the Canadiens And Spirit' Alone Is No Substitute Wings To Open ' For GridironAbility,HunkSa Series Tonight By BUD BENJAMIN fullback during his prep school "C d-ini'tin dnp tp.wm k Gihm lflnd 'A14r PRESS ys days. j ANGLEJ - By GEORGE J. ANDRO- (Daily Sports Editor) Here They Are ... THE four ex-Varsity athletes whose cuts appeared in Sunday's guess- ing games were, in the order of their appearance: Al Plummer, Ned Turn- er, Herm Everhardus and Chuck Ko- csis . . . Ray Goodman reports from Flint that Lansing St. Mary's, re- peating Class C champion, was the best looking team at the State Inter- scholastic basketball tournament fi- nals Saturday night . . . And Ray knows his basketball, remember -'- Coach Ray Lehman drills his St. Mary's team from September to June John Whittaker of Minnesota, voted the best wrestler in the Big Ten meet held here earlier in the month, was the only Conference man to win a title in the National Colle- giate Championships held last week- end . . . Four Michigan wrestlers won two points on a pair of falls,. Indiana with eight men took only a pair of counters . . . Oklahoma University, runner-up to Oklahoma, A. and M. in the Collegiates, is coached by a brother of Cliff Keen, Varsity mentor . . . Jesse Garber, number-one guard on Coach Harry Kipke's Varsity eleven last fall, has been accepted to Tufts Medical School in Boston . . . Watch Bob Mowerson in the 100-yard free-style and on the end of the two relay teams when Michigan's swimmers defend their National Collegiate title in Min- neapolis this week-end . . . It was diver Der .Johnston who came from nowhere to win a National title last winter, and practice times indicate that Mowerson may be the fair- haired boy this year. Tilden, Perry in Detroit... BILL TILDEN, whose longevity rec- ord makes Lou Gehrig look like a sissy, will meet Fred Perry, the Eng- lish stylist, at The Olympia in De- troit one week from tomorrow . . . Perry is lagging behind Elsworth Vines, national professional cham- pion, 17 matches to 19 in their cross- country tour . . . What a balance of strength Coach Charlie Hoyt has in his Varsity track team was brought out. again Saturday night at Butler when the Wolverines placed in 10 of 11 events they were eligible for . If Bill Watson's leg were strong enough to allow his competing in the high jump, the chances are good that Michigan --w o u 1-d have placed in every event . . . Watson and Jake Townsend, the hardwood Houdini, will give Coach Hoyt a fine pair of discus men this spring . . . Ed Kirar, Matt Mann's sensational free-styler, will be a leading candidate for a javelin post on the oudtoor track team . ... "Champion without a title" is what they had begun to call Sam Stoller .'.. But now it will be "Cham- pion" . . . it's not only because he won his first major race in the But- ler Relays 60 . . . For his record de- fies analogy with any other sprinter . .Sprinters just don't come with the temperament he has shown . . Speaking of champions there never will be a greater one than the man who kept-Sam in the back seat . . Jesse Owens, of course . . . A gentle- man first of all . .. A competitor with rare equal . . . Who can forget his making up 20 yards on the field in the Conference low hurdles last year after falling over one of the early barriers? . . . And Sam Stoller will never forget the one real man who stood out in the most hectic meeting of the entire Olympic Games. I-M ENTRIES CALLED All entries for Intramural base- ball, tennis, and horseshoe con- tests are due Wednesday before 6 p.m. at the Intramural Building, according to Earl Riskey, assist- ant director. New Rules Will Cup Play-Offs; Aurie Are Out oor I'analn on pcee , eamworK , pp intmencead HunK, Feature physical stamina and the ability and The immortal George Gipp, whose desire to work hard-that's the stuff career at Notre Dame still stands in Young, that makes winning football teams, football annals, influenced Anderson in any league and at any school, all to matriculate to the South Bend opinions to the contrary notwith- school. Both were Calumet products I I. NEW YORK, March 22.--'P)- With each game due to be played to a finish for the first time in modern, league history, the six survivors of the regular National Hockey League; campaign go into the opening rounds of the Stanley Cup play-offs tomor- row night. In Detroit the cup-defending Red Wings will meet the Montreal Can-1 adiens in the first game of a three- out-of-five series for the league championship and the right to enter the cup finals. Meanwhile the Bos- ton Bruins will face the Maroons at Montreal and the New York Rangers will battle the Maple Leafs at Toron- toi n the opening skirmithes of two- out-of three games series. In past seasons the second and' third-place duels were decided on a total-goal basis. That arrangement was scrapped this winter in favor of the new set-up, which will find the teams going into "sudden death" overtime if they are tied at the endj of the regulation three periods. These games also may produce the first test of another innovation. If two teams remain deadlocked at the end of 20 minutes overtime, play will behalte d for a half hour while the rink receives a fresh coating of ice. It is hoped this procedure will elim- inate the long-drawn-out scrambles that have marked past play-offs. Detroit, which held its place at the top of the American Division despite the loss of three stars, is favored to, repeat its 1936 triumph. Except for young Howard Mackie on the for- ward line and Johnny Gallagher on defense, the. Wings face the Cana- diens with the same lineup that car-1 ried them successfully to their first Stanley Cup last spring. Mackie was brought up from the minors to replace high-scoring Larry Aurie, who broke his ankle a few days ago. Frosh Trackmen SwampHoosiers Sweeping 11 out of a possible 12 first places and annexing the first three places in seven events, the Wolverine yearling trackmen wound up their indoor telegraphic campaign as they crushed the Indiana frosh 84 to 19. Ralph Schwartzkopf, brilliant dis- i tance ace, copped individual scoring honors as he galloped home first in the mile and two-mile grinds and second in the quarter to amass a total of 13 points. Close on Schwarzkopf's heels in the scoring were Tom Jester, first in the 440 and 880, Stan Kelley, with vic- tories in both hurdle events, and Carl Culver who won the high jump and broad jump. Jester also ran a leg on the winning mile relay team to give him 111/2 point total.. In the only event in which they were allowed a first, the 60-yard dash, the Hoosiers made a clean sweep, Boyle winning in 6.5 seconds. --=lDRUGS_ i' standing." The speaker was Heartley "Hunk"'' Anderson, newly appointed line coach of Michigan's football forces. "The popular myth that some schools are simply graced with a great deal of fight and spirit and can go out there every Saturday with a lot of fight talk and bowl over their op- ponents is purely bunk," he con- tinued. Work Together "Down at Notre Dame the boys win because they have the material and know how to work together. The old Notre Dame spirit takes a back seat to Notre Dame's ability to play good football, and here at Michigan the boys play just as hard and work just as hard as anywhere else; there's no substitute for it!" "In 1935 when Notre Dame came from nowhere to beat a touted Ohio State eleven in the closing minutes, the fans left the stands talking about the old Notre Dame spirit, and how it was an unconquerable force when fully charged. That game was won by the ability of one man, Andy Pil- ney, a truly great back who found himself in that game. The other boys worked together, blocked together, and thought together while the great Pilney ran rampant." Football and Hunk Anderson are almost syncnomous terms. Born in Calumet, Mich., he served four years of high school gridiron duty at Cal- umet High School, playing a lot of Netters Ben 'Test Matches and very close friends. e s e n good. Football coaches today," he went on, "know how to stop the flying j____circuses after they've seen them work With five weeks of practice already a few times. The wide open game is behind them, the varsity tennis squad nothing new; it's been in-and-out of yesterday began a series of test football many times. The new revival matches to determine their respective started in Texas where they need ratings for the coming season. that type of game to fill the stands." Six men, five of them members of last year's squad, were indicated by Coach John Johnstone as his prob- -I-MSports able first team, and have begun a - series of matches, each man playing every other, to determine their rank- ings. Eight others, the majority The standings of the various fra- sophomores, are fighting it out among ternities competing in the Intramural themselves to decide which three or sports program are listed below. The four among them will remain with score includes points garnered from the squad. all of the sports that have been Practically certain of positions are offered thus far this year. Miller Sherwood, this year's captain, 1-Lambda Chi Alpha, 486. Jesse Flick, Jarvis Dean, Ted Thor- 2-Psi Upsilon, 480. ward, Seymour Morrison, and Bill 3-Chi Psi, 473. Mills. 4-Theta Chi, 450. All except Mills have seen action 5-Theta Xi, 429. on other Wolverine squads. He is only 6-Sigma Alpha Mu, 425. a sophomore, but as a member of the 6-Sima laM,42. yearling team last season was re- 8-Alpha Kappa Lambda, 331. garded by Coach Johnstone as "one of the best tennis prospects ever to 9-Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 319. come to Michigan." 10-Kappa Nu, 316. Those fighting for positions in the second bracket of the matches now in progress are John Kidwell, William Woolsey, Gordon Morrison, Don Per- cival, Anthony Formillo, Irving Ra- witz, Henry Thackwell, and Bud Smith. KODAKS Hail, Hail, the Gang's all Here.. and so is your EASTER SUIT and TOPCOAT SUITS at $25 to $40 T0PGIATSc227 -f S -111 Be Ready for Springtime Snapshots with a KODAK SIX-16, with a F.6.3 Lens Capture the week-end highlights in snapshots and you've saved the fun for keeps. Kodak Six-16, with an f.6.3 lens, makes light work of picture making. 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