THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUTrackmen Here for Last ndoor Seasoi v/i 'p r !xtet FacesRejuvenated Tindsor Spitfires Today GWolverines End Home Track Season In Cinder Battle with Buckeyes Tonight MSC Seeks To Revenge Earlier Loss to Michi2a' ichigan's hockey team journ- to Windsor, Ontario, tonight a rematch game' against the dsor Spitfires. the first meeting of the two ns the Wolverines complete- utplayed their rivals, scoring t goals in the first two periods then coasting to a 10-7 vic- il Jacobson led the scoring in first tilt, garnering three goals an assist. However, Jacob- is still suffering from a groin ry and will be used only spar- dsor Boasts Win Streak he Spitfires are in -the midst ,n extended winning streak, 'h brought them to their pre- second place position in the rnational Hockey League. >ach Ebbie Goodfellow of the fires, will present a vastly im- ed squad than the one that :d the Maize and Blue in the game. Goodfellow, one of outstanding defense men in history of the National Hockey rue, has developed new talent improved the play of some of veteran players. ries Plague Chinese Star ie of the new men under the age of Goodfellow is Georgie . He is one of the first play- ers of Chinese descent to play hoc- key in Detroit, but a series of in--j juries that have plagued him from the start of the season have kept Chin from regular competition. The Border City team has dis- played a strong offense chiefly through the efforts of Gordon Haidy, who is the leading goal scorer in the International Lea- gue, and Harry Marchand who is leading in total points scored. Since the Spitfires are girding for No tickets for the Michigan- Windsor game are available in Ann Arbor, but there will be about 4,000 tickets on sale at the Border City's arena before the game. the coming League playoffs the Wolverine encounter should give them an indication of their title chances. In spite of Bill Jacobson's in- jury, this will be the first game in a month that Coach Vic Heyliger will be able to call on the services of the full team. Michigan will probably start the sarrie team that faced Waterloo last Saturday. The first line will have center Gord MacMillan flanked by Jacobson and Renfrew. Captain Connie Hill and Bob Mar- shall will be on defense and Jack MacDonald will guard the nets. The Wolverine hockey team will return to play the final two games of the current season next Fri- day and Saturday night against the Michigan College of Mines at the Coliseum. Closest Meet of Year Predicted as Coach Doherty Depends on Mile Events for Points Michigan's home indoor track season reaches its climax at 7:30 p.m. this evening in Yost Field House, when the Wolverine thin- clads entertain Coach Larry Sny- der's dangerous Buckeyes from Ohio State. Coach Ken Doherty of the Maize and Blue predicts the closest cin- der battle of the year. "It will be up to the mile relay again, in all probability," he declared yester- day. However, a Michigan victory depends upon much more than a relay first place. Doherty is counting on a landslide of points in the two endurance contests, the mile and two mile, and is expecting the same results from the shot put. Ohio State's fastest mile time is a 4:26.6 recorded by Gene Davis in a triangular affair with North- western and Iowa. Wolverine Herb Barten, on the other hand, loped the eight laps in a fast 4:19.9 in FLEET TRACKMAN Barten is slated to _mile and mile relay - Herb run the tonight. CAGERS BATTLE: Rangers, Mis-Fits Come Out On Top in I-M Hoop League the recent Michigan State meet. Just last week he achieved 4:20 flat at Illinois, In addition to Barten, the Wol- verines have a host of distance aces to enter in the mile. Don Queller will probably be ready for action tonight, although still both- ered slightly from the effects of his recent attack of bronchitis. Other possible entrants include Chuck Low, who ran a 4:25 at Illi- nois and Jack Morrison. The sixty yard dash prom- ises to be one of the closest races of the evening. The Buckeye sprinters have never gained {higher than a third in any of their indoor encounters so far this season. James Foster fin- ished in the show spot in both the Northwestern-Iowa and the Minnesota meets, with a time of about 6.5. Wolverine Jim Mor- rish has also sprinted a 6.5. An- other promising entrant for Michigan is John Witherspoon, who performed well in the B- team meet last Saturday. In the two mile run Charley Birdsall is hands-down favorite. The Michigan captain was clocked in 9:35 last Saturday at Illinois, while the Buckeye endurance men, Frank D'Arcy and James Dean have been hitting the low 9:50's. Both Rog Kessler and Alex Morris of Michigan have hit below the Ohio times. Kessler ran a 9:43 at Illinois, and Morris a 9:45. Charley Fonville expects to haul in five points for Michigan in the shot put, while Pete Dendrinos and George Kraeger will duel with Ohio's Joe Mascio and Emil Mol- dea for the remaining two places. Dendrinos reached 48 ft. 11 in. at Illinois, and has shown improve- ment every weekend. Ohio's Mal Whitfield is doped to take the quarter, with Michi- gan's Dick Forrestel, Mel Det- wiler, and George Shepherd fighting with Harry Cogswell for the runner-up spot. Whit- field returns in the half to run against Queller, George Vetter, Joe Hayden, and possibly Bar- ten. The field events, other than the shot, will be close affairs. Lloyd at Stake will be a doubleheader track tonight at the field house for idition to the Michigan-Buck- luel, four fraternities and four is will compete for the I-M -mile relay titles. .i,4vrow'cint - Sudden death overtime proved fatal to the West Lodge basketball team as Bob Schoendube sank a long floor shot breaking the dead- lock and giving the Rangers a 26-24 victory in the Intramural Independent league. The two teams traded basket for basket throughout the first half and at intermission the score read 9 all. Don McIntosh poured in 17 points to keep the West Lodgers in the ' contest, while Schoendube's 11 markers set the sights for the Rangers' scoring gun. The oddly named Mis-fits op- erated like a smooth running ma- chine in their 49-20 shellacking to the mistreated Robert Owens quintet in another Independent league. Offense was the Mis-fits best defense as their aggressive style pushed the play continually into the area around the Owens' basket. Sharpshooting George Frye and. Bob Revis had a field day as they whisked in a total of 34 points for the Mis-fits. Opportunities to earn more points towards the "athlete of the year" trophy can be found in sev- en new individual tournaments which will be getting underway as soon as the minimum of 16 en- tries are turned in at the Sports Building. Plans are being formu- lated for competition in Foul shooting, rifle shooting, table ten- nis, skating, fencing, codeball, and gymnastics. Fraternity bowling reached the quarterfinal round with Theta Chi,, Sigma Phi, Theta Delta Chi, Phi Delta Theta, Kappa Sigma, and Chi Phi competing next .week. NOW 2,x4- LUNCH Duff has hit 13 ft. 4 in. this season, which should be enough to cop first place in the pole vault. Harry McKnight of Ohio is capable of 13 feet. Chuck Lauritsen of Michi- gan has also done 13 feet in pre-- vious years, but so far this season has not hit his stdide. Max Kelly and Ed Ulvestad vaulted 12 ft. 8 in. last week-end. If Michigan and Ohio break even on the points in the first eleven events as expected, victory will rest on thetshoulders of the mile relay quarters. Ohio's Charles Dupre, Mal Whitfield, BobLittle, and Harry Cogswell have run 3:22, while the Wolverine foursome of Forrestel, Shepherd, Bob Mann, and Barten finished second to the Illini last week in 3:20.5. Purdue Names Stu. Holcob To Grid os Crisler Predicted Rise Of Army Coach Contrary to the age-old idea that football coaches are miserable prognosticators, Coach "Fritz" Crisler came up several weeks ago with a prediction which rang the. bell last night. It was at the press conference in which he announced his in- tention to remain at Michigan that Crisler threw this out to the re- porters present: "Watch that Stu Holcomb of Army. He's a comer and should get a nice job as head coach somewhere one of these days" Holcomb Picked Last night the following As- sociated Press story came over the wire: LAFAYETTE, Ind., Feb. 28-R) -Stuart K. Holcomb, an assistant Army coach at West Point, will take over in March as football coach at Purdue University in a try to bring the Boilermakers back to the top in Big Nine football. Succeeds Isbell Holcomb signel a five-year con- tract last night and left immedi- ately to rejoin the Army basket- ball team at Annapolis. He is head basketball coach. He succeeds Cecil Isbell, former Purdue'and professional grid star who resigned to coach the Balti- more Colts professional team of the All-America Conference. Salary Unannounced Holcomb's salary was not an- nounced. Isbell's salary at Purdue was reported to have been about $8,500 annually. The 36-year-old Army assistant will come to Purdue with football at a low point at the big engineer- ing school. Isbell's Boilermakers, plagued by injuries, were able to win only two games last season, and they were both non-conference. They tied Ohio State and they lost all other league games. Guy (Red) Mackey, Purdue Athletic Director, sail today Hol- comb could name his own staff. He was chosen by a faculty commit- tee after a wide search. OSU Whips 'Cats CHICAGO, Feb. 2-(P)--Ohio State trounced Northwestern, 62 to 42, at the Chicago Stadium to- night to seal the Wildcats in tie Big Nine basketball cellar with a final record of two victories and ten defeats. The triumph moved Ohio State into a fifth-place tie with Michi- gan, each with five victories and six defeats. The defending champ- ion Buckeyes and the Wolverines will contend for a first division berth when they close at Ohio State Monday night. It was the second time in 20 years that Northwestern finish- ed last in the conference. By DICK KRAUS Michigan State's cagers will be thinking of a bitter December 7, when they take the floor at Jeni- son Field House tonight, against the Michigan five that landed a "sneak punch" in the form of a 51-29 shellacking on the unpre- pared Spartans in the 1946-47 sea- son opener. Spearheaded by a recruit, center Jack Cawood, and a pair of light- ning fast forwards, Bob Geahan, ex-Wolverine start, and Robin Roberts, the Spartan attack has steadily developed, hitting a high water mark in State's last outing, a 740-49 performance against Bos- tori College. Cawood An Ex-Bronco Cawood, an ex-Western Michi- g n ace, has stepped into the all- important pivot post to plug up that early season hole in State's offensive armor. Coach Ben Van Alstyne's intri- cate short passing attack depends on a copetent center to make it move, and he experimented with four other men before Cawood sewed up the job. Spartans Use Bounce Passes Unlike. Michigan, the Spartans use a lot of- bounce passes to work the ball to the center, key spot in most of Van Alstyne's set plays. To go along with its increased fire power from the pivot, State's forwards' have been hitting the nets with great regularity. Roberts, the state's outstanding player last season, has yielded scoring hon- ors to Geahan, who is only 19 points away from Sam Fortino's Diamonds and Wedding W Rings 09 717 North University Ave. North Main Opposite Court House Starts Today Jean Parker in "ROLLING HOME" -Plus -- * Edward Norris in S ~"DECOY" 9 RKO News "Son of Zorro," No. 12 OUR PRICE: Weekdays until 5 P.M., 25 Evenings and Sundays, 30c -- Last Day Today ECONDEMNED TO DEVIL'S ISLAND" ,ith Ronald Colman --and- THE PLAINSMAN AND THE LADY" with William Elliott Starts Sunday "TWO GUYS FROM MILWAUKEE" -and- "UNDER.,NVADA SK IES"r ,tit MIChuIGA Playing through Satu ..._.. _&.& I Spartan scoring record. Tonight's game is Geahan's last chance to set a new mark as it winds up the Michigan State campaign. Same Guards to Start Van Alstyne will start the same pair of guards that opened the season, Captain Ollie White and Don Waldron. White held Michi- gan's Mack Suprunowicz to 9 points last time and will probably be assigned to guard him again. Suprunowicz' leg injury, suf- fered in the Illinois game, seems to have responded to treatment and will not keep him out of ac- tion. Coach Cowles will start his reg- ular combination, the same quin- tet that opened against State lasi December 7, with the exceptior of Captain Pete Elliott, who hac just shed his football uniform. Meet Ohio State Monday On Monday, Michigan will meet another outfit bent on vengeance, Ohio State at Columbus. The Buckeyes rebounded from a disas- trous early season campaign to develop into one of the toughest teams in the league. The Bucks are the only team to defeat Wis- consin's pace setting Badgers at Madison. Michigan squeezed past them with a 6-53 win at Ann Ar- bor, three weeks ago. TWO STORES 1319 South University--Hours: 8:00 P.M.-1 :00 A.M. 1015 East Ann-24-Hours Daily (Closed Mondays) We" eliVer on $2.00 Food Orders CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING Now! Newt HOME PERMANENT Deluxe Kit with Professional Home Permanents made easier! Here's why:The new TONI Pro- fessional Plastic Curlers are big (50% more curling surface). New DeLuxe Kit $ with plastic curlers They're round, for easier wind- ing, smoother curl.They're ribbed so your hair won't slip. They're re-usable, to save you money! Refill Kit, without curlers . $ 00 Regular Kit, fiber curlers. $125 All prices plus tax LOST AND FOUND I LOST: Ladies Tiffany watch. Yellow Gold with two diamonds. Lost be- tween State 'and Packard and Haven Hali Tuesday night. Reward. Call 4521. Stockwell Hall. ) 52 'OST--Keychain, silver disk with in- tials H.E.S. Two keys. Finder call 2-0734. WILL THE PERSON who "borrowed" my bicycle Monday return it to 1408 Washtenaw. No questions asked. )65 LOST-Monday, Feb. 24, brown Shaef- fer fountain pen with gold top. Call 2-7552 after 5:00. Reward )1 LOST-Brown Eversharp fountain pen, between Cambridge and South Uni- versity Streets. Reward. )56 REWARD for return of identification bracelet engraved Nuel Smock, Jr. Lost near Field House. Call 9581. ) 3 LOST: Wristwatch. Black face, pink gold case. Name on back: Jean Ath- ay. If found, please call 5740. )48 LOST: Mexican Slver Necktie Clip, Saturday, between Mich. Union. and Washtenaw. Reward. Phone Swords, 8568. )62 LOST-Brown leather cigarette case eta- graved "ECK." Probably lost Angell Hall. Substantial reward. Edwin Kidd, 2-4401. )11 DOUBLE Heart-shaped Bracelet bear- ing SAE and Alpha Xi Delta crests between Mich. Theatre and Alpha Xi Delta House Sunday night. Reward. Call 2-5570. )64 FIELD JACKET, gloves, scarf and ur- gently needed keys mistakenly tak- en from second floor of Union Feb. 21st. Reward. Write Box 778, West Lodge, Ypsilanti, Mich. )24 WANTED TO BUY SLIDE RULE: K & E Log-Log Trig or Deci-Trig, 10-inch. John Bengtson, Dorm 15, Rm. 23, West Lodge, Tel. 9213. )17 FOR RENT DOUBLE GARAGE. Will rent singly or together. Inquire 915 Green Street. HELP WANTED WANTED: Clothing Salesman that can put in as much time as possible. Has to be all day Saturday and would prefer at least 2 or 3 other full days. Box 5, Mich. Daily. )35 FOREIGN JOBS-Men, women. Gov't., private listings, hundreds of skilled classifications. Accurate information, $1.00, postpaid. FOREIGN JOBS, INC.. Baltimore 1, Maryland. ) 14 TAILORING and SEWING DRESSMAKING and alterations, also teacher of sewing. Miss Livingston 315 S. Division, second floor front. )33 MISCELLANEOUS ENTERTAINER-Irene Schwocho (pia- nist) featuring the electric Solovox- the instrument with pipe-organ simi- larity. For clubs, banquets, gatherings.. Saline - phone (collect) 143F1-2. )20I Read and Use Daily Classified Ads RIDER'S WANTED THERE'S A FUTURE for women in the telephone business. If you're look- ing for an interesting, well-paying job that has a future, come to see us now. We will welcome you and will answer all your questions cheerfully. Apply 323 E. Washing- ton. )5 FOR SALE FOR SALE-1935 Plymouth. Call Jones, 4121, ext. 2222 between 1 and 6 p.m. )9 1939 DESOTO Sedan. Radio, heater, ov- erdrive. Good shape. 1317 Pontiac. )10 FOR SALE-Beautiful white formal net skirt, off shoulder. Size 14. 4041 Stockwell. )2 ARGUS SLIDE PROJECTOR (2x2) -.. carrying case, built-in tray. Phone 6883. ) 50 PORTABLE record player, 3 months old, good condition, $25. Call 2-7374 after 6. )66 I ____ ____ Also News Ill Musical Novelties Matinees Nights 35c 50c Sti n V ve ,t ,ki sa n Calki-mFletcher Drug Company 1939 CHEVROLET town sedan. after 3 p.m, 406 Greene House, Quad. Call East ) 49 Last Times Today! JANE FRAZEE "CALENDAR GIRL" The Dependable Stores 324 South State 818 1 South Sftoe RECORD PLAYER, portable (AC), like a console, smart blue and case. Call 8591. tone grey ,i Continuous Daily, from 1 P.M. ..r ...... r A .tPilOrP. NE1i3' ST+ 9f'tA JIY' . Weekdays 35c to 5 P.M. 7JTRKEY DIINEs NEW G.E. DW58 LIGHT METER with case. Guaranteed perfect, $22. Call Mr. Mee, 611 Church St., Ph. 9183. )39 PLYMOUTH '40, black 4-door, '46 Dodge Motor, Good Tires, Heater. $975. Phone 8682, evenings, 5:30 to 7:30. )7 26-FOOT vagabond Housetrailer, 3 rms., completely furnished. Also 16-foot Schult housetrailer partly furnished. 2740 Packard Rd. Lot A-20. )61 Starting Sunday I 11 t,., Now at 115 West Liberty r I! i MICHIGAN One Night Only Thurs.. March 6th rr America's Romantic Triumph! 11 R0S L IND " R U SS ELL ALFRED de LIAGRE, Jr. presents JOHN VAN DRUTEN'S Comedy THE ALLENEL takes reat pride in scrving you the best food in town. One of our favorite and most demanded specialities is ROAST TURKEY prepared THE FARM CUPBOARD S peclal(?g in i:-nFRIED CHICKEN DINNERS Upa 11:00 A.AI. to 9:00 P.M. including Sundays, Sister. IT , SIII I I ';