THE MTCTiiGA~ IiAILY (. " ii ?.TF TenMan Thinclad Squad To Conipete in Cliieago HRelays By HARVEY FRANK Sports Editor W HEN MICHIGAN'S FOOTBALL TEAM plays Minnesota, Ohio State, Northwestern, Illinois, Wis- consin, Indiana and Purdue next fall, it will be the first time in grid his- tory that the Wolverines have ever met seven Conference foes in one' season. And although - this doesn't leave much leeway for scheduling other games, Michigan already has a game with Penn at Pennsylvania, and Ath- letic Director Fritz Crisler is hopeful of adding two more games, probably with service teams LAST year's grid captain, Paul White, now on active duty with the Marines, has been named 1943- 44 recipient of the Western Con- ference medal awarded at each Big Ten school for athletic and scho- lastic achievement. White also won letters in basketball and baseball in his sophomore year, but dropped the cage sport in 1942. ONE of.the best fields ever to enter one swimming event will be com- peting in the NAAU 100-yard free- style race here April 1. Besides Alan Ford, Bill Smith and Bill Prew, whose merits we have already expounded, three other outstanding sprinters will also be bidding for honors. Chuck Fries and Mert Church of Michigan, who finished one-two in the Big Ten championships, and Jerry Kerschner, 19-year-old star from Great Lakes, all bear watch- ing in the 100-yard event. Fries and Church are both, hitting their peaks in practice now, and Kersch- ' er has been steadily improving since the beginning of the season. In last year's race, Church fin- ished second, a yard behind Ford, while Smithw as a distant fifth.FBut Smith has said, without qualms, that hie intends to break the world's rec- ord come April 1. *:* * An article appeared in the Chicago Daily News this week which we think bears reprinting. It follows in full: MAURICE TILLET TOPS MADISON A.C. CARD Editor's Note: The drama pages be- ig crowded, this item generously given sace in the sports section, but is drama news just the same. Maurice Tillet, the "Original An- gel," tonight will be featured on a five-bout wrestling program to be held in the Madison A.C. arena,, 4721 W. Madison St. Tillet will meet Nick Elitch, the agile Serbian, in the main event. Clark Shaughnessy Will Coach Redskins CHICAGO, March 15. - (P) -The newest football fangle is the Shaugh- nessy shift. Clark Shaughnessy has ended his unofficial connection with the Chi- cago Bears and this fall will peddle his "T" to none other than the Bears' arch rival, the Washington Redskins. Shaughnessy, whose regular job is teaching football at the University of Pittsburgh for a reported $12,000 per annum, has matriculated on the side with George Marshall's Redskins and will act in "advisory capacity." WILL THEY ADD TO THEIR LAURELS? Strong National Competition May Overshadow Varsity Entrants Elmer Swanson, Bob Ufer, Conference Titlists, Kay Annex Wins in Chicago Relays Saturday By BOB CLINTON Elmer Swanson, conference high and low hurdle champion, and Bob Ufer, conference 440 champion- these are two Wolverine champions whom Coach Doherty is taking to the Chicago relays Saturday, March BOB UFER WI ings .Clinch Second Berth DETROIT, March 15. - (P) - The Detroit Red Wings could breathe eas- ier today following assurance that they no longer could finish lower than second in the National Hockey League race and thus would not be forced to buck up against the cham- pion Montreal Canadiens in the first series of next week's Stanley Cup playoffs. The idle Wings sat back and let Boston, their next opponent, clinch Detroit's runner-up spot last night by downing the Chicago Blackhawks, 6 to 4. Chicago was the last remain- ing club with a mathematical chance of overhauling the Wings. By finishing second in the league race, Detroit will entertain the fourth place finisher March 21 and 23 in the first two games of the cup play- offs. Montreal will engage the third place occupant-currently Toronto. Boston, fighting for a bare chance of nudging Chicago out of the play- off picture, invades Olympia tomor- row night to close its season' set with the Red Wings. The Bruins must win both their remaining games while Chicago drops three. Detroit tangles with Chicago twice next week-end, here on Saturday and at Chicago on Sunday. 18. Along with the Hume twins, they' have led Michigan through a great season which was climaxed last Sat- urday when the thinclads won the Western Conference championship. Swanson is a product of the Detroit high schools where he attended Northwestern. In his senior year there, he took the city high and low hurdle championships. Now, three years later, he has accomplish- ed the same feat at Michigan, while last year he placed second in the high and low hurdles at the conference championships. Swanson Is Marine Swanson is a Marine trainee and is in his junior year of competition. Under the new program he is a sen- ior; however, he still can participate in one more year of college competi- tion. Coach Doherty says that he is im- proving every day and should reach the eight seconds mark for the high hurdles. His best time to date is :08.2 as he is unbeaten in collegiate competition. Swanson hopes that this summer he will be able to divide his time between baseball and track. This Saturday he competes against! the best in the nation in an effort to add to his laurels. Ufer Underplayed So far this season not much has been said about Bob Ufer. It has be- come more or less a matter of routine to concede the 440 to Ufer of Michi- gan, since his records stand as tops all over the nation. The same is gradually becoming true in the 600. Ufer has played an important part on the squad this year as a spirited leader. Coach Doherty has placed the rest of the 440 runners in his charge. AlsohCoach Doherty doubts if the mile relay team would have All men interested in becoming baseball managers are asked to call Bob Milnor, head baseball manager, 8177, for details. Ex- emption from P M will be granted to civilians. Hit Cage Finals DETROIT, March 15.--()-With only two defending champions among survivors of district and re- gional play, 48 Michigan schoolboy basketball teams aspiring to state championships square off tmorrow night in the first round of a final series from which eight titlists will emerge Saturday. Among the candidates for the championships-four in lower Mich- igan and four in the upper peninsula -are Niles, defending its lower Mich- igan Class i3 title, and Crystal Falls, upper Michigan Class C titleholder. Both Niles and Crystal Falls, cap- tured the diadems in 1942. No Mich- igan high school tournaments were held last year. The prizeplum probably is the Lower Michigan Class A diadem. Among the eight quintets still in the title picture are Saginaw Arthur Hill, winner of 19 straight games; Jack- son; which won but four games in the regular season but turned back two highly-regarded Lansing fives to gain the final round; Kalamazoo Central, beaten by only, two teams all season; and Detroit Catholic Cen- tral and Muskegon Heights, both stopped only once this year. been able to reach the time they did last week without Ufer's help. Ufer's records speak for themselves., For two years he has been one of the top 440 men in the country. This year besides being unbeaten in col- legiate competition, he has won the 600-yard dash at two eastern invita- tional meets. Last Saturday he suc- cessfully defended his Big Ten cham- pionship in the 440, and this Satur- day,l ike Swanson, he will be back on the track trying for another vic- tory to add to his fame. By BILL LAMBERT The Michigan track team which has really earned the name "The Victors" by running through their in- door season undefeated and by cop- ping the Conference crown last week will be represented this week-end in the Chicago relays when a ten-man squad travels to the Chicago Stadium where they will encounter some stiff national competition. Bob Hume, the Wolverine's captain who is co-owner of the conference mile title and also the two-mile champ, will compete in the Banker's mile, against such outstanding per- formers as Gil Dodds, who just last week set a new world indoor record of 4:07.3; Bill Hulse and Don Burnham. Hume placed third when running against practically the same field in the NAAU Feb. 26 in Madison Square Gardens. Ufer To Run "600" . Michigan's entry in the 600-yard run will be "Bullet" Bob Ufer, who holds the NAAU title for this dis- tance. He will have a good chance of repeating his New York perform- ance; however, it must be remem- bered that he has run ,the 600 only twice this season. Bob Kelly of Il- linois, who last week copped the half- mile run, will be a serious threat to the 600 first place spot. Ross Hume, who now shares the mile crown with brother Bob, is en- tered in the 1,000-yard run along with Dick Barnard, who placed third in both the half and mile runs in the conference meet. Ross, however, turned his ankle in Saturday night's running, and has not been working out this week. Unless it really comes along between now and the relays, it is doubtful that he will run. Elmer Swanson, the Big Ten low and high hurdle king, is slated to ap- pear in the hurdle series, and will find the going tough when he meets Bob Wright, former National Collegi- ate champion, Ed Dugger and Al Manigold. Witherspoon, Dal To Compete Julius Witherspoon, the freshman flash who finished second in the 60- yard dash last week, and Bill Dall, who tied for first in high jump at Chicago, are again entered in their specialties. Coach Ken Doherty is also taking his championship mile relay combin- ation of Jim Pierce, Will Glas, Fred Negus and Bob Ufer. This quartet, which showed so well while winning the conference crown, will be mak- ing their first appearance of the boards, and it will be interesting to note if their speedy time of 3:23.6 can be equaled. Dickey Changes Batteries; Backstops for Navy Now LITTLE ROCK, Ark., March 15.- (P)-It's Bill Dickey of the Navy, not the New York Yankees, now. The veteran catcher, who was to start his sixteenth season with the Yankees when his number was called, passed his physical examination at the Little Rock induction center to- day and was assigned to the Navy. ELMER SWANSON Oge "THE RED CROSS IS TOPS!" EVANSVILLE, Ind:, March 15.-i (P)--Manager Steve 'Neill began tinkering with the problem of an in- field today as the Detroit Tigers went through their second two-hour drill of the new spring training season in summer temperatures. The mercury, in the high 60's for yesterday's open- ing drill, went to 70 today. Bob Swith, who came from the Philadelphia A's as the result of ar f" winter deal, was behind the plate to- day for O'Neill's session with the in- field. Big Rudy York was back in his old first base spot. Jimmy Outlaw, a Tiger outfielder at the close of the 1943 season, was at third. Outlaw arrived in camp only today from Anniston, Ala., where his draft board told him he would be classified 4-F because of a foot ail- ment. 1 WILSON (BILL} SAWYER PRESENTS THE BIGGEST SHOW OF THE Y EAR ."r.. *0 SARI SUITS and TC P t A 'S p .: ,, N: : ::: . " .:; ?:. a? .. ..:i v: Y .r: :::: '" ". ::;?:tit " " : +' ': . Y i: : f.. . '' :. is ; l: {?.;:";:' ,i,: :?;.; r: , ." .r.:,.,.,. ;-r. '2"..; { -}fib . ::i:;:: ": :; :;."':;v fir . Yjr. 1rti'. V.{I S.. tt ' L" f , ?. , -rplain talk from the fighting man who knows Wherever the going is toughest-in desert and jungle and alien land-there you will find the Red Cross, side- by-side with our eleven million fighting men and women. Coffee and doughnuts and companionship-is this all the Red Cross offers? Let's see- -if a soldier at camp must be found quickly, perhaps notified of trouble at home, who helps him obtain leave, and advances rail- road fare and money if necessary? THE RED CROSS. -if it is humanly possible, who gets your letters in to the boy prisoner of war-and who gets his letters out? THlE RED CROSS. -wherever possible, who sends every week through the barbed wire of the prison camp ELEVEN POUNDS of American food for your boy-meat, cheese, sugar, chocolate bars-and real Ambrican cigarettes? THE RED CROSS. -if a soldier is wounded, who provides him the blood YOU gave, who cares for him in his convalescence, who provides sym- pathy and comfort and understanding? THE RED CROSS. These are just a few of the services our men and women are grateful for. There are many others. When you dig into your pocket this year for your annual Red Cross contribution, dig deeper than ever before. Can your money be spent for any worthier cause. o y . ./. . ; . __: ....... ::....... .. r": : :............._ 'iliner ...:ie'7iii5iiigSr';E _ ., t In this staff officer's hands, the familiar telephone is weapon of war. It controls the striking power of our forces in the whole area. Over it flash orders that help our fight- ing men to drive the enemy back. Today, Western Electric is the nation's largest producer of communications and electronic equipment for war - .aking many kinds of telephone and radio apparatus for sonlan 12nd t sa, in the air. College graduates-men and I i