TUESDAY, MARCH 1, 1947 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE T EP TUE /MTCHI 1y~y4AL1i JATyy Pa taa! 'apimpip _ Fifty Golf Hopefuls Answer First Call New I iiik (C*ach Hert IKatzeitmyer "Past performances (1 1 .1 t in-rmore, we're three weeks course will rot Serv(C as th(' i' lkiteif)gctting started." Third Place Cinder Team Is Tops, Declares Coach for this year's vaity cquadc." re-I vealed the new Michigan golf mentor Albert C. "Bert" Katzen- meyer, as he surveyed the swing- ing of more than 50 aspirants in the initial try-out session yester- day afternoon at the Intramural Building. Katzenmeyer, who transferred from Ohio State to assume his new position here with the Physical Education Department, has a4 wealth of talent on hand to carry the Wolverine links- men to the Western Conference title once again. With Bill Barclay at the helm last year and Katzenmeyer as as- sistant coach, Michigan's easy- swinging golf lads represented the lone varsity athletic squad to gar- ner a top rung in any of the Con- ference's final standings. "Our prospects are very bright but competition will be keener than, ever before," declared the new 29-year-old mentor. We'll have to practice quite a bit in- doors, for the University Golf Course is covered with snow. Dave rcirlay, tr.,ini captain andl( probable inUinber )one man, and five other holdovers from last year's squad were on hand to greet Katzenmeyer. They includ- ed - Pete Elliott, of football fame, Bill Courtright, champion wrest- ler, Ed Schalon, John Bennett and Roger Kessler. For the first time since the war, Michigan golfers will em- bark on a trip through the South. The southern expedition gets underway April 7 with Washington and Lee University at Lexington, Va., and closes with the University of North Carolina on April 11. Virginia Polytechnic Institute, Univer- sity of Virginia, and Duke Uni- versity will also meet the Wol- verines during this period. Katzenmeyer plans to carry an eight-man squad for the southern tour, but the regular squad will consist of 12-15 members. He plans to form a freshman golf ,qugad at Michigan to insure the varsity team with prospective ma- erial. DARKHORSE FLYWEIGHT-Bob Johnson, Wolverine 121-powmder, applies a wrist lock to Arnold Plaza in the final 121-pound bout in the Conferenl.e Wrestling Meet at Evanston, Illinois, Saturday night. Johnson dropped a 9-2 decision to Plaza to clinch second place honors in his weight division. M ihigaSurprises Bi Nine Grapplers By EV ELLIN Aladdin's genie had nothing on Coach Cliff Keen, Michigan mat mentor, who uncorked a bottle full of surprises for the tBig Ten muscle men who gathered at Ev- Play refreshed... have a Coke + ' J ~ n i} - t rr 4 anston, Illinois last weekend for! the Conference Wrestling Meet. Michigan's fighting grapplers came up with two dark horses, in the persons of Messrs. Bob John- son and Dan Dworsky, who really put out when the chips were down and earned the precious eight points that put the Wolverines in- to a third place tie with Iowa. Captain Bill Courtright, 'Batt- ling' Bob Betzig, and Maurice Smitty' Smith, shone in Michi- gan's well balanced attack which netted 20 points over five weight divisions. Johnson Stages Comeback Johnson, a former Wolverine mat captain, made a sensational comeback when he captured sec- ond place honors in the 121-pound bracket of the Conference tour- ney. Johnson returned to school this semester after a three year absence and waded through five weeks of intensive conditioning to earn a starting berth in time for the Big Ten finale. Purdue's Arnold Plaza decision- ed Johnson 9-2 in a hard fought battle in the final bout. Johnson earned the right to appear in the finals by virtue of his 4-2 victory in an overtime match over Herb Farrel of Indiana. The Michigan flyweight fought Farrel to a 0-0 tie in the regular three periods and entered an over- time period to score a snappy re- versal followed by a quick escape in the closing seconds. Dworsky Surprises Dworsky, Wolverine h e a v y- weight, set the Conference heavies on their heels with a fine show of wrestling ability that earned him the runner-up spot in his weight class. Vern Gagne of Minnesota edged out the battling Wolverine by a narrow 2-1 margin in the final bout. T h e Michigan heavyweight scored two of the biggest upsets of the meet in defeating the top- heavy favorites, Ray Gunkel of Purdue and Chuck Gottfried of Illinois. Gunkel, Dworsky's vic- tim in the opening round, was un- defeated during the regular Con- ference campaign and slated as a sure-thing for the crown. Dworsky earned a spectacular 5-1 victory over Gottfried with a burst of power in an overtime period that took the Illini husky by surprise. Courtright Champ Cbourtright was true to form throughout the meet and encoun- tered 1de difficulty in annexing thei Conference 155 -pond crown for the second year in succession. C-ky's 9-1 victory over Illinois' Ken Marlin in the finals gave him the title and garnered a precious six points for the Wolverines. Courtright scored one more point for Michigan in pinning Warren Gregory of Purdue in the semi -finals. l3ob Betzig, Michigan's out- standing 155-pound find, turned in one of the most colorful per- formances of the entire meet in amassing three points for the Wolverine cause. Betzig pinned Dick Fisher of Indiana in the opening round and bowed out 11- 8 to Illinois national champ, Dave Shapiro, in a semi-final match that was acclaimed the finest ex- hibition of wrestling of the entire meet. It was nip and tuck all the way but the Illini champion had the edge on experience and proved just a little too much for the batt- ling Wolverine. Retzig Wins In the consolation tournament, Betzig pinned Walter Sherman of Northwestern in 21 seconds of the second period in the opening round to score one more point for Michigan and cinch another marker for fourth place honors in the 165-pound class. Michigan's scrappy 136-pound- er, Maurice Smith, turned in his best work of the season in cap- turing third place in his weight division by downing Iowa's Duane Hanson 3-2 in the final round of the c o n s o l a t i o n tournament. Smith's victory added two points to the Wolverine total. Wolverines Johnnie Allred, 128-' pounder and Ward Peterson, 175- pounder, drew tough opponents in the opening round. Lou Kachi- roubas, Illini crackerjack who went on to cop the title, subdued Allred in 4:51 while Norm An- thonisen, Illinois captain and Big Ten runner-up, pinned Peterson 19 seconds shy of the final horn. Wolverine Perf Better than 194 By ARCHIE PARSONS What is probably the finest Michigan track team ever to step on the cinders finished only third in the Big Nine Championships in Champaign last Saturday, which is probably the best indication of what a great meet it was. In Coach Ken Doherty's esti- mation, the present squad even tops the 1945 Wolverine aggre- gation which set a Conference scoring record, winning the championship with 75 points The mile run is a good example. Don Queller, Maize and Blue standout who copped third place, had not taken a good workout in four weeks. He has been con- stantly bothered with a bad cough and a foot injury. After qualify- ing in the 880-yard trials Friday night, the cough started up again and he didn't get to sleep until 5 a.m. Saturday night he ran a brilli- ant 4:16.4 mile and came back one hour later to post a 1:55 ef- fort in the half mile, taking fifth in the latter event. Last year 1:57.8 won the half. Chuck Low also turned in a fine bit of running in the mile, where he ran 4:20.4, which would have won the grind in '46. This year it placed him out of the money in sixth place. Herb Barten's win in the half was easily the top performance of the meet. Going down the back- stretch in the last lap, he figura- tively tied the rest of the field to a post, ripped by them, and open- ed up 20 yards on them before they knew it. Only a sophomore, he tied a 14 year record establish- ed by Indiana's Chuck Hornbostel, winning in 1:53.9. Not far behind this was Chuck Fonville's new record in the shot pu.t Second to Illini Norm Was- ser with only three heaves to go, the Wolverine star inched ahead, and after Wasser's last try failed to overtake him, Chuck really let go with a 53 ft. 2% in. toss which rode the old Big Nine mark right out of the Illinois Armory. Team captain Charlie Bird- sall and Rog Kessler also chalk- ed up the best performances of their lives in the two-mile. Bird- sal ran the distance in 9:30.5, while Kessler was clocked in 9:31.1. This race turned into a stampede at the end, with al- most the entire field charging down. the last stretch together, Wisconsin's Don G e h r m a n n outlasting the pack to win. The next five men were close enough to almost tag him as he finish- ed. One of the wildest finishes came in the semi-finals of the 70-yard low hurdles Friday eve- ning. With three men to qualify for the finals, Michigan's Jack Martin was a sure bet-until his lead foot hit the last hurdle, cata- pulting Martin through the air for three yards, after which he slid the remaining two yards on the cinders. There was some contro- versy as to whether he did not place, three-point landing and all, but the judges did not call it that way. The race of races, from the crowd's viewpoint, was the mile relay. Ohio State got off to a fast start when Bob Little, their lead- off runner, brought home a 15- yard lead over Michigan, and a 30-yard advantage over Illinois Then the Maize and Blue and the Illini started to whittle Charles KO's Bivins CLEVELAND, O., March 10-(P) -Ezzard Charles, the National Boxing Association's No. 1 chal- lenger for the Light Heavyweight title, tonight registered one of the top triumphs of his career with a lightning-quick k n o c k o u t of Heavyweight Jimmy Bivins of Cleveland in the fourth of a scheduled 10-rounder before 11,- orma(Ies 1Even, 4 Chuiinpion's it down. Wolverines Dick For- restel and Herb Barten, the lat- ter running after only a 20- minute rest from his half-mile jaunt, turned in 50.0 and 50.3 quarters respectively, while Le- Roy Vranek ran a 48.5 third leg for Illinois. The anchor leg started off with Buckeye Mal Whitfield, who had run the 440 and 880 earlier, lead- ing Wolverine George Shepherd by about 10 yards. Ten more be- hind Shepherd came the great Herb McKenley. The Jamaican raced to the front in one lap, Shepherd com- ing right along with him. Mc- Kenley held Whitfield off to the last stretch, but the pace had been too much. The Buckeye passed him, and Shepherd was a very close third. The disappoint- ed Illini fans did not realize that M c K e nle y had run 48 flat equalling the world's record he had set the night before. Such was the meet in which even a world mark did not always mean vic- tory.. 1. national championship. I For Real Dancing Enjoyment Tihe Melody Men Orchestra Phil Savage Evenings 25-8084 _. i.-- ----- -.. _n... ....._ - YOu Can Always Find NEW STY LES F He re's 1 IRST AT W ILD'S Proof CORDUROY JACKETS Bad er Cagers Get NCAA Bid CHICAGO, March 10- (AP) - Wisconsin today became t he eighth Big Nine basketball team since 1939 to represent the Fourth District in the NCAA Eastern playoffs at Madison Square Gar- den. The Badgers, who won the Western Conference crown with a 9-3 record and closed the regular season with an all-game record of 15-5, were picked today by the district selection committee of Doug Mills, Illinois, Bill Chand- ler, Marquette, and Ben Van Al- styne, Michigan State. Since 1939, Wisconsin and In- diana were the only Fourth Dis- trict representatives to win the By McGregor k+ V 0 5, BOTTLLD UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY ANN ARBOR COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY Priced for long, com- fortable, satisfactory wear . .,.at $22.50 Several eye-catching shades from ;which to choose. Pr kofed -DAY SERVICE Every man who's ever owned one is all for the corduroy jacket. It's hardy, handsome, and highly durable. For outdoors . . .for lounging indoors . . . it can't be topped. These are tailored with the care usually found only in fine suits. 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