THE MICHIGAN DAILY Cagers Close Season With 43 To 32 Victory Over Go Jim Rae Leads Varsity Attack With 12 Points. IN THIS CORNER r MEL FINEBERG ! nyJ Michigan Breaks Even With Sixth Conference Win; Sofiak Scores 10 (Continued from Page 1) No Feudin' Please . . the floor swished the nets as the gun went off to close the contest at 43-32 for the Wolverines. Pink, Wood and Rae dropped the curtain on their varsity careers to- night along with Minnesota's dimin- utive guard, Johnny Dick and Harold Van Every. Gopher Endin +g Minnesota (32) FG Carlson, f-.....3 Warhol, c .......2 Anderson, g.... 1 Dick, g .. . ..... 2 Mohr, g .........1 Van Every, g.,.... 1 Ahrens, f ........ 0 Pearson, c.......1 Johnson, g .......1 Totals... 12 Michigan (43) FG Sofiak, f........2 Ruehle, f ....... Rae,c ..........4 Pink, g ........... 2 Wood, g . ....0. Brogan, g......4. Totals.....15 FT 3 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 1 8 FT 6 0 4 2 0 1 PF 3 1 1 2 2 0 1 2 1 13 PF 2 3 1 4 2 4 TP 9 4 2 5 3 2 1 3 3 32 TP 10 12 6 0 9 ONE of the swimming races of the year was run off (we never know whether or not swimming races are run or swum off) last Saturday night-one week ahead of schedule. Charley Barker and Gus Sharemet met for the first time over the 100-yard route and the result was that it appears that the old order changeth. Gus Sharemet beat Charley Barker, National Collegiate champion at 50-yards and co-champion at 100-yards, in the second fastest time ever swum (this time we're sure it's not run) by a Michigan swimmer (not runner). The time was :52.2, surpassed only by Walt Tomski's 52 seconds flat last year against Yale. . The story lies in the fact that this is the first time this year that Barker has essayed the century. All along he's been concentrating on the 50 and then swimming a leg on the free-style relay. Sharemet, on the other hand and also on his stomach, has been swimming hundreds all year. Matt Mann was a little bit afraid to let the pair swim against each other.' Sharemet is undoubtedly the brightest prospect ever to hit the campus. Barker is the champion. Both are team men but still he was afraid they'd start feuding. That's what happened to Ed Kirar and Tomski for two years and on a minor scale, too, Tom Haynie and Jimmy Welsh last year. It's something unconscious when you're trying to beat someone else. Anyhow, Matt wasn't taking any chances of anything changing Barker's name to Martin and Sharemet's to Coy. So what we've been driving at is that the first time they were going to meet was this week- end at the Conference meet in Columbus. Instead Matt shoved the schedule up a week, probably because he feared that the first time out together they might try to beat each other. Well, if Gus swims another 52.2 and Barker, after a slow first fifty, finishes three feet behind him, the rest of the swimming world can start wishing they'd stop trying to beat each other and concentrate on the rest of the field. CORNERSTONES: Tommy Decker, injured pole vaulter, started to sprint on his injured ankle last night and will be able to vault at the Conference meet this week ... Strother Martin, sophomore diver who sprained his ankle a couple of weeks ago, probably won't be ready to compete at Columbus .. . Davie Nelson, who can play half a dozen positions on the diamond, popped up with a pain. in the side that was diagnosed as chronic appendicitis ... Unless it becomes .worse, however, Nelson will not have to undergo an oper- ation until summer . .. Les Veigel's brother Alan is a candidate for the Boston Bees' pitching staff . . .Al made his big league debut against Johnny Gee and the Pirates last fall . . . Hurlers Jack Barry and Mase Gould were high school rivals several years ago when Barry pitched and played third base for Kotona, N. Y., and Gould did the pitching for Scarsdale, N. Y. .. Bennie Oosterbaan is the only Michigan man ever to have led the Big Ten in scoring in the 22 years during which the records have been kept. He did it in 1928 by scoring 57 field goals and 15 free throws for a total of 129 pointq... Wisconsin and Minnesota are the only Conference teams which haven't had an individual scoring champion. . . Purdue has had nine indi- vidual leaders and Illinois, in second place, has had but three . . . Indiana is the only team which has never been undisputed title-holder The Hoosiers have, however, finished in a first place tie three times ... . Purdue has won the most Big Ten titles-five-and has tied for it seven times. Wisconsin is next with four crowns and the same number of ties... Mich- igan has been on top alone but once, in 1927, and in 1926 and 1929 was tie for the title. Rowe Shows Back In The Picture His Old Form In Tiger Drill Team Is Brought To Full Strength As Gehringer, Averill, Campbell Arrive LAKELAND, Fla., March 4.-(P)- Warning to the New York Yankees and the rest of the American League -your old pal Lynwood Rowe looks like he has finally found the come- back trail. The one-time schoolboy, now 28 years old and matured beyond his <> >- age by the tragedy of having his mighty arm go "dead," dominated SCHOOLBOY ROWE the Detroit Tiger workout today with his free, easy pitching in batting sons before going down to Beau- practice. mont of the Texas League, where he "He started to use a full arm swing won 16 and lost nine. Rowe made late last season," said a jubilant Man- something of a comeback in 1939 as ager Del Baker, "and that was the he scored 10 victories and lost 12 first time he did it since he had his games for Detroit. arm trouble. I'm glad to see him do Rowe has worked himself into con- it because it convinces me that he dition gradually this season but he has lost all fear of arm troubles." may get a test , against big league In case you have forgotten, Rowe competition next week-and if his won 24 games in 1934 and Detroit comeback appears genuine the stock won the pennant. The following sea- of the Tigers will climb accordingly. son the big fellow scored 19 victories The Detroit squad was completed and he came up with tthe same num- today when outfielders Earl Averill ber of wins in 1936. and Bruce Campbell and second base- Then came the arm trouble and man Charley Gehringer rolled into Rowe won only one game in two sea- camp. Grapplers' Title Hopes Remain Alive DespiteHoosier Licking 13 15 431 scare at half: Michigan 16, Minne- sota 13. Big Ten Swim Marks Sought By Wolverin There is nothing sacred, nothing' inviolable in fact, nothing immortal about existing Big Ten swimming records and Matt Mann's mermen will get a chance to prove that fact when they pull into Columbus this weekend for the Conference cham- pionships, In last year's 'meet at Lafayette, six of the eight records melted dur- ing the struggle, with the Wolver- ines accounting for five of them. According to Coach Mann, there is no reason why the Michigan power can't improve on those performances comes this weekend. "This present bunch I have is capable of cracking them all except the breastroke per- haps, and Ohio's Johnny Higgins can take care of that one," he pointed out. Certainly the Wolverines ought to find no, trouble surpassing the relay marks. Ohio State is the present king of the medley with the 2:56.8 timing turned in last year, but it was just two weks ago that the crack Michi- gan trio, Bill Beebe, John and Gus Sharemet, swam the distance in 2:55.4 with a minimum of opposition from their rivals, the Iowa Hawkeyes. In the 400-yard free-style relay, it's the same story. The present I Michigan's hopes for a Conference wrestling title were not killed by the Indiana beating Saturday, as the 23-3 score might indicate. In spite of the fact that only the brilliant Harland Danner was able to come out on. top, the Wolverines gave a performance that showed them cap- able of taking the crown this eek- end if they get their share o the breaks. With Capt. Forrest Jordan and Bill Combs on the sidelines with injuries, the Wolverines suffered only one fall at the hands of the Big Ten cham- pions, and in four matches came within a shade of getting the nod. Jordan and Combs will return to the lineup this week. Closest bouts of the meet were Jim Galles' one-point loss to Conference titleholder Chauncey McDaniels and lbn Nichols' defeat by "Tuffy" In- man by the same margin. McDaniels, behind his less experienced foe dur- ing most of the match, scored a go- behind with two minutes to go and rode Galles the rest of the way to squeeze out an 8-7 win. Nichols' match with Inman went much the record board reads 3:33.8 set by Ed Hutchens, Bill Holmes, Charley Bar- ker and Walt Tomski during the 1939 meet. This year's Wolverine quartet, made up of John Gillis, Bar- ker, Tommy Williams and Gus Share- met did three-tenths of a second bet- ter against Northwestern last Satur- day, with Gus loafing through the final lap. Even the senational freestyle times that Tomski and Tom Haynie turned in last year will be' threatened this weekend. Barker, the intercollegiate sprint king, with a 23.2 against Mich- igan State and a 23.0 while finishing second to Tomski against Yale here a year ago, is Matt Mann's bet to take care of the :23.1 record for the 50-yard race. For the century, it will be Michi- gan's great sophomore, Gus Share- met, who will be favored to upsetJ Tomski's present mark. No more need be said than the fact that Gus's :52.2 against Northwestern was four- tenths of a second faster than the record Walt hung up in Lafayette last March. in Over Irish Pleases Doherty It was easy to tell that this was the week of the Conference Meet,, at the Field House yesterday, for the building hummed with activity. Ken Doherty was occupied with the prep- aration of his track team for the meet in Chicago, but he took time off to say a few words about last Saturday's meet with Notre Dame in which the Wolverines came the closest they've been to a dual meet defeat in the last two years-only a 13 point win. "In the first place," remarked Do- herty, "we were holding back for this weekend. That's only natural. All the boys want to have everything they've got for the Big Tens, so they didn't go all out. And, what's more, some of the men were not run at all because they were not quite in shape or were slightly injured. "For instance, Warren Breidenbach I had a strained muscle, so we didn't run him in the 440. In the relay, he picked up all but a foot of the lead Notre Dame had, but he didn't let himself out because we did 't need it. No, I wouldn't say the closeness of the meet had any real signifi- cance." Doherty went on to say that the peculiar shape of the Notre Dame track harppered men like Jack Leu- tritz who couldn't reduce their long strides as mucn as the banked turns required. Next came words of commendation for almost everyone who went on the trip. "Al Smith looked great despite the fact that the judges picked Sag- gau as the winner, and Bill Harnist surprised everyone with his sprint- ing." Ed Barrett chimed in with "I wish they'd told me the Field House mile record was only 4:19.1. I was leading by quite a bit, so I coasted in with STUDENTS- Are you in need of odd trousers? We have plenty.. Every trouser taken from suits at a special selling Fs .: 5.0650 - 7.50 Cheviots Worsteds Coverts Gabardines