THE MICHITGAN DlAILY PAG _:. -F PA~~F~ Ohio 's Team Strength Produces Swim Victory By CLARK BAKER Dailyl Sports IEditor Unknowns' Accomi Wolverine Defeat N By Clark :Baker Daily Sports Editor If there were any questions la week about the outcome of the Co ference swimming meet over t week-end, Ohio State came up wi all the answers. In losing the crown to the Buc eyes for the second time in the pa decade, the Wolverines suffered th worst Conference defeat in Ma Mann's reign as Maize and Blue me tor. All told the Buckeyes amassed points while Michigan totalled on 38. Ohio State showed amazing tea strength by placing at least to point-winners in five of the sev individual events and winning bo relays. The Buckeyes had be figured to monopolize the firsts bi it was the Ohioan's "unknowns" wi made the victory decisive. Seconds, Thirds Add Up Lenny Adh took a third in th 220-yard freestyle and added a four in the 440. Steve Grimm captured pair of fifth spots in the same even for Coach Mike Peppe's crew. Ea Trumble took second place behir teaimate Jim Counsilman in t 200-yard breast stroke. Ted Hobert added two points I the Ohio State total with a third i Wrestlers Gain Big Ten Third; Finish' Schedule Champion Court-right ryas Unbeaten Record Swinging into its last and final le of the 1945-6 season, Michigan wrestling team walked off with thir place last Saturday night in th Western Conference Meet held at th University of Illinois. Illinois, with many of her pre-wa grapplers back from the services, too top honors and is the newly crowne Big Ten Wrestling champion. Thre first places were enough to do th trck for the Illini. Second place wn to Indiana, whose wrestlers took tw first and two seconds for 27 poins The Wolverines two firsts andt fourth were good enough for thin place. Smith Dins Puchanny Michigan's first points were gar nered in the 136 pound class. Wayn Smith, wrestling this season for th first time in collegiate competition pinned Dick Puchanny of Indiana i 1:27 of the second period, anid thu is the Big Ten champ at 136 pounds The next Wolverine to win a titl fort the Maize anid Blue was Bil Courtright, former conference cham at 165 pound. Starting off this yea: at 165, Coach Keen shifted "Corkey' to the starting 155 pound position a mid-season. Courtright won all o his mat ches at this weight, and wen to take the conference crown. A Champaign he pinned all his com petitors, winning the title from Do Kramer of Minnesota by a fall i 2:50. Wolverines Nose Out Buckeyes George Chaimes gave Michigan it one point over Ohio State. It ww Chiames' fourth place in the 165 pound class that meant third fo Michigan in the Conference. Chaimes, who did not have an previous experience as a wrestler came out for the squad at the clos of the football schedule. Under th careful tutalage of coach Keen, h improved rapidly as a grappler which can be seen by his fourth plac victory at Champaign. Montreal Leads Hockey Teams Boston Ousts Toronto From Play-Off Tilts All play-off spots were practically cinched over the weekend in the Na- tional Hockey League with the Mon- treal Canadiens almost a sure bet to take top honors for the third straight year, as the teams begin the final week of regular play. The Canadiens, by virtue of victor- ies over Toronto and Chicago in- creased their lead to six points over the Boston Bruins. A victory over the will give Montreal the title. Mean- while Boston retained a slim one- point margin over the Blackhawks and four over fourth place Detroit. Toronto was eliminated from the play-offs by Boston Sunday night. The Maple Leafs are now eight points behind the Red Wings and have only three games remaining. National League Standings Almost Half of Total; in Mann's Regime EDITOR'S NOTE: This column was written by Walt Klee, Daily Sports Night Editor, the 50-yard freestyle and then led off who covered the Conference track meet last week-end at Chicago. the victorious Buckeye 400-yard LOSING TRACK meets to Illinois by two-thirds of a point is getting to be freestyle relay quartet. Two other somewhat of a bad habit for Michigan's talented group of thinclads. The "unknowns", Bill Zemer and Don ' margin that decided the Big Ten Indoor Track and Field Championships last Coolahan, also swam for the Buck- week-end was the same that decided the dual meet between the two teams eye quartet. Coolahan anchored the last month here in Ann Arbor. 300-yard medley relay team.} I ill Wins TwooAlthough Coach Leo Johnson's teamn certainly deserved to win the In all Peppe's little publicized team first team title over the week-end for their coach one can easily see how members were responsible for 33 of the meet could have gone the other way. the Buckeye's 75-point total. Only double-winner, and probably the Ken Doherty, Michigan's track coach, in deciding on the entries he meet's outstanding individual swim- would make, chose the men who, if things broke exactly right, would have mier, was Buckeye Jack Hill who took given Michigan its fourth straight title. As always happens the breaks went the 220- and 440-yard freestyle the wrong way and unforeseen things came into being, and as a result Illi- marathons. Friday night Hill missed oswnisithile the Conference 440 record by a tenth of a second in spashing to a fast THE MEET was actually decided in the first event on Saturday's schedule. 4:47.1' Michigan was conceded the first two places in the mile, which would Illinois' John Haulenbeek pulled an have meant nine points and the team title. Ohio State's Bill Clifford came unusual iron-man stunt, swimming up with the upset of the meet when he defeated Bob Hume after a brilliant yard breast stroke. Haulenbeek took duel. The two milers set the pace for seven laps with Hume leading almost first in the 50, second in the 100 and all the way. Then on the back stretch of the final lap the Buckeye came fifth in the breast stroke to account through with a kick that spelled the Wolverine defeat. for all of the Illini's 11 points. .j.Another event went the wrong way for the Maize and Blue. Wiscon- Veteran Takes Diving Title sin's Lloyd LaBeach was the favorite in the 60-yard dash because of his ped back from an Army Air Force record up to the meet. In Friday's qualifying heat the Badger turned accident that nearly ended his athle- in the best time of the entire meet to further his rank of the favorite. tic career, to capture the diving event Then on Saturday he failed to live up to expectations as he only man- from his teammate, Ted Cristakos. naged to finish third, behind Illinois' Bill Mathis and Jack Pierce, giving Anderson didn't look so good last the Illini two more valuable points. month against Michigan at Columbus but made up for that performance at Although the officiating at the meet was on the whole of the very best Minneapolis. caliber, even it has been named as the cause of Michigan's defeat. It is cer- Wolverine Coach Matt Mann had tain that the judges called the meet as they saw them. Yet several overserv-+ little to say. "We really took a beat- ers swear that-they erred in their decision in the 75-yard hurdles. ing, didn't we?" he asked. "Mike's squad (Ohio State) was hot. Our boys T THE time of the event the Wolverines were two points in the lead and were a little too tense. With a year every point counted. The official results placed George Walker in first, Ray' of competition behind them, they Tharp of Minnesota in second and Elmer Swanson in third place. In the' ought to make it interesting for opinion of several observers. Swanson had beaten out the Gopher by at Ohio." least a foot. Breast stoker Bob Sohl had a tough break.. The Wolverine freshman set Any one of the three above named incidents, had they not happened, the best time for the 200-yard dis- would have changed the final result of the meet. Yet Michigan cannot feel tance in the preliminary trials only disappointed. The Wolverines did much better than anyone thought they, to be disqualified for using an illegal would. This was Illinois year, and they proved that Saturday night., leg kick. Bob Matters scored the only Several Wolverines deserve praise for their outstanding contribu- Wolverine points in the breast strokess with a fourth spot. tion to the ,Wolverine cause. Herb Barten, half-mile title holder in his Two lMleets Remain first year of college competition, ran a nearly perfect race. He broke A pair of meets are still remaining slowly and remained in the pack for two laps, while Archie Parsons and on the Michigan 1946 slate. March 20 Ohio State's Clifford set the pace. Then coming into the stretch in the the Wolverines will clash with Wayne final lap Barten put on a terrific burst of speed and finished going away. University's swimmers at Detroit Northwestern High School pool. The CHARLIE BIRDSALL, the only other Wolverine to win an individual title. meet had originally been scheduled ran a brilliant two-mile after a tw6 week layoff from practice. Birdsall for March 22 but was moved ahead. was paced by Vic Twomey, Big Ten cross-country champion, in the earlyt Final showing for the Maize and laps. On the 13th lap the Maize and Blue star put on the speed to finish 20° Blue natators will come March 29 yards ahead of his nearest competitor, Ross Hume, Dean Voegtlen placedi and 30 when Mann takes his tankers fourth in the event which gave the Wolverines 11 points.l to Annapolis, Md., for the. NCAA championships. A few words of praise must go to the ;Hume twins. Ross and Bob Michigan Sextet Coneludes Best, Longest Season MacMillan's 29 Goals Win Scoring ;Honors Michigan's hockey team scored an impressive 10-0 victory over Michigan Tech last Saturday night to bring a fitting end to the best puck season in Maize and Blue history. While playing 25 games, which comprised the longest and most haz- ardous schedule in Michigan hockey -nnals, the 1945-46 sextet established i reputation as one of the best col- tegiate squads in the country. The eecords indicate that Coach Vic Hey- 'iger's latest edition certainly merited shis distinction. Records Fall Several records were shattered by phis year's pucksters. With 17 wins to' -heir credit,' the Wolverines surpassed the old mark of 13 triumphs which was made in 1938. That same season, 76 goals were tallied which was the ill time peak until this season. The )ooks now show that the 1945-46 sex- °et creashed its opponents nets 168 times. On Jan. 5, when the Wolverines de- ,isively defeated the Sarnia Hockey Club, 16-2, they set three new marks. it was the first time that any Maize and Blue squad has scored as many as 16 goals in a single game, nine tallies in one period, and five goals in less han four and a half minutes. MacMillan Top Goal-Getter Gord MacMillan was the team's top ;oal-getter, scoring 29 markers, with runner-up honors going to Wally Grant who managed to net 25 goals. Al Renfrew and Wally Gacek tied for hird spot with 24 goals each. Neil Celley and Bill Jacobson tied with 18 markers, to round out the leaders for the Maize and Blue. Throughout the season, Heyliger was able to alternate two forward lines composed of MacMillan. Jacob- son, Renfrew, and Grant, Gacek, Cel- ley. Michigan's puck mentor said that these two front walls played fine all season, and especially singled out Renfrew who participated in the last seven tilts with a broken wrist. Hill, Marshall Top Defensively Heyliger, commenting on the Wol- verine defensemen, said that Captain Connie Hill had an outstanding sea- son, not only ably filling his position at right defense, but also was good offensively. The Wolverine puck mentor mentioned that Bob Marshall, the big popular Michigan defenseman had a great year despite the fact that he was hampered by illness and in- juries. Concerning the 1946-47 schedule, there is a possibility that Michigan will encounter several eastern squads. Dartmouth, Colgate, and Army may fill the bill next season at the Coli- seum. *C ut* e Yankees,Cars n, zs rawCapacity " Crowds in South 11 ,p By WHITNEY MARTIN ST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March 11 Lt -VP)-We saw what could have been f either a preview or a review of a itWorld Series game at Waterfront Par, dand in speaking of a review we t hasten to explain it was not a review n of a 1945 World Series game. Particu- n larly the sixth game. That contest n probably will be pointed to as the horrible example as years go by, a sort of baseball black sheep to be spoken s of behind cupped hands. This game matched the St. Louis r Cardinals and the New York Yankees, The preview angle is that they could y very well meet in the 1946 series. The review might be that of a 1942 Series e game, as there were enough men on e each team who played in that year to e bring on an acute case of nostalgia. Fellows such as Joe DiMaggio and e Charley Keller and Phila Rizzuto and Joe Gordon and Spud Chandler and Terry Moore and Enos Slaughter and Howie Pollet The most amazing thing to us about the game was the crowd. Anyone ex- pecting attendance records being shattered this year would have found comfort in the interest shown here. It was the first exhibition game for the Cardinals and the first here for either team. Plus, irates, 'Yanks Tri~umph 11S$ MIAMI BEACH, Fla., March 11- ()-The Philadelphia Phillies today, nipped the Brooklyn Dodgers 5 to 4 in an exhibition .game before grand- stands filled to their capacity of 3,500. SAN BERNARDINO, Cal., MarchI 11-1(,) - The Pittsburgh Pirates team defeated the Los Angeles Angels in a loose contest today 13 to 8. Rookie Al Mackey, son of Leo Mack- ey, Pirate coach, worked the last three innings, allowing only one hitI and coming through with a single of his own. St. Petersburg, Fla., March 11- 1 (A)-Home Runs by Johnny Sturm ndn Joe DIM o'o'in- thf1.1 t++~v'q hi, are entered in the Medical School this year and have given track only second consideration to their studies. Without the benefits of every day practice, the "dead heat twins" ran in the meet for the Wolverines, al- though they knew they couldn't repeat their feats of f6rmer years. Bob took a second in the mile in the good time of 4:24 (unofficial) while Ross took a second in the two-mile. Credit must also go to Chuck Lauritsen for his second in the pole vault. Lauritsen flew to Chicago for the Championships with Birdsall. Both track- men have been on active duty with the Navy for the past two weeks and have not had the advantage of every day practice: IN THE final analysis, however, all credit must go to the Wolverine thin- clads. Michigan went into the meet as a definite underdog. That was the general consensus of opinion. Yet at Chicago, Coach Doherty's men per- formed at their peak. Of the 24 performers, 18 of them turned in their top efforts of the year. A peculiar note to the meet is the fact that the only two men who set or tied records will not be running for the United States in the com- ing Olympics. Herb McKenley, whose brilliant :48.1 in the quarter-mile, and LaBeach, who leaped 24 ft. 3 in. in the broad jump are both from Jamaica, which is a British possession. Therefore two outstanding West- ern Conference Trackmen will run under the Union Jack. ILLINOIS and Michigan are undoubtedly the two strongest teams in the country, and for that matter the strongest teams in the history of the Western Conference. The 57%2 and 56 5 /6 points are the second and third highest point totals in the 36 year history of the Championships. Tgers efeate 1 r 1 r DOES THAT OLD SLIPOVER TIRE YOU? Why not have it made into a ca digan at VAN AKKEREN KNI SHOP, 440 S. State. We will bin it in grosgrain ribbon and ma button holes for you. EVERLASTING MUSIC. is only comparable to sterling sil ver - for a lifetime. Start lookin at your patterns now at EIBLERS We have the name makes of Inter national, Gorham, Wallace, an Lunt. at " r C j 7 WHAT'S NEW in the latest spring hat styles? O course it's those pastel Easter bon nets at the JUNE GREY SHOP Bedecked with colorful flower they're a must on your sprin shopping list. t~W ~, ' t _ __ _ , t., .E S , / , i TAKE 4WAY THE HONORS;.. with some lovely Mexican jewelry from JENKS AND CO., 221 E.lib- erty. We have a choice of pins and bracelets that will do wonders for any outfit. YOU TOO WILL SWOON0... when you see the newest blouses and dickies at the DILLON SHOP. In white there are the frilly and tailored ones plus a multitude of colored ones. Sports Notices All candidates who ire interested in competing for the varsity golf team should report between 2:00 p.m. and 4:30 p.m. today at the I. M. building. Candidates for varsity tennis team should report to the Sports Building at 1:00 p.m. any day this week. All men interested in varsity track are invited to a meeting Wednesday, March 13 at 5:10 p.m. Previous ex- perience is not necessary. Give to the Red Cross /F 2w ,f1 l . ,, ?ti ° ; , y ' ' I . y 1 t " e I,. By Indians, 4-3 Rookie's Homer Ends Extra-Inning Contest CLEARWATER, Fla., Mar. 11-(') -Rookie pitcher Winslow (Winky) Stroupe bashed a 12th inning hame run over the 290-foot right field screen here today as the Cleveland Indians took a 4 to 3 victory from the World Champion Detroit Tigers in their opening exhibition game at "home." Stroupe, who worked six innings as the third Cleveland hurler, scattered four of Detroit's eight hits and yielded two of the Tiger runs. Tommy Bridges, Stubby Overmire, Louis Jretlow and Virgil Trucks of the Tigers fielded eight hits. Trucks, who served up Stroupe's home run ball, was the losing pitcher. Walter (Hoot) Evers, stellar Tiger center fielder, doubled home the run that tied the score at 3-all in the enghth and threw out Gene Woodling trying to score the winning run after an outfield fly in the Tribe half of the same inning. Dick Wakefield, Detroit outfielder, missed the game with a pulled groin muscle. Detroit (AL) 100 000 110 000-3 8 1 Cleve. AL) 010 002 0001 001-4 8 1 AROUND THE CLOCK WITH WPAG SHE'S IN HER GLORY... TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1946 7:00-News 7:05-Sleepyhead Serenade 8:00-News 8:15-Wake Up and Live 8:25-Morning Novelties 8:30-Musical Revelie 8:55-News 9:00-Music Box 9:30-Popular Music 9:40-News 9:45-Moments of Melodies 10:00-News 10:05-Hawaiian Moods 10:15-Realty Service Quiz 10:30-Broadway Melodies 10:40-Community Calendar 10:45-waltz Timee 11:00-News 11:05-Three Suns 11:15-Lean Back & Listen 11:30-Verse with Music 1:45-Across the Footlights 11:55-_Hit Tunes 12:00-Noon Day News 12:15-Jesse Crawford 12:20-Spike Jones 12:30-Farm and Home Hour 12:45--Man on the Street .1:00-News 1:05-Salon Music 1:10-Victorious Living 1:15-Ray Bloch Presents 1:25-Flashes from Life 1:30-Tin Pan Alley Goes To Town 1:45-World of Song .:00-News 2:05--Melody on Parade 3:00-News 3:05-Everett Tutchings 3:15-U of Michigan 3:30-Latin American Music 3:40-It Actually Happened 3:45-Trade Winds Tavern 4:00-campus Ballroom 5:00-News 5:05-Rainbow Trin 5:15-Mystery Melodies 5:30-Little Show 5:45-Salon Music 6:00-News 6:15-Along the Sports Sidelines 6:30-Quiz '.. because she just purchased one of those soft lovely cashmeres at the CAMPUS SHOP. It's a rare article these days, so come in and select yours today. 1- P" tg~ THAT BANDBOX LOOK0, 0 , Continuous from 1 P.M. Now CRAZE OF THE AIRWAYS ON "WE SCRIEN s BREMAR r 1RARVILLE_ MICHIGAN Ending Today CHARLES COBURN \EJOAN B ENINETT '~EYTHE TEAMS W. L. lontrcal. 27 16 HBsto.... 22 17 T. 4 PTS. GF. 58 159 52 156 1 D A