TZt,-,D".qlf, TvL.1, RCR ;, THE MICHIGAN DAILY . .. .. ,.. :,.y, _ PRESS PASSES -By BUD BENJAMIN- Sport Splashes..., NATATORIAL idols are taking their daily baths in the Intramural Pool this week in preparation for the weekend's big splash, the Na- tional Collegiate Championships. Yesterday afternoon's session found the big shots of aqualand exhibiting their wares in what appeared to be a page out of the 1939 swimming guide. Adolph Kiefer, Ralph Flanna- ganiand Paul Wolf were paddling around, Al Patnik and Earl Clarke were sailing through the air from the high board, and Matt Mann, Fred Cady, and Tex Rob- ertson were watching. Add these luminaries to Michigan's regular hit parade, and you have a pretty fair collection of swimmers. Swimming stars are a strange breed. By reputation, they're hopelessly conceited, physically superb, and academically disinterested. Yet a cur- sory appraisal after an hour of chew- ing the fat with the boys indicated that this is an unwarranted general- ization. Some of them are, and some of them seem quite normal. Which is the way that generalizations usually go. TAKE Adolph Kiefer, for example. Adolph is the Olympic backstroke champion, a big, likeable chap of pronounced capabilities. No muscle man, hardly a Weissmueller type, Kiefer is rather flabby, lacking the expected athletic trimness. His stroke reminds you of the kind seen in the final 100 yards of the Toronto mara- thon swim. One might describe it as lethargic. Its beauty is the apparent effortlessness, the smooth perfection with which he cuts through the water. He is completely relaxed and yet his near perfect form gives him a maxi- mum of speed with a minimum of wasted motion. Why a person like Kiefer should be modest--a shrinking violet- is something you can try to fig- ure out. I can't and neither can he. Take a simple question ad a simple answer: Q. Adolph, what is the world's record in the 150 yard backstroke? A. One minute 32.5 seconds. Q. What is your best time? A. One minute 31.7 seconds. If you're looking for comparisons the Western Conference mark, shared by Curly Stanhope and Charley Bar- ker, is 1:38.1. You ask Kiefer questions and he tells you with the same minimum of effort with which he swims what you want to know: He won the backstroke in the Berlin Olympics in 1936. His best time in the 440 backstroke is 5:07 (Blake Thaxter of Michigan qualified in the Big Ten meet this year in the 440 FREE-STYLE in 5:09). He believes Michigan will win the national title. He is going to swim the 1500 meter free style, the 440 free style, and the 220 free style. He will swim in the backstroke at Columbus, March 30 to Api 1, in the Na- tional A.A.U. meet. He figures that Albert Vande Weghe of Prince- ton and Taylor Drysdale of Mich- igan will give him close competi- tion-but not too close. Texas can't win the collegiate title. Michigan women (who should like this gent) are a foreign ele- ment to him thus far. He has been swimming competitively since he was 15 years old. He is interested in a college education. You'll like this Kiefer fellow this weekend. Don't give up on him when he begins to mosey along with that lazy man's crawl. Brother, that's sub- terfuge. POOL ROOM NOTES:-Cady, who is the coach of Southern Cali- fornia, brought along one man- Wolf-but his protege is an Olympic star and will gather points . . . Add incongruities: Tex Robertson, Tex- as coach, wearing an M' sweater ... Affable, glib, and well built, this Robertson guy is definitely the Adon- is type . . . He too hands the palm to Michigan . . . Cady was giving Patnik, Clarke and Hal Benham plen- ty of diving tips yesterday, and how those lads did open their ears . . He coached the Olympic divers in 1936 . . . Flannagan, whose form surpasses even Kiefer's, claims he's through swimming in 1940 "to go to school" . . . This he punctuates with "if the government doesn't send me to Europe with a gun and some bul- lets" . . . Robertson, incidentally holds the pool record of 4:51 in the 440, a mark which Kiefer will have to break this week . . . "It's jake by me," drawls Tex, "if he wins" . . ~ U Collegiate Swimming Aces Stream Into Ann Arbor dl i Buckeye Diving Champions Are EarlyArrivals Survey Of Friday's Events Indicates Close Contest For First Night's Lead The cream of collegiate swimmers began converging upon Ann Arbor yesterday with the National Collegi- ates Friday and Saturday as their mecca. They started coming from East, West and South, a small vanguard of the 25 schools who will attempt to put a halt to Michigan's victory march to its sixth consecutive Na- tional Collegiate crown. The first to arrive was Texas with its 14-man squad. The Texans (most of whom come from Chicago, De- troit and Floria) pulled into town Monday and have worked out at the Intramural Pool twice. Then, about four o'clock yesterday afternoon, more started to stream in. Ohio Divers Report The Ohio divers, led by the na- tion's top springboard artist, Al Pat- nik, surprised everyone by coming to Ann Arbor three days early. In- cluded in the troupe were Earl Clark, runner-up to Patnik in the Big Tens, and Brud Cleaveland. A little later, Southern California's ambassador of swimming, Paul Wolf, and the Trojan coach, Fred Cady, came in. Cady was the 1936 Olympic diving coach and Wolf was a mem- ber of the team. Finals in six events will be swum off Friday with the pre-meet strength in each of the events looking some- thing like this: Kiefer Is Favored 1500-Meters. This one is swum in heats and the places decided on a time basis. Adolph Kiefer elects to swim this one instead of the back- stroke; he should win. But to win he'll have to swim faster than Johnny Macionis did last year to triumph in 20:15.2. Jimmy Welsh of Michigan probably will give the Texas sopho- more some competition if they swim in the same heat. Bob Lowe of Il- linois who placed third last year is back and should fight it out with Eric Cutler of Harvard. Blake Thaxter of Michigan may pick up a point but to do it he'll have to beat Ohio's El- wood Woodling and Leon Macionis of F.&M., brother of last year's win- ner. 50-Yard Free Style: Michigan should take one-two here with Walt Tomski and Charley Barker finishing in that order. The fight should come for the remaining three places with Wolf, fourth last year, leading the pack. Bill Walter of Georgia is cap- able of better than 23.8 while Eric Perryman of Yale, Julius Armstrong of Dartmouth and Billy Holmes of Michigan have all hit that same time. Wolf, almost unbeatable in the long course, may be a surprise in this event if he is right. - Vande Weghe If ... 150-Yard Back Stroke: If Kiefer doesn't swim this one, Al Vande Weghe should successfully defend the championship he won last year. If Kiefer does swim, the Olympic cham- pion must be favored. The rest of the field will be strung out far be- hind with Curly Stanhope of Ohio, Texas' Bob Tarleton and Michigan's Bill Beebe and Barker all having broken 1:39. Barker, however, may forego this event for the hundred. LymanBrandt, Minnesota captain who took a fifth last year and Bill Griffin of Kenyon both can do about 1:41. 220-Yard Free Style: Haynie will have to swim faster than he did last year in taking second because that man Kiefer is in again. And then there's a little matter of Welsh who is the Big Ten champion. To make the field tougher there will be Johnny Good, Yale's captain who has done 2:14.3, one-tenth of a second faster than Welsh's winning time at the Big en but .7 seconds slower than the new record Haynie set in the prelims. Ned Parke of Princeton, Eastern In- tercollegiate champion, Northwes- tern's Irv McCaffery, third at the Big Tens, Eric Cutler of Harvard, Russ Duncan of Yale, Bob Johnson of Ohio, fifth in this year's Big Ten WEDNESDAY ONLY 6 Takamine TOOTH BRUSHES ji-ohnny On The S--pcpi Tigers Score First Viectory Three Homers Aid Detroit In 7-3 Win Over Cards ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March 21. -(U)-The Detroit Tigers staged a four-run rally in the eighth inning today to defeat the St. Louis Car- dinals 7 to 3. It was the first Tiger victory in the four exhibition games the Detroit club has played this sea- son. The Tigers were trailing 3 to 2 un- til the big eighth inning. Then, with one out, Pete Fox found one of Bill McGee's offerings to his liking and drubbed the ball over the left field wall for a home run. That started the panic. Gehringer, next up, lined a single to right. Hank Greenberg scooted to first to beat out a bounder and Tebbetts got on when his grounder was fumbled. Dixie Walker's grounder forced Gehringer at the plate, but Barney McCoskey worked McGee for a pass, forcing in Greenberg with the second run of the inning. Croucher led the Tigers in batting for the day with a double and a hom- er. Johnny Haigh, Michigan's num- ber one breaststroker, will face the same tough competition which held him to fourth place in the Inter- collegiates last year. Princeton's Hough, Ohio ,State's Higgins, and Columbia's Callahan, who beat Haigh at Rutgers, will all be back Saturday night. Reconstructing Forward Wall Will Be Tough Job, Says Munn Gedeon Competes Hurdlers At C By DICK SIERK One member of Charlie Hoyt's Wol-k verine track squad refuses to consid-r er the indoor season as finished. Ther lone dissenter is Elmer Gedeon, Big Ten hurdles champ. Although "Gid" is about to launch a busy spring campaign that willt find him leading a "double life" inE which his time will be divided be- tween track and. baseball, he has1 accepted an invitation to compete int the third annual Chicago Relays to be held this Saturday in the Windy City. No Favorites Here For one of the few times in his career as a hurdles champion, Gedeon will not be favored. But, then, neith- er can anyone of the other entries in the special event be set up as the favorite. In a field that includes Gedeon, Allan Tolmich, Ed Smith, Larry O'Connor, Steve Gutting, John Collinge, Dick Brunton and Joe Shurilla there can be no favorite- it's bound to be too close. Gedeon suffered a reversal of form at the Butler Relays last weekend and he finished third in the high stick race behind Wisconsin's Smith and Purdue's Gutting, both of whom he had beaten in retaining his Big Ten championship a week previous. For Elmer, therefore, the Chicago meeting Saturday will offer him the opportunity to reverse the defeat. Meets Conqueror In Tolmich, former Wayne ace, and O'Connor, Canada's best, Gedeon will be meeting two rivals he en- countered a month ago at the Mill- rose Games in New York. There, O'Connor nosed him out but the Wol- verine star upset Tolmich, who holds world records for several of the in- door hurdles events. It will mark Gedeon's second start on the boards this year. The Mill- rose event was also run on a board track. Nine Frosh Hockey Numerals Awarded Freshman hockey numerals will be awarded to nine men from the year- ling puck squad, Coach Eddie Lowrey announced yesterday. Those receiving the awards are: Robert Collins, Detroit; John Cor- son, Birmingham; Clifford Dance, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Paul Goldsmith, Swampcott, N.Y.; Warren King, New Rochelle, N.Y.; Henry C. Loud, Grimsby, Ont.; Lawrence Smith, Ply- mouth; Richard Taylor, Syracuse, N.Y.; and Chester Witters, St. Johns- bury, Vt. Phone 3 534 With Cracks 1eeE~we hicago Saturday Ankl In Practice BATON ROUGE-(A')-The first serious injury of the New York Gi- The hurdles championship will not ants training season put Frank De- be decided on the basis of the win- maree out of action Tuesday with a ner of one race but wlii be detr-. sprained left ankle and possibility of mined as the result of a series of 40. a slight fracture. The former Chi- 50 and 60 high hurdles races. The cago center fielder turned his ankle winner of the series and the hurdles while chasing a double off the bat of champion of the meet will be de- Bob Seeds, his chief rival for the po- termined on the basis of accumulat- sition, in an intra-club game. An x- ed points in the three races. ray was taken to determine the se- The Relays will be held at the In- riousness of the injury. ternational Amphitheatre in Chi- cago and the entry lists indicate that STANLEY CUP PLAYOFFS it may well turn out to be the out- Toronto 4; -Americans 0 standing meet of the indoor season. Montreal 2; Detroit 0 SI' SI FT'S DU TR I TAKE A j Dr. C NO BOOKS 340 S. State St. By TOM PHARES Chunky Clarence Munn, the man who last year turned out one of the best lines in Michigan football his- tory, isn't so cheerful these days. With the experts boosting Wolverine chances for 1939 sky high, it's his job to provide an answer to that trouble- some question -"what about the line?" Confronted with that query yes- terday before the second spring prac- tice of the season, Michigan's like- able line coach pondered for a mom- ent and then apparently decided thatj after all honesty is the best policy. Lost 'Best Line' "Frankly," he admitted, "it's going to be a darn tough job to 'replace a line like last year's.~I'm not singing the blues because it's not an impos- sible job by any means but it will be a mighty hard one. "That line was the best I have ever coached. Yes, and it was a little bet- ter than any I ever played .with," he grinned. "You know, last season ourt lines worked as units and we shifted and substituted a lot. That may be harder this season now that such boys and fourth in last year's Nationals, and Ed Hutchens of Michigan all hover around 2:27 or better.c One Meter Dive: It's Al Patnik all[ alone with teammate Earl Clark, Russ Greenhood of Harvard, Eastern champ and third last year, Hal Ben- ham of Michigan close together. Fifth place will be fought for by Theran Feigel of Indiana, Billy Brink of Texas, Tommy Powell of Northwes- tern and Adolph Ferstenfeld, Ralph Pyszinski and Jim Wilkinson of Michigan. Medley Relay: Princeton's record smashing team of Dick Hough, Vande Weghe and Hank Van Oss should crack the mairk they set last year. Ohio with Stanhope, Johnny Hig- gins and Quayle should beat off the Texas trio of Bob Tarleton, Mike Sojka and Will Choniski, Yale with Joe Burns, Ed Gesner and Bill Moon- an, Michigan wtih Beebe, John Haigh and one of the "H" men, Hutchens, Haynie or Holmes, and Minnesota with Brandt, Sahlman and Jablonski. as Heikkinen, Siegel, Janke and Bren- nan are gone." It was that first-string line that put the steel into Michigan's defense as all fans who watched the North- western game will remember. This forward wall was not scored upon all year, the only touchdown play to go through the line being engineered by Pennsylvania when the second and third string forwards were in the game. Stop-Gaps Wanted Now husky Mr. Munn is working to fill the gaps left by his star guard and tackle pairs. "I don't know about Joe Savilla 1 yet," he says. "He is still troubled by that bad foot I understand." Sa- villa received the injury in the Minne- sota game and was out the rest of the year. "Bill Smith will be out there," Munn continued, .and Ralph Fritz, Milo Sukup and Freddie Olds arere- turning guards. Orchids For Fritz Fritz? he's a very good man. He is a fine blocker especially on down- the-field blocking, he's fast for his size and good on the defense." Included among Munn's other prospective proteges for either spring or fall delivery are tackles, Bob Flora, Bob Smith, George Ostroot, Bill Val- mer, Reuben Kelto, Dennis Kuhn, Al rWistert, J. Labadie, Ernest Zielinski; guards Ted Denise, Bill Melzow, Jim Galles, Warren Brock, Charles Lane; centers Horace Tinker, Bob Ingalls, Tom Kieckhefer, and Jim Grissen. SWIMMERS NOTICE The I-M swimming pool will be closed to students for the rest of the week. It will be open to col- lege divers from 12 to 3 p.m., and 5 to 7 p.m. daily. Matt Mann. There are no pre-requisites for this course as Dr. GRABOW'S PIPE is Pre-Smoked. Truly a liberal education promising life- long enjoyment, for only . . . . . $1.50. I REGISTRATION AT Contest ,Winner: EUGENE A. KANE '42 1030 Oakland e NO ITE.. O BEA I k :JEO ITRTS 1 NEW SPRING NOW STADEL First National Building STETSON STYLES SHOWING &WALKER 205 South Main _a' r: EXHIBITION BASEBALL Cincinnati 4; Boston (N) 3 Pittsburgh 9; Chicago (N) 4 Philadelphia (N) 6; St. Louis (called in 10th) New Orleans 8; Cleveland 3 1 ' I 11 II (A) 6 ,a Fountain Pens RIDER'S 302 S. 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