THlE M~H J ~~ Ii; J~,VS jA2~ ThtIT Upsets Mark AAU Mat Tourijamem split tihe N1ational AAU w)~et ling championships wide open tonight, with the only 1942 titleholder on hand bowing but along with two of the most highly regarded lighter grap- plers before the semi-finals were half over. Led by Bill Maxwell, the three Spar- tans who survived the quarter-finals swept right into the finals. The others were D0n Rippberger, 115-pounder, and Merle Jennings, lightweight. Exhibition Baseball I Dptrait (A) 000 010 300-4 pittsburgh (i) 106 OG000--i Broolyn (N) 010 200 000-3 New York (A) 000 000 000-0 Michigan, Iowa Nines Split- Varsity Drops Opei4er ,4:3,iComesBack. in Switidl,7-a I Phil'phia (N) Phil'phia (A) 000 000 020-2 000 030 20x-5 St. Louis (N) 000 020 000-2 St. Louis (A) 020 010 00x-3 Cincinnati (N) 000 004 000-4 Cleveland (A) 000 210 000-3 Boston (A) . .010 210 000-4 New York (N) 000 000 000-0 5 6 7 5 9 7 6 5 4 0 1 0 0 2 1 1 2 A Good Start for Mickey dirthdays Weddings Bracelets, pins, necklaces- the most suitable and ideal gifts for the occasion. We have them in all styles de- sired - come in and see for yourself, # .0 I. B EIBE Rfewe'r., Since 1904 . . . . Now at 308 South State Inexperience Responsible for Loss; Lund, Stenberg Share Michigan Batting Honors Special To The Daily IOWA CITY, Apri' 10.-In its first games of the season the Wolverine nine split a doubleheader with Iowa, co-defender with Michigan of the Big Ten crown. The Hawkeyes won the first game, 4-3, and the Maize and Blue came back to take the second, 7-3. Inexperience cost Michigan the first game. Ace pitcher 'Pro' Boim struck out ten of the Iowans in the six innings he worked, but one of his two wild pitches let in a Hawk run in the initial inning. Te Wolverines also made five errors. The final Iowa run came in in the fourth inning of one of them. Nothing seemed wrong with Mich- igan hitting in this game, however, unless it be that the eleven hits off One for Tiwo pitcher Stille didn't come at the right moments. The Hawkeyes could only (First Game) gather seven safeties off Boim and MICHIGAN AR R f, PO A E his successor, Lefty Bill Smith. Stenberg, 2b . 5 1 2 2 0 1 Iowa Get Two Unearned Runs Wiese, If ......... 4 0 1 0 0 0 After their run in the first the Blanchard, 3b . . . .5 0 0 1 1 1 Hawks added two in the third on White, rf.........4 0 0 1 0 0 three hits. The error in the fourth Lund, cf .........4 1. 3 3 0 0 brought in the final Iowa run. Michi- Walterhouse, lb . ..4 0 0 5 0 0 gan didn't score until the seventh, Wikel, ss .........4 1 1 1 1 1 when two runs came across. The Swanson, c ...... 4 0 2 11 1 2 bases were loaded when the inning Boim, p ...........1 0 1 0 1 0 ended. The third marker was added Smith, p .........0 0 0 0 2 0 in the ninth. *Farnyk..........1 0 1 0 0 0 The second game had a different *Nussbaumer ......1 0 0 0 0 0 story. Starting out with three runs off three hits and three errors in the first Totals ......... 37 3 11 24 6 5 inning, the Wolverines added single tallies in the third and sixth and put *Batted for Boim in 6th. the finishing touches on with two *Batted for Smith in 9th. more in the ninth. Michigan Improved in Nightcap IOWA AR R H P0 A E The Michigan team looked very Landes, If........ 4 1 0 1 0 1 much improved in this contest, in Thompson. ss .... .4 0 0 2 1 1 spite of two misjudged flies by right- Farmer, 2b .......5 2 2 0 3 1 fielder Paul White. Iowa pitcher Lind, rf .......... 4 1 2 1 0 0 Kenney was nicked for 13 blows, in- Rinkema, cf ......3 0 0 2 0 0 cluding a double by Don Lund, whose Kingsbury, lb ....4 0 1 8 0 0 hitting and fielding in both games Trickey, 3b ......4.0 0 1 3 1 was excellent, and triples by Bob Ebner, c .........4 0 1 8 0 0 Stenbergaand Bob Wiese. Stille, p.........4 0 1 5 0 0 Lund and Stenberg took batting t i0 doubles and a single in the first game, to which he added his double MICHIGAN ........... 000 000 201 and onother single in the second. IOWA .................102 100 00x Stenberg got 'five for ten.' Lind and Farmer led the Hawks in (Second Game) hitting. k MICHIGAN . AB R H PO A E Howard Wikel, of Ann Arbor, mn Stenberg, 2b ...... 5 2 3 2 2 0 his first start at shortstop, made four Wiese,g f.........5 1 2 5 0 0 singles in the two games. FreshmanBanchard, 3b....4 10 1 0 and fellow Ann Arborite Dick Walter-Bahard,3b....4.20101 0 house got two hits in the nightcap. White, rf........5 0 0 1 1 0 Elmer Swanson, catcher who is also Lund, cf .........5 2 2 3 0 0 one of the star hurdlers of the track Walterhouse, lb ..5 0 2 9 1 0 team, got two safeties in the opener. Wikel, ss........5 0 3 1 2 1 The second game marked the first Swanson, c .......5 0 0 5 0 0 home defeat for Iowa in 19 games. Fishman, p ...... 4 0 0 1 4 0 from China Fine imported lace table cloths to grace your dinner table. The supply is limited so come in now and make your selection. Size 36 inches square to 3 yard dinner cloths. GAGE LINEN SHOP 10 NICKELS ARCADE Always Reasonably Priced I FOR e EASTER And what could be better Mania lovely new blouse for your new spring suit? Get a frilly one for your springy moments, and a lovely tailored one to make your costume the perfect one of good taste. They come in all sizes 'and colors. ALWAYS REASONABLY PRICED The BUDGET SHOP Two Doors East of the Michigan Theatre HUTZEL'S Main at Liberty BREATH wiha perionafltouch I MICKEY FISHMAN senior pitcher who allowed the Hawkeyes ten hits in the sec- ond game of the doubleheader yes- terday, but had thecontrol to hold them to three runs. Wakefield Stars Again for Tigers MUNCIP, Ind., April 10.- UP)- Rookie Dick Wakefield continued his, sensational spring hitting by ham- mering out a three-run triple in the seventh inning to pace the Detroit Tigers to an easy 4 to 1 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates in an exhibi- tion game here today. Coming tobat in the seventh with the bases filled and two out, the 21- year-old former University of Michi- gan outfielder drilled a three-and- two pitch into left centerfield off Lloyd Dietz, second of two Pirate hurlers to clear the bases. Wakefield now has nine hits in 22 times at bat for a .409 average. In the outfield he had only one putout and handled two batted balls flaw- lessly. Freshmen Show Promise in Discus When big George Ostroot left Mich- igan early this spring to enter the Army Air Forces Varsity Coach Ken Doherty was left without a single ex- perienced discus thrower for the outdoor track season. Ostroot, Varsity discus tosser and shot putter during the 1942 outdoor campaign, had always been depended on to pick up points in both events. He consistently tossed the discus over 140 feet and was to have borne the Wolverine's hopes this spring. His departure left Coach Doherty without a Varsity discus tosser of proven ability. However, Coach Chet Stackhouse sent two of his freshmen prospects, George Kraeger and Bob Gardner, to Doherty and both show promise of developing into point win- ners. With little or no high school experi- ence to back them up both Kraeger and Gardner have been hitting 130 feet in initial practice sessions and show indication of considerable im- provement before the outdoor cam- paign gets underway. Coach Doherty has several other prospects in Dimitri Zonars, Dick Ahlbeck, Bill Perham and Bob Oren. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - DATE CHANGE!!. I MARY DUNHILL COLOGNE in classically beautiful bottles with your own PERSONAL INITIALS! 3 Initial size $3.00 2 initial size $2.00 Exciting, Different Fragrances Natators Win In State AA U's A quartet of Michigan s%' mmers completely dominated the two men's events in the Michigan AAU cham- pionships held Friday night at the Women's City Club pool in Detroit. Harry Holiday, star backstroker, capitalized on his dorsaling ability to give him a margin of victory in the 150-yard individual medley over fellow Wolverine Charlie Fries in 1:37.5. The third Michigan sopho- more in the race, Johnny McCarthy, grabbed the show position. Fries was in the lead at the end of the breaststroke leg, but Harry more than made up for it in the backstroke fifty yards. Charlie pick- id up again in the final lap, the free- style, but Holiday was a little too far in front. His time was three and a half seconds slower than the American record. In the 100-yard freestyle the fourth Wolverine to make the trip, Mert Church, runner-up at the distance in the National AAU's, won over' Fries and Holiday in 53.7. This was well over a second slower than Mert's time in the AAU meet a week ago in New York. Totals .. IOWA Landes, If Thompson, s Farmer, 2b. Lind, rf .. Rinkema, cf Briscoe, lb Trickey, 3b Ebner, c Kenney, p Totals .. . AB R H PO A E s ..5 1 1 0 3 1 4 0 2 1 4 1 .4 0 0*,0 0 0 ...4 0 0 10 0 1 .......4 0 0 2 2 0 ........4 1 2 10 0 0 ....... 4 1 2 0 1 0 ......38 3 10 27 10 , .43 7 13 27 11 1 I DR. J. L HROMADKA will not speak Tuesday, APRIL 13 at Rackham Lecture Hall, due to the University aptitude test. He will speak FRIDAY, APRIL 16 at 8:00 P.M. at Rackham Lecture Hall. HIS SUBJECT: "What is Dynamic Christianity's Answer to the Present Crisis?" (Auspices. Committee for Dynamic Christianity) MICHIGAN...........301 001 002 IOWA .................002 000 100 COLLEGE BASEBALL Navy 3, Princeton 0 Notre Dame 21, Chicago 1 Lake Forest 14, Illinois Tech 6 Penn State 3, Villanova 2 (12 Inn- ings) ATTENTION! All interested freshmen and sophomores are urged to try out for football manager. Call Don Howell, senior manager, at 4438. Those chosen will be excused from PEM. Since some of the junior managers have left school, there will be several numeral sweaters awarded. -04 BUY WAR BON DS - I NVEST I N V I CTORY GARDENIA BEWITCHING WHITE HYACINTH DEVONSHIRE CURE f or HUTZEL'S DOWNTOWN STORE - - - - - - - Clip Here And Mail To A U.-M. Man In The Armed Forces- ------- - - mERIC ~rI~g #flr3w L OL. I, No. 26 ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN APRIL 11, 1943 REPUBLICANS ran rampant in Michigan last week in the elections.. gaie thing happened in Ann Arbor . . . Prof. Leigh J. Young of the forestry school was reelected may- or, defeating Prof. John L. Brumm of the journalism department... .Prof. Young carried all'of the city's ten precincts in one of the lightest votes in years ... Ii mahy other municipal elections the candidates were unopposed. * * * FOUR ROTC 'staff offi- cers had promotions an- nounced by the War De- partment last week Cant. Roland L. Kolb was ROTC, having for 18 years. * * served here * TAPPING has been the order of the week with the women even getting all hepped up about reward- ing the hard workers . . . Vulcan, engineering non- scholastic honor society, tapped 14 men for mem- bership Saturday night. . . Karl Brenkery, Chuck Dot- terrer, Don Engl, Art Gieb, Louis Haughey, Herbert Heavenrich, Bill Jacobs, Ken Moehl, Bill Pritula, Karl Reed, William Ses- sions, George Sloan, and George Snow are the new Vulcans. * * * BOMBERS, UNIFORMS scene . . . The parade will be escorted by a powerful Liberator bomber from the Willow Run plant as a special feature . . . March- ing units from every branch of 'the military groups on campus will fig- ure prominently in the parade . . . All the ROTC, the NROTC, as well as the soldiers in the Army schools will parade... The University and Ann Arbor bands will provide the marching music for the hour-long review ... Lieut. C. D. Vaughan, who is con- nected with military head- quarters on campus, will be the marshal of the par- ade . . . A squadron of naval pursuit planes from ternational Government." . . . The Conference went on in four panel discus- sions which studied various phases of post-war plan- ning . . . Campus brains and professors, brains too, convened for the confer- ences. * * * TRAGEDY hit the cam- pus last week too.. . Agnes Day Gilson, 19-year-old bride of two weeks, was fatally burned when a spot fire raced through her two-room apartment . . . Her husband, Dr. Charles Mark Gilson, 24-year-old dentist, was confined to St. Joseph's Mercy Hos- pital, severely burned . . . The young bride, who was ...... ~piligting A shoe you won't want to live without in these on-your- feet days. Perfect in fit, soft9 and flexible -vet staunch A GOLF GAME The weather is perfect for that long-waited-for golf game. Take to the fairway and get rid of that spring fever. And it will improve your game if you have fine equipment. Come in and make a selection from our complete line of golf equipment now, while it is still available. THE BEST IN SPORTING GOODS spring ia/'er