.f ..r . f f:.. .r a ... y. a, _ _T . .x. .,.-.. wi~ onmers Breai Records To I (Continued from Page 1) mier the old mark of 24:04 set by 4e Wolverines in 1935. That made it six records down and tne to go. And the nine did go in the dWe back stroke. Varsity men Charley Barker and 31ll Beebe turned in 1:44.3 and :43.9 respectively and then fresh- aan Dick Riedl did 1:41 flat. Once pore the record cameup to Haynie in a silver platter. He had but to do :r5 to smash the Olympic Club of an Francisco mark of 7:00.2 for 'P yards. Haynie did 1:44.5 and the wolverines were again on their merry a~y. Williams performed an encore and :pt the ball rolling with 1:44.6 for ;other record. Freshman Bill Buck- nuham turned in 1:46.3 to make a otal of 10:23.5 for 900-yards, 16.6 !conds better than the listed record. kt Ebeling and Bill Holmes added wo more marks with 1:48.4 and 1.:46 nd in spite of frosh Dean Thomas's $9, the Wolverines were 18.1 sec- MCds ahead of the old time at 1350 ards. Little Dobson Burton managod a 48 and Jack Sherill a 1:49.7 to rinig two more into the fold and then 3a.b Sauer made it 20:4.8 for the al', The old mark of 21:28,9, set i Tovember of 1938 by Olympic Club 15 National Louis Flattens Rout State, 67-17 Lewis In First f Pan ancisco w 1;!etteregi 401 Round Of Bout The meet itself : was a typical Michigan-Michigan State meet. The Champion's Head Blows] outcome was never in doubt. Send John Down The Michigan team of Jack Slher- H rill, Johnny Haigh and Bill Holmes Three Times In K.O.u won the medley relay in 3 :2?.5.p Jim Welsh and Blake Thaxter MADISON SQUARE GARDEN,, placed one-two in the 220 in the med- New York, Jan. 25.-(P)-A ruthless,n iocre time of 2:23.2. Joe Ruke of smashing killer with as much mercy I State finished about 20 yards behind, as a bombing plane, Joe Louis blast-. Bill Beebe nosed out Ed Hutchens ed John Henry Lewis into submission .n the 50 by a foot and Spartan Bar- in less than three minutes tonight to ney Slamkowski managed to sal- successfully defend his World Heavy- vage the usual third. weight Championship for the fifth Talph Pyszinski garnered 298 time. Apparently willing to believe the -xints in the low board diving to ystories he had heard of the classy beat his teammate Jim. Wilkinson by ;boxing skill of Lewis, who is still rec- 1 points. Ed Vincent was third withogdkioalioxisg 77 points. ognized in National Boxing Associa- 77 oint , -T Htion territory as light-heavyweight The ;100-yard went to Tom Haynie champion, Jolting Joe sparred cau- n the slow time of :58. The Michigan tiously for the first 10 or 1 seconds, :aptain was the only Wolverine en- leading only with a light left. rant in this event and so the Spar- Suddenly he leaped forward as the ans captured their only second of crowd of 17,350, who contributed to he meet. Bill Holmes switched from his a gross gate of $102,015.43, roared'. He sual free-style stroke, turned over drove the challenger into a neutral Corner " alnd smash~Ed iover anfear'-ul n his back and came home in front crght and.hok oer a fearul n the 150-yard back stroke. Ja1 nh hook full to he bin ,aw. That Thrilwas second, imre h bgnigo h hinny Haigh turned in his sco ed. f, although John Henry took Jast breast stroke when he s n ego d it wihout failing, his knees sagged he 200 in 2:30.2. Eddie Mackei'rj-c and his cyes became glassy. scul four yards ahead of Ec( From that point, it was just a ques- wen. tion of how much more he could take Welsh and Thaxter repeated their before the inevitable ending. Anoth-) erformance in the 220 when they er smashing right swing dropped him ini.hed in the same order in the for the first time.1 Iarter mile, Welsh, with a last l-p On arising, the Phoenix, Ariz., bat- 'rint, whipped Thaxter by two yards ter, by way of Pittsbur"h), tried to ad they both were a pool's lengr k( cp ,ut of firing range, but Joe was head of the third place Len tWilliji. in on him like a bolt of lightning. Two on from State. imore rights and some three or four The Free-style relay team of Bill left hooks to the body draped John 3eebe, Charley Barker, Bill Holmes Henry over the bottom strand of the E 'nd Ed Hutchens swam as they ropes where he swayed until the count ?leased and still were good enough to reached three. Then he came up :eat the E. Lansing quartet by 10 again. yards. He countered Louis' next charge _______________________with a hook to the body, the only clean blow he landed during the brief battle, and then was battered along the ropes, helpless and defenseless, under an unmerciful onslaught, be- fore the final right rocked hir to the floor, near a neutral corner. There John Henry Lay, helpless and Michaels Stern Finest Clothes goggle-eyed, as Referee Arthur Dono- van counted five, before deciding to halt the contest, with Louis the win- ner and still champion by a technical knockout in 2 minutes, 29 seconds of NowOff the first round. PRESS PASSES By BWD BuNJAM N _ ===;-a= -===. PAUL WARREN, sports editor of the' Ohio State Lantern, wins my vote' of appreciation for the day. Writin ' with a vitrolic naivete and spicing his piece with some farcical misstate- ments, Mr. Warren has provided the most refreshing bit of journalism that this corner has perused since Mushky Jackson's Galento story. Mr. Warren's pungent, albeit unintended, humor is devastat- ing. His wrath knows no bounds. He flays the Miehigan swimming team, Matt Mann, Clarence Pinkston, and you folks who watched proceedings last Friday night with an unmerciful ire. And yet, outside of exhibiting a woe- ful lack of good taste, a total absence of sportsmanship, and a wholly Juvenile perspective, Mr. Warren has made a valuable con- tribution to the archives of Jour- nalistic humor.. Employing such side - splittmng cliches -s referrinq to referee Pinks- I On as "Pxinky" onr loboel'; Mvaft Mann as being a member of the "we wuz robbed" school, M . Wrren3 clinches his picce by ding deeoly into the sports muck. Bellyaches he: "Neither of the ti o Woiv 4 ers (Benham and ,Erst'nfeld could ever beat Patnik or Clark with a aver, but ctwa'dly Matt cvicently didn't bclve thIs. Whenever Benham, the best of the two Wolve men, made a dive, Matt would come through with his cry, "Great," and the tanei spectators would aeinost tear thi roof down with their thunderous applause. This despite the caliber of the dive. The judges couldn't help but being influenced by such actions, as witness the apparent close margin by which Clark beat Benham. "Yet when Patnik and Clark , came through with some of their geratest dives, a faint ripple of applause was barely noticeable. And both Buck divers really showed the Wolves how it's done." Thus Mr. Warren ends his master- piece. Of .course I could go ahead and point out to this aspiring jour- nalist that his facts are badly in er- ror. I could stake the word of the ' entire press corps, who sat directly across from Matt as I did, that no such actions were discernible, and that the applause was evenly divided. As for the crowd stooging for Matt as Warren states with his "He (Mann) surely has the spectators who watch the meets in the Michigan pool trained to obey his every "wish" -I'll leave that to you. The crowd was rich in its applause for Patnik in my opinion. I might tell Warren that Michael Peppe. his coach, picked the officials, not Matt. I might inform him that there was no change of decision in the 100 in the duel between Haynie and Johnson. The announcer re- ported the wrong decision and had to be corrected by the officials. There are other examples-but, ah, why fret. Anything for a laugh, eh Mr. Warren! And then there's a repeat engagement next month, one which °e are all looking forward to with h2 keenest of anticipation. XII: LETTERS and two cards added new fuel to the Burlingame-Lar- jon ba'e yesterday, and this de- ra rinht ray hire a secretary to audie the unprecedented mail. Among the letter wr'iters were Don Siegel, Ken Chlrein, Carl W. Carr, W. D. Reynos, Bruce ._ ,yer, and Sam nad Tcvm Foot. The cards were anonymous both denreciating Mr Eurli.- game with gusto. claimed that the writer was Uiased since "without University box- ers in his show it would amount to very little." He commended Larson's handling of the men, especially with regard to withdrawals in bouts. This corner will have a few comments of its own to make about this affair and its bearing on the University's athletic pro- gram in the near future. And before I forget, if Al Cotton, sports editor of the Jackson Citizen Patriot, can round up some heavy- weight talent, Siegel will enter the Jackson Golden Gloves tourney next month. Wonder why he isn't fight- ipn here? CLc OT ' usinessSal e Formal Wear - ;V I h Harmon Moves To Fifth Place In Race For Scoring Honors TUXEDOS $17.85 VESTS . . $2.95 Now' is the time to buy that Tuxedo at a great saving! Topcoats Overcoats The greatest reductions you will find. Compare our prices. $40 Values ...... Now $29.75 $35 Value ......Now $26.25 $30 Values .'..... Now $20.95 $25 Values......Now $18.75 Don't buy until you see the vast stock we are offering at these great savings. J-HOP SPECIALS $35 Full Dress . $28 $30 Tuxedo ... $24 VESTS $4.50 -- SHIRTS $2.50 uapt NSTiNCTIVE MCNS A 116 EAST LIBERTY Gehrig Agrees To Salary Cut Yankee Star Signs Early For Thirty Thousand NEW YORK, Jan. 25.-(IP)-Lou lehrig, who has played first base for the New York Yankees in 2,122 con- secutive games, today signed a con- tract calling for a salary of between! $30,000 and $39,000 for 1939, his 15th season with the world champions. As baseball's. highest-paid player, Gehrig received $39,000 last year vhen he had one of his poorest sea:" sons. When the new Yankee con- tracts were put in the mails last Sat- irday, it was reported the big first sacker had been asked to take a $9,- 100 cut. Last night he called at the home of Edward G. Barrow, newly-elected president of the club, and the , two came to what Barrow called "A com- promise agreement." He added that Lou "appeared satisfied." From an insignificant bench warm-i er to a spot among the leading scor- ers in the Big Ten in a space of hardly three weeks-that's Tom Har- mon's record. Counting 17 points to lead the on- slaught on Iowa and adding nine more against Ohio State Monday, Michi- gan's great sophomore athlete now boasts a total of 49 points in six games and fifth place in the list of she leading point-makers in the Con- ference. Two notches below Harmon, rank- ing seventh on the list is Eddie Thom- as with 41 points. "Ish" counted 16 points in last week's two starts to Pump from 16th place to the, ranks of the leaders. Taking advantage of the illness of the Iowa star, 'Ben Stephens, Pick Dehner, sharp-shooting Illinois cen- ter leaped into the scoring lead. Scoring 10 and 12 points in two week- end starts, the big pivot star now has accumulated 74 points. In second| place, but three points removed from his teammate is Bill Hapac, Illini forward who advanced from fourth place to second by virtue of 17 mark- ers against Wiscoisin. Still very much in the running for the scoring title is Ohio State's flashy forward Jimmy Hull whose record now totals 58. The Buckeye captain has participated in only four games, and boasts an average of 14 plus. Although benched by a severe case of influenza, Stephens, Hawkeye cap- tain and last week's leader, remained in fourth place in the standings with 56 points in four games. THE BIG TEN'S BIG TEN G B F T 1. Dehner, Illinois .. 6 25 24 74 2. Hapac, Illinois .... 6 25 21 71 3. Hull, Ohio State .. 4 23 12 58 4. Stephens, Iowa ... 4 18 20 56 5. HARMON, Michigan 6 17 15 49 6. Kundla, Minn. ... 5 19 4 42 7. THOMAS, Michigan 6 15 11 41 8. Addington, Minn. . 5 13 13 39 9. Dick, Minn....... 5 16 5 37 -10. Dupee, Iowa ......5 12 13 37 I LTON S 6 I CLOTH ES 119 South Main Street i i i r ti } I meet & 1939 as Fashioned by STADEL & WALKER THE TAILS WHITE VESTS WHITE TIE DRESS SHIRTS COLLARS CWT A ATT A t'fT^' CQYI 1C 1 - - :"~J W IA I N i\& 1t ~r,Jix1 II ILL 1 III