THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1940 THE MIC HIG .&N Sillr PAOR TTMV% THE mn .i C.h'A. N >1.' 6 t.R f. FAG?! TITIk?!! Wrestlers Leave For National sWho. * Five Michig Matmen E Collegiate ,i Meet At Illinois 100-Yard Freestyle Heads List Of Saturday'sSwimming Eveits TwoW f over itto ..Seek~ 1A ti~~)tlI 1101torĀ°s IN THIS CORNER By MEL FINEBERG- . ... Prognosticating... THE swimmers may think that sit- ting up in a day coach is tedious labor but it pales into insignificance (where have we heard that before) when compared to our own nocturn- al gymnastics as each year we at- tempt to say how-and why-Michi- gan's swimmers will win the Na- tional Collegiate title. Yesterday afternoon we started out, our time charts in front of us and experience behind us. Four pencils later we arrived at cer- tain conclusions which may be found below. Our excuses are many, numerous and myriad. In short we have rea- sons for everything. We picked Michigan to win by three points but don't be surprised if Yale annexes its first Collegiate title since it be- gan claiming it was the best swim- ming college in the country-an in- cident which coincided strangely with the Pelopennesian War. First of all we give you our upset killer-diller. This eve surprises us. Francis Heydt will beat Collegiate champion Al Van- de Weghe of Princeton in the backstroke. So help us-and Mr. Vande Weghe too. If the Tiger wins, he'll have to break 1:35 to do it. In case of such an emergency Michigan would find itself with two less points and a lot less confidence. Point number two: a lad named Paul Wolf, a first cousin to Methu- sala, is back again. Wolf was a member of the 1936 Olympic team and may tear up the pool. He supposed- ly swam 51.8 for the hundred. We're skeptical. But he's capable of throw- ing oil on troubled Wolverine wat- ers if he decides to swim in a hurry. Watch out for him in both 50 and 100. If Princeton whips Michigan in the medley relay-and there are rumours that they're consid- ering such a plan, more points fly out the window. Close that window, we feel a draught. At any rate, just rememer that while individuals may be off here and there it's the team total that counts. And that should remain as we have it. At least Yale's won't change. Whether or not Michigan's does will decide the victor-and vic- tim. If the results don't conform to the following, the mistakes lie with the swimmers-not with us. I* * * 1500-meters free style:-1. Clark, Wayne; 2. Chouteau, Yale; 3. Cut- Warren Breidenbach Withdraws From Meet Warren Breidenbach, Michigan quarter mile star, has withdrawn from the New York Finnish Relief Fund Meet Sunday night because of the continued soreness of his in- jured leg. Breidenbach had been scheduled to run on the West's al- star mile relay team. Unless one of the other Michigan 440-men is chosen to take Breiden- bach's place, Capt. Ralph Schwarz- kopf will be the only Wolverine re- presentative, running in the mile and a half against Charles Fenske, Wal- ter Mehl and Gene Venzke ler, Harvard; 4. Stanhope, Ohio; 5. 50-yard free style: -1. Barker, Aichigan; 2. Wolf, USC; 3. Lums- len, Wayne; 4. Colwell, Army; 5. Duncan, Yale. 150-yard backstroke: Heydt, Mich- igan; 2. Vande Weghe, Princeton; 3. Burns, Yale; 4. Beebe, Michigan; 5., Armbruster, Iowa. 220-yard free style:-1. Johnson, Yale; 2. Cutler; Harvard; 3. Clark, Wayne; 4. Chouteau, Yale; 5. Hut- chens, Michigan. 300-yard medley relay:-1. Mich- igan (Heydt, J. Sharemet, G. Share- met); 2. Princeton; 3. Yale; 4. Ohio; 5. Iowa. One-meter dive:-1. Patnik, Ohio; 2. Clark, Ohio; 3. Benham, Michi- gan; 4. Cook, Yale; 5. Powell, North- western. 100-yard f reestyle:-1. Sharemet, Michigan; 2. Johnson, Yale; 3. Bar- ker, Michigan; 4. Wolf, USC; 5. Col well of Army and Schieber of Brown tie. 200-yard breast stroke:-1. Hig- gins, Ohio; 2. Parke, Princeton; 3. Meyer, Yale; 4. Sharemet, Michigan; 5. Gesner, Yale. 440-yard free style-i. Clark, Wayne; 2. Chouteau, Yale; 3. Cutler, Harvard; 4. Stanhope, Ohio; 5. Rood, Florida. Three meter dive:-1. Patnik, Ohio; 2. Clark, Ohio; 3. Martin, Michigan; 4. Cook, Yale; 5. Benham, Michigan. 400-yard free style relay:-1. Yale; 2. Michigan; 3. Army; 4. Northwest- ern; 5. Ohio. Michigan .. Yale ...... Ohio ...... Wayne Princeton Harvard .. Army USC... TOTALS 51 48 ..... ............ 36 ..................18 ..................16 .................. 10 .............. 8/2 . . . ... .. . . . . .. ... 6 Capt. "Butch" Jordan leads a group of five Wolverines who will compete at Champaign, Ill., Fri- day and Saturday in the National Collegiate Wrestling Meet. Jor- dan seeks the heavyweight crown. GOLIF TIP' by RAY COURTRIGHT Varsity Golf Coach The Daily Sports Department has asked me to give some hints on the fundamentals for the benefit of those who wish to play a better game this and succeeding years. Each article will deal with some phase of the game such as: grip, stance, straight left arm, swinging the club, head, cock- ing the wrist, pivot, balance, slic- ing, hooking, topping, smother- ing, and some of the more simple rules. Today, get your mashie out and start swinging. Try to sense the weight of the club head by relax- ing the wrists and arms, and by not gripping too tightly. Do not hurry the swing. Allow the body to respond to the swinging weight. Swing back and forth for five to 10 minutes in a lazy manner, trying to get rid of all tension. FRESHMAN SPORTS STAFF There will be a meeting of the freshman sports staff at 2 p.m. to- day in the Publications Building. -Herb Lev Cliamp laShi)S Jorlan, Nichols, .11-nner, Combs And Galles Holdl Woiveririe Tide Hlopes A five-man squad. of Wolverine wrestlers leaves at 8 a.m. today for Champaign. Ill., prepared to make a strong bid for the National Intercol- legiate title. The men Coach Cliff 1,een picked to make the trip will be faced with the task of dislodging the Oklahoma A. and M. powerhouse from a three- year reign at the top of the country's grappling heap. The Aggies, unde- feated in dual meet competition this season, are favored to take their sev- enth national crown. Capt. "Butch" Jordan, Big Ten heavyweight champion, will lead Michigan's Conference runners-up against a field that will include, be- sides the Aggies, Lehigh, Eastern Intercollegiate titleholders for three successive years; Kansas State, Big Six Champions; and Indiana, one- point winners over the Wolverines for the Big Ten crown. Nichols, Danner Seek Title Coach Keen will depend on his three Big Ten champions and two second-place winners to carry the Wolverines through the two days of action against the nation's best, Be- sides Jordan, Conference 175-pound titleholder, Don Nichols and Har- land Danner, the class of the Big Ten 155-pounders, will be attempt- ing to add the National crowns to their lists. Sophomore Jim Galles, who bowed in the Conference finals before two- time champion Chauncey McDan- iels, of Indiana, may have another shot at the Hoosier if the pairings are right. Oklahoma A and M's1 Clay Albright and Tommy King,] of Lehigh, are the other big threats for the 165-pound title. Combs' Rival Withdrawn Bill Combs, whose injured knee lost him the 145-pound Conference crown to Ohio State's Tony Maon- tonaro, will have to forego his re- venge for another year, it was learned yesterday. The Buckeye has been withdrawn from the meet. A wholesale shake-up by Indiana's Coach Billy Thom also took Combs' other chief Big Ten rival, Joe Ro- man, out of reach. Roman dropped into the 136-pound division in the Bill Combs will be looking for the national 145-pound wrestling crown at Illinois this weekend, having fully recovered from the knee injury which hampered his efforts to gain the Big Ten cham- p onship. hank Stars AficHl ORLANDO, Fla., March 27.-(IP)-- Detroit's Tigers were ineffective at the plate against Kendall Chase and Joe Haynes today and lost an - exhi- bition game to the Washington Sen- ators, 5 to 2. Some sparkling fielding plays by Hank Greenberg helped keep the score down as the Senators nicked Buck Newsom and Clay Smith for eight hits. The big ex-first sacker threw Jim- my Wasdell out at the plate after catching Gee Walker's foul fly in the third, and made a long running catch of Wasdell's lusty drive in the fifth. shift which forced Scotty .Sefton, Conference 121-pound champion, to the sidelines. With these two men gone, the oustanding men Combs will have to beat are Joe Scalzo, Penn State's runner-up last year; Vernon Nell, Oklahoma A and M; Harold Masem, Lehigh; and Glenn Duncan, Big Six titleholder from Kansas State. Editor's note-This is the second of two articles describing the prospects of the National Collegiate Swimming Meet to be held Friday and Saturday in New Haven. Today's article deals with the five events to be held on Saturday night. By DON WIRTCHAFTER On Saturday, the nation's nata- torial might will swim and dive in ?he five events remaining after Fri- day night's program. Accortling to the observers here, they will prob- ably stack up as follows: 100-yard freestyle: This race prom- ises to feature the entire meet, for the field will be as fast and classy as ever entered one tank. It includes Gus Sharemet and Charley Barker from Michigan, Howie Johnson from Yale, Paul Wolf from Southern Cal- ifornia, Charles Cowell and Bob Gar- rett from Army, Guy Lumsden and Bill Prew from Wayne, Bob Percyl from Louisiana State, Chic Acosta from Florida, Bob Tarlton from Tex- as, Ed Kompf from Syracuse and many others who have done better than 54 seconds. Barker and Wolf tied for the title last year, but the Pacific Coast star's :51.8 performance this season stamps him as the man to beat. Sharemet has turned in a :52.1 and ought to finish at least second. Cowell whipped Johnson in ,,he Eastern Intercollegiate League Meet, but either is capable of bat- tling Barker for the third spot. Higgins Gets Chance 200-yard breastroke: Now that Dick Hough has gone from the Princeton lineup, Ohio's Johnny Hig- gins ought to get what he's been af- ter for a long time, a National Col- legiate crown. The highly seasoned Buckeye will find his chief competi- tion in Hough's understudy, Ed Parke, the present Tiger mainstay. Parke has done 2:24.8 in winning [he Eastern Collegiates. The rest of the field ouglht to follow at least five yards behind. Yale has Ed Ges- ner and Johnny Meyer, both in the 2:26 class. Michigan will depend on its two Johns, Sharemet and Haigh, while Al Kirkland from Illinois, Iowa's George Poulos and Mike Sojka from Texas will all be possible point winners. 440-yard dash: Jim Welsh would have made this quite a race, but even without him, it has plenty of spice. The nation's distance aces, Andy Clark, Wayne, Rene Choutau, Yale, and Eric Cutler, Harvard. will match strides again. Ohio has Harold Stan- hope for a possible fourth while Buckeye Johnny Patton, Jim Rood, the Florida ace, Michigan's Blake Thaxter and others will churn intp the fifth place spot. Three-meter diving: Al Patnik and Earl Clark, Ohio's unbeatable duo, will even be more impressive in this event than in the lows. The third place will produce the battle with Michigan's Strother Martin and Yale's Jim Cook favored to be the standouts. If the meet turns out as close as it is expected, either of these two men might bring victory to his team by beating his rival. Wayne's hope, Bobby Gardner, Hal Benham, and Jack Wolin, from Michigan and Tom Powell oz Northwestern will probably vie for the fifth place point. Relay May Decide Meet 440-yard freestyle relay: Two years ago Michigan had to win this event in order to capture the title by one point. It might be almost the same story this time. The Wolverine quar- tet, Barker, John Gillis, Ed Hutchens and Gus Sharemet, is undefeated in competition so far and will be fa- vored to strike the wall first Satur- day. Yale, with a 3:30.6 performance in the books, lost to the Michigan team in its dual meet, but will offer the most competition to the Wolver- ines. The Eli quartet is made up of Willis Sanburn, Ed Pope, Ross Dun- can and Johnson. Wayne, North- western, Ohio and Army all have teams that. are capable of battling for the lower positions. I-M Swim Meet Today The Annual Independent Swim- ming Meet will be held at 7:30 p.m. today at the I-M Pool with the For- estry Club favored to win. Other contestants are: Wolverines, Hill- billy A.C., Phys. Eds, and the Hia- watha Club. Northwestern..... Iowa ............. Brown ........... Florida ........... ~3 1 Nationals Draw Top Swimmers. Favor Wolverines To Cop SeventhStraight Title (Special To The aily) NEW HAVEN, March 27.-Ameri- ca's outstanding natators, represent- ing more than 25 colleges and uni- versities throughout the nation, were pouring into town today and set- ting up camp in preparation for the National Intercollegiate champion- ships that will be held here this week- end. Among those who have not yet arrived are the powerful Wolverines from the University of Michigan, de- fending champions and favorites to capture their seventh straight title when things get under way Fri- day morning. Matt Mann and his 15 natators are en route from Ann Arbor and will arrive here just before noon to- morrow. After a day's rest, the Wol- verines will open their title bid in the six events Friday. OUTDOOR TRACK All men interested in outdoor track report for a meeting at four p.m. today at Yost Field House. Ken Doherty Varsity Track Coach Quality Clothes at lower prices, is Pens - Typewriters - Supplies "Writers Trade With Rider's" RiDE RS ;302 South State St. I Balanced Strength Of Frosh Track Squad Augers Well For Next Year mmmm"'1 N0 buttons to \ -C ";t Shorts have the laundryproof fas. tener . . . Grippers are quicker ... more convenient .. and they permanently end ril kltn trnl,,IInr I I By HAROLD WILSON Take the highly promising per- formances of the current freshman track squad; add the improvement which might reasonably be expected with a year's practice and physical growth; mix in a sufficient number of good grades to hurdle the eligibil- ity bugaboo, and you have the for- mula for Michigan's hopes to con- tinue its dominance of Midwestern track circles in future years. For included among the 85 year- ling trackmen is much material of potential varsity calibre. In the re- cently-concluded indoor season five frosh records were smashed and two others equaled by this almost per- fectly balanced squad which lacks strength in but one event, the two- mile run. Ilalf-Milers Stand Out The yearling outfit has an out- standing group of half-milers. Quen- tin Brelsford, John Purdue, and Bob Ufer have all bettered the old frosh mark of 1:58.9 held by Torn Jester, varsity half-rmiler, Brelsford and Purdue running 1:58 and Ufer 1:58.6. Another pair, Dave Matthews and Bill Dawson, has run under 2:00. Brelsford, Ufer, Purdue and Mat- thews also form the record-breawing two-mile relay team, which lowered the old standard from 8:12.8 to 7:59.3. A host of 14 freshmen has bettered 54 seconds in the quarter mile, Ufer turning in the best time with a rec- ord-breaking :50.3 as compared with Jack Leutritz's former mark of :51,5.1 EARN $0WE DURINGSUMMER OR YEAR-ROUND We can use several reliable college men, during summer or full time, to operate movie circuits in theatre- less communities. Earnings $50.00 a week and better. Projection equip- ment, sound films, everything fur- nished. No experience needed. For complete information write imme- diately to Southern Visual Equip- ment Co., Department .., Box 2404, Memphis, Tennessee. Ufer also teamed up with three other capable quarter-milers, Hugh Dalzell, Have Matthews and Bill Dawson, to form a quartet which established a new mile relay record of 3:25.8. Hurdle Marks Tied In both the low and high hurdle events the frosh records have been tied. Jim Byerly and Neil McIntyre have each run 8.4, the existing year- ling mark, in the 65-yard highs, while Norm Elson and Macuityre have equaled the 65-yard low barrier mark of 7.4. In the 60-yard cash Bob Ufer again has the best time, 6.4, only a tenth of a second off the yearling recoord, while Charles Donahey has run 6.5, These two speedsters, along with Elson and Dawson, hung up a new half-mile relay record of 1:32.6 last Thursday, clipping nine-tenths of a second off the old mark. A trio of promising shot putters, Rudy Sengel, Gene Hirsch and Bill Steele, have all turned in heaves of 40 feet or better. Sengel's mark, 45 feet 9 inches, is especially impressive, since it is the second best ever made by a freshman, furthered only by Bill Watson's yearling mark. Two Jumpers Show Well Frank McCarthy and Neil McIn- tyre have both high-jtunped better than six feet, the former having the best mark with a leap of six feet one-half inch. In the broad jump this same duo paces the freshmen, each having done beter than 21 feet. A quartet of potential varsity pole vaulters, Fred Spaulding, Bob Can- hamr, Bob Segula and Wilbert Wede- no a, round out; the yearling squad. Spaulding's vault of 12 feet six in('hes is the best effort turned in during the indoor season. A's Lose To White Sox HOLLYWOOD, Calif., March 27. -(P)-The Chicago White Sox beat the Philadelphia Athletics, 3 to 2, behind the six-hit pitching of Thorn- ton Lee, Jess Dobernic and Clint Brown today. Philadelphia (A) 100 001 000-2 6 0 Chicago (A) .. 000 210 00x-3 8 1. 34 Yearling Track Numerals Are uAwarded Thirty-four members of the fresh- man track squad will receive numer- als, it was announced yesterday by Coach Stackhouse. They are as fol- lows: William Ban, Bu ffalo, N. Y.; Del- lason Bress, New York City; James Byerly, Oweso; John Copeland, Wil- iiamville, N. Y.; Robert Canhamn, Oak Park, ill.; William Dawson, Eas- ton, Pa.; Hugh Dalzell, Indianapolis, Ind.; Norman Elson, New York City; John Edelberg, Saranac Lake, N. Y.; David Eldredge, Dearborn; Peter Grant, Los Angeles, Calif.; Eugene Hirsch, D Aroit; Lawrence Hayes, Howard City; George R. Hall, Sag- inaw; Brad Hoelscher, Indianapolis, Ind; Ernest Lampkin, Grand Rap- ids; Robert Lehnert, Brooklyn, N. Y.; David Matthews, Royal Oak; Frank McCarthy, Birmingham; Richard Mansfield, Buffalo; John Mikulih, Marquette; Fred Nassar, Dearborn: Leroy Pecar, Lincoln Park; Herbert Presson, Revere Mass.; John Purdue, Albion; Carl Riggs, Tndianapolis, Ind.; Robert Segula, Owosso; Fred Stein, Ann A bor; Robert Tmilson, Norwalk, 0.; Robert Ufer, Pittsburgh. Pa.; Paul Young, Detroit; Robert Winkley, Kirkwood, Mo.; John Wise, Bradford, Pa.; Wilbert Wedenoja, Wakefield. dnce- Dill Sawye ""S Muski Hear- ,the new Modern Melody Choir sing your favorite songs Satra,9 still 1 One dollar fflICHIGf Ur IOB ?bome 2-44 31 for your reservation NOW! our aim. SUITS By Mchaels-Stern and other fine makers. $2250 to $400 TOPCOATS $2250 -$35001 SPORT COATS Fine imported Tweeds in the newest colorings. $12 50 to $1750 SLACKS All new shades in worsted, gabardine, and flannel: $q95 ;95 8 SlOPPING DAYS for the 1940 NENSIAN ff~a~tin~ ~-Natural Color Photos I Ill N I EM II O