FRIDAY, MARCH 22, 194G THE MICIGAN DAILY Three Matmen Hirsch To Play Pro Football MADISON, Wes,, March 21-(k'-- Elroy (rzy Legs ii b, University of Wisconsin halfback who starred at Michigan and the El Toro (Calif.) Marine base after he entered the Ma- rine Corps, has decided to play pro- fessional football, Badger athletic di- rector Harry Stuhldreher said today after a long-distance telephone con- ference with Hirsch. "Harry, I'm going to play pro ball," Stuhlidreher said the Wausau, Wis., ace told him. John Keeshin, owner of the Chi- cago Rockets, announced some time ago that Hirsch, now a lieutenant, had agreed to play with Keeshin's All- America Football conference entry, but Stuhldreher said after a talk with Hirsch that the 1942 mainstay would return to school. THE WORLD'S MOST WINNER OF 10 World's Wolverines Defend Purdue Re lays Crown To Illinois Is Favored To Capture Title; Several Meet Records Slated To Fall iorrow By JACK MARTIN Michigan's track squad departs at .1:15 p.m. today for Lafayette, Indi- ana, where it will clash with some of the strongest teams in the Midwest in the fourth annual Purdue Relays at1 the Boilermaker fieldhouse Saturday night. A total of 24 men will make the trip, Coach Ken Doherty has an- nounced. When asked for comments on the meet, Doherty smiled and re- marked, "We're not going down to play marbles!" HONO N0IRED W A T C H The Wolverines have good quartets entered in all four relay events. They are determined to try for titles in at least three of the four. The time schedule of the events makes it nearly impossible to capture all of them. Illini Meet Choice Most of the competition will be fur- nished by Michigan, Illinois, and Notre Dame. The Illini appear to be pre-meet favorites due to outstand- ing strength in individual events, but the Wolverines emerge as a definite threat. Michigan is favored to win the first rclay event, the two-mile, with plenty of good, half-milers on hand to do the job, including Herb Barten, re- cent winner of the Big Ten half-mile, Archie Parsons, third in the same race, Bob Thomason, place winner in Conference, Chuck Low, and Bob and Ross Hume. Notre Dame is expected to furnish the chief competition with its distance aces, Bill Leonard and Ed Tully. Notre Dame Strong The distance medley is likely to be a fight between the Wolverine en- tries and Notre Dame. Fred Jones will probably run the quarter-mile position for the Irish, Tully the three- quarters, and Leonard the mile. Avail- able to the Wolverines for these dis- tances are several men, including Hugh Short, Bill Haidler, Horace Coleman, Val Johnson, Ross Hume, Barten, Parsons, Bob Hume and Thomason. One of the features of the evening will be the sprint medley where Mich- igan and Illinois are expected to stage a duel for the crown. If the Illini en- ter the strongest quartet possible they have a potential record-breaking out- fit. The mark is 3:25.1, set by Great Lakes in 1945. Marce Gonzales, who reportedly ran a 48 flat quarter in the Big Ten mile relay recently, could run the first three-lap leg, Bill Mathis and Jack Pierce could pair off the short dashes, and Herb McKerley could take the half. Relay Mark Threatened However, the sprint medley comes just before the mile relay, and Gon- zales and McKenley are mainstays of the Illini team at this spot. Michigan has several men they can place in the crucial first and last legs, such as Short, Coleman, Johnson, Parsons, and Barten. The mile relay is likewise a choice between Illinois and the Wolverines, with the Illini ranking favorite. Coach Johnson's quarter-milers raced away with the relay in the Conference meet recently in 3:21.2. The Purdue record is 3:22.6, set by Illinois in 1945. Fair Grand Prizes, 28 Gold Medals and more honors for accuracy than any Three Matmen Enter NCAA Routs Tonight Keen Pieks Courtright, Smith, Kopel for Meet By CHUCK LEWIS Three members of Michigan's wres- tling team, Captain Bill Courtright, Wayne Smith, and Dick Kopel left yesterday for Oklahoma A & M Col- lege in order to compete in the Na- tional Collegiate Athletic Associa- tion's annual wrestling tournament to be held with the preliminaries tonight and the finalists tangling tomorrow at Stillwater. The NCAA always brings together the finest wrestling talent in college circles each year with this as no ex- ception. The best competition will probably be provided by the contes- tants from the Western Conference schools with the aggregation of the host college also providing a good number of contestants. Courtright Is Mainstay Michigan is represented in the three men that Coach Cliff Keen has selected to go to the Nationals. The mainstay of the Maize and Blue's sea- son was Captain Courtright. He started the 1946 campaign in the 165- pound division, but in middle of the season's competition was transferred to wrestle at 155 pounds. Courtright's record for the year's dual competition was six wins against one lone defeat. This loss was at the hands of Illinois' colorful 165-pounder, Dave Shapiro, who, incidentally, is also expected to give an excellent performance this week-end. Courtright won the Big Ten's 155- pound crown, and in doing so, set an unusual record of pinning all four of the opponents that faced him in the toulrnament. WayneSmith, Michigan's other Conference champion, will wrestle in the 136-pound class. Smith also started the season in a higher bracket, but trimmed himself down to grapple at 136 pounds after the season had progressed considerably. His main triumph of the year came when he returned to mat competition after be- ing out for two weeks as a result of an operation. This is when Smith won the Western championship at 136 pounds. Kopel Is Outsanding Dick Kopel, the other Wolverine contestant, returned to competition immediately after getting discharged and coming back to school. He hadn't wrestled in college circles in three years but rose to the occasion of the Michigan State meet and won his match. Kopel will grapple at 121 pounds in the NCAA. The Aggies, who are holding the meet for the first time in their history, are defending champions. They have won the team titles in 13 of the 15 times that the meet was held. I). Tigers Top Ian ks At Lakeland, Pia. New York (A)d 11 000 010 -3 6 2 Detroit (A) 301 300 OIX-8 9 1 Peek, Wade (6) and Sylvestri; Trucks, Overmire (6) and Tebbetts. MSC Whips Georgia ATHENS, Ga., March 21 - (P) - With Keith Steffee hurling three-hit ball and Michigan State hitters breaking out in, a 15-hit rash, the Spartans walloped University of Georgia 16 to 1 here today on their southern baseball swing. Catcher Bucky Walsh led MSC with four singles in five times at bat as nine Spartans hit safely at least once each and Martin Hansen banged out a sixth inning home run with nobody on base. Highlights -World of Sportsj other timepiece. Litte . .. A my! by If0 IEI'O 0 IF As brief as you couldZ want them... and sleek-fitting under your most clinging frocks. Luxite Briefs are knit to fit and to wear longer. Easy to care for... whisk through the wdsh like a hankie ... and need no ironing/ Wear them inpeach or white... with other Luxite intimate apparel. SMRRTEST HOSIERYHPPE 539 East Liberty Street n et efrom the MARCH RELEASES BACH : Sonata in E Landowska and Menuhin BEETHOVEN: Symphony No. 2 Reiner and Pittsburgh Symphony BEETHOVEN: Piano Concerto No. 1 Dorfmann with NBC Orchestra under Toscanini BERLIOZ: Symphonie Fantastique Monlteux and San Francisco Symphony BIZET: Symphony No. 1 Rodzinsk.i and New York Philharmonic CHOPIN: Chopiniana Mitropoulos and Robin Hood Dell Orchestra WHITE: Sea Chanty for Harp and Strings Edna Phillips and String Orchestra SINGLE RECORDS BEETHOVEN: Coriolan Overture Toscanini and NBC Orchestra $ORODI N: Polovtsian Dances Ormandy and Philadelphia Symphony LISZT: La Companella-Valse Impromptu Brailowski, Pianist HEROLD: Zampa Overture . Kurtz and New York Philharmonic These and an extensive collection of Victor, Columbia, Decca, Capitol, Keynote, Asch, and other recordings are always in stock !{ ing:lBet-itniinsa Ii I NO SHIOR TAGE HEIIE: Rirclay To Cooose firo 45 1Tryous; Golf ers Train Ins ide 11 ty BOR MOIIC With a turnout of 45 candidates, probably the largest in Michigan golf history, Coach Bill Barclay faces a tough job in selecting his five-man team in the month before the Wol- verines' April 20 opener here with Michigan State. Although inconsistent weather has prevented the squad from holding any outdoor sesions, Barclay has had them working out in the Sports Building. There he is ironing out A glee Favor. msC wiikles in their iriving by watch- ing them hit balls into the driving nets. A few members of the squad were able to get in some actual play on the Municipal course last week-end and Barclay hopes to have them all practicing on the University links about April 1. Three Veterans Return The only three men with any pre- vious experience at Michigan golf teams are Dunc Noble, Bill Court- right, and Harry Jung. Noble played on the 1944 squad while Courtright played here in 1943. Jung was a member of the 1941 freshmen squad. Other promising prospects on the squad are Roger Kessler, Michigan high school chiampion last year, fete Elliott, football and basketball star who won the Trueblood Tournament last summer and Dave Barclay and Bob Muir, both of whom have had considerable golf experience before coming to Michigan. Despite the large size of the squad, Coach Barclay urges/ all men still interested in trying out to report any week-day afternoon to the golf driv- ing room in the Sports Building. ,itry lio ig Ten Michigan State College is virtually assured at least one vote when its ap- plication for admission to the Western Conference is considered by Big Ten faculty members at their May meet- ing. Law Prof. Ralph Aigler, the Uni- versity's Conference committeeman' declared last night, "I have the same favorable attitude toward that insti- tution's application as Coach Fritz Crisler." Crisler was quoted in yes- terday's Daily stating that he would like to see MSC admitted. He indicated that there is feeling on the part of some committeemen that a nine-school conference is big enough. State, Pittsburgh, and Notre Dame have applied for entrance in the past. ' ...at the MUSIC SHO Operated by Musicians for Music-Lovers 205 East Liberty Street Phone I 1!. -I 'i WERTHER: i IN& ' w 3 AY SERYKEC ME 'SSi Phone 23 231l PP on for Free pICk GRE E NES iCr@ clean 8 g R ER T ME WICROSCOPI 5l6 East Liberty 4 Nae yor Spinghat rI-FANEDO '~ : Incredible (aptivator Wreathe yourself in this wholly captivating fragrance. Dry perfume is the fadeless fragrance-the perfume that incredibly reaches its full flower as it clings to warm, glowing skin. Use this gos- samer powder the same as liquid perfume. 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