THE MI-.lCHlGAN DAILY StT~flAY MA.R......... .THE M.CHGAN.DAIL FWolverines Nose Out Ohio State To Retain - -- - F -ASIDE " _____LIN E' S 3y IRVIN LISAGOR Hike... T'S A BIT premature, of course, to accept the critical gauntlet at this stage of proceedings, but from a personal preference we'd like to wager that one Crisler innovation in Michigan football will add greatly to its appeal. Somehow, that curious specimen of homo sapiens, known variously as a grid addict, fan, fana- tic, likes the sharp bark of "one-two- three-four hike", which character- izes the offensive shift. (This was just interrupted by a jubilant whoop from our swim- ming expert, who had conceded defeat for the Michigan natators when the teletype flashed that Haynie was a poor third in the quarter-mile race, but who was almost overcome with mingled surprise and joy when a bulletin revealed Wolverine victory. An "I-told-you-so" deluge followed). Back to football . . . Notre Dame elevens, it seems to us, invariably presents an interesting spectacle, whether greatness or mediocrity is their lot, because of the rhythmical snap of their backfield. It augments a successful attack with a certain precision which spectators enjoy watching. To us, a backfield that shifts into position has an explosive quality, i.e., it appears to be headed somewhere in a-convincing fashion, and although it may meet recurring rebuffs at the line of scrimmage, it retains the impression that the brief pause before the ball is snapped is like the short sizzle of a firecracker fuse . . . fireworks to follow. And Heik.-- RALPH HEIKKINEN, Varsity vest-pocket g u a r d, who gained All-Conference distine- tion last season, anticipates the '38/season with a new-found de- light. "Heik," because of stomach ulcers, was forced to adhere to a diet last fall and consequently had to forego those culinary spe- cialties for which most gridders live. After an X-ray the other day, he was advised that the ul- cers had disappeared, that the diet could finally be dispensed with-and the soft-spoken blond is happy no end. Heik is further pleased by the new shift. "It's the same as we used in high school," he says. Wins Two Events arsity WijsIelders Hold B ::Ninth Crown ShortOutdoor k At Baton Rouge, La.: In 15 YearsCleveland, A .010 000 100-2 3 3 Prac i e D r New York, N ....102 100 00x-4 6 1 Hudlin, Whitehill and Hemsley, Kirar Take's Two Firsts; Pytlak; Gumbert, Melton and Man- Frigid Weather Compes Bail Relay Team Also WinSd At Clearwater, Fla.: Pitchers To Work Out esse Haynie Places Third Rochester, IL ...001 100 200-4 10 1 In Yost Field House Broklyn, N .....000 013 000-5 9 1 Yanti (Continued f~rom Page 1) ! Sherrill, Barrett and Ogrodowski, Looon ---Narron; Mungo, Fitzsimmons, Cohen Milec hn s-and Chervinko, Spencer. eskimos in heavy sweat shirts and Bro 4Michigan as champion. The per-anChrikSec. hoods, the *infielders and outfielders Bo formance bettered the pool record of At Sarasota, Fla.: of the Varsity baseball squad braved secon 2:32.5 made last year by Callahan. Boston, N.......000 001 000-1 4 0 thecl erd tp im entire .WilliamKendall, Australian Olym- Boston, A .......001 400 00x-5 8 0 than an hour of fielding practice on was n pian from Harvard, became a double At Los Angeles, Cal.: the Ferry Field diamond. lead< winner by taking the 440-yard free Chicago, N .....000 100 300-4. 10 0 Coach Ray Fisher kept his pitch- and style in an air tight finish, with Yale's Chicago, A .....100 010 100-3 6 0 Cog ay Fiherted i pith- an CAPT. ED KIRAR Johnny Macionis second. Tom Hay- Carleton, Bryant and O'Dea; field house, howeverd not wishing to Yar nie of Michigan, the defending cham- Whitehead, Rigney, C. Brown and let his hurlers run the danger of con- of th pion, faded after challenging Kendall Sewell, Rensa. tracting sore arms or pulled muscles. other Varsity Nine Faces at the half way mark. At St. Petersburg, Fla.: Wind Pevents Gamehe e R kyRoad Bak Kendall, who won the 220 yard New York, A . . .001 100 001-3 8 0 The cold biting wind that swept arche I 0 C race last night was timed in 4:48.9. St. Louis, N . .. 000 120 1Ox-4 10 1 across the field precluded any chance Clo Haynie was a poor third. Ruffing, Gomez and Dickey; Weil- for an intra-squad game, so the tators and, Henshaw and Padgett, Breman. workout was limited to fly shagging in as Summaries'Biloxi, Miss.: for the outfielders and a snappy de- near. If pre-season optimism in rival Phil., A .........002 100 000-3 7 1 fensive drill for the infielders. The at 20E baseball camps were a sure sign of Phil., N . . . . . . . . . 000 002 12x-5 9 1 heavy wind caused the outfielders a tis st stength, then Michigan would find 100-Yard Free Style-Final-Won Kalfass, Potter and Hayes; Mul- great deal of trouble as it carried the built by iEdward Kirar, Michigan; second, cahy, Lamaster and AtwVoo(!. high flies several yards out of their short( rocky oe Charles G. Hutter. Jr., Harvard; At Orlando, Fla.: trajectory. Dr. Ten heap a very rocky one. Kan. City, AA . .000 002 100-3 10 0 Fisher Drills Pitchers sent I From Illinois comes word that third, William Quayle, Ohio State; Washington, A 051 110 00x-8 13 0 In the field house Coach Fisher even Coach Wallie Roettger has a veteran fourth, Jack Miller, F. and M.; fifth, Washburn, Prendergast, Hamner spent the entire afternoon with his slight array ready to defend the ConferenceHd and Breese; Deshong, Appleton and pitchers trying to polish up curves the g title won last year. Ray Poat, voted 200-Yard Breast Stroke-Final- Livingston. and minor faults of delivery. He At the outstanding pitcher in the Big Won by Richard Hough, Princeton; At Houston, Texas: worked with Danny Smick, the dual break Ton last year is back along with his second, John Higgins, Ohio State; nfi personality of the squad who works com Mc~n- third, Justin Callahan, Columbia, St. Louis, A . .000 310 002 02 8 12 2 pe frsn ay o edydo the sqadwotorscoi brilliant battery mate, Tom McCon- rth, J tic Houston, TL . .. .004 001 00-6 11 4 mound the t for quite'a spell in pastte fnell. In Capt. John Callahan', Ernieforh lhnlaihMiign;itjmudtenx, Callo, on ChistinsConan Chuk Dario Berizzi, Harvard. Time-2:23.4. Newsom, Van Atta, Cole and Sulli- one of the batting cages.from Cavallo, Don Christianson and Chuet 440-Yard Free Style: Won by Wil- van, Heath; Severi, Lewis, Perry, Provided warmer weather prevails limbe fpoerfg hitter htam Kendall, Harvard; second, John Crow and Wysock, Callender. this week, the squad will continue the NrU Has LMacionis, Yale; third, Thomas Hay- At San Francisco: series of intra-squad games started The N.U. Has 9 Lettermen nie, Michigan; fourth, Henry Brew- Pittsburgh NL . .000 100 041--6 12 0 last week with what is roughly the nesse Watharg eoutormisrtingsopho- erton. Arnmy; fifth, Robert Chris- San Franc. PCL 100 000 011-3 7 1 Varsity line-up opposing a team of Tin mlre Co u r Ingerpn - tians, Iowa. Time-4:48.9. Heintzelman, Swift and Todd; Bal- i reserves. Beer mores, Coach Burt Ingwersen of Northwestern is hopeful of another High Board Diving-Won by Al lou, Shores and Woodall. good season. The pitching staff is Patnik, Ohio State, 14392 points; sec-tH awks Leafs W n built around a trio of veterans, Bill oa s te n i ae Syring, Jack Kaufman, and Harry 133.38; third, harold Benham, Mich- Oklahoma CapturesH 'Skidmore, while two football stars, flcigan, 1; fth, dlpaertn- kd, Michian, 119.0 iftheDanel Ninth N.C.A.A. Title MONTREAL, March 26.-(P)-The TO Cleo Diehl and Nick Conteas, are E Chicago Blackhawks advanced to the Toror waging a neck and neck battle for the second round of the National Hockey Bosto backstop post. 400-Yard Free Style Relay: Won by -(AP)-Oklahoma A. and M.'s Cow- League's Stanley Cup playoffs to- secon Coach Everett Dean of Indiana is Michigan (Waldemar Tomski, Ed- boys captured their ninth National night by defeating the Montreal Ca- off s again expecting a slugging team with ward Hutchens, Thomas Haynie, Ed- Collegiate Wrestling Championship nadiens, 3 to 2, in overtime in the Leagi the complete infield and outfield re- ward Kirar) ; second, Harvard; third, in 11 years tonight and had one of third and deciding game of their the S1 tui omlt eand sond peI Ohio State; fourth, Rutgers; fifth, their number, Tiny Joe McDaniels, third-place series, the Yale. Time-3:33.2. named the best in the tournament. __ace _ser __s.__h-__ nine However he has only one test- Final Point Standing-Michigan The sturdy 118-pounder, former ed pitcher available in Louie Grieger, 46; Ohio State 45; Harvard 36; National Amateur Champion and de- while the' catching spot is still wide; ope. Princeton 22; Yale 18; Iowa 7; .Rut- fending N.C.A.A. king, led the Aggies ' gers 5; Stanford 4; Texas 4; Army in their im'pressive triumph by de- / O.S.U., Gophers have Lead 4; Southern California 3; Columbia feating Willard Duffy, Indiana's Ohio State and Minnesota are get- 3; Illinois 3; Franklin and Marshall Olympic star and undefeated Big ting a head start on their rivals, hav- 2; Pittsburgh 1. Ten Champion. ing already left on their spring train- ing trips to the sunny southland. The ,I ley "Butterball" Brown of Ten- wheezed to a 10-lap decision his arch-rival John "Humpco" s of Arkansas yesterday after- in the first annual Beer Barrel on the Waterman Gym track. wn poured in a blistering 26 Ld last stanza to negotiate the e 10 laps in 5:53.5. Bitterball never headed after he took the at the middle of the first lap pulled steadily away from his competition. ntis finished second by virtue .e fact that he was the only entrant. He was forced out at end of the ninth , with broken s. se to 100 bitterly partisan spec- s were on hand for the weighing Playoff Games I Buckeyes have been breezing by the southern opposition thus far, but will be handicapped upon returning because their ace sophomore flinger, Stan 'Lefty' Goletz, has been ruled scholastically ineligible. Eat At The Parrot - TODAY'S MENU - J34oi&~d £ie o CDW, n nr $1.00 Cream of Chicken Reno 90c Sizzling Porterhouse Steak Sizzling Fancy Filet Mignon 80c Sizzling 1 lb. T-Bone Steak Sizzling Regular Filet Mignon 65c Sizzling Top Sirloin Steak Roast Young Tom Turkey 60c Assorted Chop Grill Large Beef Tenderloin Regular T-Bone Steak Grilled Ham Steak 55c ,Boiled Fresh Lake Trout Fresh Lake Trout Broiled Special T-Bone Steak Broiled Special Tenderloin Steak Potato Vegetable Pie Fruit Jello or Chilled Tomato Juice "- 50c Fried Scallops, Tarter Sauce Roast Prime Ribs of Beef Special Small T-Bone Steak Grilled Pork Chops, Apple Sauce Grilled Lamb Chops, Jelly Grilled Veal Chops, Jelly OUR REGULAR DINNERS 45c Fried Fresh Smelts Fried Fillet of Sole Breaded Veal Cutlets Braised Swiss Steak Grilled Liver with Bacon Chopped Round Steak with Sauce Vegetable Dinner, Fried Egg Bacon and Eggs, Country Style Salad Beverage Baked Apple Ice Cream ENJOY the treat of a lifetime! Try this broiled live lobster dinner for only $1 .00 at either the Dining Room or Tap Room of the Allenel Hotel. Taste this truly delightful table delicacy, fresh as if seined directly from the sea, and brought to you as served only at the sea-coast Other sea foods may be had, including Blue Points, Half Shells, Fried Oysters, and Fresh Fish Dinners. ALLENEL HOTE L 126 East Huron Phone 4241 THE PARROT 338 SOUTH STATE STREET FA - ---------- -------- - - - - . Wrinkles Belong to Old Age... Goldman Keeps Your Clothes Looking YOUNG .I.1 1 /y i 1 0