' Lsiv' l . iC IN THIS CORNER By Mel Fineberg HoosiersHand Michigan intet 57-3O gan Q - -tet 57-3 lace D ifary .. Diary of a between-the-semesters Pepys: Down to the Golden Gloves finals at the Armory on Wednesday night where the local lads throw gloves with reckless abandon and an amazing lack of direction. The fights made up in color what they lacked in finesse. The fighters were ready, willing if not able. But color of a different sore threw its pall on the meeting. We1 can't speak for other meetingsl but we understand they were just the same. It seemed that the only way a colored lad could win a de- cision would be to fight another colored man. Anything that was nearly doubtful went in one direc- tion. It was a sorry example of discrimination. There were a host of University1 students brushing up on their geom-, etry inside the squared circle. The best of these was Tom Flake who won the novice light heavyweight title by scoring three knockouts in three, fights, two of them in the first round, and the other in the second. John; Rieger, another freshman, took the lightweight title while Clarence Hall, a frosh gridder, was the heavyweight titlist. Leon Coquillette lost in the finals of the middleweight division; while Glenn Brooks, Frank Butters,; Tom Connolly and Harry Wickers alsol fought. Down to Bufalo, N.Y. with the+ swimming team to watch them I shelback Ben Grady's Pittsburgh team, a good outfit in its own league but highly outclassed by Michigan's National CollegiateI champions. The Wolverines, with- out Matt Mann who missed his first meet in 16 years because of illness, put on a good show for the assembled alumni. While iT-Bone Martin and Hal Benham were giving an exihibition off thel high board, the whole Michigan rew booed and sent Bill Holmes up, acclaiming him as "a reall diver." Holmes fell in three times,l once intentionally.l The swimmers find speed a habit. Recordings of Michigan songs were1 plIyed and the natators finished7 about three bars ahead of the music. On the way back we discovered that Gus Sharemet used to be a shot put-] ter. He gave it up (he says) because when he started to swim he found that his right arm was so much stronger that he'd swim around in concentric circles. No matter how much we drive through tCanada we're always amaazed at the way the kids skate along the highways, nursing a puck with a hockey stick. Thej stick grows there, like the exten- sion of the forearm. Back to Ann Arbor to discover that Walt Peckinpaugh is in Florida, training with the Cleveland Indians, that.Don Lash may come to the state A.A.U. track meet here next month, that Wilber Greer, Allan Tolmich are among those who will compete, that Bill Watson is back in school but is no longer eligible for a spring sport. Back to school. Byron Nelson Wins Texas Golf Tourney SAN ANTONIO, Texas, Feb. 12.- (P)-National Open champion Byron Nelson shot his first round of golf out of tlie 60's in two years of the Texas Open, but his flat 70 was good' enough to beat out Ben Hogan 'of White Plains, N.Y., by a stroke in the 1940 title play off at Brackenridge Park today. They just didn't have the touch . that had wound them up in a tie at the end of the regular 72-hole play; at 271,13 strokes under par Indiana Coach Uses Seond, Third Teams Pink Leads Teammates With Eight Points, Rae Is Held Down To Seven (Continued from Page 1) the 5,500 fans to their feet as he in- tercepted a Michigan pass and drib- bled the entire length of the floor to get another field, goal. With less than four minutes re-, maining, Ruehle connected for the Wolverines and Bob Menke tallied from the field for Indiana. Sofiak was good for another field goal and Pink added two points to the Wol- verine total from the foul line. Dorsey made the final goal for In- diana and Stephenson counted from the charity mark. Then Rae got his only two-pointer with seconds left to play. Indiana hit 25 of 78 tries from, the field and exactly half of its 14 foul chances. Michigan could connect with only 10 to 72 field goal attempts and 10 to 19 charity tosses. AotherLoss Triangular Track Meet To Be Held Ton igh Pitt Swamped By Wolverine Natators,54-21 A 16-year Wolverine tradition along with five Niagara Association swimming records went by the way- side last Saturday night as Michi- gan's high powered natators defeat- ed Pittsburgh, 54-21 in the Buffalo Athletic Club tank. The Panther spanking marked the first time in 16 years that a Michi- gan swimming team took part in a meet minus the presence of Matt Mann, for illness forced the Wol-' verine mentor to remain in Ann Ar- bor while his squad journeyed to Buffalo for the killing. Led by assistant coach Harvey Muller, the Wolverines won eight of the nine events and stampeded over five of the existing district records in their fourth straight dual meet vic- tory. Wolverines Crack Medley Mark From the first event in which Dick Reidl and the two Sharemnets, John and Gus, cracked the 300-yard med- ley relay mark with a 3:03.8 timing to the final free style relay, it was only a matter of how big a score the Michigan squad was going to roll up. Other new district records were Charley Barker's 24.6 for the 50- yard free style, John Sharemet's 2:38 for the 200-yardbreast stroke, John Gillis' :55.3 century free style time, and Reidl's 1:41 flat for the 150- yard back stroke event. Final Grades Change Lineup The Michigan squad returned to Ann Arbor Sunday to find that there would be three changes in the lineup that would face the undefeated Iowa mermen Saturday night as the Wol- verines make their first competitive appearance of the year in the home waters. Francis Heydt, the Western Con- ference back-stroke champion in 1938 who transfered from Iowa last year, became eligible to compete for the Matt Mann forces along with Strother "T-Bone" Martin, the soph- omore diver. Lost to the team, how- ever, through the ineligibility route was Dobson Burton, Matt's pocket battleship and capable sophomore free-styler. Thinclads Face Normal State At Field House Schwarzkopf, Frey, Quinn Will Race In Two-Mile; Duel Seen InHigh Jump (continued from Page 1) will round out a fine trio of jumpers. Warren Breidenbach, Michigan's Big Ten 440 champion, will take a healthy crack at the meet revord of 51.1 seconds. Breidenbach has been running better than ever this year, and hopes to add this record to a list which includes the all-time Michigan and Ferry Field marks outdoors. The mile run brings together a large group of the state's best dis- tance men including Michigan's Ed Barrett, Karl Wisner, and Jack Dob- son, State's Capt. Roy Fehr, and Nor- mal's Joe Brzezinski, though the lat- ter was hurt last week and may not compete. In his first year of run- ning, Barrett placed third in the Conference, and has been improving steadily. Wisner is rounding into shape again and is displaying the form that made the coaches expect so much of him when he was a fresh- man. Dobson, whose -showing in prac- tice would make him a favorite against any other competition might come out in front. After being over-shadowed for two years by Elmer Gedeon, Stan Kel- ley takes over as number-one hurd- ler of the region only to find his posi- tion threatened by teammate Jef Hall and Normal's sensational sopho- more, Whitey Hlad, who set a new record for the highs against Mar- quette last Saturday. Doherty will present to track so- ciety five of his sophomores, Bill Ackerman, who is being groomed to take over Schwarzkopf's place, will make his first start tonight against one of the toughest fields anyone could take on in collegiate circles; Charley Decker and John McMaster, of whom much is expected before the season is over, will be making their bows in the pole vault; Johnny Kautz will compete in half-mile; and Ray Gaulthier will display the form that made him the top hurdler of the yearlings last year. Students will be admitted on pre- sentation of identification cards. Michigan (30) 0 Sofiak, f ............2 Fitzgerald, f ......... .0 Ruehle, f...........2 Cartmill, f ...........1 Glasser, f...........0 Wood, f............0 Westerman, f ........0 Rae, c ...............1 Pink, g .... .........2 Brogan, g ..........2 Total ,...........10 Indiana (57) G Armst'ong, f ......... McCreary, f ..........1 Gridley, f ...........2 Francis, c ............4 Dorsey, f ............2 Frey, f ..............1 B. Menke, c ..........3 R. Menke,c ..........I Stevenson, e.........0 Dro,g...............0 Huffman, .g..........2 Schaefer, g.........4 A. Zinnmer, g .........3 Hasler, g........ ....0 W. Torphy, g........0 Total ...........25 F 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 5 4 0 10 F 2 0 0 3 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 7 Pf 2 2 2 0 0 2 0 0 3 0 11 Pf 0 1 1 0 1 0 1 4 0 2 0 1 3 1 1 16 Tp 4 0 5 2 0 0 0 7 8 4 30 Tp 6 2' 4' 9 5r 3' 6i 2' 1" 0 5; 8 6 0 0 57 Half - time score: Indiana 29, Michigan 13. Free throws missed: McCreary, Armstrong, Schaefer, Dorsey 2, Stev- enson, Sofiak, Pink, Fitzgerald, Rae, Wood, Grisson. Referee, Adams, DePauw. Umpire, Rieff, Northwestern. Hockey Team Loses Cal vert i Second Semester Textbook Economy at FOLLETT'S c r Every Book for Every Course - and Every Used Book at a Saving. That is what nfakes it worthwhile to buy all your textbooks from FOLLETT'S MICHIGAN BOOKSTORE By Graduaion Michigan's floundering hockey tem lost its ninth game of the sea- son Saturday night- at the Coliseum when a fast-skating team from Sar- nia, Ont., capitalized on its superior speed to chalk up a 4-2 victory. But the game was more than an ordinary loss to the Lowreymen, for it marked the final appearance of defenseman Larry Calvert whose fine play this season has sparked the Michigan attack, Calvert was lost through graduation, and his ab- sence fronn the back line will be sore- ly felt on the undermanned squad. Together with Charley Ross, his other partner on the defense, Cal- vert has given the Wolverines much- needed defensive strength as well as treating the fans to the unusual sight of a defenseman stealing the offensive show. BARGAINS in SAVE at FOILEIL' S ED , . >4 R i tl or NEW IF YOU PREFER STUDENT SUPPLIES LAST CALL -mm Just a few days longer .. 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