MARCH 4, 1937 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE T"EU Natators End Dual Season Unbeaten; Whip Buckeyes, 53-31 Haynie, Kirar Capture Two Firsts Apiece (~.. Sets New Pool Mark Varsity' Swimmers Break Two Pool Records And Tie A Third Win Relays Easily (Continued from Page 1) swimmers. Co-Capt. Jack Kasley won his favorite breast-stroke event in 2:25.4 to better his own mark of 2:26, the Michigan medley trio of Cody, Kasley and Bob Mowerson did 2:59.4 to better the old record of 2:59.6 held by the same team, and Kirar tied his own 100-yard free- style standard of :53.2, also held by Spence of Rutgers. The 220- and 440-yard free-style events were stirring battles between Haynie, Capt. Dexter Woodford of Ohio and Co-Capt. Frank Barnard of Michigan. Big Ten Meet Is Next Haynie finished the furlong in 2:15.4 two yards ahead of Woodford, but the latter was the first to touch. The 440 was even closer, Haynie sprinting to nip Woodford by two yards in 4:55.1 with Barnard coming up strong to finish -three yards be- hind. Kirar was one foot ahead of team- mate Walt Tomski at the end of the 50, and took Bob Johnson of the Buckeyes by a yard and a half in the 100. Baker Bryant was about a foot behind to take third for Michigan. Both relays were walkaways for the Wolverines, each by a complete length of the pool. The Wolverines will go into compe- .tition again one week from tomor- row in the Big Ten championships to be held at Bloomington. Swim Summaries_ 300-yard medley relay: Won y Michigan (Cody, Kasley and Mow- son); second, Ohio State (Volk, Mc- Kee and Hartlein). Time-2:59.4. (New pool record)._ 220-yard free-style: Won by Hay- nie (M); second, Woodford (0); third, Barnard (M); time-2:16.4. 50-yard free-style: Won by Kirar (M); second, Tomski (M); third, Neunzig (0). Time- :23.6. High-board diving: Won by Pat- terson (0), 409 points; second, Grady (M), 407.9; 'third, Haughey (M), 299.9. 100-yard free-style: Won by Kir- ar (M); second, Johnson (0); third, Bryant (M). Time---:43.2 (Ties pool record). 150-yard back-stroke: Won by Neunzig (0); second, Cody (M); third, Sauer (M). Time-1:40.1. 200-yard breast-stroke: Won by Kasley (M); second, McKee (O); third, Gustafson (O). Time-2:25.4. (New pool record). 440-yard free-style: Won by Hay- nie (M); second, Woodford (0); third, Barnard (M). Time--4:55.1. 400-yard free-style relay: Won by Michigan (Tomski, Farnsworth, Mowerson and Kirar); second, Ohio State (Howell, Karthern, Hartlein and Kessler). Time-3:35.6. ENDS HOLDOUT CAMPAIGN NEW YORK, March 3.-(A')-Ver- non (Goofy) Gomez, star southpaw of the New York Yankees, ended his holdout campaign today and signed .his'1937 contract with the New York Yankees. New Records Are Thinclads' Aim Tomorrow Pittsburgh Trackmen May Press Varsity; Injuries, IneligibilityHit Team Michigan's track team, hit sud- denly by the injury and ineligibility jinx, will face a powerful and well balanced University of Pittsburgh squad tomorrow night on practically even terms. Field House records will be en- dangered in practically every event with Michigan's seniors, competing on the local indoor track for the last time, out to hang up as many new marks as possible. In fact, it may prove that the Wolverines will have to turn in record smashing perform- ances to top the Panthers in the point column. Starr Lost To Team The loss of Ben Starr until April 1 has complicated for Coach Chuck Hoyt the problem of whom to enter in the middle distance runs. The question is further muddled by the. fact that Ross Faulkner, promising sophomore quarter-miler, is still in the Health Service and unless he is able to compete next week-end in the Big Ten meet at Chicago the Wol- verines may have to put up a great- er battle than now expected before annexing their fourth straight Con- ference championship. For tomorrow's meet Coach Hoyt has decided to run Steve Mason in the 440 as well as the low hurdles. Both Harold and Howard Davidsonl will be in the half, the race that Starr has won in both of the season's meet for the first time this year, along with Ed DeVine and Brelsford. Fink and O'Connell will be the Wolverine runners in the mile. Hoyt Undecided The veteran Howard Davidson against Ohio State ran the quarter and also a leg of the relay while sophomore Harold has competed in the mile this season. As yet Hoyt has not decided what four men he will put in the relay. In the 1936 Michigan A.A.U. Re- lays the Pitt relay team ran against the Wolverines in a special invita- tional race and Michigan was forced to come from behind to win in 3:24.4. Pitt Record Holder r ti M Jack Kasley, co-captain of the Wolverine swimming team broke the Intramural pool record in the breast stroke yesterday in the Var- sity's victory over the Ohio State squad. The score was 53 to 31. Yearling Track Squad Meets Iowa Via Wire Michigan's freshman track team, classed by Assistant Coach Ken Do- herty as one of the best yearling squads in recent years, is this week- end competing against Iowa in the first telegraphic meet of the year. Next week the Wolverine freshmen will clash in a telegraphic meet with Wisconsin and following this will compete against Indiana and Ohio State in that order to wind up the indoor season. As Iowa holds a vic- tory over the Hoosier yearlings the score of the Michigan-Hawkeye clash is expected to be close. There are several outstanding men on Doherty's squad that should make good Varsity men for the next three years. In the mile and two mile Ralph Schwartzkopf and Paul Wisner are rated as the best, while in the quarter and both the high and low hurdles, Stan Kelley appears to be the tops. Dave Cushing in the pole vault and Ken Steen in the shot are two more freshmen who should fare well in intercollegiate competition. After these four indoor telegraphic meets Doherty's squad will in May compete in several outdoor meets of the same type. Townsend Seeks Second Place As Young Breaks Scoring Mark Harold Tost, Pittsburgh senior, is the man Clayt Brelsford will have to beat tomorrow night in the mile run if he is to remain undefeated in the 1936 indoor campaign. Tost holds the University of Pittsburgh records for the event both indoors and outdoors. $1 Will Get You $500 If Forecasts Are Right NEW YORK, March 3.-GP)-It's a long shot proposition but $1 will get $500 if the country's leading sports editors are correct in their forecast of the outcome of 1937's ma- jor professional sports. Gazing into the crystal ball at the request of the Associated Press, the majority of the writers saw, (1) Joe Louis whipping Jim Braddock for the world heavyweight title at Chi- cago; (2) Harry Cooper wearing the National Open golf crown after many a year of being close; (3) Pompoon leading the turf's greatest three-year olds home in the Ken- tucky Derby, and (4) the New York Yankees defending their World Se- ries title against the St. Louis Car- dinals. Broadway's Jack Doyle is the au- thority that the five-star parlay is a 500 to 1 proposition though he didn't say he'd accept any wagers at that price. Gee Eyes 100 Point Total In Season's Final Game Against Badgers By ART BALDAUF Saturday night, after Michigan and Wisconsin have tangled at Yost Field House, after the Illini have finished their game with Northwestern, and' Minnesota has played Chicago, the 1937 Conference basketball scoring race will be over. Of the ten present leaders, most of whom are sure to get some high positions in the finals, eight will have a last chance to boost their records. Although Jake Townsend and Johnny Gee are certain of final places, they'll be trying to climb an- other notch or so Saturday against the Badgers in the Wolverines' last game of the season. Jake, now in fourth place, is only two points be- hind his last season's total of 108 and has a good chance to better that rec- ord considerably and even climb to third or second. Young Has 172 Johnny Gee,.now in fifth with 95, has the century mark as his goal, and with his present average of nine points per game he should be able to make it. This is his last game in Conference competition, as he is a senior. First, of course, in the final stand- ing, is Jewell Young. Monday night against Wisconsin he finished the season with a total of 172, setting a new conference record. He bettered by five points Joe Rieff's old total of 167, established in 1933 when he was playing with Northwestern. Many Fighting For Places Fighting with Townsend Saturday will be Harry Combes, now in third, and Mike McMichael, present second place holder. They'll all have a share in these three places, but whether they'll stay as they are remains to be seen. Gordon Addington, Johnny Kund- la, and George Rooney will also be in when the finals are totaled, unless, of course, none of them score any I more points. Addington and Rooney are tied for seventh place with Ken Gunning, who incidentally has the real worrying to do having finished the season. He has nothing to do but 1 Hockey Team Prepares For Invasion By Most Formidable Foe In Five Years , I ':1 By BONTH WILLIAMS The most formidable foe that a Michigan hockey team has been called upon to face in the last five years, a team that has drubbed Dart- mouth 10-1, Princeton 10-0, and scored impressive victories over such vaunted opponents as the Boston Olympics, Yale, Queen's and the Uni- versity of Montreal, will provide the opposition for Eddie Lowrey's Wol- verines in the Coliseum Saturday night. The invaders are the Toronto Var- sity, powerhouse of eastern intercol- legiate hockey and one of the best puck clubs in North America. In this, their first year in the new- ly formed International Intercolle- giate Hockey League made up of the leading schools of both the American and Canadian east, Toronto has lost only one League series, and that to McGill, the probable Allan Cup champions of the Dominion. Has Veteran Squad Coached by Ace Bailey. member1 of the great Toronto Maple Leafs Topcoats Our Spring Line of Topcoats Is Now On* Display team of five years ago, the Varsity has a squad of veterans who fit to- gether into one of the smoothest working sextets in amateur hockey. Coach Bailey carries a 14-man squad including three high-scoring forward lines, four top-notch de- fensemen, and a pair of eagle eyed goalies who have allowed an average of less than three goals per game despite the stiffest kind of competi- tion. Toronto has lost only four games this season, two to McGill, and one each to the University of Montreal and Harvard. The Varsity has piled up 59 goals in 12 games for an aver- age of practically 5 markers per tilt -an average which, incidentally, Captain Vic Heyliger and his mates will have to lower if they expect to hang up a victory Saturday. Average Is High The Wolverines can look back on their own statistics with pride, how- ever. Of 16 games played with the best hockey clubs in this part of the United States and Canada, Michigan has skated off the ice with 11 wins and four losses. The Wolverines have banged home 66 tallies in those 16 contests to give themselves the very presentable average of just bet- ter than four goals per game. Saturday night's clash will in all English Reversible Topcoats Patterns in ! PLAIDS and Herringbone Colors in Tan and Grey SPECIAL $1850 we could go into breathless descriptions of this really knockout value in Reversible Topcoats, but we's rather have you find out the facts for yourself. probability set a new attendance mark for hockey games here if the management will allow standing room all over the old Coliseum, but the crowd will be nothing new to Toronto. They play before assemblies that average well over 2,000 and for ;heir final game with McGill in Mon- treal drew more than 12,000 wild eyed rooters into the forum there. The Toronto game is the first step in-the plans of athletic powers to de- velop a regular seasonal rivalry be- tween Michigan and the highly tout- ed sextets of the east. That such a rivalry could be established not only as a major drawing card, but as a financial asset as well, is believed by many officials. No reserved seats will be sold for the Michigan-Toronto clash, and as a result, fans who want to see this intersectional clash between two great teams representing the east and the west, will be wise to take their supper with them to the creaky old Coliseum. 'w .l $2250 to $4'000 The 'HUDDER' by Society Brand at $4000 is our I outstandina value If i - I