dame have it in For Daley, ex of Minn? Did something go amiss With Elroy, ex of Wis? How come this awful 'blight On the'record of Paul White? And where was Wiese that fateful day- Was he hurt and couldn't play? After all, you'll all remember T'was only last November That Michigan routed Notre Dame In a truly glorious, wond'rous game, And they did it very gaily Without the aid of Hirsch or Daley! Now, why couldn't the Big Ten Champs Whip once again those Irish tramps I demand to know the reason For this year's seeming treason Was it due to Bertelli's barrage Or to combined Wis-Minn sabotage? Was it over-confidence Or a team too immense? Tell me who and what's to blame For putting dear old Mich to shame! For though I'm far beyond Pearl Harbor My heart is still in Ann Arbor And how I wish and wish and wish This hadn't happened to my dear old Mich! ('Specially since I bet every penny And am now left without any) Lightweights Tangle NEW YORK, Feb. 8.-(/P)--Light- weights Tippy Larkin of Garfield, N.J., and Lulu Costantino of New York, occupy Madison Square Gar- den's ring tomorrow night. Big Ten Standings W L Pct. Iowa...........7 0 1.000 fuirdue.........7 1 .875 Northwestern ... 5 1 .833 ohio State ..... 6 2 .750 Wisconsin . .2 .714 Pilinois..........2 4 .334 Michigan.....3 7 .300 Indiana......... 0 7 .000 lWiinesota .......0 6 .000 Chicago........ 0 5 .00) C ASSIVIED DIIRECTOIIY BOB HIME captain and one of the main- stays of the 1944 Michigan track team, will compete in both the mile and half-mile in the meet with Western Michigan Saturday. Hume is the present Western Con- ference champion in the mile. r .nl dsT .[1 11 cS Sa.urday ,,,Night IWolverin~e track farts will get their first real look at Coach Ken Doher- ty's 1944 thinclads when they meet a comparatively strong Western Michigan team at 7:30 p.m. Satur- day in the Yost Field House. The Kalamazoo squad was nosed out by Notre Dame 62-51, and showed much power, especially in the sprints. Dick Radcliffe, Western Michigan's iron m-an, copped first place in the 6-yard dash, the 220- yard dash, second in the high jump and third in the broad jump. This means that the Broncos will be fav- ored in the sprints but will be weak in the longer distances. Pittman of Western Michigan turned in the amazing time of 51.6 in the 440-yard dash against Notre Dame. and will be favored in that event, inasmc as Mel Detwiler, Wolverine quarter- miler, hasn't done better than 52,1 yet this year. Michigan will be the odds-on fiv- orite in the 880-yard run and the mile, despite the loss of Bob Ufer, who will be competing in the Boston Athletic Association's Invitational Games Saturday night. Bob Hume, Ross Hume, John Roxborough and Dick Barnard, who are all stellar half-milers, will be running for the Maize and Blue in the 880, while the Hume twins and Barnard will also compete in the mile. Although the Wolverines are the pre-meet favorites, the Broncos are expected to provide a busy evening for Doherty's squad, and will give him a chance to see just what mater- ial he possesses this season, It will be the first actual competition for most of the squad this season G e Sa urd n - o o g~ m Hockey Team Seeks Revenge In Return Tilt Vickers Sports Club To Meet Sextet Here Again Saturday Night Emphasis is being placed on shoot- ing this week, as the Michigan hockey team prepares for Saturday's return contest with the Vickers Sports Club. In last week's Paris contest varsity players had at least fifteen oppor- tunities to make additional scores, but in each case the shooting was either so misdirected or so impotent that goalie Dick Rutherford had little difficulty in deflecting the at- tempted shots. Back-handed Shots Weak Back-handed shots have been no- ticeably weak in all the sextet en- counters. In the Paris game, second line wing Herb Upton, who was play- ing far-and-away the best hockey he has exhibited this year, ran into this difficulty two different times. He was only partially checked in both cases and within easy shooting dis- tance, but because he was forced to attempt back-hand shots, was unable to make either opportunity good. Against Paris the inept shooting was not serious, since the squad kept a good edge throughout the contest. However, in the last Vickers game, it was one of the primary causes for Michigan's 4-3 defeat. It's Vickers again this week-end and Coach Eddie Lowrey is not going to let the same thing occur again if it is possible to cure. Squad Improves In other respects the squad was so much better last week that if it is able to maintain the same standard of play in Saturday's battle, the out- come should be a decided Maize and Blue victory. This is no small if,' however, since the team seems to be incapable of maintaining a high rate of efficiency two weeks in a row. The last Vickers game was a nip-and- tuck affair the whole way, and unless Michigan is playing clever hocley the Detroit squad may well cash in again on errors. Defensive play. has been excellent for some time. Neither Bob Hender- son or Tom Messinger have been guilty of many errors, and have looked very good at close quarters around the nets. "Prin tze y1L * r . .. Sage-n a f iucoa PreciIoos 100% Wools - - * at 4n yv and3 .O were to.$Sr4 If you are still looking for a superb winter coat you are in graat luck! W bring you beauty,'quality, fit ond guaranteed goodness at- thrilling sloshed, prices4 The best selling styles of the sedsmn. Woolens that defy steady war! Coats that will be stand-outs in any crowd for years to come. Misss, Women's and half sizes, 10-44 Twogroups of' ~~iFur Trimmdoats U, *4 ~.NUN N.4~ r Mosterpieces "'b ass Mchel o~rec, _.,.% K 7 3 95and 4j 1 Were originally tq $89.95 Other Grand Clearance Values in $uits and Dr4se Ruct;o ~to Ir'4nn. re EizaIett, umo N roI a . A c"",:Nntal Alk, F' 1 l i a r a ,, ,'' ill dickey Signs with Yanks for '44 Sesoln NEW YORK, Feb. 8.-iP1- Bill Dickey, who was given a plaque Sun- day by the New York Baseball Writ- ers' Association as the outstanding player of 1943, has signed his con'- tract for the coming season, it was announced today. sammmes BUY V! VAR BONDS - INVEST VICTORY "U 1 Over one hundred units of o~r regular fine quality sutis and uterCOats to be cleared at E E 1 i . e ,i TONIGHT at 9 P.M. BOND PREMIERE CARY GRANi "DESTINATION TOKYO" M Seats Still Available WAR BONDS ISSUED HERE Continuous from 1 P.M n ruslaL TEĀ® - -Im o'"I I I I The men who make our coats are artists. Their paints are gloriously hued woolens, Their brushes are their hands and their fine machines. They work these woolens into masterpieces of tailor- ing. Come in and try on the coats. $ee how well balanced they are. Feel how easy they are on your shoulders . . that's because they're skill- ully cut and so precisely tailored, 'Se hoy com- fortably they top your suit . . . or how smart they are over a dainty print. Choose the ckbssic full-length style, or the dapper, new shorter coot a natural for your new suit. MISCELLANEOUS MIMEOGRAPHING: thesis bindi v'. Brumfield and Briumfield, 30B R State. $10 REWARD to student arranging rental - ftirnished apartment- campus vicinity. Permanent cou- ple. Michigan Daily, Box 10. LOST and FOUND FOUND-Gentleman's ring. Owner, may have same by calling at 4012 U.H.S. and paying for this ad, LOST-Pearl necklace with large am- ethyst pendant. Valued as keep- sake. Reward. Contact Daily. LOST: Wallet with identificatimoi papers in Waterman Gynnasiumn Saturday morning. Please return to office in Waterman Gym. N. Rojas. LOST-Pearl necklace believed lost at Navy Ball, or between IM Build- ing and 400 block Division. Finder please notify John White, 434 Will- iams, West Quad. Reward. FOR SALE FOR SALE - Boy's 28-in. balloon tire bicycle, $12. Call 24648. FOR SALE: Woman's cap and gown.1 Also plyboard sweater stretcher, medium size. Call Hibbard, 4807." rQ 39.95 NOW I I 0' 5firt With, G ST ROOCKS ABINGTON I risTmflhlA&T GOLD BRIGHT RED PASTEL-BLUE-COCOA MISSES SI ZFS I I I