"r WIAPXH 11, 1939 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Michigan Qualifies Nine In Bid For Sixth Indoor Trac k Title Gedeon Leads High Hurdlers To Pace Team Wolverines Also Dominate 60 Yard Dash, Quarter And Half-Mile Races (Continued from rage 1) failed to survive the qualifying heats. Lewis weakened by a recent attack of the flu finished behind Bob Bar- nard, Michigan sophomore, who sal- vaged a third place in the heat to win a place in the 60 yard dash semi- finals tomorrow night. Al Smith was the other Michigan sprint qualifier, winning his heat in :06.4. Myron Piker, diminutive Northwestern soph- omore, became favorite to win the title when he turned a :06.3, the fast- est time of the night. Frank Kauf- man of Wisconsin also qualified. Michigan's hurdle corps, headed by Elmer Gedeon made the semi-finals en masse. The indomitable Gedeon won his heat away in :08.7, the same time turned in by Ed Smith of Wis- consin, Gedeon's chief rival, and Steve Gutting of Purdue in winning their heats. Stan Kelly and Jeff Hall made it a Wolverine grand slam. Kelly took a second and Hall a third. Besides Smith, Wisconsin placed Haberman in the semi-finals. Three Place In 880 The Wolverines also showed great strength in the half-mile as three Michigan men qualified in as many heats. Not one of the Hoytmen won his heat but all finished easily be- hind Bodeau of Purdue, Graves of Iowa, and Trutt of Indiana won the three heats. Dye Hogan took third in the fastest heat of the night, 1:56.4, won by Bodeau, with Wisconsin's Buxton second. Both Hod Davidson and Tom- my Jester placed second. SUMMARIES 60-yard dash-Kauffman, Wiscon- sin; Evans, Minnesota; Barnard, Michigan; Smith, Michigan; C. Teuf-1 el, Iowa; Boyle, Indiana; Ashley, Illi- nois; Davenport, Chicago; Wiggins, Iowa; Piker, Northwestern; Allen, Indiana; Darling, Wisconsin. Best time, 6.3 seconds, by Piker. , 440 yard dash-C. Teufel, Iowa; Howells, Ohio State; Cochran, Indi- ana; Sulzman, Ohio State; Faulkner, Michigan; McGowan, Illinois. Best time, 50.2 seconds, by C. TeufeL. 70 Yard High Hurdles-Gutting, Purdue; Kelley, Michigan; Finch, Northwestern; Smith, Wisconsin; Wasem, Chicago; Hall, Michigan; Collinge, Iowa; Hirsch, Minnesota; Haberman, Wisconsin; G e d e a n, Michigan; Hanson, Minnesota; Pagel, Ohio State. Best time, 8.7 seconds, by Gedeon, Smith, Gutting. 880 Yard Run-Bodeau, Purdue, Buxton, Wisconsin; Hogan, Michigan; Graves, Iowa; Jester, Michigan; Hoke, Indiana; Trutt, Indiana; Davidson, Michigan; Elsenhart, Ohio State. Best time, 1:56.4, by Bodeau. Hough Breaks Kasley's Mark In Breastroke Capt. Dick Hough of the Princeton swimming team, Wednesday, shat- tered the world's record in the 200- yard breastroke formerly held by John Kasley of the University. of Michigan. His time for the distance, 2:22.2, bettered Kasley's mark of 2:22.5 by .3 Qf a second. The old record was set by Kasley in the same Yale Pool on March 28, 1936. Hough will lead the Princeton swimming team to Ann Arbor on March 24 and 25, when they will en- ter the National Collegiate Swimming meet. Swimmers, Excel, 7latmen Fail InBig Ten Preliminaries Qualifies In Half-Mile I Dye Hogan, Michigan junior half-miler from Hornell, N.Y., who, by virtue of his qualifying in the preliminary trials of the National Intercollegiate track meet at Chi- cago last night, will compete in to- night's classy field at the Windy City. Hank Socks Homer In Infra-Squad Tilt LAKELAND, Fla., March 10.-(P) -Big Hank Greenberg's heavy bat has lost none of its pontency because of the long winter layoff. In camp only three days, Greenberg came to bat for the "Regulars" in the open- ing inning of the first intra-squad game against the "Yannigans" today and drove the ball over the left field wall. Paul (Dizzy) Trout, rookie from Beaumont, was on the slab. NEW BRAUNFELS, Tex., March 10 -(IP)-A big eighth inning rally fell one run shy today as the Phillies lost their first exhibition game of the sea- son to the St. Louis Browns, 6 to 5) before a record crowd of 3,000. Paced by George McQuinn's hom- er with one on in the first, the Browns built up a 6-0 edge before the Phils batted around in the eighth scoring five runs on four hits and two errors. ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.-(P)-Joe McCarthy announced the Yankees lineup for the opening exhibition game against the St. Louis Cardinals tomorrow would include only three of last year's regulars-Joe DiMag- gio, Lou Gehrig and Joe Gordon. CLEARWATER, Fla.- (RP) -Tony Lazzeri, the veteran second baseman, is being considered seriously for the Brooklyn Dodgers' second-base job, Manager Leo Durocher said Friday. Lazzeri shone in today's workout. Pete Coscarart was considered the regular second baseman when the squad as- sembled for practice. Natators Break Four Records Qualifying 17 Tomski Heads Wolverine Assault Smashing 50 And 100 Yard Marks (Continued from Page 1) in the furlong all won their heats in the evening's fastest times. Jim Welsh promised Haynie an eventful evening tonight by doing 2:14.4. His fastest of the year, while Ed Hutchins did his in 2:16.5. Welsh lead the qualifiers in the 440 by beating Capt. George Lowe of Illinois, runner up to Haynie last year, by two yards. The sopho- more's time was 4:59.4 while Haynie, who won the first heat, did 5:03.5. Blake Thaxter also qualified. New Medley Record Ohio's crack medley team of Stan- hope, Johnny Higgins and Quayle knocked .an even three seconds from Michigan's three year mark of 2:59.8 Matt Mann, conceding the medley victory to Ohio used Thaxter to an- chor Beebe and Johnny Haigh. Thax- ter finished strong and the Wolver- ines won their heat in 3:01.4, the second best time made. Higgins won his breast stroke heat, as he pleased with a 2:26. Haigh's heat winning time, 2:30.5, was second fastest. Ohio's Al Patnik and Earl Clark finished one two in the low board div- ing with Hal Benham and Adolph1 Ferstenfeld finiishing third and fourth respectively for Michigan. Seven men qualified and the Wolverine sopho-( mores, Ralph Pyszinski and Jim Wil- kinson, finished eighth and ninth out of 18 entries.g 'Pay Off Tomorrow' Michigan completely dominated the preliminaries but Matt Mann is not1 over-confident of victory. In spitel of his quite illuminating "we did swell" he added "they pay off tomor- row night." He was thinking that Stanhope in the back stroke and Quayle in the hundred are both cap- able of equalling last night's time in dual meets. But it appears that in spite of these possibilities, the Wol-) verines have too much team balancei for the Buckeyes to overcome. QUALIFIERS Fancy diving: Patnik, Ohio State; Benham, Michigan; Fiegel, Indiana; Ferstenfeld, Michigan; Wilhack, Pur- due; Cleveland, Ohio State. Highest score, Patnik, 119.70. 300 yard medley relay: Ohio State (Stanhope, Higgins, Quayle); Michi- gan (Beebe, Haigh, Thaxter) ; Iowa; Minnesota; Illinois; Northwestern. Best time, Ohio State 2:56.8 (New Big Ten Record-Old Record 2:59.8, set by Michigan in 1936.) 220 Yard Free Style: Haynie, Welsh and Hutchens, Michigan; Lowe, Illinois; Johnson, Ohio State; McCaffery, Northwestern. Best time Haynie, Michigan, 2:13.6 (New Big Ten Record-old record, 2:13.8 estab- lished by Haynie in 1937). 50 Yard Free Style-Tomski, Bark- er, Holmes and Beebe, Michigan; Surles, Northwestern, and O'Maho- ney, Iowa. Best time, 23.1, made by Ends Conference Career Gophers Lead In Conference Wrestling Meet Only Two Michigan Men, Nichols Brothers, Place For Final Bouts Today (Continued irom Page 1) the afternoon and evening of grap- pling. The opening bouts held at the Uni- versity of Chicago Bartlett gymnasi- um, found five Wolverines entering the semi-finals, two by falls, while two of Coach Cliff Keen's entries suffered hairline defeats. Sophomore Tom Weidig threw Morris of Chicago in his opening bout with a body chancery in 4:30. Mericka followed at 136 pounds by tossing Bob, Butler of Chicago with an arm-lock in 5:10. Capt. Harold Nichols, wrestling superbly at all times, won a lopsided decision over Dan Mill, of Indiana in 12 to 0, missing falls on four occa- sions. Harold ,Nichols, Wolverine mat captain, will end his Big Ten Ca- reer at Chicago tonight in the Con- ference meet where his mates last night suffered serious reversals to qualify only two men. Tomski, Michigan, in quarter finals to establish new Big Ten record. Old Aecord :23.3 set byKirar, Michigan. 100 Yard Free Style: Tomski, Mich. igan; Johnson, Ohio State; Surles, Northwestern; Holmes, Michigan; Quayle, Ohio State; Emmerich, Wis- consin. Best time Tomski, Michigan, :52.6 (New Big Ten Record, Old Rec- ord :52.8, established byKirar, Michi- gan, in 1938). 150 Yard Back Stroke: Barker,1 Michigan; Beebe, Michigan; Stan- hope, Ohio State; Armbruster, Iowa;' Kurlak, Illinois; Brandt, Minesota. Best time Barker, Michigan, 1:38.1 (New Big Ten Record, Old Record 1:38.9, set by Zehr, Northwestern, and Neunzig, Ohio State, in 1937). 200 Yard Breast Stroke: Higgins, Ohio State; Haigh, Michigan; Ander- son, Chicago; Sahlam, Minnesota; Kirkland, Illinois; Poulos, Iowa. Best time, Higgins, Ohio State, 2:26.0. 440 Yard Free Style: Haynie, Mich- igan; Woodling, Ohio State; Jablon- ski, Minnesota; Welsh, Michigan; Lowe, Illinois; Thaxter, Michigan. Best time Welsh, Michigan, 4:59.4. Frosh Track en Oppose Badgers 'By Mail' Today The Michigan freshman track team will be out for their second victory of the season when they compete in a so-called "telegraphic" or postal track meet against the Wisconsin yearlings at the Field House at 3:30 this afternoon. H. W. CLARK English Boot and Shoe Maker 4 Our new repair department, the best in the city. Prices are right. 438 South State and Factory on South Forest Avenue.7 Capt. Iiillberg, Cooke Wind Up Michigan Puck Careers Tonight Giants In Go To I Appear Pod Shape Bill Terry By NEWELL McCABE{ Lead by Capt. Les Hillberg and George Cooke. both of whom will bek playing their last game of collegiate1 hockey, the Wolverine sextet will ring down the curtain on the 1938-39 hockey season when they clash with Paris Athletic Club at 8:00 p.m. to- night at the Coliseum.I Not only will this game conclude I-M Sports ; The winter all-campus tennis tour-. nament advanced to the semi-fnal round this week wtih Lawton Ham-+ mett defeating Jack Coleman 8-6, 6-1, and Owen Eskendroder beating Jim Hynes, 8-6, 6-3. Hammett will+ meet Eskenroder, and the winner will face the victor in the lower bracket on March 15, the night of Open House. In the hockey plaoffs, Phi Kappa Psi defeated Delta Kappa Epsilon to win the first place playoffs in the fraternity league. They will meet the Hiawatha Club, winners of the Independent first place, on the night, of the Open House. Both class "A" and class "B" first place basketball finalists were decided this week when Theta Xi defeated Lambda Chi Alpha in the "A" class, 25-22, and Phi Delta Theta defeated Phi Gamma Delta, 15-14, in the "B" class. Both teams will meet Sig- ma Chi "A" and "B" teams in the foals next Wednesday on the night of the annual Open House to decide the championships. In the Independent "A" class, the finalists will be the Badgers and the Senators. The Badgers defeated the Eskimos 22-21, and the Senators de- featedthe Phys-Eds, 32-22 to enter the finals. All-campus badminton advanced to the semi-final round with Sam Rot- berg, Clint Mahlke, Otto Becker, and Lilburn Ochs surviving the competi- tion. Budge 'Slaughters' Perry NEW YORK, March 10.-(AP)-Don Budge, fresh from his conquests of Ellsworth Vines, opened his second professional tennis tour tonight by slaughtering Frederick John Perry, 6-1, 6-3, 6-0, in just 49 minutes be- fore a thunder-struck crowd of 7,000 at Madison Square Garden. Cooke and Hillberg's careers as Michi- gan hockey players, but it will also be a game which the whole team will be fighting to win in an effort to end the season with a .500 percent- age. Leads In Assists Breaking into the lineup as a sopho- more, Cooke has been noted for his speed and ability at poke-checking the opposing players. Being an ex- cellent team player he has made more assists for goals than any other Wol- verine. Les Hillberg made his debut on the squad last year, and after having shown the fans and fellow members of the team his merits, he was elect- ed captain of this year's squad. At present he is high point man on the squad, his goal making sprees coming to a climax when he netted five shtots in the Woodstock game. Shifted To Wing Although starting out at a defense position this year, in mid-season he was switched to the forward line to team with Al Chadwick, a junior, and Cooke. As in all games, Michigan's hopes for a victory will rest on the drive and scoring power that this for- ward line can throw into the fray. Bringing to an end another season of spectacular net minding, "Spike" James will attempt to keep the Paris players from whipping the puck into the Wolverine net. Since his first game as a sophomore last year, "Spike" has been the idol of all Michigan hockey fans. More than one game this year has turned into a personal battle between James and the whole opposing team. Prospects For 1940 Although being handicapped be- cause of lack of experience Larry Calvert, Chuck Ross, Jim Tobin, Gil Samuelson, and Jim Lovett have im- proved a great deal since the first game, and next year they will form a nuceleus around which Coach Low- rey will be able to develop a strong Michigan team. Another sophomore who was in the, process of becoming an excellent defense man was Bert Stodden. Sick- ness, however, forced him to drop hockey for the rest of this season but he will be on hand fighting for a de- fense position on next year's squad. GRAND FINALE! Paris A.C. Pos. Michigan G. England G James B. England D Calvert Granton D Ross Kempthorne C Hillberg Midgley W Chadwick Hayward W Cooke BATON ROUGE, La., March 10.- (I)-There may be a question in some minds of whether the New York Giants will be folding the National League pennant come next Septem- ber, or just folding, but to those most interested there is no doubt. The Giants are out to win that flag. From skipper Bill Terry down to the bat boy an air of quiet confidence prevails. Theoretically, Terry would seem in a position to do a little experiment- ing with his lineup. Since his Giants won the pennant in 1933 he always had a contender until last year, so he couldn't break up a potentially winning combination. On the surface, the same team which finished third last year could not be expected to finish first this year, but there are factors giving an- other angle to the case. For one thing, the Giants at the close of the 1938 season were held together by baling wire and adhesive tape. From Carl Elubbel on down the team was afflict- ed by injury and illness. I. Call It Spring.... FELT HATS by SCHOBLE , If you enjoy a hat that fits the head -- then you will enjoy Schoble hats. $5 - $7.50 - $10 Sold exclusively by On All Subjects 9,c to 99C r .?? b . }.f r Y.}f;" '}..t. , ' rr{L - : 1. .fit v :Y ". r ^ f.°. i."it at i I