I' 1A "h4 1940TUE lTCHiTCNN. DrY atorsVie For AAU Crown; Nine Opens With Tar He 'Aryp rl k e Is Relay Teams Carry Varsity Titular Hopes Maize And Blue Favored To Dethrone Buckeyes; Jim Skinner To Swim (Continued :rom Page 1) Veteran Backstop faster. field here in New York ti weekend, but the experts say the fas ter the field, the faster the Gus. Pete Fick, the New York AC star, who h: won five staight indoor centuri and four outdoor titles, will be bac once again, but even that does keep Sharemet from being the dope sters' choice. Fick holds the world' record of 51 seconds flat. His tean mate, who will also compete, Walt Spence, holds the intercollegiate mar of :51.6. Walt Tomski, the ex Michigan performer, Paul Wolf, tb Southern Califqrnia star who place second in the Collegiates, Howi Johnson of Yale, along with sever other speedsters will fill out the al star field. Hough In Breast Stroke Probably the feature event on tU two-day card is the 220-yard breast stroke with Princeton's Dick Houg last year's "Outstanding Swimme defending his title against unquec tionably the fastest group that he ever competed in this stroke. 'For the old school of veterans in eluding, Hough and Johnny Higgir from Ohio will find a younger gene ation around that can really trav via the butterfly method. Headii the list of youths is Ann Arbor's ov Jim Skinner, the Michigan freshma ace, who won the outdoor title la summer in Detroit. Heading the list of backstrokei on hand for tomorrow's clash is t r amazing dorsal star from Chicag+ Adolph Kiefer, who will be favor to win in world record time or there alfout. Even Al Vande Weghe, th great collegian from Princeton, is n in Kiefer's class, but the Tiger ve elan will probably wind up in U. runner-up spot. Also in the runnin will be Francis Heydt of Michigan Haynie To Meet Clark The distance events will bring ba Tom Haynie, last year's Michiga captain who will swim along wit Tomski for the Detroit A.C. this tim "Tireless Tom" will have his greate competition from Wayne's Andy Cla in the 440 and Yale's Johnson in t 220.' 'The National AAU diving even both high and low board, will course find Patnik and Clark leadii the way both nights with Stroth Martin and Hal Benham carrying tt Michigan hopes. Russ Dobson Slated To Hurl Curtain Raiser Sophomores Chamberlain And Holman Or Nelson To Start For Michigan CHAPEL HILL, N.C., April 4.-_ Coach Ray Fisher and his Michigan baseball team arrived here today to launch their 1940 season against the University of North Carolina nine tomorrow afternoon at Varsity Field. Lanky Russ Dobson, bespectacled righthand curve-ball artist, has been selected to start on the mound for the Wolverines. Fisher plans on keeping Dobson in the box as long as the latter feels right, and relieving him with Lyle Bond or Mickey Stod- dard should Russ tire. Fisher Has Six Vets The Wolverines, with but three days outdoor practice behind them, will take the field with six veterans in the eight remaining positions. Evashevski will start behind the plate; Ruehle on first base; Steppon, sec- ond, Sofiak at shortstop and sopho- more Bud Chamberlain at third. The outfield will be comprised of Trosko in left field, Captain Pink in center, Don Holman in right field against right-hand pitching j.nd Davie Nelson against southpaws.,- The Tar Heels have already played four games on their season's sched- ule. The Southerners opened with an 8-7 victory over Maryland and dropped the next three games to Penn, Harvard and Cornell, the first two being one-run decisions. Benton Takes Mound Coach Bunn Hearn, who prepped 'such stars as Burgess Whitehead, Lew Riggs, Nate Andrews, Johnny Hum- phries and Johnny Peacock for their major league careers, will probably start Horace "Red" Benton, veteran right-hander, on the mound against the Wolverines. Benton was defeat- ed by Harvard, Monday, by the score New Mat Captain ' Forest FEvashevski, captain-elect of the Michigan football team, had to sit on the bench two years be fare he got his chance the mask and mitt re the varsity nine, butt he is number one man fo tion. I-M, Sports: Baseball Will After Spring Competition in five baseball leagues willc to put on gularly for this season !or the posi- Start Recess Intramural open Tues- he day, April 16.. Ninety-four teams ot will battle for the titles this year. with the 41-team fraternity division ng drawing the largest turnout. Special interest will be centered on the new Residence Hall loop, ck where nine squads will participate in an the first year of competition. th Theta Chi will be defending the 1s crown it won last season against the rk large fraternity field, while 20 Pro- he fessional Fraternity teams will be f ighting for the championship taken ts, last year by Phi Delta Phi. In the 16- of team Independent circuit, the Has ng Beens will be the defending titlehold- er ers, while eight teams will compete he for the Faculty League crown, now in the hands of the Bacteriology nine. of 6-5. The lineups: MICHIGAN Pink .......of Sofiak . ... ss Steppon .. 2 Evashevski . .c Trosko . if Ruehle....1 Chamberlain 3 Holman or Nelxon .. rf Dobson . .M.. p N. CAROLINA Topkins ...... ss Mathes .......If Stirnweiss .... .2 Mallory .......cf Reynolds .... 1 Jennings .... rf Rich .........3 Myersc........C Benton........p STETSON HATS STATE STREET at LIBERTY f( k* 1 ON YOUR CAMPUS' .you're bound to see the Stetson 'Campus' It rates an "A" with style- wise students. Its lines are clean-cut ..its colors, flattering. Flattering, too, is that felt binding...a new touch. STETSON HAT FIVE DOLLARS AND UP Linksmen Open At Tennessee The Tennessee Volunteers will play host to a touring band of Michigan golfers Saturday as the Wolverines start their annual "Swing in the South."' Despite their two-year Southern record of 10 matches won, one lost and one tied, the Wolverines will enter this match as the underdog, for not one man on Coach Court- right's veteran squad has completed a round of golf so far this season. Last year Capt. Bob Palmer and Tom Tussing led a 14-7 conquest of Tennessee while the small but mighty Jack Emery took medal honors in a 14-4 lacing the Wolverines dealt out to Georgia Tech, whom they meet again this year in their second match April 9. On April 10 the mashie wielders lock clubs with Georgia at Athens. They are entered in the Southern Intercollegiate Tournament starting the following day. In addition to the five seniors who will already be on hand, sophomores John Leidy, Dave Osler and Goodwin Clark and Ken Johnson, a senior, will augment the Maize and Blue forces. All freshman baseball candi- dates are requested to report to the Yost Field House with own equipment Monday, April 15 at at 3:00 p.m. Ernie McCoy, Freshman Coach Bill Combs, one of the most col- orful wrestlers on Cliff Keen's grappling squad was honored last night by his teammates as they selected him to succeed Butch Jor- dan as their new captain. Combs is undefeated in dual meet compe- tion this year. Mat men Elect Combs Captain For, Next Year The University of Michigan wrest- ling team, runner-up to Indiana in the Western Conference and to Okla- homa A. & M. and the Hoosiers in the National Intercollegiates, met in the Founders' Room of the Michigan Union last night and elected Bill Combs as its 1940 mat captain. The popular Oklahoman received a unan- imous vote for the captaincy at the annual letterman's banquet given by Coach Cliff Keen. Combs succeeds Forrest "Butch" Jordan in the honor position and from all appearances will lead an- other highly successful mat team during next year's campaigns. The Tulsa junior returned to the team after an absence during the first semester this year and began his por- tion of the season with a victory at 155 pounds in the Michigan State meet. An injured knee kept him from the championship in the recent Big Ten meet. As Michigan's other finalist, he fell before Ohio State's Tony Mon- tonaro, 9 to 5, but defeated Morton of Minnesota in the consolation mat- ches to take second and add three points to his team's total. Bill also took a second in the National Inter- collegiate tournament at Champaign last weekend and is rated as one of the two top wrestlers in the country at 145 pounds. He was nipped in his final match by Harold Masem, East- ern Intercollegiate Champion, from Lehigh. Bill was right up at the top in 1939 also. He breezed into a second place in the Conference meet with a vic- tory over Kemp of Iowa and was de- feated only by Henson, Oklahoma A. & M., twice national champ, at 155, in the nationals. Depending upon speed Combs has run up a brilliant string of dual competition victories during his wrestling career for the Wolverines. Mangrum Shatters Par; Leads Masters' Tourney AUGUST, Ga., April 4. -(4)- Lloyd Mangrum, 24-year-old assistant pro from Oak Park, Ill., broke the Augusta National golf club couise record by two strokes today as he shot an eight-under-par 64 that gave him the first-round lead in the sev- enth annual Masters Golf Tourna- ment. The Texas-born newcomer, one of the last two players to qualify for this all-star competition, played each nine in 32 strokes. Frosh Gridders Launch Battle For Varsity Positions Next Fall By CHRIS VIZAS 1 badly handicapped as far as attend- Cold raw winds don't hamper the I ing practice regularly goes because Wolverine gridders these days, but it of afternoon classes and late labora- simply invigorates them. Take yes- tores. terday for example, the boys got so fired up that the grounds keeper will But those who were present, like have to re-sod part of South Ferry the veteran quarterback Jack Meyer, Field. who is making a comeback, tackle Especially damaging, but pleasing I Flop Flora, Bill Melzow, center Bob to Coach Fritz Crisler, was the work Ingalls and Ed Frutig displayed a done by several freshmen. Banging away as if every play counted were scrappy spirit and a determination linemen Pete Gritis, a tackle, and to work hrd. Glenn Ireland, guard. Both boys hit Vets Report hard and sharp and appear to be Meyer turned in some good block- theats to some of the varsity men. ing in the backfield as Flora and Day Shows Speed Ingalls continued to turn in some Also included in the yearling group fine work on the front line as they of standouts was half-back Frank kept up with a bunch of rough riding Daiy who demonstrated plenty of freshmen, who considered the biting speed and a knack for finding the wind as a tonic. holes that were opened up for him. At the close of the session yester- While Crisler was satisfied with day Crisler announced that he would the work of these men and of the pick the team for next fall at the group as a whole, he was disap- end of spring practice, which means pointed at the small turnout for the that the impression the spring grid- last practice before vacation. Too, ders make will go a long way in the fact that a majority of the players determining the selections. As one were first year men caused a couple f-eshman remarked at the close of of wrinkles to blend in with the practice, "Opportunity only knocks Crisler smile. once, do you hear it boys?" Which However, some of the veterans are all adds up to the fact that a high- ly rated group of rookies is going to give the regulars a battle for their In Tile posts. Grapefruit TH EE- AY-PE Leagme THREE-DAY SPEC SATURDAY -MONDAY - TL AUGUSTA, Ga., April 4.-(A')-A pitching duel between Carl Hubbell and Bob Feller that would have elated FlM thousands in a major league city I FA was offered for the edification of COMPLETE RUN OF Sid 500 fans today as the Cleveland In- dians stopped the New York Giants ENTIRE SPRING STO( 1 to 0. $5.00 FREEMAN SHO Feller, working easily, scattered six WHITES, SPORTS, PLA hits in seven innings while Hubbell was touched for seven in six frames. Cleveland (A) .. 100 000 000-1 9 1Wr New York (N) .. 000 000 000-0 6 0 Feller, Al Smith and Hemsley; Hub- 122 E. Liberty St..,. Phone 8( bell, Brown and Danning. 4' * * LUBBOCK, Tex., April 4.-(P)- After Chicago's White Sox had tak- en advantage of big Johnny Gee's wildness to go ahead 8 to 1, the Pitts- burgh Pirates came back with some M A NA T robust hitting against Jack Knott to -- - nose out the American Leaguers, 10 THE DOWNTOWN STO. to 9 today in an exhibition game. Pittsburgh (N) 001 050 22x-10 14 6 Chicago (A) 020 060 010- 9 8 6 Gee, Lanning, Lanahan and Davis; Lyons, Knott and Turner, Sylvestri.S e DAYTONA BEACH, Fla., April 4. 300 SOUTH h -(AP)-The Philadelphia Nationals started a two week exhibition tour in reverse today, taking a 7 to 1 drubbing from Minneapolis of the American Association. FT. WORTH, Tex.,hApril 4. -(P)- George Caster pitched shutout bal for six innings today as the Philadel- phia Athletics turned back Fort Worth, 1939 Texas League champions 5 to 3, in an exhibition game. Caster, gave up five hits. * * * New York (A) 020 201 010- 6 9 2 Tulsa (Te) .. 010 701 01x-10 14 1 Reis, Hildebrand and Rosar; Bark- elew, Milstead and Sueme, Steiner. * * * Boston (A) .. 102 500 401-13 15 1 Cincinnati (N) 000 100 200-3 3 Dickman, Hash and Peacock; Der- ringer, Beggs, Turner, Barrett and Lombardi, Baker. __ __ __ __ __ __ _ __ __ __ __ __, Get the Boys Together Get the gang together tonight for a celebration at that favor- ite eating place of so many stu- dents. Form a dinner party, make reservations in advance. This STETSON will ( Change Yur Future! It's an Air-Light felt that will sit lightly on your head ... bring admiring glances your way ... give' you the well-groomed .tat^ rr tp 1 d~ . WINES Bottled and Draught BEER I I I