16, 1937 THLE MICHIGAN DAILY .. .... . ....................... .. . . . ....... . ..................... . ...... . ............. ........ - - Se Trackmen Seek Fourth Straight Butler Relay Title PRESS ANGLE i I i 4;. m By GEORGE . ANDR (.W...po ...odts Swimmers-And Stuff.. .. WHEN TOMMIE HAYNIE had won his second Conference swimming ch' mpionship Saturday night and put a second new record on the books, he decided it was time someone kissed the "Queen" of the meet, Rosemary Redens of Delta Delta Delta. So the :Detroit sophomore climbed out of the pool at the end of the 440, put on his' robe, wiped his mouth on his sleeve and amid the yells of the 100 spectators and 150 competitors and ofiicials approached her majesty's throne seeking more than his gold medal. The queen handed Tom his medal and ducked. Haynie blushed purple and grinned sheepishly, while the Michigan squad jeered his un- successful effort. This should end the story, but it doesn't. In a few minutes her majesty repented and sent her victim an autographed pro- gram inscribed with: "To Tommie with a kiss-Rosemary." * * * AS FORECAST in this column some few months ago, the dual-meet winning streak of Yale's swimming team was broken at something over 150 straight victories Saturday night at the hands of a well-balanced Har- vard squad. The score was 39 to 36. In view of the fact that Coach Bob Kiputh of Yale would not consent to meeting Michigan in recent years, it is quite satisfying to Matt Mann to know that the team that finally did beat the Eli is coached by one of his own pupils, Hy Ulen, who was Matt's assistant at the latter's summer camp for several years. Now that the cod- dled winning streak is no more, a Michigan-Yale meet in the near fu- ture is not improbable. THANKS to the wrestling ability of Bill Farnsworth, I am in posses- sion of a choice bit of doggeral com- posed by a certain free-styler and in- tended for the eyes of a certain very attractive.co-ed member of the wom- er's Olympic swimming team. Here itis, but I'll be kind enough to keep yur niame out of it, Walt. Close to my heart, dear, For "you I 'would That I could Win' a Big Ten title.-, * 9 IGHT NOW I am starting a one- man campaign toward the con- struction of a trophy case in the east windows of the Intramural Pool large enough and appropriate enough to hold the scores of cups and tro- phies the Varsity. swimming team las collected in the 12 years of Matt Mann's reign at Michigan. I carried one of the three won at Blooming- ton on my lap for 360 miles Sunday and I am convinced that it and the many others like it deserve a better resting place than a towel locker underneath a stairway or a closet off the Intramural locker room. * * * THFEY SAY in 'some jealous swim- ming circles that Matt Mann's swimmers are champions before they ever get to him. Here are some facts that should quiet a few of the dis- gruntled brethern for a spell. If you want more facts, boys, I have them. Ed Kirar's fastest effort in the 100- yard free-style until he came to Mich- igan was 55 seconds fiat in a 20-yard tank. In the same sized pool at Iowa a few weeks ago, "The Moose" did :51.4. Walt Tomski's best time for the century until he matriculated here was :55.6. The gangling sopho- more swam the distance in :53.8 Fri- day night, and watch him go next year! Bob Mowerson was a 59-sec- ond man three years ago; but he paced the relay team in 53 flat Sat- urday night. toller, Grieve Hopes F Renew Rivalry At Indianapolis r; or Revenge Penthouse Five Unpopular Results Are Feared Loses To Flint i.As Center Jump Is Eliminated IF- r -M iU t7 i I. I_ i I' { i" E r e i i L i t i t Indiana, Ohio State Offer Stiff Test To Michigan In Meet This Wek Their lease on the indoor track throne of the Western Conference re- newed for another year, Michigan's thinclads yesterday started pointing for the Butler Relays, to be hold this week-end, where the Wolverines will again be seeking a fourth consecutive title. Last year the Wolverines scored 41 points in the Indianapolis meet while Ohio State was taking second with 40 2/3 with Indiana pulling up third at 23 1/3. This year the same three teams will probably be battling it out for top honors. Notre Dame, who last Saturday won the C.I.C. indoor championship, will also be at the meet but the Irish are not expected to prove a serious contender for the crown. Wolverines Loaf The Wolverines let down somewhat yesterday because of their strenuous week-end which saw them beating out Indiana and Wisconsin for the Big Ten title but bykSaturday will be back at their peak. Four Michigan relay teams will run at Butler with two of them defending titles. These two are the mile- and two-mile teams while the four-mile and medley teams will be out to do at least as well as they did last year when they were both second. Sammy Stoller will again clash with Bobby Grieve of Illinois in the 60-yard dash with the Wolverine sprinter out to avenge his defeat in the finals of the Conference meet. Capt. Bob Osgood will also be running again in the hurdles where he will be favored. At Chicago he hit the first liurdle, lost his stride, was j fourth at the half-way mark, and still finished second. In the field events Bill Watson will be the center of attention. Saturday he set a new Conference record of 50 feet 4%/4 inches in the shot put and this week will attempt to estab- lish a new Butler mark. He will also be competing in the broad jump with Alan Smith and Stoller Mile Features Relay The big feature of the Relays will be the mile run in which three of the world's most outstanding distance stars will clash. GlennrCunningham, world record holder, Archie San Ro- mani, Kansas star who has zoomed to the heights since last spring, and Don Lash of Indiana will match strides in this race. Jim Kingsley, Wolverine sopho- more pole vaulter who pulled a ten- don in his left leg at Chicago, is out of competition until the outdoor season, Coach Chuck Hoyt announced yesterday. The meet will be the final one of the Michigan indoor schedule and the Wolverines will be idle until April 17 when they face California in a dual meet at Berkeley, Calif. Anderson Tires 60 In Grid Rehearsal Hunk Anderson demonstrated con- clusively to a squad of 60 aspiring gridders yesterday'that work and lots of it will be his tonic for the local football situation as he sent his charges through a three hour prac- tice to feature the first day of out- door drills. Anderson had many of Michigan's hopefuls wishing they had kept in better shape during the off season as he drove them in a strenuous ses- sion that lasted till dusk. Stiff calis- thenics and a lot of diving for flabby stomach muscles was the ex-Notre Dame mentor's way of showing that he meant business. If Sam Stoller, Wolverine sprinter, who was upset Saturday in his spe- cialty by Bobby Grieve of Illinois, gets a chance for revenge this week-end at the Butler Relays. Sam is co-holder of the world rec- ord for the 60-yard dash, with .06.1 performance to his credit. A Illinois Places k In SevenEvents;- >r Wins Mat Titlet By BUD BENJAMIN The storm is over, the smoke hase cleared and only a serene quiet, sym-r bolic of a new Conference mat cham-x pion, is left to tell the story. The Illini, with a powerful, well- balanced crew of grapplers, took the9 honors Saturday night in the Field House scoring 24 points and nosing1 out Coach Cliff Keen's Michigan1 squad by five points. Minnesota'sF Gophers were tied with 15, Indiana,N the defending champion, fourth with 9. It was a nip-and-tuck meet all thef way, one in which the slightest breakt would decide the outscome. The, breaks came, but not Michigan's way, and when it was all over those very breaks meant the margin of vic- tory and defeat. .c No Sour Grapes No sour grapes are herein intended.] Coach Hec Kenny brought a fine squad down to Ann Arbor-the power of which is shown by the fact that they garnered points in no less than seven of the eight weight divisions. But nothing broke right for Mich- igan, and a couple of the breaks almost led to disaster. Paul Cameron, the clever veteran 126-pounder won't forget his match for a long while. Meeting the new Conference champ Al Sapora of Illinois in the semi- finals, Cammy actually had one of his opponent's shoulders down and was applying pressure on the other in a sure pin hold when the horn blared ending the match. An over- time was rightly called-and in the extra session Sapora won by one of the closest decisions ever recorded. &lowv the referee ever decided between the two is one mystery that must re- main unsolved. Danner Loses First Sophomore Harland Danner lost his first match of the year at 165 pounds to Illinois' John Ginay, an Olympic wrestler, senior, and third in the Conference last year. Har- land was not outwrestled, he was out- smarted. He never could get to using his aggressive tactics against the wily Ginay who stayed behind, attempted no pin holds, and just rode along comfortably while a frantic Danner attempted to break into the open where he excels. The rarest exhibition of courage in the meet was Earl Thomas', new Conference champ at 135 pounds, battle with Archie Deutschman of Illinois. Thomas, far ahead in the first three minutes, possibly on his way to a pin, was the victim of a punishing wristlock, severely wrenching his arm. Michigan, pro- testing an illegal hold, took timeout, and Earl, wrestling with one arm, finished the bout managing mirac- ulously to keep away from a deter- mined opponent. Speiher Off Johnny Speicher was a disappoint- ment. The wee junior 118 pounder was definitely "off" in the tourna- ment, for after losing in the semi- finals to "Two-Bit" Myers, the new champ, he dropped a decision to Illinois' Dan Blum, ranked far below Johnny by coaches and spectator's alike.JIt was simply Blum'shnight and Johnny had to content himself with a single point and a third place. Had Cameron pinned his man, had Danner won as was expected, had Speicher taken an expected second, a different yarn would be forthcoming. But "if" is an elusive word-one that is practically meaningless in the ath- letic world. In 1-11 1Gamei Winners Meet Wildcats In Independent Finals At Annual Open House In a real story-book finish the Flints came from behind in the last second to eke out a victory from the Penthouse basketball team, 12-11, last night at the Intramural Building. The game advanced the winners to the finals of the independent division playoffs which will be held tomor- row night at the Open House against the Wildcats. With the exception of one player the Flints are all from Flint, Mich- igan, and that one player, a Cats- kill boy, won the game for them. In the last instant of play, after missing all his attempts up to that point, Walter Singer grabbed the ball and shot blindly off balance to sink the winning margin just as the game ended. The game which featured the ref- eree's whistle as only the Intramural referee can feature it, was badly played in many respects. Poor passes and ball handling combined with faulty shooting tended to dull the game. Starting off after two minutes Aaron Shnirman sank a long fol- lowed by George Gens to put the Penthouse in the lead. Earl Hollo- way followed with a long and I. Orris and Shnirman continued with a foul and another dog respectively for the Pents as Red Stevens ended the quarter for Flint with a free throw. The second period saw Holloway score three points plus a long by Freddie Trosko on, a pass from Nate Goldberg to bring the score up to 9-8 just as Corelitz sank an overhead for penthouse. Three free throws was all the shooting in the third canto, one by Steve Uridek for the Vehics and one each by Gens and Shnirman. I By RAY GOODMAN And they still call it basketball- though the reason for 'the retention of that name seems mighty obscure. Sunday the Big. Ten basketball coaches decided to eliminate the cen- ter jump except at the beginning of the game, the start of the second half, the opening of overtime, and after technical and double fouls. At all other times play will be begun by the team scored upon from its own end zone. The reasons for the change are cer- tainly obvious. Its supporters say that it will speed up the game, allow more minutes of actual competition, and most important eliminate, par- tially at least, the advantage of su- perior height at the center circle. "So What?" The supporters of the plan, prin- cipally from the west, are probably right in all these claims, but what I want to know is-"so what." Who wants these so called "im- provements" and where did they get the idea that they were improve- ments. Basketball is a pretty fast game right now, especially with the wide use of the fast break. More speed certainly isn't going to do it I much good. A little slowing down might, however. Not For Basketball This racehorse stuff is all right, but it can go too far. If you want to see a lot of boys tearing around at top speed patronize the track meets, but don't bother basketball with it. Why not give $he set offenses a break. They're as pretty to watch as anything in the game, and especially when they're mixed with a fast break as when Michigan plays Purdue. also took much of the wide open play out of the game. Then, seemingly not satisfied with this piece of vandalism, they got to- gether and introduced the' three-sec- ond rule which was supposed to do away with the pivot play and did nothing of the sort. It just called for more whistle blowing and little else. And now they've done away with the center jump. Why its like taking Piggy Lambert off of the Purdue bench. It's "'Rulebook Ball" This isn't basketball; it's "rule- bookball," at least that's a truthful title. What's going to happen to the old- time finishes. When there's 50 sec- onds to go, and the score is Jones- ville 31, Brownstown 28, and then Brownstown comes through with a long shot to make it 31 to 30 and the referee gives the ball to Jonesville in the end court. And Jonesville just freezes the ball and the game is over. Excitement Lost The old-time scramble at that last tip-off, the excitement as those last 30 seconds go by seem to be a thing of the past. Remember that whirlwind finish when Michigan's Varsity came from behind to beat Northwestern, 34 to 31, when the Conference opened this year, remember Illinois' amazing vic- tory over Purdue in the last few sec- onds to turn the Big Ten race upside down, and think back to last year and the Boilermaker's terrific finish to beat Michigan, 38 to 37, as the gun sounded. Well, that's all over. There's no center jump. Give me the good old days. . . i NOW'S the time I N EED IT! .... Table Tennis Champ ToPlayHere Tonight Coleman Clark, probably the greatest ping pong player in the United States, will give an exhibi- tion of his skill at 7:30 p.m. today in the billiard room of the Union. Clark, who is noted for his strong all-round game and his trick shots, will team with Abbott Nelson, the Illinois State Doubles Champion and number 27 in the national men's ranking, for the exhibition. A master of the sport which has proved such an indoor pastime, Clark has written two books on table tennis and contributes to "Esquire," "Popular Mechanics," and "Country Life" as well. Among his crowns are former national singles champion, twice western singles titleholder and al- so western doubles champion. Another example of his ver- satility was his recent stardom' in Metro-Goldwyn Mayers Sport movie "Table Tennis." Serious illness often strikes in the spring. Changeable weather ... a more active life . . damp rains . .. all lead, to illrhess in a rundown body. That's why it's so necessary to retain vital- ity and build resistance by drinking plenty of West Side Dairy Milk. WEST SI DE DAIRY 720 Brooks Phone 2-3141 In the last four years the boys have just about taken the basketball out of basketball. All that's left is the backboards and the baskets. First they put one half of the floor out of commission with the 10-secondj rule, which it did away with stalling, HEY, JOE - Didja hear? Portable typewriters are going up in price April 1st! No foolin'?! - I'm on my way to Rider's right NOW ! Ruby - -. _ Keeler says. 4,. Luckies are a light smoke that treat a tender throat rigt "In a way, it's easier to keep in con dition as a dancer than as a singer. Exercise can keep the muscles in : . shape, but there are a lot of things that can go wrong with the voice and throat. It stands to reason, then, that any actress wants a cigarette that is gentle and strikes the right note with her throat. I started smoking Luckies 4 years ago. They're a light smoke that treat a tender throat right." LOVELY WARNER BROS. STAR NOW APPEARING IN "READY, WILLING AND ABLE" Joe Louis May Fight In England July 30 1 CALL MANAGERS All second semester freshmen and first semester sophomores who are interested in trying out for football manager report to Fred Colombo, Varsity manager, in Yost Field House at 3 p.m. today. LONDON, March 15.-(A)-Brown Bomber Joe Louis will show his fistic wares in London this summer if Brig. Gen. Alfred Cecil Critchley's promo-' torial plans materialize. Arriving home on the Queen Mary from a flying trip to the United States, the British promoter said Louis would fight on July 30 in. the White City Stadium against the win- ner of a current heavy weight elim- ination series involving Max Baer, Ben Foord, Tommy Farr and Walter Neusel. Farr tonight won the British Em- pire heavyweight championship, out- pointing Foord in a 15-round bout. Farr weighed 203 pounds; Foord 206. The winner will meet Max Baer, former world's champion, here April 1~ An independent survey was made recently among professional men and women-lawyers, doctors, lecturers, scientists, etc. Of those who said they smoke cigarettes, more than 87% stated they personally prefer a light smoke. Miss Keeler verifies the wisdom of this pref- erence, and so do other leading artists of the radio, stage, screen and opera. Their voices are YORK MAY PLAY THIRD Rudy York, rookie Detroit Tiger first-baseman may be tried at third base in order to make use of his hitting ability. Hank Greenberg, if his wrist is okay, will most likely play first. PRICES ADVANCE APRIL 1st On All Makes of New Portable Typewriters their fortunes. That's why so many of them smoke Luckies. You, too, can have the throat pro- tection of Luckies-a light smoke, free of certain harsh irritants removed by the exclusive process "lt's Toasted". Luckies are gentle on the throat. THE FINEST TOBACCOS-- "THE CREAM OF THE CROP"