THE MICHIGAN DAILY C he I PRESS A NGL E By GEOLGE J. ANR@O.A; (Daily Sports Ette t A Hand To The Cagers ... IT WAS A disgruntled campus that awoke Tuesday morning to the realization that the Varsity basket- ball team had been rudely jerked from the Big Ten throne room . . Now that the shock has worn off there still remains, unfortunately, an element that seems to think disgust is the logical feeling to express . . Any University student who feels dis- gusted because an exhausted team was beaten by a squad that played better ball that night should be dip- ped by his heels in the Union Pool. . . Coach Cappy Cappon and his boys deserve the best in all of us for the great showing they have made this season . . . Let's make it a full house tomorrow night when Wisconsin comes to town to end the season Varsity 35, Foe 7.. BILL BATES, last fall's Varsity football manager, after prowl- ing through our records reports that Michigan teams have won 35 and lost seven points since Jan. 1 Danny Smick is slightly, chagrined because The Daily proofreaders er- red in interpreting Ray Goodman's telegram and had Danny on the wrong side of the incident at Colum- bus last Saturday night . . . There have been many crowds in Yost Field House larger than the one that at- tended the Michigan-Indiana wrest- ling meet last Monday night, but not many with more enthusiasm .,.. . Harland Danner, sensational ,sophomore matman who is undefeat- ed to date, refuses to be interviewed unless he wins the Big Ten title here next week-end . . . There isn't much doubt in my mind that he will be interviewed when the Championships are over . . A Great Player Passes ... CENTRAL MICHIGAN is mourn- ing the death of Maurice Buy-- see, the greatest blind-shot artist ever to step on a basketball floor ... Up- perclassmen will remember him as the dark-haired center who played for Michigan State a few years ago' and gave Coach Cappon heart fail- iure every time he broke for the corn- .er on a dead run and hooked the. ball over his head with his left hand ..Buysee was not satisfied at State, however,. . . There he could only Tracksters Battle ._.I Tops Among Sprinters - Associated Press Phoi Sammy Stoller in the dual tra meet with Pittsburgh tonight wi be out to equal the world recordi the 60-yard dash which he hol jointly with Jesse Owens at :06 seconds. Three Pitt stars and Al Smith, Wolverine sophomore, wi be battling Stoller all the way. play one or maybe two games a w . He liked to play four and f times a week ... With anybody, a where . . . Once he played th games in a single night . . . Anotl time he even obliged the Jacks Prison five . . . He didn't smoke a never drank, but he had one we ness-his car . . . When they to him out of a ditch near Jackson Si day night, he walked into the hosp with a punctured lung and inter injuries .. . He .died a few ho later . . . I am proud to have cal "Big Bush" a friend. -v 1 y to ck ill in ds .1 an 'ill eek five ny- ree her son and ak- ook un- ital nal urs led Se e.1 Final Meet Pitt Endangers Perfect Seven-Year Record Held By MichiganIndoors Will Assault Records Tonight, for the first time in his- tory, the track teams of Pittsburgh and Michigan will clash, records wil fall, and at least 3,000 fans will leav Yost Field House satisfied that they have witnessed one of the greates battles ever staged on any track. The dual meet between the Pan thers and Wolverines will get unde way at 7:30 p.m. with the mile run and as there is no other athleti event here tonight there is little doub but what the largest crowd of th season will be on hand to see thi titanic tilt, the last indoor meet her this year. Woodruff Is Star Coach Carl Olson is bringinga powerful 21-man squad here from Pitt and plans to hand the Mich igan thinclads their first defeat i indoor dual competition since 1930 Pacing the Panthers in their effort to down the reigning champions o the Western Conference will be th great Johnny Woodruff who wil compete in the 440, 880 and possibl the relay. Because Pitt, like Michigan, pos sesses outstanding performers i practically every event all Fiel House records will be in danger. I the 60-yard dash, the mile, both th high and low hurdles, the 440, 880 broad jump and relay the battle fo first places should be the closest a well as the most thrilling seen her in several years. Relay Team Eyes Record Michigan's mile relay team ma: furnish the fans with their greates thrill of the evening when they fac the Panthers in the final event o the card. Last Saturday the Wol verines set a new Field House mar of 3:19.8 and weren't even pushed Tonight Pitt guarantees to push th Micl igan quartet and push them hard with the result perhaps bein that the record will fall again. Th world indoor mile relay mark is 3:1 and nothing would please Coac Chuck Hoyt quite so much as to hav his team equal that. Besides Woodruff, the Panther boast a long list of stars who wil give Michigan plenty of trouble. I the dash Ed Mason, Art Thomas an Glenn Cooper of Pitt will matc strides with Michigan's Sammy Stol ler and Alan Smith. Only three o the five can place and the struggl to get into the money should pro duce the fastest sprint the Fiel House has lever seen. Watson Will Jump Harold Tost will battle Clay Brelsford for first place in the mil and in the quarter it will be Birleso vs. Woodruff. Michigan's brother ac Harold and Howard Davidson, will b pitted against Woodruff in the hal while Capt. Bob Osgood in the hur dles will have his hands full wit Andy Lasky and Ken Ryden. Big Bill Watson, phenomenal Wol verinesophomore, will be competin tonight in both the shot put an broad jump. The latter event is be ing included on a Michigan indoo dual meet card for the first time i: 25 years in order to prepare the Wol verines for their outdoor meet a California April 17. Pete Bennett and Red Oden, bot of Pitt, will be expected to tak first and second in the high jum tonight while Wolverines will be fa vored in the other field events. Greatest Crowd Of Season Will Pitt Here Tonight Pitt Mentor Expects Woodruff To Be First Four-Minute Miler By FRED DE LANO sity indoor games and in that meet, When big Johnny Woodruff flashes while running for Connellsville High his 12-foot stride, the stride that car- School, he won the scholastic mile ried him to the Olympic 800-meter title although he stuck to the out- championship last summer, against side lane all the way. He later ex- Michigan quarter and half milers to- plained that he thought he would be night in Yost Field House Wolverine disqualified if he cut over to the in- fans will be getting a glimpse of the side. man that 'Coach Carl Olson of Pitt Woodruff is without question the expects to be the first to run a four- most freakish runner on the Amer- minute mile. ican track today and his loping style The four-minute mile has long has been the despair of sticklers for been the dream of middle distance running form. Olson states, however, l runners the world over but the best that he has made little effort to e that has ever been done was Glenn change the natural style of the Pitt y Cunningham's 4:06.7. Olson believes sensation. that a great short distance star has In the meet here Woodruff is en- t the best chance of turning in such a tered in both the 440 and 880 and miraculous mile and that Woodruff, will be the big attraction of the night. - because of his terrific speed in the His race with Stan Birleson in the r half and his overwhelming stamina, quarter should be one of the best n is the man to do it. ever seen on the Field House track c Woodruff is a sophomore at Pitt and advance indications point to- t now and wants to keep on running ward the meet's. being the finest of e long enough at least to make the the local mdoor season. s American Olympic team of 1940. He e hails from Connellsville, Pa., and Bad er C am e took to track only because his father objected to John's playing football. T 2 Yeare a Few doubt but what the powerfully To E d5Ye rs a built six feet, four-inch Negro would - have made good on the gridiron. n He saw his first real track meet . in 1934 at the West Virginia Univer- of Conference Title Is Just e Jack Merrill Is A Mathematical Ideal; y Out As Sextet Game IsSaturday With the Big Ten basketball title n just a mathematical ideal the Mich- d waiuts Toro1 to igan cagers will close their season n Saturday night at Yost Field House e against Wisconsin's surprising (and By BONTH WILLIAMS . probably surprised as well) Badgers, r Jack Merrill is all through playing who upset Purdue's five little piggies s college hockey. When Ace Bailey last Monday. e leads his rangy Toronto Varsity out The Wolverines, with an eight and on the ice in the Coliseum Saturday three record, can finish no lower in night, there will be just eight Wol- theerecorhan finh erchn verines to meet them, for Jack Mer- the race than third, and the chance Y rill has scored his last goal for Mich- for second place, if they defeat the t igan. Madison team and either Illinois or e In that hectic two-game battle in Minnesota should be upset, is not be- n Minneapolis last week Merrill was yond possibility. - the victim of some of the dirtiest Illinois will be playing Northwest- k cross-checking Coach Eddie Lowrey ern, one of the two teams that has de- . has ever seen. In the first game feated the Illini in Conference com- e Jack was almost prostrated with a petition this year. Minnesota, on n serious charley horse, and when he the other hand, will be facing the g tried to play in the final tilt two weakest team in the league, Chicago. e nights later, was forced to the bench If the two leaders should both be 7 with a wrenched knee. . beaten and the Varsity comes out h Yesterday doctors and trainers re- ahead of Wisconsin then Michigan e ported that the plucky little second- will get a third of the title. line center had developed water on Just what Harold Foster will bring s that knee and advised Jack to take down to Ann Arbor with him is hard L a long rest to get back in shape. to say. When the Wolverines faced n Merrill's loss comes as a severe the Badgers at Wisconsin they looked d blow to Michigan's hopes of upset- mighty weak. But evidently they h ting the powerful Toronto club which have taken a new lease on life for - carries three forward lines, four de- they have been playing triple A ball f fensemen, and a pair of goalies. for the last few weeks. e Merrill earned his freshman nu- Two Michigan players will be - merals here and then went on to de- wearing Varsity basketball uniforms d velop into a first rate varsity puck- for the last time. . They are Capt. ster. Jack had all the moxie that Johnny Gee, The Daily's choice for takes to be a great competitor, but All-Conference center, and Matt Pat- t it was not until this year that he blos- anelli, veteran guard who will re- e somed out into a flashy stick handler ceive his sixth M at the end of the n and a dangerous offensive threat. season. t Always a reliable defensive flanker, The game will also be important e Jack this season teamed with George in that it will give Gee and Jake f Cooke and Ed Chase to present Mich- Townsend their last chance to swell igan with their first high class spare their scoring records. Townsend is h line in'years. It was the Merrill to fourth in the Big Ten with 106 points, Cooke combination that gave the just two off his 1936 mark and the - Wolverines some of their most-need- same number behind Illinois' Harry g ed goals. Combes in third place. g >r Matmen Travel To State Today n t Michigan's Varsity wrestlers, fresh Earl Thomas; 155-pounds, Harold from their 13% to 12% upset over Nichols; 165-pounds, Capt. Frank h Indiana, embark today for East Lan- Bissell or Frank Morgan; 175-pounds, e sing where they will tackle Michigan Harland Danner or Dick Tasch; and P State's grapplers tonight. heavyweight, Jim Lincoln. The Spartan aggregation, composed The meet with the Spartans con- mainly of sophomores, will provide cludes the dual-meet season for the little opposition to Coach Cliff Keen's Wolverines. Next week-end will see fast stepping mat corps, although the them in action for the last time at East Lansing boys have been coming home in the Western Conference along fast after a poor start. championships. Michigan is favored Keen will insert a few of his second feating India ast Mondayafter de- stringers into the lineup, saving his____________________ regulars for the all-important Con- ference meet, to be held here March 12 and 13. SATURDAY ENDS OUR Johnny Speicher, little junior 118 pounder, will meet the best man in the State lineup, Bud Aldrich, who is undefeated as yet this season. SL Johnny's brilliant draw with Confer- ence champ Bob "Two-Bits" Myers of MICHAELS-STERN of Indiana gives him the nod. Keen will most likely use the fol-SU ITS lowing men: 118-pounds, Speicher; $30 to $40 Values 126-pounds, Ed Kellman; 135- pounds, Paul Cameron; 145-pounds, $2175 to$29.75 Overcoats $30 to $47 Values brior $20.00 to $32.50 CE CREAM Topcoats Values to $35 nd Shecial $74.50 - $,Q.50 t ,. U EASTER FALLS ON MARCH 28th spring - p SUITS $1950 up STYLE PARK HATS $350 to $500 TOPCOATS $1950 up SMITH SMART SHOES $750 to $850 Others $5.00 I _ I-M RELAYS TONIGHT Four fraternity half mile teams will compete during the Pitt track meet at 8:30 p.m. tonight in the finals of the Intramural depart- ment relay meet. Psi Upsilon, Tri- angles, Phi Gamma Delta, and Theta Xi are the groups entered. L __._ TYPEWRITING MIMEOGRAPHING Promptly and neatly done by experi- enced operators at moderate prices. O. D. MORRILL 314 South State Street ARROW SH IRTS Accessories All requirements for the Well- Dressed Man. $200 .. , s READ THE DAILY CLASSIFIEDS Fiegel's Men's Store MILK- I Week-E Sets A New High Standard In Style, Value, And Variety For Your I i ~z' ' ///1l /1i 'r// M 1 u rn