THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEV IPermen Set Wor Wolverines Sweep Eight First Places In Swamping Wayne Tanksters, 58-26 Holiday Sets American 50-Yard Mark- ld 's Record in 150- Yard Medley Infield Posts Sought by Fiver "M" LettermenI White's Final TallymClinches Win For ATO Wolverine Two-Mile Relay Quartet Wins in Annual Illinois Tech Relays Stager Captures Tw By MURRAY GRANT Michigan's medley relay trio of Harry Holiday, Bob Sohl and Dick Weinberg smashed the 150-yard medley relay mark yesterday as the Maize and Blue Mermen bat- tered a weak Wayne University team into oblivion to the tune of t a 58-26 pasting. Wolverines took eight out of the nine events and every man entered managed to garner a place. Hal Krause was the only Tartar to finish first as he nosed out Bruce Witherspoon and Bill Crispin in the 50-yard freestyle. Crack Old Record The medley trio, originally scheduled to swim the 300-yard event, chose to take a crack at Yale's 150-yard mark and suc- ceeded in lowering the standard to 1:18.0. Yale's trio of Alan Ford, McFadden and Smith estab- lished the former world's mark of 1:18.8 in 1943. In this record- breaking attempt Harry Holiday also added another laurel to his growing list as his time for the 50-yard backstroke leg was :26.6, good enough for a new American record. Gus Stager took the 220-yard freestyle with plenty to spare in 2:16.5 to give him two victories this weekend. Friday night he copped the Michigan AAU 220 ti- tle beating the cream of the state distance crop. Tom Coates took third behind Bob Clark of Wayne. O'Neill Wins Dive Tom O'Neill nosed out Tartars Bob Knorr and Joe Mracna to take the one meter low board div- ing and Wally Stewart copped his specialty, the 440-yard freestyle, in the comparatively slow time of 5:04.7. The medley relay team each came back during the course of the rout to easily cop their three specialties. Weinberg edged team- mate Jay Sanford to capture the 100-yard freestyle in :24.6. Sohl Takes Specialty Sohl, current Western Confer- Northwestern Takes Big Nine Fencing Title CHAMPAIGN, ILL., March 15-- (P)-Northwestern University, pre- meet darkhorse, won the Western Conference Team Fencing Champ- ionship with a 10 point total to- day. Illinois defending team titlist, and Wisconsin, tied for second, each with 912, and Ohio State tal- lied 7. Rog Kessler, outstanding two- miler on the Maize and Blue track team, was a freshman sensation on last season's golf team and is expected to turn in even finer performances this season., ) Week-End Events ence breast stroke champ took his 200-yard event in the slow time of 2:27.6 as Bill Upthegrove, prom- ising freshman, followed close be-. hind. And Holiday took the back- stroke without any difficulty as he nearly lapped his two oppon- ents. He touched in 1:33.5 to nose out Sandy Sinkiewicz of Wayne and George Olsen, another up and coming Wolverine freshman. In the final event of the after-f noon a Wolverine 400-yard relay quartet composed of Witherspoon, Sanford, Upthegrove and Crispin took an early lead over the Tar- tars and were never headed to win handily in 3:50.1. This was the last dual meet for' the Wolverines who lost only to Ohio State. The team will con- DICK WEINBERG -- swam last tinue to practice, however, with leg of 150-yard medley relay in an eye on the coming NCAA meet :23.0 to help Wolverines smash on March 28 and 29 in Seattle, the existing world's record. OCTOBER IN APRIL: 100 Grid Tryouts Expected For SpringFotbal Practice prlR dC CI Ketterer, Tonasi Vie The ATO quintet loosed an For.Keystone Sack ATO-mic bomb on the Sigma Phi Epsilons, 21-17, yesterday to an- Five Michigan lettermen lead nex the crown of their fraternity an influx of candidates vying foi positions on Coach Ray Fisher' 1947 infield. Two of these. Jack Weisenburg- er and Dom Tomasi, are returnin from last year's nine, which fin- ished second in the Western Con- ference. A sixth lettermen is thir( sacker Larry Savage, a Saginav boy who won two letters coverinc the hot corner for Northwestern Three Fight for First Coach Fisher has two veteran; available at the initial bag in Howard Wikel Ind Don Boor. Wikel won a letter as a shortstor in 1943, but also can pitch anc play the outfield. He will probabl3 be used mostly as a first basemar this season. Boor played first backa in '42. A third candidate for the first base job is John Griffin, re- serve defenseman on Vic Heylig- er's hockey team. CharlieyKetterer, who played second base in 1943 and '44 has re- turned to Michigan to give Tom- asi a fight for the keystone sack, a position which he has held for the past two springs. Jack Back to Short Jack Weisenburger, who was moved to the outfield to make room for Don Robinson at short- stop last year, will be moved back to the shortfield this campaign to strengthen the inner workings of the 1947 nine. Also battling for the shortstop assignment is Willard Baker and Buddy Ross. Baker was a second stringer last spring, and Ross is an Ann Arbor product who could develop into a fine ball player, according to Fisher. There are four candidates for the third base job. Included among the candidates are Larry Savage, Bill Kuhn, Jack McDonald, and Ted Berce. Kuhn is a freshman, while McDonald, ace goalie on the hockey team, understudied Walt Kell at third base in 1946. Berce lettered in basketball in 1944, but this is his first trial with the base- ball team. ., i. sV 1 league and qualify for the cham- pionship play-offs of all the league winners. The contest looked tighter than a drum until Paul White hooked in his only field goal of the game givi'ng the ATO's a four point lead, 19-15, in the last few min- utes, an obstacle which the Sig Eps could not surmount. White and Howard Wikel slowed the tempo down to a fast walk in an attempt to freeze the ball. Then on a wild scramble under- neath the Sig Ep basket, Bob Dayoe tipped in another two points to pickle the ATO victory. Center Sam Massie whittled the lead by sinking a free throw, and making good another charity toss just as the game ended. Twenty personal fouls were called with the Sig Eps collecting eleven of them. Guard Harry An- derson tallied six points for the Sig Eps, and generallyskept his fraternity five in the running with his cool work on defense with Bob Hicks. Wikel and Dayoe com- bined on scoring honors with half a dozen points each. The semi-final round pits ATO against Alpha Delta Phi which boasts a record of five wins and no losses during the regular cam- paign. special To 'The iDaily CH-ICAGO, Ill.,March 15 - A! fast Wolverine two-mile relay' team swept to victory in the ae-. nual Illinois Tech Relays tonight as they outdistanced a strong Illi- nois quartet to cop the event in 7:48.1. Captain Chuck Birdsall led off Weir Namced To Ticket Post The announcement that Don- ald A. Weir was appointed Ath- letic Ticket Manager of the U. of M. Athletic Association was made yesterday by H. O. "Fritz" Crisler, Dorector of Athletics. Mr. Weir, last year connected with the property control unit of the University Business Office, will begin his new duties April 1. He replaces the General Manager of the Athletic Association, Andrew S. Baker, who will continue in that position until his resignation becomes effective in June. Before his employment with the University, Weir served fifteen years with the Washtenaw Cou xty Road Commission, obtaining that job immediately upon graduation from Cleary Business College in 1932. Weir has been associated with the Athletic Ticket Office in connection with football games and additional sports events dur- ing the past ten years. I f i i I s 4 and handed a short lead to Joe Michigan's mile relay-team cap- Hayden, Chuck Low took up the tured third place behind thie %win- baton on the third leg and Herb ning Illinois quartet and Notre Barten provided the kick cn the Dame. The Illini time was 3:18.8. anchor leg to insure the Wolver- The Wolverine spring medley four- ine thinclads of victory. Follow- some was second behind Wiscon- ing Illinois was Notre Dame with sin. Charley Fonville was upset Purdue and Indiana fourth and by Norm Wasser of Illinois in the fifth. shot put. Wasser threw 52 ft. 5 'M' Third in Distance Medley in., and Fonville 51 ft. 104 in. Michigan also took third in the Bob Gardner and Bob Harris of distance medley as Notre Dame Michigan tied for fourth in the and Indiana staged a down-to- high jump. the-wire battle. The Hoosiers clinched it in the last three yards Before the war Michigan golf as Earl Mitchell edged the Irish's teams made periodic trips through Bill Leonard for the win in 10:21.9, the South. In 1941 they met Geor- a new meet record. gia, Georgia Tech and Tennessee, FI i1 --"4 Pew SIdpinent o By BERNIE MEISLIN Coach Fritz Crisler estimates that approximately 100 candidates for Michigan's 1947 football team will be on hand March 31 when six weeks of Spring grid practice are scheduled to begin. The drills, to be held daily from 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., will continue through Friday, May 16, accord- ing to present plans, Crisler an- nounced,. Assisting Michigan's Head Man will be his regular staff of Bennie Oosterbaan, backfield coach; Jack Blott, line mentor; Art Valpey, end coach; and the newest addition to the Maize and Blue coaching staff, form- er Wolverine quarterback, George Ceithaml. Other staff members, including Wally Web-1 er and Cliff Keen, reserve squad coaches last Fall, will aid in handling the large turnout. / Absent from drills, because of + participation in other sports, will be Pete Elliott of the golf team; J a c k Weisenburger, Chalmers "Bump" Elliott, Joe Soboleski, Dominic Tomasi, and J. T. White, all of whom will spend the Spring months, under Ray Fisher's tute- lage, on the diamond, and George Kraeger and Bob Mann of the track team. However, classroom schedules permitting, a large group of let- termen are expected to partici- pate in the drills. Captain Bruce Hilkene, ends Lennie Ford, Donovan Hershberger, and Ed McNeill, tackles, Bob Bal- lou and Fenwick Crane, full- back Dan Dworsky, and half- back Gene Derricotte will be in uniform. The varsity letterwinner group will be augmented by a large num- ber of eager B team award and freshman numeral winners. Crisler declared that he was un- decided about scheduling a Spring practice game to culminate the six week drill period. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 3) ICLASSIFIEDADVERTISINGJ S---.-I -- ~~~~-- MISCELLANEOUS PHOTOSTATIC Copying, Enlargements or Reductions. Leave your work at Wikel Drug, Calkins-Fletcher, Pur- chase Camera, Card and Camera, marriage and birth certificates, dis- charges, records. 24-hour pick-up service. Technical Photo Service. 917 Sunnyside, Phone 4559, 2-6958. )53 TYPEWRITERS Bought, Sold, Rented Repaired STUDENT & OFFICE SUPPLIES 0. D. MORRILL 314 S. State St. Phone 7177 ace Q ]Diamonds'c and Wedding - SsRings S 717North University Ave.O OC~rO >0;;;;:>0<;;;;;> U Z NEW HOSPITAL POLICY pays you up to $10.00 per day for room and board, plus liberal medical and surgical ben- efits. Airway Underwriters, 712 Wol- verine flldg,, Phone 2-7521. )21 FOR RENT TYPEWRITERS now availabYp for rent, standards or portables. Office Equip- ment Service Co., 111 S. Fourth Ave. )36 HIGHLY RESTRICTED- NEW-Unfurnished 3 room "Greenwich Village" type, private bath, finished in antique green and soft rose, prime, highly polished oak floors and inlaid linoleum, electric apartment stove, FHA ceiling $89400 per month. NEW-Unfurnished 1% room "Ber- muda" type, bachelor sleeping apart- ment (no cooking), private bath, fin- ished in soft rose, prime, highly pol- ished oak floors and inlaid linoleum, FHA ceiling $64.00 per month. RENTAL-Restricted to veterans, with no children, no pets. Leased on a yearly basis, rent payable in advance. Located in 1d2 mile circle of campus. References required. WRITE-Box 60, The Michigan Daily. TRANSPORTATION WANTED: Ride to New York City and return during Easter vacation for veteran and wife. Will share ex- penses, driving. Please phone M. Ad- elstein, 2-7423 mornings or 5888 after- noons. )20 WANTED TO RENT WOULD anyone going away for spring vacation want to rent their apart- ment to student veteran and wife? Good references. Box 72. )50 REWARD-For information leading to the renting of apartment in fall- Jack Krewson, 4183. )24 HELP WANTED A CAREER FOR YOU-The telephone company offers interesting work, coin- fortable quarters, cafeteria on prem- ises, vacations with pay, thrift plans, advancement. For further informa- tion call 9985 between 8 and 5. Mich- igan Bell Telephone Co. )33 TAILORING and SEWING DRESSMAKING. Dresses, Suits, For- inals, and Bridal Gowns. Alterations. For appointments, call Mrs. Ringinen. 2-2604. )52 PERSONAL ATTENTION, Two Gremlins - Thanks for information. There are a couple of sodas for you if you make your- selves known. Call Bob Beach at 8053. ds B d Hold Those Bonds! FOR SALE A BETTER PRICE paid for Men's used clothing. Sam's Store, 122 E. Wash- ington St. ) 14 FOR SALE-New set of formal tails, size 38-40. $65.00. New. Worn three times, will sell for $50.00 complete. Phone 2-1487 after 5 p.m. )64 REAR your children with Electronics. "'Electronic Baby Sitter" will reliably watch your baby, day or night. Priced reasonably. Call 2-1371 )24 GOLF-The greatest names in Golf Clubs. Hagen, Spalding and Wilson. Have a good assortment of these. Municipal Golf Course. Call 9230. Phone number 2-0175. )17 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Billfold. Keep wallet, pictures, please return money, extremely nec- essary, poverty stricken coed. Rose- mary Doty, Phone 8598. LOST - Blue Zircon Ring with gold band; sometime Saturday. Reward for return. Phone 6943. )6 LOST-Gold link bracelet with filagree on campus Wednesday, 'March 12. Value for sentimental reasons. Please return to Rae M. Guttman, phone 4489. )12 BUSINESS SERVICES CARPETING and Rugs cleaned in your home. Place orders early. Free esti- mates. Phor e Chelsea 6691. ) 4 TYPING: Theses, term papers, etc. Duplicating: notices, form letters, programs. A2 Typing Service, 232 Nickels Arcade, phone 9811. )55 ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS Sales - JOHN JADWIN - Service. 855 Tappan Ave., Phone 2-7412. )10 CREW-CUTS!! Be you fiat, round or square- headed - we'll design one to t your facial features!! The Dascola Barbers Between Mich. and State Theatres new members will be accepted for the spring semester. Any student wishing to file application for membership should attend this meeting. If unable to attend, call Bob Schroder, 2-5669, or Larry Ward, 2-6173. Faculty Women's Club Tea. 3:30 to 5:30 p.m., Wed., March 19 at the home of Mrs. A. G. Ruthven. Phi Kappa Tau meeting, Mon., Marh 17, 7:15 p.m., Rm. 306, Un- ion. Dinner, 6:30 p.m., Union Caf- ete: ia. All Phi Tau on campus in- vit d. The Modern Poetry Club: Meet in League Monday evening, March 17. Dr. Arthos will lead the dis- cussion. Room will be posted on bulletin board. Conversation Group, Sociedad Hispanica, Mon., March 17, 3:30 to 5 p.m., International Center. Russian Circle. Russky Kruzhok. 8 p.m., Mon., March 17. Interna- tional Center. Members and their friends invited. Palestine Information Please, sponsored by IZSA. 8 p.m., Tues., March 18, Hillel Foundation. Bring questions to Palestine question box at Hillel. All are invited. Churches First Congregational Church. 10:45 a.m., Public Worship. Dr. Parr's subject will be "What Has Christianity To Say?" IV. "About the Profoundest Question in His- tory." 5 p.m., Student Guild Supper. Dr. Frank Huntley will speak on "The Christian's Task in the Re- construction of the Orient." First Presbyterian Church, 1432 Washtenaw Morning Worship. 10:45 a.m., Dr. Lemon's sermon topic will be "Man the Measure." Westminister Guild, 5 p.m. Pan- el discussion on "The Effect of Religion on the Professions." Sup- per follows. The Congregational Disciples Guild. Dr. Frank L. Huntley, Pro- fessor of English and Secretary of the Barbour Scholarship Commit- tee, will speak on "The Christian's Task in the Reconstruction of the Orient." Meeting will be at the Congregational Church at 5 p.m. instead of 6 p.m. so that all mem- bers may attend the symphony. Memorial Christian Church, (Disciples of Christ) : Morning Worship. 10:50 a.m. Rev. F. E. Zendt, preaching. Nursery for children during the service. Lutheran Student Association. 5:30 p.m., Zion Lutheran Parish Hall. 6 p.m., Supper. Program follow- ing supper hour. Mr. Eugene Han- son will speak on "Politics." Sunday morning Bible Hour, 9:15 a.m. at the Center. Worship services, 10:30 a.m., Trinity and Zion Lutheran Chur- ches. University Lutheran Chapel. Services, 9:45 and 11 a.m. The Rev. Alfred Scheips will speak on the subject, "Telling the Truth Tactfully." Gamma Delta, Lutheran Student Club. Supper meeting, 5:15 p.m., at the Center. First Church of Christ. Scien- tist, 409 S. Division St. Sunday morning service at 10:- 30. Subject: "Substance." Sunday School at 11:45. Wednesday evening service at 8 p.m. First Unitarian Church, Edward H. Redman, Minister 10 a.m., Adult Study Group and Church School. 11 a.m., Service of Worship. Ser- mon by Edward H. Redman: (Continued on Page 8) FOR FINE DANCEABLE MUSIC TcE REVELERS Dance Orchestra IF DoN MACKINNON Business Mgr. Phone 418 3 4183 NQ / "x 1 H . Hove your RACET RETRUNG ' r t 'I ( Look your best in clothes cleaned by THE MODERN. METHOD! It's the finest in scsentiflc, ODORLESS dry cleaning! ONLY INKOGIRAPH PENCIL POINTED FOUNTAIN PEN "Old. Smootije'' is a perfect name for this miracle pen which does everything that ordinary foun- tain pens can do, and many other things impossible with other pens. No nib to spread or scratch-just a 14 kt. solid trol noint that zlid They're Puddles Aparton 'What's Best in, Gargoyle? /f 8~ Athlete Prefers Travel Scholar Likes Jokes "I have traveled and I have "I ain't so dumb.' seen the Gargoyle. I will keep Spinoza Brown oni traveling.egrmN Clarence Touche SarmN DDT f l FOCUS ON NEWS AT 6:00 P. M. MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY 1Il II 11 I