THE MI~CHIAN DVAILY IN THIS CORNER By Mel Fineberg Lloyd House, Phys Eds Capture I-M Track Title 4aping Tarzan... A" this talk about comparing Gus Sharemetrwith Johnny Weiss- ' mIueller has more than clay as its foundation. Weissmueller's best time, set incidentally in the Union pool in 1927, was 51 seconds flat. That now stands as the world's record, equalled only by Peter Fick. But the Wolverine sophomore was clocked in 51 seconds flat in the an- chor leg of the freestyle relay last Saturday and we submit that that was as fast as the screen Tarzan ever swam. When'Weissmueller swam 51 seconds he was timed from his own start. In others words, the tim- ers snapped their watches when his feet left the wharf, the pier, the dock oi whatever one calls the ends of a swimming pool. In short, as Micaw- ber would say, he got a flying start just as Sharemet gets a flying start on the relay.. And Gus' time of 51.8 in winning the hundred is taken from a flat or gun start. Expert timers agree that there is a difference of about six- tenths of a second between, a relay and a gun start. All of which brings him down pretty close. FROM the New York Herald Tribune of last Sunday (which went to press just before Saturday night's finals): "Yale Nears N.C.A.A Swim Title." "Yale's array of sophomore swim- mers, tuned by Bob Kiphuth for the races of their young lives, took a solid grip on their first National Collegiate A.A. team championship and set the stage for the downfall of the hitherto invincible Michigan squad in this afternoon's trials. And later, "Yale struck a blow for its ultimate team success." It just goes to show ... * * * C HARLEY Barker's being shut out of the finals of the 100 can be ?alf-explained. He swam in the first heat, won it in 53 seconds flat. Last year he tied for the title in 52.9 and with the finalists determined on a time basis he appeared a cinch to qualify. But then six men turned in 52.8 or better and one more did 53 seconds. And that eliminated Barker. He did come back in the relay with a spark- ling 51.8. * * * DON Wirtchafter, down in New Haven for the meet, relays some short items for your diges- tion: Ohio State's Harold Stan- hope lost four pounds in winning the 1500-meters again . , Music critic John Schwarzvald- er has been teling us for days that he'd do it (win, not lost the four pounds) . . . Only three teams in swimming history have swum faster nyedley relays than the 2:54.9 Fran Heydt, John and and Gus Sharemet turned in last week . . . Two were swum by Princeton teams and.one by the Lake Shore A.C. . . . Heydt did :59.6 (Al Vande Weghe for Princeton led him with a :58.6), John S. had a 1:03.1 and Gus S. a 52 second even ... Yale quali- fled two men for every individual event Saturday night and one Eli finished sixth and out of the money in every one of the finals Johnny Haigh, who came up with a surprise fourth in the breast stroke, alternated with the orthodog and the butterfly strokes and beat John Sharemt for the first time this year. Jack Kasley, former Wolverine breast stroker who was awarded the "Outstanding Swimmer" award in 1935, was at the meet and finally re- ceived his prize, a stop watch . . Ralph Schwarzkopf, on his way to New York, stopped in to visit his old coach, Charley Hoyt, and both attend- ed Saturday's finals . . . Hoyt, Eli track mentor now, calls $8,000,000 Payne Whitney Gymnasium a glori- ous waste of money . .. It looks like an English palace . . . There are 56 doors leading into the pool and the pool is eight feet deep at its shal- low end and 16 feet deep under the diving board. Dorm Teams, Independents StageMeets Fletcher, Winchell House Finish Up Second, Third Among Residence Halls By GERRY SCHAFLANDER Lloyd House, and the Phys Eds won 4he Residence Hall and Independent Track Championships, which were run off simultaneously last night at Yost Field House. Ed Grieder, 17-year old, from Lloyd, paced his teammates to victory taking both the 60-yard dash and low hurdles. Other oustanding Residence Hall performers were, Hank Clauser of Fletcher who took a first in the high hurdles and a second in the lows, and Theophlis Oleznicak, Lloyd House with a first in the pole vault and a fourth in the high hurdles. In winning the meet, Lloyd House ran up 38 points. Fletcher was 'sec- 2nd with 28, with Winchell, Wenley and Williams following with 26, nine %nd five points respectively. The Phys Eds took the Independent championship for the second straight year, scoring 30 points as the Hill- Billy A.C., Robert Owen, Wolverines, Club Matinee, and the Forestry Club followed behind with 21, 18, 17 and seven points. Joe Rogers of the Wol- verines was high point man. ' Residence Halls 60-yard dash: Won by Grieder, Lloyd; second, Hutchinson, Fletcher Hall; third, Johnson, Lloyd; fourth, Shapiro. Time :07. 65-yard Low Hurdles: Won by Grie- der, Lloyd; second, Clauser, Fletcher Hall; third, Vibbei't, Fletcher Hall; fourth, LeGrew, Wenley. Time, :08.4. 440-yard Run: Won by Anderson, Winchell; second, Miller, Fletcher Hall; third, Grunewald, Lloyd; fourth, Coleman, Williams. Time, :57.4. 880-yard Run: Won by Smith, Flet- cher Hall; second, LeGrand, Lloyd; third, Julius, Wenley; fourth, Kline, Lloyd. Time, 2:15.8. One-Mile Run: Won by Villaverde, Winchell; second, Howe, Wenley; third, MacLeod, Fletcher Hall; fourth, Johnson, Lloyd. Time, 5:35.2. Broad Jump: Won 'by Hillhouse, Lloyd; second, Vibbert, Fletcher Hall; third, Lorig, Lloyd; fourth, Jul- ius, Wenley. Distance, 18 feet 7 inches. High Jump: Won by Carpenter, Winchell; tied for second, Horton, Fletcher, and Evans, Winchell. Height 5 feet 1 inch. Independents 60-yard Dash: Won by Nelson, Phys. Eds; second, Renda, Phys. Eds; third, Richards, Forestry; fourth, Reisdorf, Club Matinee. Time, :06.7 65-yard Low Hurdles: Won by Rog- ers, Wolverine; second, Lewis, Hill Billy; Renda, Phys. Eds; fourth, Buck, Robert Owens. Time, :07.6. 65-yard High Hurdles: Won by Rogers, Wolverine; second, Lewis, Hill Billy; third, Reid, Club Matinee. 440-yard Run: Won by McKeown, Robert Owen; second, Reid, Club Matinee; third, Matson, Wolverine; I ChwiE'lLioII Of Champons Il Swim Experts Go Overboard For Michigan's Gus Sharemet Performance At Collegiate Brings Coaches' Praises For Wolverine Sprinter By DON WIRTCHAFTER NEW YORK, April 1-Michigan's Gus Sharemet was the center of at- traction here in the New York Ath- letic Club today. A slap-happy band of victorious Wolverine swimmers pulled into the metropolis yesterday to prepare for the National AAU championships that will be held here this weekend. And by today the news had slipped around the club that the Great Gus was present . . . the amazing sprinter who had done everything but change the water in the Payne Whitney pool last Friday and Saturday. All through their terrific struggle with the Eli, the Wolverine natators aptured three first places, and the phenomenal sophomore figured in every one of them. He anchored the victorious medley relay team on Fri- day night with a 52 flat, and came back on the following' eve to 'grab the century title for himself with a timing only two-tenths of a sec- ond off of Walt Spence's :51.6 inter- collegiate record. And in the grand finale, Gus completely stole the show by whipping Yale's Howie Johnson in the anchor lap of the deciding free style relay with a magnificent 51 seconds flat performance. "Greatest Of All Time" After the thrilling National Colle- giate meet, the experts on hand gen- erally agreed that Michigan's Share- met was one of the greatest swimmers of all time. "He's the nearest thing to Johnny Weissmuller we've ever had" was the comment of Ed Kennedy, Columh- bia's great coach. "He's got power, beauty, poise and racing ability un- der pressure." Mike Peppe, Ohio's mentor, declar- ed that Sharemet is "unquestionably the greatest in the United States to- day, and he hasn't even reached his peak yet." Even Fred Cady, the Olympic div- ing coach, agreed that the Michigan speedster is one of the finest swim- mers we have ever had. "For his age and the length of time he's been in the game, Gus is tops . . . and he will be for some time," he pointed out. Ought To Break 51 Seconds. According to Bob Kiphuth; Yale's shrewd coach, "Sharemet ought to break 51 seconds before he's through. He's a strong boy and a great racer." Michigan's own Matt Mann had nothing.but praise for his outstand- ing natator. "He rose to superlative heights," he said, "and carried the team to a great victory . . . one of Michigan's greatest victories." And what really puts the clincher on Sharemet's ability was the com- ment of America's famous distance star, Jack Medica, who didn't know how the Michigan natator compared with Weissmuller cause he has never seen Weissmuller swim. "But Gus is a good boy, and he's got possibilities," declared Medica, far out on the limb. Schwarzkopf Finishes Second To Chuck Fenske Capt. Ralph Schwarzkopf finished second to Charles Fenske in the mile and a half run held in Madison Square Garden as part of the New York Fin- nish Relief Fund Meet Sunday night, losing by a stride in 6:39.4, less than two seconds off the world record. Walter Mehl led the pack most of the way, but was passed by Fenske and Schwarzkopf with half a mile to go. Just before the start of the last lap, Schwarzkopf put on a kick which sent him out in front of Fenske, and he held the lead until the home' stretch was reached. Fenske then pulled out slowly to win- the race. Finishing third and fourth were Gene Venzke and Mehl. sV Crisler Moves Squad Outside For Practice After wearing out a swivel chair, a pair of shoes, and putting a groove in his office floor, nervously waiting for a break in the weather, Coach Fritz Crisler finally got outside yesterday where he could put that nervous en- ergy he has been storing up all winter to work. Along with the Crisler energy that began to labor were 80 gridders who started tossing off extra weight in. earnest their first day out. The first workout was a long one, which was devoted to fundamentals and running through formations. Despite the fact the opening prac- tice session was delayed two weeks by inclement weather, the football squad will only work up until Thurs- day evening when it will be dismissed until after the Spring Vacation. Upon its return the squad will pick up where it left off, with fundamen- tals, which Crisler will again stress as he has in the past two springs that he has been at Michigan. If the team has sufficiently made up for lost time by May 18, when the annual clinic for high school players is scheduled to be held, the training program will end on that date when the intra-squad spring classic is held.r Crisler hopes to get in about 35 workouts and during this period he must find the men who are to fill the holes left open at both tackles, center, one end post, and the left halfback berth in the event Paul Kro- iner does not reach the form he dis- played before he injured his knee last year. There are a number of letter win- ners and reserves back fighting for the vacated positions, .but none of them will have clinched a job until they haye proven to be better than some likely looking prospects from last fall's freshman squad. Varsity Nine Holds Opening Outdoor Drill Hurling Of Veigel, Gould And Sukup's S;,ugging Mark Intra-Squad Tilt Ray Fisher's varsity baseball squad, preparing to leave for the southland Wednesday, held an eight-inning in- tra-squad game yesterday in their first outdoor workout. Fine pitching performances by Les Veigel and southpaw Mase Gould, and the slugging of gridder Milo Sukup, who collected two singles and a triple, featured the first day's contest, which the "B" team won, 10-8. The "A" squad got off to an early 3-1 lead, behind Veigel's one-hit per- formance in the first three frames, as they reached Jack Barry for three runs on six hits and a walk in the third. They held the lead during the next two innings by collecting three runs on as many hits in the fourth and one run on two blows in the fifth off the offerings of Lyle Bond, while Tom Netherton was giving the "B's" five runs on six hits. The "B" squad, with Mase Gould on the mound, took over from there on, however. While Gould, showing, the "stuff" which has marked him as the most improved moundsman on the squad, was turning in two hitless innings and giving up a sin- gle counter in the last frame on three hits and a walk, they collected one run in the sixth, one in the seventh, and three in the last frame off Charley Ross to clinch the ver- dict. AUL OGkIRDY Former y of the Lirette Barber Shop - Now at Dewey Smith Shop, at 1110 S. University. IDon Nichols, who won the 175- pound intercollegiate crown at Champaign last weekend is shown here with the trophy he was award- ed for being the most outstanding wrestler in the meet among 127 of of the country's best college wrest- lers. The meet was won by last year's champion, Oklahoma A&M, with Indiana and Michigan finish- ing second and third. fourth, Brogan, Phys. Eds. Time :55.5. 880-yard run: Won by Allmendin- ger, Club Matinee: second, Tauber, Robert Owen; third, Thor, Robert Owen; fourth, Zielinski, Phys. Eds. Time, 2:13.5. One-mile Run: Won by Stevenson, Phys. Eds; second, Gilbert, Robert Owen; third, Fager, Wolverine; fourth, Reiber, Robert Owen. Time, 4:57.1. Broad Jump: Won by Murphy, Hill Billy; second, Buntain, Robert Ow- en; third, Chadwick, Hill Billy; fourth, Matson. Distance, 20 feet 5 inches. High Jump: Won by Pyszynski, Phys. Eds; tied for second, Gilligan, Forestry and Richards, Forestry; tied for fourth, Hucksburger, Wolver- ines and Buck, Wolverines. Height, 5 feet 9 inches. Keep awheua1 of yonr huir We specialize in Scalp Treatments Crew Haircuts Personality Haircuts aseoI Barbers (Formerly Esquire Barbers t r DO HS eAs E ARE LOOKING FOR MEN WHO HAVE NEVER WORN It is no problem to sell a man his second Dobbs hat-or his thirty-second. Once a Dobbs man, always i Dobbs man. The dis- tinguished quality of the hat and the dis- tinguished look it gives its wearer are unmistakable. 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