- -~-., -. ~.. .5.u *v ~ .Y D 5 .J s. AS. c-.f A11. 1. la .ll. X V5 r IN J/.F.b. i. 2 i. 54'3L.c. .r5rtirF {li Track Team Swamps State, Hurons In Triangular Meet McCarthy Is ndlividual Star As Varsity Scores757/10 Points State A4 USwim Meet To Be HeldHereToday (Continued from Page 1) had never been run before, Hlad's marks went on the books as new meet records. The Hurons' only other first came in the mile run when Tommy Quinn and Ed Brzezinski breezed to Michigan Runaway Shot Put: Won by Hook (M); sec- dnd, Kosley (MN);third, Rosenweig (MN) ; fourth, Lawton (M). Dis- tance, 45 ft. 11%/ inches. High Jump: Won by Canham (M); second, McCarthy (M); tied for third, Lucarelii (MN) and Moore (S). Height, 6 feet 3 inches. 75 Yard Dash: Won by Thomas (M); second, Piel (M); third, Ufer (M); fourth, McCarthy (S). Tire 7.8 seconds. One Mile Run: Won by Quinn (MN); second, Brzezinski (MN); third, Purdue (M); fourth, Acker- man (M). Time, 4:20.2. 75 Yard High Hurdles: Won by Hlad (MN); second, McCarthy (M); third, Sommerfield (MN); fourth, Hall (M). Time, 9.3 seconds. 440 Yard Dash: Won by Barnard (M); second, Clark (MN); third, W. Dobson (M); fourth, Kaulitz (S). Time, 51.8 seconds. Two Mile Run: rWon by Wisner (M); second, Zemper (MN); third, Monroe (S); fourth, Lee (MN). Time, 9:43.3. Broad Jump: Won by McCarthy (M); second, Keesler (S); third, Breitag (MN); fourth, Keller (M)' Distance, 23 feet %/$ inches. Pole Vault: Won by Decker (M), second, Wonch (S); tied for third, Wedenoja (M), Segula (M), Webb (MN) and R. Harris (S). Height, 13 feet 5% inches. (New Fieldhouse record. Former record 13 feet 4%/ inches set by Earl Stolberg, Mar- quette, 1940.) 880 Yard Run: Won by Kautz (M) ; second, Quinn (MN); third, J. Dob- son (M); fourth, Brzezinski (MN). Timie, 1:59.3. 75 Yard Low Hurdles: Won by Hlad (MN) second, Thomas (M); third, Hall (M); fourth, McCarthy (M). Time, 8.6 seconds. One Mile Relay: Won by Michigan (Matthews, J. Dobson, Thomas, Ufbr); second, Michigan State; third, Michigan Normal. Time, 3:27.2. 17 ears On Top: Wolverine Mermen Expected To Take Big Share Of Titles (Continued from Page 1) Renaissance Rates As Pro ' F inest "> By GENE GRIBBROEK At least two of Jake Townsend's All-Stars-Jim Rae and Eddie Thom- as-will have a good idea of what' they're facing Friday night when they take the Field House court against the deadly New York Renais- sance club in the WAA Swimming Pool Fund benefit game. The reputation the fast colored five has established is warning enough. They've been playing the pro circuit now for some 17 years, and for most of that time the Rens have ranked on top, aaginst any team, at any time, on any court. Rae Has Experience Rae, tall, sharp-shooting Michigan center and captain last year, found out just how true this reputation is during the holiday season this past winter when he faced the Rens in Toledo while playing with Chuck Advance purchase of tickets for the benefit basketball game be- tween the Townsend All Stars and, the New York Renaissance Friday night at Yost Field house can be made at the Michigan Union, the Michigan League, Slater's and Wahr's Book Stores, and at the Michigan Daily. Admission is 50 cents, and there will be no re- served seats. Tickets will also be sold at the door at game time. Chuckovits' All-Stars. Thomas can turn to memories of the winter night in 1938 when he had the task of guarding Wilmeth Sidat-Singh, key man in the Rens attack, when the Wolverines nosed out Syracuse, 39-37. Rae had a ready answer when the writer asked him where he ranked the New Yorkers. "The Rens are the best a professional team move around so much," he added. "In better shape than most pro clubs, they always put on a great show." The lanky ex- Wolverine center gave a warning that Sidat-Singh would cause the local five some trouble. "He's fast, tricky, and a good passer," Rae said, "and takes most of his shots on pops from the foul line. He sinks at least half of them, too," he groaned. Sidat-Singh gained a national repu-1 tation at Syracuse as All-American basketball and grid star before joining1 the Rens. He had just one shot at Michigan during his collegiate ca- reer when the Wolverines made their annual Eastern trip in 1938. It was on} that trip that Thomas, one of the best defensive guards to perform here in recent years, held the colored flash to 10 points in the My-higan victory. Thomas added his warnings about Sidat-Singh, picking the All- American's shot-making skill for spe- cial praise. Scribes Rate Them Tops The calibre of the rest of the Rens3 squad, called by New York writers "the best in basketball today," is a further tribute to Sidat-Singh's great- ness. From Eyre "Bruiser" Saitch, captain and veteran of the club, downl to Bill "Pop" Gates, who moved into3 the lineup from a New York high school team, the Rens have assembled, the top colored stars in the world. "Wee Willie" ,Smith, a six foot, six inch, 225-pound giant, will face Rae at center, and Clarence "Puggy" Bell, an amazing shotmaker, and Zack Clayton, showman of the team, add color and skill to the Renaissance attack. Reutter Diving Champ Immediately after competing in the Fraternity relay trials at Yost Field House last night, Bob Ruetter of Sigma Chi traveled over to the Sports Building to capture the diving crown. Out of a possible 80 points, Reutter garnered 56. Second place went to Cliff Straehley of Chi Phi with 52 points, while Frank Savage of Phi Kappa Psi and Dale Parshall of Chi Psi tied for the third with 50 points. ./g shape all the time, should take theE first heat from such aces as Waltj Tomski, former varsity star, Jim Welsh, Matt's distance man, Bruce Allen, freshman Louis Kivi and Will Garvey. With Prew's withdrawal the second heat narrows down to Dobson Burton fighting it out with his teammates a flood of unexpected entries come they will be hard to beat. Reserve seats will be available with about 1000 general admissions on sale. This is the last tuneup for the Michigan champions before the Big Ten meet at Iowa next week. Reutter Paces Sigma Chi To Relay Lead Bill Holmes, Bob West, Clair Morse Anchored by Bob Reutter, who was and Tom Williams. Sharemet will also clocked for his 220 in 23 seconds be entered in the long 440 yard grind, flat, Sigma Chi, timed in 1:38.2, led The diving should be some of the a field of 16 fraternities in the quali- best all year with T-Bone Martin fying round of the 880 yard relay at back in action performing unattached Yost Field House last. night. Chi against Gardner, freshman Lou Psi, Phi Gamma Delta, and Delta Haughey, Bill Beamer, and Matt's Tau Delta were the other fraternities number one man, Jack Wolin off who earned the right to run' in the the high board, finals during the Michigan-Ohio MattJr., To Swim iState meet Saturday. I al JrTc rae aIn the Residence Hall relay trials, In a special handicap race at 220 Michigan House, Williams House, yards, Matt is entering his 13-year Lloyd House, and Greene House led old son, Matt, Jr., against some the field to qualify for the finals, also classy freshmen and sophomores. to be run during the track meet Sat- Matt, Jr., will take a good lead and urday night. Michigan House was try to hold it against Chuck Fries, clocked in 1:40.1, the best among high school ace, Dan Felski, Dave the dorms. Trytten and Chuck Ferguson. The Independent finals will be run As for the rest of the meet, you can off some afternoon this week with pick your winner and dollars to do- Wolverines, Robert Owen, Forestry, nuts it will be a University of Michi- and Stalker competing. These four gan man. Matt has tankmen piled teams had the best qualifying times fni ru~ nnn aaarr t"noi BOB BARNARD . won though spiked the tape ahead of Michigan's John Purdue. The Wolverines won the other nine events, while the Spartan hosts failed to cop a single event. Wisner Runs Well } Switching from the mile, which he ran against Pittsburgh last week, senior Karl Wisner turned in a good performance in the two mile against Hurons Duane Zemper and Ed Lee. Wisner trailed the smooth-striding Zemper for 15%V_ laps, then took over the lead and spurted to the tape in 9:43.3. Defending his meet high jump crown, Captain Don Canham cleared 6feet, 3 inches with ease, followed in second place by McCarthy. Johnny Kautz turned in a good performance to edge Normals' Quinn by several yards, while in the quarter mile little Bobby Barnard raced home in 51.8 despite being spiked on the first lap. Matmen Leave To Face Lions At Penn State By STAN CLAMAGE The Michigan wrestling team en- ters the home stretch tomorrow night when they meet a strong Penn State squad at State College, Pennsylvania, for the first of the last two dual meets on the schedule. The Penn Nittany Lions are carry- ing a record of five victories and one loss for the current season. Be- sides taking one-sided wins over Maryland, Syracuse and Cornell, the Eastern squad has also beaten the highly touted teams from Lehigh and Navy. The only loss was incurred at the hands of Princeton. Leading the Penn team will be Captain Frank Gleason and senior Joe Scalzo. Gleason has been un- defeated in dual meets in the last two years. Thus far, he has a record of five wins and no losses for this season. In 1939 he was the Easterna champion, and was runner-up last year in the 136-pound dlass in the same tournament.1 Scalzo was runner-up for the Na- tional Collegiate championship, and for the Eastern title in 1939 in the 155-pound division. Michigan's for- mer captain, Harold Nichols, won the national title in 1939. Scalzo's record for 1941 is five wins and one loss. Penn has first year men in thel 121-pound class, 145-pound class, 175-pound class, and in the unlim- ited division. As the paper went to press lastt night, Coach Cliff Keen had onlye decided on nine of the possible ten nen who would leave early this morn-1 ing. Tom Weidig, Ray Deane, Herbs Barnett, John Paup, Art Paddy, Hap Langstaff, Bill Courtright, Emil Lock-1 wood and Jim Galles. 128-pounder Fred Klemach's leaving with thes squad was uncertain.r After the meet at State College,t the Wolverines will embark for Ann- apolis where they will engage Navy in the last dual meet of the year. I, i, , , 1, ___________ ____________ don wirtehafter's jI DAILY DOUBLE I I2 t'- Swim Or Study ... A CHUNKY married man strolled into the I-M pool yesterday after- noon, peeled off his clothes and swam a 100-yard freestyle in 57 seconds. Nobody cheered or yelled a word of encouragement when he lifted himself out of the water, grabbed a towel, and trudged wearily over to a nearby bench. How could they cheer? This same guy used to swim the distance three or four seconds faster. He even gained All-America mention for the event two years ago when he was a sopho- more here. He showed great promise at the time, finished third in the Confer- ence century and fifth in the Na- tional Collegiates. The experts ex- pected big things from the kid dur- ing his last two years with the Wol- verines. BUT THOSE big things never came, and never will, for husky Bill Holmes . . . student, swimmer and husband . . . threw in the towel after yesterday's 57 second time trial. "It just can't be done," he conclud- ed. "Right now I'm working as hard as I can to get into the psychology clinic next year. After that, I will be aiming for a doctor's degree. You know how important grades are for something like that. There just isn't time enough in a day to remain in the top of condition that swimming -demands and still become a doctor." That was no bluff either. De- voting most of his time to the books last semester, Holmes finished with' eight hours of A and nine hours of B. It was far better than he had ever done before. To the Double, the Holmes case' brings back to mind a similar deci- sion of a decade ago. The great' George Kojac was burning up the backstroke races at that time. Like the Kiefer of today, he broke the existing records as he pleased. But in the middle of his brilliant career, Kojac quit swimming to become a successful physician. :, WE CAN'T HELP feeling that it was a far more wholesome deci- sion than the one Frankie Parker made when he quit Princeton to take up tennis for a living. Said Coach Matt . Mann last night, "I'm tickled to death that Bill is striving for something like that. I know that if we ever need him, he's the kind of a guy that will come back to help us out." Don Nichols, national 175-pound mat champion last year, left for Cali- fornia Saturday to take up transport flying . . . Brother Harold, wrestling captain two years back, has a coach- ing job at a small Illinois high school . . . More troubles for Fritz Crisler Tackle Jack Butler, who also was Michigan's chief heavyweight wrestler, and fullback Bob Krejsa have quit school to learn flying at the marine training school down south . . . This Krejsa is quite a change- able lad . . . He went to North Car- olina and Western Reserve University before coming here for a year and a half. I Cagers End Season At Ohio State; Mike Sofiak Ranks Fifth Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's re- awakened hoopmen climbed another notch in the Conference standings and were left with a mathematical chance of landing in the first division of the Big Ten race as a result of their two weekend victories over Illi- nois and Northwestern. The Wolverines, who close their season against Ohio State at Colum- bus Saturday night, are resting in seventh place at.present, but are only one game behind the Buckeyes and Illini, tied for fourth place in the race. Wisconsin's 38-30 victory over In- diana, Monday night, assured the Badgers of at least a tie for the Con- ference crown. The leaders: WILMETH SIDAT-SINGH pro team in the business," he de- clared. "Big, fast, and clever ball- handlers, they really know what to do with that ball. It's unusual to see Hockey Team ./ Faces Strong Gopher Squad By ART HILL The perennially powerful Minne- sota hockey team will invade the Coliseum tomorrow night with the avowed intention of giving Eddie Lowrey's Wolverine outfit a few les- sons in the gentle art of pushing a puck around.- The Gophers boast a season record of nine victories, three defeats and two ties. They came out on top four times over Michigan Tech without dropping a single game to the Husk- ies. In these four games, the lads from Minneapolis scored a total of 24goalsto 4 for the Upper Peninsula Club. Two Down So Far Larry Armstrong's crew has beat- en Michigan twice, by scores of 4-0 and 7-2, and the odds favor them to leave Ann Arbor Sunday morning with two more victories over the locals safely tucked away. The other three Minnesota victories were gained over Illinois, Yale, and the London A.C. Their three defeats came at the hands of Yale and Il- linois, the Illini downing them twice. The Gophers also tied Illinois once and their other stalemate came in the second game of the season when the London A.C. held them to a 3-3 deadlock. Hopelessly outclassed on paper, the Wolverines are determined to put up a good battle against the Gophers. A victory over this club would be even sweeter than one over Illinois, even though the Illini are considered one of the best, if not the best, college hockey teams in the country. Michi- gan beat Illinois three times last season but it has been three years since the Maize and Blue Pucksters last salted away a victoryl over Min- nesota. Paulsen Paces Attack Pacing the Minnesota attack are two of the fastest wingmen in the United States in the persons of Har- old (Babe) Paulsen, the blond Vir- ginia (Minn.) scoring king and Fred- die Junger, diminutive speed mer- chant from Minneapolis. They team up on a starting first line with soph- more center Bob Arnold who tallied seven points on three goals and four assists in the two games Michigan played with the Gophers earlier in the season. F lour seep in each race ana unless iast~ night. - Math -n you THOMPSON" S Opp. Mich. Theatre Ph. 4313 Barber and Beauty Shop mum ke -it. a ha4bit to Coop ,our td VISIT US REGULARLY Thompson's employees are BARBERS . ot SALESMEN. We sell you what ask for. MONOMMONOMEM ... . F .. . J , , { , ', ., ,_ i .1 I'. Have Fun in '41 at Frosh Frolic Englund, Wisconsin . . Stampf, Chicago Fisher, Ohio State .. . Sprowl, Purdue ...... SOFIAK, Michigan . . Blanken, Purdue .... FG 49 36 58 48 37 40 FT 51 68 16 22 39 32 TP 149 140 132 118 113 112 )"04n-ny cam.catI" :b avii &~ Orcheitra BILLIARDS...! ! the indoor sport of millions I FRIDAY, MARCH 14 lrrFFFr --- Ticket Sales Begin Today at the Union II HELP OUR DEFENSE 'ii' I