rpTDA1T, AX 1?2, 1939 Tflt MICII-I'GAIN -D-XILY PAGE THREE TMA D PAGE TH~E~ Cage Prospects For Next Year Hinge On Doubtfu "V Return Of Rae And Experience Are Necessary Oosterbaan Loses Three Lettermen From Last Year's Dismal Squad Faced with the loss of three letter- men and haunted by the memories of one hard luck season, basketball Coach Bennie Oosterbaan is pinning his 193940 hopes on two factors:a. 1. The return to health of Capt. Jim Rae, brilliant Wolverine center, who was troubled continually last year with a very bad back, and 2. the blossoming out of several of last sea- son's likely-looking sophomores who received very little opportunity to prove their worth. Hope To Improve Given these two blessings, Bennie will be ready to face all comers in an ecort to improve on the disap- pointing seventh place finish which marked his first year as head basket- ball mentor. Michigan, last fall, opened the campaign in aggressive fashion and with a do-or-die spirit which pro- duced a run of six consecutive vic- tories during the pre-season compe- tition before Toledo University stop- ped the parade. It was this game too which aggrevated Jim Rae's old high school back injury-a double loss. Going Gets Rocky Thereafter the going was rocky. Veteran 'forward Danny Smick was injured three times during the Big Ten campaign, Leo Beebe, captain and guard, forward Charley Pink and Rae also graced the list of non- combatants and the result was a final Conference record of four games won and eight lost. The only re- deeming feature was the Wolverines ,upset victory over the high-flying In- iana quintet at the end of the sea- son-a win which not only knocked the Hoosiers out of the champion- ship but produced some of the most amazing basketball ever turned in by a Maize and Blue quintet. They were hot and couldn't do anything wrong. It was Jim Rae's 19 points which turned the tide. If Rae, a slender six foot four inch Toledo boy, has fully recovered from his ailing sacroiliac trouble he can blossom into the league's number one pivot man this next season. His shooting is accurate and his ball- handling reminiscent of the work of the great John Townsend two years ago. Harmon May Star Sophomore Tom Harmon, grid star who set the court afire with his play and pushed Indiana's Bill Menke for soph scoring honors, also plays a large part in Oosterbaan's plans. If his teamwork can be improved and he learns to click with the regular combination, Harmon may well be a truly outstanding star on the court as well as the gridiron.{ He will team with diminutive Char- ley Pink, left-handed forward in that front line. Pink's favorite one-hand- ed shot from the foul circle was poison to the opposition on numerous oc- casions last year and his floor play makes him a valuable performer. Gone are guards Leo Beebe and There is pleasant COOL WEATHER ahead... for the men attired in suits of CRISP fresh-air condi- tioned fabrics light as a tissue -- but shape retain- ing and sturdy. $16.51 and more SLACKS of light weight, tropical fabrics. 6.50 to 8.50 Six Wolverine Athletes Gain National Recognition For Sports Achievements By NORM MILLER That familiar catch-phrase "Cham- pions of the West" from Michigan's famed song "The Victors" appears as a rash understatement after a peru- sal of the long list of national ath- (9 the Michigan "Parade of Champions" last Jhly, when, stopping off for the Hibernian Knight's track and field meet at Randall's Island, N.Y., be- fore a tour of Europe, he put the eight-pound shot a distance of 70 feet, one-half inch to set a national record in that event. Then, at the National Intercolleg- iate Wrestling Meet, which took place. at Franklin and Marshall College, A&M, "Tireless Tom" re-annexed the 220- and 440-yard free style cham- pionships that he had won two years previous as a sophomore. Free-Stylers TM "Good Time Charley" Barker also covered himself and alma mater With glory at the same meet by paddling to victory 'in the 50-yard free-style a touch ahead of teammate Walt Tomski, and then tying for first place in the 100-yard free-style distance with Olympic swimmer Paul Wolf of Southern California. The last title was captured by Matt Mann's prize 400-yard relay team of Tomski, Barker, Ed Hutchens and Captain Haynie, who wound up the Michigan Men Smash Marks Swimmers And Trackmen Better 49 Records Michigan's victorious track and swimming squads left a total of 49 smashed records in their wake dur- ing the winter season as they took the Big Ten crowns in their respec- tive fields and the swimmers cap- tured the National Collegiate cham- pionship as well. The natators led the way, setting 42 new marks. Twenty of these were American records, nine were Confer- ence, seven National Intercollegiate, and one a world mark. Capt. Tom Haynie and Walt Tomski paced the team with seven and five record breaking performances to their credit, respectively. The trackmen, led by Capt. Bill Watson, presented departing Coach Charley Hoyt with seven new marks as well as the Conference champion- ship. Watson, who set a new Big Ten Indoor record in the shot put at the Conference Meet in Chicago, gave promise that the assault on the record book would continue during the out- door season when he unoffically smashed the Conference mark out- doors at Illinois with a toss of 54 feet 134 inches. Chicago's Grid Hopes Rise As Squad Reports Spring football practice at the Uni- versity of Chicago is enjoying an un- precedented boom. Many afternoons this spring Coach Clark Shaughnessy had enough men on the field to form two complete teams and once or twice he was even fortunate enough to have three teams practicing at the same time. The present situation might be termed as over-emphasis of football when contrasted with last year's spring practice when Shaughnessy, by dint of extreme effort, often man- aged to scrape together as many as 11 men at one time. I L Factors Gymnastic Team Prospects Found Elmer Townsley, coach of Michi- gan's tumbling team, uncovered four exceptionally fine prospects for his 1940 team after the all-campus gym- nastic meet. Thirty-three freshmen and novices entered the competition with experi- enced athletes being excluded. Work on the horse, high bar, parallel bar and tumbling comprised the events. Richard Jones, '42, captured first place and was followed in points total by Charles Buell, William Harrselson, J. McMaster and Sidney Weinberg, all of the class of '42. Each man won first place in at least one event. I . . STUDENT SUPPLIES OFFICE EQUIPMENT "RIDER S ".RENT A TYPEWRITER" FOUNTAIN PENS 302 South State St. TYPEWRITERS TYPEWRITR * I!_____ _F ___ El CHARLEY BARKER letic titles captured by Wolverine athletes during the past year. "Champions of the Nation," it seems, would be more in keeping with the distinguished accomplishments that have gained six Maize and Blue athletes each a niche in the collegiate record books of the nation. Altogeth- er, these men won six national crowns and tied for still another by virtue of their noteworthy track, wrestling and swimming feats. Track Captain Bill Watson started Eddie Thomas, two reliable boys whose absence will hurt and with them goes forward and center Danny Smick, tall nine letter man. Sophomores Return, To replace the departees are such boys as Bill Cartmill, Harold Wester- man, Herb Brogan, Mike Sofiak and Milo Sukup from last year's sopho- more contingent not to mention sev- eral likely looking prospects from the freshman squad. Cartmill and Westerman, while not' getting a real chance last year, seem to be Oosterbaan's two dark horses. Cartmill is a big six-footer who can :play either forward or center and who has developed his shooting a great deal during the past year. Wes- terman is a flashy ball-handling guard who, although small, may prove to be the answer to the prob- lem of precision and teamwork. Bro- gan is a long shot artist and Sofiak an aggressive player who saw a lot of action last season. Tonight's the night HAROLD NICHOLS March 17 and 18, Capt. Harold Nich- ols climaxed a stellar undefeated season by decisioning Vernon Logan, of Oklahoma A&M, to win for him- self the national collegiate 145-pound championship. Swimming Team But it was left to Coach Matt Mann's crack natators in the Nation- al Intercollegiate Swimming Meet, held here at Michigan, March 24 and 25, to turn out titles in true mass production style. Capt. Tom Haynie set the pace for his teammates. Pitted against such ace tankmen as Michigan's Jimmy Welsh, Billy Quayle of Ohio State and Adolph Kiefer of Texas BILL WATSON Michigan-dominated swimming car- nival by outdistancing the runner-up Ohio State entry by a wide margin. He Brings Them Home Every team which Joe McCarthy, present manager of the Yankees, has managed in the majors for the last twelve years has finished in the first division. McCarthy was a second baseman in the minors but was never good enough to play major league baseball. His Yankees won three con- secutive World Series. I z. N WITH HARTMANN LUGGAGE Good loolting, practical Hartmann lug- gage certainly adds to your travel en- joyment--not only enroute, but on ar- rival, when you find your apparel wrinkle-free and ready for the occasion. SKY-ROBE for Women $16.50 up BONDSTREETER for Men $22.50 up O'NITE CASE . . . . $11.50oup Others lower priced ummonamI L M g it Please her by wearing a new Palm Beach Eve- ning Formal. Tailored with the soft draped lines that add height to your figure. With longer shawl lapels and a new shoulder fit never before pos- sible in a washable tux. Single or double breasted. Choose the one which flatters you most. White coat and side-striped black trousers. Palm Beach Evening Formals. DRESS COOL and COMFORTABLE COA 1 ONLY o. _ . $12.50) TROUSERS ... $6.00 to be AT EASE! f I (STEIN BLOCH Clothes ), 7vb I voe* I I