THE MICHI.tAN I ,rAGE THREE THE MICHIN tV~ii;v FAGE TflUEE .. .._ .. .. ........................._.. Hawaiian Flash Smashes Pair of Records World merican AAU Records Are Shattered Kiefer, Knight, Batterman, T-Bone Martin Also Stand Out as Bluejackets Swamp Opposition V Tigers, Cubs Hook Up in Slugfest EVANSVILLE, Ind., April 1.-(.P)-April Fool's Day was celebrated by the Detroit Tigers and Chicago Cubs today as if they were deadly intent on playing every funny trick in the book. After nine innings of wild carryings-on, they counted up to find the Cubs 10 to 9 victors in the opener of a two-game exhibition series and all hands glad to escape to the relief of the showers. Iowa and Illinois Most Consistent Michigan Rivals in Diamond Sport Same Schools May Be Troublemakers for Wolverines During 1944 Conference Race I!i (Continued from Page 1) Adolph Kiefer, standout with Smith on the first night of the meet, came through with his second win in the 150-yard backstroke, although he missed his world record time if 1:30.4 by six-tenths of a second, as he fin- ished the event 15 yards ahead of his nearest competitor in the fast time of 1:31 flat. The only mark that Kiefer broke while coasting to this victory was the Michigan pool rec- ord set by Harry Holliday. Kiefer swam the first 100 yards of this dor- sal affair in the sensational time of :58.4, and had the fans on their feet urging him to a new mark, which he barely missed. Ralph Knight of Massilon High School, O., made an excellent show- ing in the backstroke, as he finished second to Kiefer, with Carl Ahlman of Great Lakes third and John Gib- son of the Naval Air Station in Olathe, Kansas, fourth. Smith Wins 440 After a short rest from the 100- yard free style, Smith, defending champion in the 440, wort that race in good form to break the AAU rec- ord held by his former teammate, Keo Nakama, as he went the dis- tance in 4:42.1. Nakama, who set the AAU mark of 4:42.4 in 1942, finished third as he was nosed out by Gene Rogers of Columbia, who also upset Nakama in the 220-yard. free style at the National Collegiates the week before. Charlie Eatterman of Columbia, after coming from behind on the last dive to beat T-Bone Martin of the Three of O'Neill's Best '43 Pitchers Lost to Detroit EVANSVILLE, Ind., April 1.-(P)- Three pitchers who contributed near- ly half of the club's 78 victories in 1943 aren't with the Tigers anymore, but Manager Steve O'Neill is looking to four junior members of the staff -Hal Newhouser, Frank Overmire, Rufus Gentry and Johnny Gorsica- to fill in. Paul Trout topped Tiger produc-, tion last season with 20 victories, and O'Neill is counting on another big season. But Virgil Trucks who won 16 games and Tommy Bridges who contributed a dozen victories are in the. armed forces. So is Hal White who won seven. Who's going to step up and replace them? CLASSIFIED DIR ECT ORY Bluejackets in the low board divingl Friday, also won the high board div- ing last nightbycompiling 420.3 points ; with Martin again coming in'second; Harold Kallman, Fremont, O., third; and Bob Stone of the Buck- eyes, fourth. Kallman came down from Fremont to watch the meet, but was not too impressed with the divers, so he entered the field and' came out of the AAU meet with two points. He finished seventh in the low board diving. Sailors Cop Relay Michigan and Great Lakes both had two teams entered in the 300- yard medley relay in which the Wol verines were the defending chain- pions. Smith swam the first leg for the Sailors' "A" team and he gave the Bluejackets a commanding three- yard lead which they never relin- quished, as they dethroned the Maize and Blue quartet in 2:59. Mert Church, swimming the anchor for the Wolverine "A" team, tried valiantly to close the big gap which Smith had given the Sailors, but couldn't quite make it; and when Dobby Burton, who was swimming the anchor leg for the Bluejackets "B" team, closed in on Church, it became a three-way race, with the Wolverines "A" team barely edging out Great Lakes' "B" squad for sec- ond place. The medley relay event wrote finis to one of the greatest AAU meets ever to be held, with eight present or for- mer NAAU indoor and outdoor cham- pions defending their titles. The meet presented one of the finest ag- gregations of stars ever to compete in one pool. NAAU Summaries 100-Yard Freestyle-Won by Bill 2mith (Gieat Lakes); second, Walt Ris (Great Lakes)-; third, Jerry Ker- schne. (Great Lakes); fourth, Bill Prew tT.S. Air Force, Panama). Time :51.6. 150-Yard Backstroke-Won by Ad- olph Kiefer, (Bainbridge, Md., Naval Station) ; second, Ralph Knight (Massilon, 0., unattached); third, Carl Ahlman, (Great Lakes); fourth, John Gibson (Olathe, Kans., Naval Station). Time 1:31. 440-Yard Freestyle-Won by Smith (Great Lakes); second, Gene Roger (Columbia); third, Keo Nakama, (Ohio State) ; fourth, Jack Hill (Ola- the Naval Station). 'Time 4:42.1. (Breaks record of 4:42.4 set by Na- kama in 1942.) High Board Diving - Won by Charles Batterman (Columbia), 420.3 points; second, Strother Martin (Great Lakes) 378.6; third, Harold Kallm'an (Fremont, O., unattached) 275.9; fourth, Bob Stone (Ohio State) 255.8. 300-Yard Medley Relay-Won by Great Lakes "A" team (Smith, Bob Matters, and Ris); second, Michigan "A" team; third, Great Lakes "B" team; bfourth, Michigan "B" team. Time 2:59. -Official U.S. Navy Photo BILL SMITH ... was awarded the gold medal given annually to the star of the NAAU meet, by virtue of his three winning performances in the 100, 220 and 440-yard events. Yankees Edge Phils 4-4 in Close Contest ATLANTIC CITY April 1.-(/)- The New York Yankees poled only five hits today but defeated the Phil- adelphia Phillies, 5 to 4, in the first exhibition game of the year at this resort. A crowd of 2,678 paying fans and 500 wounded soldiers watched. Johnny Lindell cracked a homer for the winners with a mate on base and George Stirnweiss banged out a triple with two men on. In both cas- es the hit was made off Charles} Schanz. During the past eight seasons in' particular, and all through the ten- ure of Ray Fisher as Michigan's baseball coach, teams from Illinois and Iowa have afforded the greatest obstacles to the Wolverines' winning ways. From the reports which have been flowing from the diamond camps of these two schools in the last few days, the 1944 season may be no exception to this rule. Both coaches boast a variety of promising though inexperienced talent at all positions and seem to have no fears at meet- ing teams like Michigan which are heavily reinforced with Navy and Marine personnel. Iowa is the only school in the Con- ference to boast a higher winning percentage than Michigan over the past eight seasons, having won 61 and lost 25 for a fancy .709 figure. In that period, it won one champion- ship, tied for two others and never wound up lower than fifth. The Wolverines gained 56 wins against 28 losses for .667 in the same stretch, copping two championships outright and tying for a third. The Illini, also, have always been right at the heels of the Wolverines in the games won and lost columns and rank a scant few points to the rear in overall percentages. In the matter of Big Ten titles, the rivalry has been even more pronounced, as Illinois is the only outfit to seriously challenge Fisher's reign as "Mr. Big" in Conference baseball. Since Fisher took the reins at Michigan 23 years ago, he . has brought eight Big Ten winners and co-winners home in front, while the Illini boast seven over the same span. The series between the two clubs stands at 23 victories for the Wolver- ines and 22 for Illinois. Although it is still too early in the season to draw any definite conclu- sions as to the strength or weakness of any one team, indications point to fast, young, aggressive squads from both Iowa and Illinois. The Hawk- eyes have no veterans of previous collegiate experience, but Coach "Waddy" Davis is confident that his crew of 17-year-olds will develop into a first class contender. Down at Champaign, Illinois Coach Wallie Roettger is not quite so confident, but is far from pessi- mistic over his team's chances. He remarked recently that this year's squad, which wound up in second place, was very similar to last year's in experience and initial playing ability. Hit It Low! Tenn is Rackets FOR MEN AND WOMEN Get ready for your tennis playing- Buy your racket now! THE BEST IN SPORTING GOODS MO0 E 3£2Pmt htC p UNIVERSITY GRILL William Street Third Door from State DINNERS . 5 to 8 2 to 8 Sundays SANDWICHES every night 8 to midnight I 711 North University 907 South State 11'- _ -LI GOLFSIDE Riding Stab'l'els PRIVATE OR GROUP I NSTRUCT ION SPECIAL RATES FOR SERVICEMEN COURTESY CAR Phone 2-3441 3250 EAST HURON RIVER DRIVE BUY WAR BONDS- INVEST IN VICTORY --"-WON 04 all brwr A4 TA t i i W8 d: T A N dL E I D I -~I I V ..X L her Dollar-a-Year man n a priority pickle... arling of the Bureaus........... ~% CLASSIFIED RATES $ .40 per 15-word insertion for one or two days. (In- crease of 10cfor each additional 5 words.) Non-Contract $1.00 per 15-word insertion for three or more days. (In- crease of 25c for each additional 5 words.) L I TODAY! Note New Prices Listed Below! When gets x the d 'm. XTA 0~ 1l C piasoi...seuiy Contract Rates on Request LOST and FOUND LOST-Black wallet at East Medical Building, Friday, March 25. Find- er call 8221. LOST - Brown wallet March 24. Please return ration stamps, iden- tification. Keep money. Phone Brenkert 23125. LOST- One eight-foot slide rule. Needed by May 6 for the Slide Rule Ball. Reward. Call 4121, ext. 483. HELP WANTED STUDENT-Men and women. Good pay. Excellent meals. University Grill. 615 East Williams, Phone 9268. ROOMS ROOM in private home for graduate or employed woman. Garage avail- able. Convenient to bus. 3958. ROOM and BOARD WANTED-Four men to room and board with us at Phi Alpha Kappa House for only $12 per week. Call 7779. 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