THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ThRS Nine Michigan Swimmers To Fight for NCAA Championship Stewart Aims at 1500 Meter Freestyle Crown Evans, Canja Face Strong OSU Divers; Finals in Five Events Slated for Tonight 'M' Hockey Ace Excells On Jap Ice Former Michigan hockey star Neil Celley is piling up a maze of skating records in Japan while in the Army waiting his return to the Wolverine campus. Recently, Celley won the Japan- By MURRAY GRANT Nine Wolverine swimmers will attempt to regain a crown they lost two years ago as they open tIhe annual NCAA swimming championships in Seattle, Wash- ington, tonight. The mermen, making the first postwar flying trip of any Maize and Blue squad, arrived in Seattle yesterday and are scheduled to follow the same slate of events as in the Western Conference meet. Stewart in 1500 Meter This morning there'll be heats in the 1500 meter freestyle with the title going to the winner of the fastest heat a n d runners-up Judged by the times they recorded. Wally Stewart, Wolverine distance, man, who took second in the Con- ference, is one entry while Coach Matt Mann may also enter Gus Stager, middle distance star in this event. Also scheduled for the morning round are preliminaries in the low diving and here again it looks like 4 repetition of the Western Con- ference meet with the Buckeye quarter of Harlan, Anderson, Strong and Calhoun favored along with the Michigan pair, Gil Evans andAlex Canja to reach the finals. Weinberg Ready for 1"50" Heats will be run in the after- noon for the 50-yard freestyle, 440-yard freestyle, 150-yard back- stroke and the 300-yard medley relay. In the "50" Dick Weinberg will try to make it two out of three over Buckeye flash Halo Hirose. .Also considered as serious threats in this event are Ted Ho- bert of Ohio State and Ed Heuber of Yale. In the "440" it looks like Ohio State all the way. With stars like Jack Hill, Jack Ryan, and Seymour Schlanger the Bucks definitely rate the nod. The Wolverine en- tries will probably be Stager and Stewart, who took third and fifth in the Conference meet. M' Favored in 2 Races Coach Mann's charges are rated fairly heavy favorites to take two titles tonight as Harry Holiday is the odds on choice to whip Alan Stack of Yale for the backstroke crown. Other threats to Holiday are Dick Maine of Iowa and Bob deGroot of the Ohio State. The 300-yard medley relay trio of Holiday, Bob Sohl and Wein- berg hold the world's record for this distance and no team has come even close to challenging that mark. Therefore they appear "shoo-ins" in their specialty. Other Wolverines making the trip are Bill Crispin, short dis- tance freestyler who will probably swim in the 50 and 100-yard free- styles and on the 400-yard relay team and Bill Upthegrove, fresh- man breaststroker, who will swim in the 200-yard breaststroke and on the 400-yard relay team to- morrow. Canadiens Two Up The Montreal Canadiens nosed out the Boston Bruins 2-1 in overtime tonight to take a 2-4 lead in their best-of-seven Na- tional Hockey League cham- pionship playoff series. Kenny Mosdell hammered in the pay- off counter at 5:38 of the "sud- den death" overtime. RelayQuartet To See Action Fordliani Poses 'est In Chicago Relays Michigan's 2-mile relay team will put its undefeated record on the block tomorrow night when it faces quartets from Fordham, Indiana and Notre Dame in the annual Chicago Relays at Chi- cago Stadium. Coach Ken Doherty will count on Charley Birdsall, Chuck Low, George Vetter and Conference half-mile king Herb Barten, to keep the Wolverines' slate clean. Michigan's Don Queller is still out of action with a persistent cold. Rams Threaten Since the Wolverine foursome has already taken the measure of the Hoosiers and the Fighting Irish this season, the once-beaten Fordham baton-passers seem the greatest threat to Michigan's two- mile relay record. Fordham's team of Jack O'Hare, Frank Leary, Ed Carney and Jerry Connally have made an impressive showing this year, taking the two- mile relay in all the eastern invi- tational meets, including the Na- ti-nal AAU Indoor title. They were upset in the scramble for the IC4-A two-mile relay crown when NYU and Manhattan broke the tape ahead of the Ram quartet. Indoor Season Ends Fordham's best clocking this season has been 7:49 on Madison Square Garden's eleven lap board track, while the Wolverine four- some has turned in a winning time of 7:48.1 on the eight-lap dirt oval in the University of Chicago Field House. Courtright, Dworsky Grapple or Michigan in Season nals By EV ELLINI Two Wolverine wrestlers, Bill Courtright and Dan Dworsky, will wind up Michigan's 1947 mat cam- paign when they open in the NCAA wrestling championship tourney this afternoon at Illinois' Huff gym, Champaign, Illinois. Coach Cliff Keen, Wolverine mat mentor and Big Nine representa- tive on the NCAA Wrestling Rules Committee, is not gunning for the team championship but will be out to see that his two bright charges bring home the bacon in 155 and heavyweight divisions. Courtright, defending Nation- al 155-pound titlist, has wrestled at 165 during the current cam- paign but will drop down to 155 to defend his crown in the NCAA meet. Courtright captured the Conference crown three weeks ago and has suffered just one' defeat this season, at the hands of Illinois' national champ Dave Shapiro. Gales Mikles, 155-pound junior . ~-.; NEW FOR EASTER JUST RECEIVED- SMITHSON SUITS $35.00 to $55.00 greys, browns - single- or double - breasted - regulars, shorts, or longs. NEW CHAMP HATS $7.50 - $10.00 KUOHN'S CLOTHES SHOP 122 EAST LI ERTY Two Matmen Enter NCAA Meet 1, from Michigan State, is expected to give Courtright a tough fight for the title. Mikles placed third in last year's tournament and was National AAU champ at 145 in 1945. He won eight consecutive matches this season and was the only wrestler to defeat Michigan's spectacular 155-pounder, Bob Bet- zig, in dual competition. Dworsky, recently crowned Big Nine runner-up, stands as one of the leading contenders for the heavyweight championship. Dwarsky's toughest opposition is expected from the Gopher's Vern Gagne, the rude gentleman who stopped Dworsky in the fin- al bout of the Conference meet. Michigan's versatile heavyweight has made a rapid rise to the high- er wrestling circles during the current campaign. Dworsky turn- ed in a brilliant performance in the recent Big Nine meet in down- ing the two grapplers that had defeated him earlier this season in dual competition. The leading contenders for the team crown are Oklahoma A.&M., Cornell College, Iowa State Teach- ers, and Illinois. The Aggies, de- fending champs, have won the NCAA title every year a team champion has been declared but may be surprised by the Fighting Illini who will be sparked by four grapplers of champion caliber. The Lawyers Club quintet de- feated Nu Sigma Nu, 34-27 last night to take the I-M Graduate Basketball title. The Lloyd House bowling team copp d the I-M Dorm Bowling title y outpinning Chicago House, 2540 2525. I r £1 N EW STYLES FIRST AT W GREY # 4e 6a RE.D &BLU~k5p/u NEIL CELLEY aU c 2 4 Z'J >' 1 Y''\ 'A Let the Buyer Be Sure! Whether it's a pure wool plaid in warm colors or a cool short-sleeved oxford, you can always be sure of highest quality in an Arrow sports shirt. The proud guarantee of the Arrow label is your assurance of the best in sports shirts and sport knits. To be sure -buy Arrow! State at Street Liberty S INC E '&54&- - ese All-Service Ice Derby at Lake Yamanaka by taking the 100, 220, 400, 440, and half mile ice titles. The former . Wolverine speedster set the 100- and 220-yard Japan- ese records, and he is being boost- ed as an Olympic ice team candi- date. In winning the titles, Celley received five $125 watches for his record-breaking efforts. Celley played left wing on the number one line of the champion- ship 1945-46 puck squad, making 15 goals and 18 assists for 33 points which was good for fifth place in the team scoring. The other mem- bers of the line that played with him were center Wally Gacek, who, played the latter part of the re- cent season and clinched the my- thical Big Nine championship against Minnesota by garnering two markers, and Wally Grant, who is also in service. In a recent letter to Coach Vic Heyliger, Celley said that he hopes to be back at Michigan for the 1949 hockey season, 9 Planning a trip? Don't make a slip. Save yourself a consider- able sum, Five can ride as cheaply as one. Phone 25-666 (No Local Calls) BURN'S SUBURBAN CAB CO. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN II I a II 11 (Continued from Page 2) sity of Pittsburgh offers a one year training course at the Re- search Bureau for Retail Training. Call at the Bureau of Appoint- ments, 201 Mason Hall, for further information. Mr. F, W. Fr.ostic, Superintend- cut of Schools, Wyandotte, Michli- gan, will be at the Bureau of Ap- pointments, Mon., March 31, to in- terview candidates for early ele- mentary, speech correction, biol- ogy, and mathematics positions. Call 4121, ext., 489 for appoint- ments. Chemists, Chemical Engineers, Mechanical Engineers, Electrical Engineers, and Accountants: Ans- co will have four representatives here on Fri., March 28, to inter- view June graduates in these fields. Mr. G. A. McKenzie will represent Personnel; Mr. M. F. Skinker, Engineering; Dr. I. G. Stevenson, Development Labora- tory; and Dr. F. J. Kaszuba, Re- search. Call the Bureau of Ap- pointments, ext. 371, for an ap- t-in n m a t if 1 t .ty , t Ce z You will find our stocks complete for your Easter Ensemble SLACKS Gabardine, ... Flannel . .. Worsteds SPORT COATS .. . SHIRTS JACKETS. . . LOAFER COATS Accessories To Complete Your Outfit. BUY Where Your Money Goes Furthest- L q 1~< A . The Experts choose GREY spiked with RED and BLUE for Spring EAcH SEASON those in the "who's who" in the menswear business choose the team of colors that they consider the most important in the I1 poln ULmenA I. (Continued on Page 4) k119T~i sC f .w. 1 . ~tsew sts .w r .: - i1" ,, +i~i",- r^ _ rsfW " e.. "i9 - 4 fashion picture. This year the choice is grey spiked with red and blue. We've bought our merchandise to coincide with their choice so you can be dressed in the best New York man- ner this Spring! nable s -'i. ~ ~.) - 111,.. - . -I _® __ i 0. ci8 v %5r J ~ 7 4 R I I 'IN9 New FashioF Foulard Tie Ii