SNAY, MARCHi13,i38THEs MICHIGAN DAILY __ e Track, Mat Teamns Win A Swimmers Lose In Blig Tfen Meets > -- Natators Bow To Ohio State In Big_10 Meet Kirar, Haynie Win Four Events But Buckeyes' Better Balance Wins (Continued from Page 1) rar's second record-breaking perform- ance of the meet. He shattered the 50-yard record in yesterday's trial heats. Ohio State accounted for the third new record when its 400-yard relay team bettered Mi.igan's old mark of 3:35.6 by a half second. Al Patnik, Ohio's flawless diver won the hearts of the fans, some 1,200 per- sons who filled the stands in the new Trier High School's palatial pool, as he "dropped" every one of his dives in a beautiful exhibition. Defending Champion, Al Patterson of Ohio State, took second. Tom Haynie was the second double- winner of the meet as he successfully defended both his 110-yard and quar- ter-mile championships against mer- men who failed to push the Wolverine natator to fast times. Haynie tried his "Ironman" stunt again when he swam in the free-style relay a scant few minutes after winning the 440 yard race. Michigan finished fourth in the medley behind Ohio the winner, Iowa, and Minnesota. Kirar won the fifty, and Walt Tomski and Bill Farnsworth kept close on his heels to take the second and third places. Kirar took the 100 and Haynie won his two events to about finish the Wolverine scoring. Ohio piled up its winning margin on the basis of the two relay vic- tories, first and second in' both the dive and breast stroke and first in the back-stroke. Michigan took sec- ond in the free-style relay. ALL-CAMPUS WRESTLING All students except members of varsity squads and the freshman wrestling team are eligible to en- ter the annual All - Campus Wrestling tournament which starts at the Field House tomor- row at 7:30 p.m. All entries must weigh in between 4:00 and 5:00 p.m. tomorrow. Gold medals will, be given to the winners in each of the eight weight divisions. For ST PATRICK'S DAY Table Decorations and Boutonnieres at CHELSEA FLOWER SHOP 203 East Liberty Telephone 2-2973 i Swim Summaries 300-Y.d Medley Relay--Won by Ohio State (Neunzig, McKee, and Quayle); second, Iowa; third, Min- nesota; fourth, Michigan; fifth, Wis- consin. Time, 3 minutes, 1.7 seconds. 220-Yard Free Style-Won by Hay- nie, Michigan; second, Johnson, Ohio State; third, Lowe, Illinois; fourth Zehr, Northwestern; fifth, Christians, I Iowa. Time, 2 minutes, 16.1 seconds. 50-Yard Free Style-Won by Kirar,t Michigan; second, Tomski, Michigan; third, Farnsworth, Michigan; fourth, Sabol, Ohio State; fifth, Wolfson, Northwestern. Time, 23.4 seconds. 100-Yard Free Style-Won by Ki- ( rar, Michigan; second, Quayle, Ohio State; third, Sabol, Ohio State; fourth, Tomski, Michigan; fifth, Hqw- ell, Ohio State. Time 52.8. (New Con- ference record. Old mark of 52.9 set by Flachman, Illinois, 1935. 150-Yard Back Stroke-Won by Neunzig, Ohio State; second, Heydt, Iowa; third, Brandt, Minnesota; fourth, Reike, Michigan; fifth, Bre- mer, Iowa. Time 1:39. 440-Yard Free Style-Won by Hay-. nie, Michigan; second, Lowe, Illinois; third, Zehr, Northwestern; fourth, Brandt, Ohio State: fifth, Christians, Iowa. T.ime 5 minutes, 3.2 seconds. 150-Yard Breast Stroke-Won by Higgins, Ohio State; second, McKee, Ohio State: third, Haigh, Michigan; fourth, Allen, Iowa; fifth, Mack. Michigan. Time, 2 minutes, 29.4 sec- onds. 440-Yard Relay-Won by Ohio! State (Sabol, Johnson, Quayle, Neun- zig), second, Michigan; third, North- western; fourth, Wisconsin, fifth, Minnesota. Time 3:35.1 (New Big Ten record. Old record 3:35.6 set by Mich- igan in 1937). GEJIRIG SIGNS ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March 12. -(r')-Lou Gehrig gave up his ambi- tion of drawing down a $40,000 salary today and signed with the New York Yankees at Colonel Jacob Ruppert's own figure of $39,000. Manager Joe McCarthy announced the glad tidings after word from the Yanks' New York office. Track Summaries | Michigan Wins One-Mile Run-Won by Fenske, Fifth Straight Wisconsin; second, Deckard, Indiana; third, Davidson, Michigan; fourth, Big Ten Title Trutt, Indiana. Time, 4 minutes 11.1g seconds. . 50-Yard Dash-Won by Davenport, Watson And Gedeoin Lead Chicago, second, Kaufman, Wiscon- sin; third, Lehmann, Illinois; fourth, Track Team To Closel F. Teufel, Iowa; fifth, Delaney, North- Victory At Chicago western. Time, 6.3 seconds. 440-Yard Run-Won by C. Teufel, (Continued from Page 1)! Iowa; second, Howells, Ohio State; - - - -- - -- third, Miller, Indiana; fourth, Hayes, Indiana. The Hoosiers picked upj Michigan; fifth, Sulzmann, Ohio seven points in the mile classic.I State. Time, 49.8 seconds. Fenske returned a half hour later 70-Yard High Hurdles-Won by to turn in his second win of the eve- Gedeon, Michigan; second, Collinge, ning in the half mile run. After Iowa; third, Robinson, Illinois; trailing in the first quarter Fenske j fourth, Lamb, Iowa; fifth, Hanson, poured in the steam in the third lap Minnesota. Time, 8.6 seconds. and got the call in the gun lap but Two-Mile Run--Won by Mehl, Wis- managed to pass Bodeau of Purdue consin; second, Smith, Indiana; third, only after a bitter stretch battle. Schwarzkopf, Michigan; fourth, Ben- Tom Jester placed the Maize and ner. Ohio State; fifth, Deckard, In- Blue with a hair's breadth fifth. The diana. Time, 9 minutes 18.3 seconds. time for the race was 1:55.4. Shot Put-Won by Watson, Mich- The slim crowd of 2,000 fans leaped igan, (50 feet 2 5/8 inches); second, to their feet as Walter Mehl of Wis- Frary, Illinois; third, Townsend, consin flashed out of obscurity to Michigan (45 feet 8 inches); fouirth, 1 clip a tenth of a second off the 8:18.4 Fordham, Ohio State; fifth, Gragg, record in the two-mile. Illinois. Rambling Ralph Schwarzkopf off 880-Yard Run - Won by Fenske, Michigan, after riding well up the Wisconsin; second, Bodeau, Purdue; whole route behind Smith of In- third, Lyle, Iowa; fourth, Trutt, In- diana, weakened in the last 10 yards diana; fifth, Jester, Michigan. Time after a Inal strong bid which carried 1 minute 55.4 seconds. him to the front, to place third, be- Pole Vault-Won by Padway, Wis- hind Smith who repassed him for the !B il PLAYS DUAL ROLE JOHNSON OVERCOMES JINX il l Stewar, manager of te C Ben John:on, Columbia's sprint star G jive J~ctrtt'v lace onteac awbencf h u tr algChi-.Wie a cago Blackhawks, will soon leave his has escaped his injuries. In 1935 he G ves V rs tA1' place on the Blackhawk bench. putI tore a leg mus,,'e, when he was just away his skates, and don a mask and beginning to reach his peak, which SW chest protector. The reason: as well fed hi frm op n for 1 P4ucft, Bl as managing a professional hockey Na months. A year later he aaain pulled By BEN MOORSTEIN tional League. By now he probably another muscle, but in view of his T knows how fans feel when an umpire I.C.4-A accomplishments, he seems The smallest crowd of the year, 500, makes a raw decision. to have overcome the jinx. smoothest hockey of the year during the first period and some of the worst during the other periods last night at the Coliseum. Although the score was 6-3 in the Wolv ine's favor, Paris H. C. was conceded a moral victory. N e ooKS Paris, substituting for Chatham A.C. which was originally scheduled,! u3 caeheeth no hockey under its Just Pu blisned belt since it last played Michigan and lost, early in February. This marks the final appearance on HERVEY ALLEN: Action at Aquilahivo i ' home ice for five of Michigan's Var-$2.50 sity crew. Captain Bob Simpson, .Johnny Fabello, Gib James, Burt PEARL S. BUCK: This Proud Heart . 2.50 Smith and Ed Chase are graduating in June and have 'one more game, FRANK SWI NN ERTON: Harvest Comedy 2.50 that at Cleveland next week. Passing Features THOMAS MANN: Joseph in Egypt 5.00 From the outset Michigan showed its superiority and scored four times' WARWICK DEEPING: The House of Spies 2.00 in the initial half of the period with some of the neatest passing the first' The Best of Runyon 2.00 line has done all year. From tha/t point on something happened to put AGATHA CHRISTIE: Death on the Nile .2.00 them in reverse. They did, however, snap out of it long enough to scoreEFFERY FARNOL The Crooked Furrow.250 twice in the second period but in the third were listless. Gib James added two more goal to his high scoring mark, now having 40 points. Al Chadwick, second h"e ( wing, also tallied twice and QeorCe down. 105 Nor th Main Street 3 6 South State Street Enough shots that should hare,, and would have counted for inaare on almost any other night, were wide'A or stopped by the Paris goalie. Lar: England, to win a half-dozen games, .%ooke Scores First - consin (13 feet 4 3/4 inches); second, Kingsley, Michigan (12 feet 10 3/4 inches); tied for third and fourth, Nelson, Northwestern, and Shoema- ker, Indiana; tied for fifth, Farrell,l Michigan; Cassels, Chicago, and Rob- erts, Iowa. high Jump-Won by Albritton, Ohio State, (6 feet 6 1/4 inches); second, Allen, Michigan; tied for third, fourth and fifth, Diefenthaler, Illinois; Hubbard, Minnesota and Best, Wisconsin.. One-Mile Relay--Won by Ohio State, (Sulzmann, Robinson, Howells, Squire); second; Iowa; third, Illinois;, fourth, Michigan; fifth, Chicago.) ,Time ,3 minutes 20.7 seconds. 4 second spot. Tommie Deckard diana barely managed to placei money with a fifth. of In- in the Ohi, State's veteran Negro high- jump campaigner and- co-holder of the world outdoor mark erased the third standard from the record books as he outleaped Michigan's Negro sophomore, Wes Allen, with an ef- fort of 6 feet 6 1/4 inches. The new mark replaced the 6 feet 5 3/4 inches set by Albritton's old team mate, Mel t Mhigan Wins Bg 10 Mat Title With 28 Points; Indiana Second (Continued rom R1C 1) Jdefeated Ray Hyde (Indiana, over-, time.., but Harland Danner, who also got fall 175 Pounds-Don Nichols (Micn.) tpoints on his way up the brackets, defeated Chuck Mutter (Illinois). picked off the Conference title at 155 Heavyweights - Chuck McDaniel pounds to give the Wolverine grap- (Indiana) defeated George Downes piers five more points. y (Ohio State). Michigan's third surviving finalistw was Don Nichols, who crashed . through in the 175-pound title bout Chicago Fencers Retain 1 with an impressive win over Chuck Conference Chanpionslip Mutter of Illinois.o All of the final matches were de- CHICAGO, March 12.-(XP)-Chi- cisions, no pins being registered. cado retained its Big Ten fencing 118-Pounds-John Speicher (Mich- team championship today, winning 23 igan defeated Dave Helman (Illinois). out of 30 bouts. 126-Pounds-Willard Duffy (In- Illinois placed second with 18%/ diana) defeated Allen Sapora (Illi- bouts won and 111 lost, with North- nois).fwestern winning 14 and losing 16' 135 Pounds-Archie Deutschman and Wisconsin winning 13 and losing (Illinois) defeated Joe Poman (In- 17. (in)s Fred Kastan of Wisconsin, only de- )fending champion in the individual 14 Pounds'- Larry Lederman events, lost his saber crown to Ed (Wisconsin) defeated Bob Finwall Gustafson of Chicago.a (Chicago). 155 Pounds - Harland Danncr (Mich..) defeated Rudolf Meyer SKATERS IN DETROIT (Ohio State). DETROIT, March 12.-( 1)-Offi- 165 Pounds-John Ginay (Illinois) cials of the Michigan Roller Skating -- - --- --- Association announced today that chamnions from Flint Traverse Cit. Walker, last year. :fere's how the goals were madc: Doug Hayes kept Charlie Hoyt's (1) Fabello carried the puck Wolverines in the quarter mile money across the blue line. passc to Cooke with a fourth behind Iowa's surprise who was clear and who tallied (4:00 winner. Carl Tuefel. Tuefel broke first period). fast and completely out raced his (2) The same play except Fa bello touted Buckeye rival Harley Howellsand Cooke reversed positions. Fabllco in 49.9. Miller of Indiana placed from Cooke (6:20, first) third two yards in front of the game 3) Chadwick grabbed the puck but tiring Hayes, with Elliott, also of in front of Michigan's net, skated the Hoosiers and Sulzman of OSU Iswiftly down the entire ice, around trailing in that order. Both men had the side of the defense and scored previously beaten Hayes. (:56, first). Chicago's stocky John Da'venport'. (4) James, on a pass from Fabello. lived up to his prelim promise as he while crossing the blue line, scored beat out a mediocre field in a blanket a direct hit (12:47, first). finish of the 60-yard dash final. In (5)- Bill England, Paris, scored winning Davenport eqgalled his own with no one near on an unassis best time of the meet set in the semi- ith:47firstna finals of 6.3 seconds. It was the Ma-(18 ,s. roon's only win. Milt Padway gave Goalie Disgusted ,Wisconsin their fourth first. place in (6) Cooke passed to James neal I the pole vault as he topped 13 feet the blue line who, without effort I 4 3/4 inches. Jimmie Kingsley of; pushed it through the disgusted goalh IMichigan barely missed the winning ( 2:45, second). heighth after clearing 13 feet easily, (7) Chadwick scored on a re- to take second money. Dave Cush- bound off the goalie's pads, causec ling suffered an attack of buck fever by Hillberg's shot (16:01, second). and went out before the bar was well I (8) Kempthorne scored on Midg- off the ground, but Michigan's third ley's pass when Spike James came out I man in the event, pulled over 12 feet 6 Sandy Farrell inches to gain a r three way tie for fifth. On his sec- ond toss of the evening, Jake Town- send, recently acquired from the cage team, outdid himself with a toss that fell just short of 46 feet and placed him third behind Frary of Il- linois who was second. The other Il- lini entry, Gragg of whom better things were expected by the forecas- ters was able to snag only a fifth. Ohio State came through as ex- pected in the one mile relay, anchor- man Harley Howells finishing 10 yards ahead of Illinois in the fastest of the two heats in the event which netted a time of 3:20.7. Michigan's second behind Iowa in the slower heat gave them a fourth with Iowa second, Illinois third and Chicago fifth SRAYMOND ROY. SPI4OTOG RAPP.Y it Be Sure You're Set til1.1kIV 1 lV1 11 , . ' Z Al Jackson and Detroit would compete I in the annual state championships here Wednesday, Thursday and Fri- day. NOTRE DAME WINS SOUTH BEND, Ind., March 12. (/')-Notre Dame won the 12th An- iual Central Intercollegiate Confer- ence indoor track meet today with a record-breaking total of 56 points. The previous record of 441/ points was set by Notre Dame in 1929. .. for Spring Francisco & Boyce have the latest models of cameras in now. They will prepare you for those outdoor spring pictures which you will wont to take. 1 I L LU ST R AT IVE I4omiiAND 5$Tt'1o rtc)U TRAIT 32O 0 STATE-'OVER THE QUAR~RY JAMES AND HIS FISCHER ORCHESTRA "The U. of M. Skippers" Re-engagcd for theic Trans- lMantic Crossings; for Quality I r n c is c o & Ro y c e ca n n io t be excelled. They offer 24 hour scrvice and picturEs that icfly ar cicar and distinct, They carny all of Eastmat n's supplies which I Ii :..I I fis t ru nr 1,00 S. S. HAMBURG JUNE 23 f rom Ne York to Cobh, Cherbourg Sutwatm pton, H omburg S.S. BREAMEN AUGUST 16 from Bremen, c1A1ing at Cherbourg, IScthampten Note these Special "n fTri alns I It , I 11