E'!TtD Y, tTP. 24, 1I4O THEi MICHIGAN DAILY. PA SextetacesGophers, Tracknien Meet OSU Here onight Week Of Wins Just A Tuneup For Natators Michigan's crack swimmers aren't supposed to be in condition these days, but you'd never be able to tell that fact after looking over the Wol- verine record for last week. Matt Mann's crew won three meets with power to burn. Iowa went down first 63-21, and Michigan State and Minnesota followed with 70-14 and 61-23 scored respectively. "My boys haven't started to show their real stuff yet," the Michigan coach said, "I had them in shape for their two big opening meets with Ohio and Yale, and after that we eased up. Now we're going to begin getting ready for the Big Ten and National Collegiate meets, and then the boys will really get down where they belong." The Wolverines found little to write home about in the land of the Gophers. As in their two previous meets last week, they won every event on the program and could have taken as many seconds as they desired. There was only one real race in the whole meet, the 200-yard breastroke which Johnny Sharemet won, but not without trouble. The big sopho- more went out in 1:08 and found him- self trailing Judd Ringer, the Gopher entry. It wasn't until the seventh lap that Sharemet succeeded in pass- ing his rival, and he went on to win in 2:29.3. Charley Barker turned in the best time of the evening as he churned the 50 in 23.2, only three-tenths of a second off the national intercollegiate mark. le - ^ - - J1 Invading Team Boasts String Of 14 Victories Minnesota Squad Ranked As Strongest Collegiate Aggregation In Country (Continued from Page 1) Paul Goldsmith and wings Jim Lov- ett and Gil Samuelson on his first line. The relief duties will be left to Fred Heddle, Bob Collins, Bill Canfield, and John Corson. Coach Larry Armstrong will start Co-captain Frank St. Vincent at center, and Harold Paulsen and Hay- don Pickering at the wings on the first Minnesota line. This trio has scored a total of 55 goals this sea- son, and is credited with 37 assists. Mariucci, Cramp On Defense At the back line, Co-captain John- ny Mariucci and Ken Cramp will share the defensive duties. Mariucci is by no means a stranger to Mich- igan fans, and during the past two years he has become their favorite badman. Considered one of the most colorful players in collegiate hockey today, big John combines his hard checking with a flare for goal-get- ting that has netted him 20 goals and seven assists this season. Marty Falk will be in the nets for Minnesota. Falk has never had more than two goals scored against him in any game, but the strong team in front of him has limited his saves to 4.6 a period. Gophers Have Plenty Of Subs Minnesota has plenty of reserve strength with another complete team, including a goalie and three alternates for this combination. Sec- ond line duties will fall to Dave Lampton, Fred Junger, and Al Eg- gleton. Bob Rhineberger will alter- nate on this line. Bert McKenzie and Ian Anderson are the second-string defensemen. Smokey Keranen, and 235-pound Tiny Magnussen form the third Min- nesota defense line. The lineup follows: Matnen, Navy Clash In Field House; Quintet Plays Illini At Champaign (Continued from Page 1) finale of one of the most successful brother acts in Wolverine annals. With brother Harold, last year's cap- tain, still a vivid memory in the minds of Michigan wrestling follow- ers, Don will be staging a comeback from the first dual meet defeat in his career last week at Penn State. The 175-pounder has recovered from a back injiury suffered early in the semester, and is back in condition for his match with Navy's George Weems. A change in the lineup that licked Penn State last week was announced by Coach Keen yesterday when he placed Carl Mosser in Jack Ser- geant's spot at 136 pounds. Mosser, a reserve last year, was ineligible during the first semester. The new- comer will face the Middies' Clay Mitchell. Bill Combs, minus enough pound- age to make the 145- pound limit, will be after his third win since re- joining the squad over Navy's Don Blue. Jim Galles, chalking up a sensational first-year record as var- sity 165-pounder, will seek his sixth straight win over Midshipman Dick King. Tom Weidig and Dick French will again handle the lower weight assignments for the Wolverines, with Weidig meeting John Landreth and French, still after his first vic- tory, facing Roger Smith. Students will be admitted upon presentation of identification cards. Admission to the general public will be 40 cents. (Continued from Page 1) on each team the starting line-ups will be the same as when the two squads met the first time. In the Michigan line-up George Ruehle, the hard working junior who won a start- ing berth last Monday in the Purdue tilt, will again be a forward post in place of Bob Fitzgerald, the sopho- more giant who has been in a slump lately. Hank Sachs, a junior guard, will be on the back line in place of Bob Richmond, who became ineligible at the close of the last semester. Sachs is a peppery six footer who has aver- aged five points per game in the four contests he has started. With Sachs at a defense post, the only man not towering over six feet in the starting five will be guard Coling Handlon, who at 5 ft. 8 in. is the smallest man on the squad. Not only will Illinois hold a decided height advantage, but it wall have the edge in condition as well. Scrappy Mike Sofiak will go on the floor sport- ing an ultra-modern colored black- eye decorated with four stitches as the result of the injury he received in the Purdue battle, and Charlie Pink is still favoring an injured ankle. The starting lineup is as follows: Vaisity Rates Wide Margin In Buck Clash Feature Event Threatens Meet And Field House 440-Yard Dash Marks (Continued from Page 1) want even if he is fresh for the half- mile. Don Canarm may provide the top' spot of the e ivnin;, again, as he has for the past two meets in each of which he has established a new high jump record. The meet mark was also the Field House record set by Dave Albritton in 1937, and since Don has bettered that height twice in the past two weeks, the possibil- ities for even better leaps are highly favorable. The pole vault, before last week, promised to provide the best com- petition in that event that the Field House has ever seen, presenting two sophomore stars, Mike Linta of Ohio and Charles Decker of Michigan. With Decker's unfortunate ankle in- jury after clearing 13 feet six inches at Illinois preventing his competing for at least another week, Linta should have things his own way, for he too has reached that height this season, though finishing at 13 leer(ti(a Ill11ini-,.Tht',e meet mark Is ranly= :inc hijil g [Iei'tanithat, so Linta has a good chance to set his name down in the books tonight. HOCKEY Ferary 24 and 26 MINNESOTA Cs. MICHIGAN REGULAR SKATING 2:30-5:00 8:00-10:00 Sundays 3:00-5:00 only MICHIGAN ICE SKATING RINK Corner Hill and Fifth BILL HAPAC ... he's high scorer At ounee Change In Coaching Staff The formal resignation of end coach Campbell Dickson and the addition of Ernest McCoy to the coaching staff was announced yesterday by athletic director Fielding H. Yost. The announcements came as no surprise, since it had been expected since last Monday that Dickson, end coach and chief scout under Herbert 0. Crisler here for two years, would accept a position as dean of students at Hamilton College in Clinton, N.Y. McCoy, a five letter man here in 1927-29 when he starred in basket- ball and baseball, is now coaching at a Montclair, New Jersey high school. Combii of L, LONG and r ::ti ies ationt fXUUY, WEAR VTALUE } 0 MICHIGAN Sofiak Ruehle Rae Pink Brogan Pos. F F C G G ILLINOIS Hapac Evers Wukovits Handlon Sachs e A REAL TREAT Paul To Dean Retire Decides From Game cunt Jay evening Winter Haven, Fla., Feb. 23.-({A)- Paul Dean, junior partner in the once famous pitching partnership with brother Diz, intends to retire from baseball without reporting to the New York Giants this season, Man- ager Bill Terry disclosed tonight. ptperSevc t*n 1 te Main Dining Room February 25 Specials M E N U Golden Waffles with Honey, Grilled Sausage or Bacon, Ice Cream, Wafers, Beverage 50c Byzantine Sandwich, (Scrambled Eggs, Diced Ham and Chicken on Toast, an Gratin) Fresh Pineapple Sundae Beverage 50c MICHIGAN POS James G Stodden D Ross D Goldsmith C Lovett W Samuelson W Michigan alternates:I son, Collins, Heddle. MINNESOTA Falk Mariucci Cramp St. Vincent Paulsen Pickering Canfield, Cor- IN THIS CORNER 11 Chop Suey Figs or with Rice, Preserved Chocolate Parfait Beverage 60c Fruit Cocktail, Grilled Cube Steak Platter, French Fried Potatoes, Lettuce and Tomato Salad, Apple Pie or Red Rasp- berry Sundae, Beverage 75c GOOD FOOD Excellent Service 6 to 7:30 o'clock MICHlIGlAN UNION Minnesota alternates: McKenzie, Anerson, Lampton, Junger, Eggle- ton, Keranen, Magnussen, Rhine- berger, Joseph. Game Time: 8:00 p.m. Exam Results Leave athletes In Good Shape With only a few scattered excep- tions, Michigan's varsity athletes took the elgibility .hurdles in stride the athletic department announced yes- terday, four of the athletes hanging- up all-A records. More than 99 per cent were completely in the clear. However several border-line cases in some instances depending on in- completes, remain to be decided when the eligibility committee of the Board meets again. Two unnamed football players were each reported to have failed a sub- ject, but the announcement pointed out that they still had a semester and a summer session to make up the de- ficiency and regain their eligibility. The four top-ranking students were: Allen Axelrod, freshman track- man; Frank Feeley, senior high- jumper; Don Holman, sophomore bas- ketball and baseball player; and Hol- brooke Seltzer, transfer football play- er. Among those placed in the "excel- lent" class were Tom Harmon, Forest Evashevski, Don Canham, Spike James, Charlie Pink and Harland Danner. i By MEL fINEBEIRW In Memoriam . . Wolverinese In dual meet If the entire congregation will they sweptt please rise, and remove its collective victory in t hat we'll now say a brief requiem for Ohio State c the Ohio State-Michigan swimming; scheduled f meet that might have been. It was to have been swum todayy,in Minnesota's Ann Arbor, as the second of this year's time on skate: dual meets between the two schools. Coliseum tonig After the first clash in Columbus, to hockey far when the Buckeyes absorbed a 47-37 probably is ba beating, mentor Mike Peppe declared team. But tht that there was no opening on the more used to b Buck schedule for the second meet. are to the goo It was called off. And while we're propounding "in Of 19 men memoriams" we'll take a quick look from Minnes at how the other Big Ten schools view Bert McKen it. This is an excerpt from The In- defenseman diana Daily Student, February 14. It from Regina reads : men, Marty. a Frank St. "Michigan, Ohio State, Iowa, Lampton we Northwestern and Minnesota will didates for round out the first division of the didates fo Big Ten conference in swimming pic team th this year, Coach Bob Royer said because of t Tuesday. John Gillis "Long the rulers of the strong mer here, play Big Ten, the Michigan team was hockey in Hi dethroned two years ago by Ohio captain and c State who in turn has held the left wing Ha crown for two years. (Ed. note: members of th this is falacious. Ohio State was up hockey bac champion for only one year.) on unfrozenN Favored by a good sophomore players that crop and seasoned holdover ma- bunch of bum, terial, Royer cannot see how the up here, he ad can be beaten. In a wyith the Buckeyes, to-uch a convincing he Bucks' pool that alled off a later meet or Ann Arbor." Golden Gophers, this s, can be found at the ght. This is good news ns and unfortunately, ad news to the hockey en, the hockey team is bad news than the fans 4. on this squad, 18 are sota and the outsider, nzie by name and a by occupation, is tSaskatchewan, Four Falk, John. Mariucci, Vincent and Dave re nominated as can- the American Olym- at was never formed he war. the sprinting swim- ed high school and city bbing, Minn. with co- center St. Vincent and ayden Pickering, both ae first line. Gillie gave ck home to concentrate water because "all the he knew were just a s." That isn't the case ds. 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