MARCH 30, 1947 _ n THE. MICHICAA DAILY PAGE THE MICHIGAN DAILY 0 CSA3i Q Wolverines Ta] Weinberg Wins Century ForSecondNational T itle Verdeur Sets 200-yard Breastroke Marl To Defeat Miehigan Swimmer Bob Sohl ke Second in Swi eet Detroit Evens Series i I I I I I s By The Associated Press SEATTLE, Wash.-March 29- It was the same old story of too many divers tonight, as Ohio State retained their NCAA swimming championship by defeating sec- ond place Michigan, 66 to 39. For the second night in a row the Buckeyes made a clean sweep of the diving with Miller Ander- son taking his second title of the meeting. Bruce Harlan was sec- ond, Jim Strong, third, Jack Cal- houn, fourth and Ralph Buratti edged Wolverine Alex Canja for fifth. Gil Evans other Michigan diver failed to qualify for the fin- als by only .61 of a point. Anderson Named Outstanding Anderson was named outstand- ing swimmer of the season im- mediately after the diving and was presented with trophy right after he took his second title. Dick Weinberg proved to the nation that he is the outsstanding short distance freestyler in the country tonight as he copped his second national title; this time in the 100-yard freestyle finals. Weinberg was clocked in :52.2, as he touched out the Hawaiian flash, Halo Hirose of Ohio State. This added to the 50-yard crown Nhe took last night and gave the sensational sophomore star re- venge over Hirose who defeated 6 him in the Conference meet. He also swam the freestyle lap on the Wolverine 300-yard medley relay team last night as they annexed< the national title in 2:54.4. Verdeur Cracks Record Joe Verdeur of little LaSalle ' College in Philadelphia continued to better the world's record in the 200-yard breastroke. Tonight he was clocked in 2:16.8, or almost Y three seconds better than his ac- cepted world's record. However, last week in the Eastern Inter-, collegiates he was clocked n 2:16.4, Bob Sohl took second behind Ver- deur to push Michigan into a DicK WEINBERG short-lived lead. At this juncture- they led the Buckeyes 35-32._ Bill Smith copped the 440 free- style, his second title of the meet- h e Wt'Szi i e , ing, as he finished 15 feet in front * of Wolverine Gus Stager in the { fast time of 4:45. Jack Ryan ofE Ohio State was third, thus pushing MILWAUKEE, March 29-(:P)-- the Buckeyes into the yead to stay Ralph Heikkinen, former Univer- with a 41 to 39 advantage.sioMchgnuadndfr Stager swimming beautifully sity of Michigan guard and for- avenged a previous defeat at the mer line coach at the University hands of Ryan in the Conference of Virginia, was appointed foot-' meet as he nosed out his Buck- ball line coach at Marquette Uni- eye opponent by five feet. George versity today. Hoogerhyde of Michigan State was Athletic Director Conrad M. fourth with Rog Watts of Iowa Jennings said that the services of State fifth. Heikkinen a New York attorney,. Wolverines End Season Next Week had been sought by Head Coach The Buckeye 400-yard relay Frank J. Muiray since the resig- team of Bill Zemer, Ted Hobert, nation last fall of Al Thomas. Halo Hirose and Bill Smith also Heikkinen was line coach under took the relay title the last event Murray at Virginia from 1940 to of the program as they finished 1944 while attending Law School four feet in front of the Yale at Charlottesville. quartet, Michigan failed to place Heikkinen played on Univer-1 as Michigan State took third fol- sity of Michigan teams in 1936,c lowed by Stanford and Washing- 1937 and 1938. His teammates( ton. voted him the most valuable play-) The Wolverines wind up the er award in his junior and seniorI swimming season next weekend years. In 1938 ie was chosen at at Columbus in the National AAU member of the Associated Press. meet. All-America team.r L Foursome Luns Second To oosiers CHICAGO, Ill., March 29-UP) --Michigan's two-mile relay had to be content with second place in, the Chicago Relays here tonight, s Indiana's fast quartet came on t win the race in 7:48.4. Ihe Hoosier relay of Bill Corse. Elmer Prifogle, Earl Mitchell. and Torn Dtal, upset the undefeated Wolverine foursome with Notre Dame taking third and Fordham ast Charley Birdsall led off for te M ize and Blue, followed byj coe Vetter, Chuck Low, andI Herb Barten running anchor. Elmore Harris, the flying tailor from the Bronx, pulled a major1 upset by flashing by Illinois' HerbI McKenley, world's 440-yard rec- ord-holder, to win the invitational "600" in 1:11.7, far off the Ameri- can record of 1:10.2. The slender Jamaican lost stride in the final yards and finished thiid, five feet behind George Guida of Villa- nov a. Loose-limber Gil Dodds, the fly- ing parson, tonight ran the fastest mile of the indoor track season, a 4:06.8 performance which was only four-tenths of a second shy of the American mark which he set in the Cihcago Relays' same Banker's Mile" in 1944. West Cage Stars I)efea L Easterners NEW YORK, March 29-(A')- Ralph Hamilton of Indiana, play- ed a scant 10 minutes tonight buti dumped in 16 points as the West All-Stars defeated the East All- Stars basketball team. 66 to 58, in the Herald Tribune charity game that lured 18,019 spectators to Madison Square Garden. Wolver ine Grid H1o1pefuls To Start Spring Practice j .ilk ene,F Ora, SObel~eki Amon Lettermen Exl To Comipete for 1947 Positio>ns TORONTO, March 29 -dP Starting with tw-o quick goals in the first period and wkindin~g upa six goalbr inithelast .scs sign, the Detro)LIt",, Wing crushed the Tonronto Maple Leafs, 9-1, toniht to even their semi- final National Hock:y League playoff ser~ies ith the Leafs: at' one game apiece. The Red Wings struck swiftly following a penalty to Jim Thom- son of the Leafs to forge a two- goal lead within five minutes. Ted Lindsay fired the first goal at 3:21 and just 59 seconds later Sid Abel rapped in another. The Wings held the edge on th^ play right Cthrough -the period and maintained const:).it press- ure. 11he Lea-fs lackedpower and their attacks mselom bouhtany- work to Detroit goalie R=Almas. Billy Taylor, former Leaf. in- c reased the Detroit total tio three g.oal~s earlyv in the seecond period. Veteran Nick Metz got Toronto's frst goal midway through the period with a fifty foot drive from inside the blue line that eluded Red Almas. The Leafs hit a hot- ter pace in this period and in the last minute buzzed around Almas several times. I'll By BERNIE MEISLIN A host of eager football talent will be on hand tomorrow to greet head coach Fritz Criler as Mich- igan's mentor calls the opening spring grid session to order. The pr'sence of te z lette: men provides the nucleus around which Crlisler will organize the drills that will be conducted two hours daily,' sago Alumni Memorial Award winner, letterman Fenwick Crane and 1944 letter winner, Jerry Briel- maler are expected to report. Ali-Staters Among the new men. oustand- ing tackle prospects include Al- bert Wistert, brother of two Mich- igan All-Americans, Francis and Alvin Wistert; Ray Picard, all- state tackle from Grand Rapids: and Dick McWilliams, all-state Ohio tackle from Cleveland. Almost as well fortified at ends, Crisler will have his eyes on let- termen Lennie Ford, Donovan Hershberger and Ed McNeill, and on newcomer Harry Allis, all- state Michigan end from Flint. Saboleski Back Other prospective linemen in- clude Joe Sololeski, Wolverine guard letterman, and, among the rookies, Harry Smale, center can- didate from Chicago's Lindbloomn High; Donald Souchek, all-stater from Oak Park, Illi iois: Carl Kraeger, another all-state player; and Oscar Padgen, Calumet, Mich- igan prospect. Gene Derricotte and H an k Fonde are returning halfbacks from previous Wolverine elevens, while Howard Yerges, his eligi- bility now fully certain, is expected to bear Michigan's number one quarterbacking burden. Another prospective wingback with pre- vious experience, who showed promise before being injured last fall, is Louis Brunsting. Peterson Returns 1944 letter winner, fullback Tom Peterson, and an ex-Iowa Sea- hawk star, James McEvoy, are among the fullback prospects. Coach Crisler is momentarily expected back from a series of West Coast speaking engagements to take charge of the staff which will include Bennie Oostcrbaan, Jack Blott, Art Valpey, Wally Weber, George Ceithaml, Cliff Keen, and Forrest "Butch" Jor- dan. CREW-CUTS!! Be you flat, round or square- headed - we'll design one to your facial features!? The Das s la Barbers Between Mich. and State Theatres -DAY SERVICE CLARENCE PERRINE on DRY CLEANING IF BROUGHT IN TO EITHER OF OUR STORES ON MONDAYS, TUESDAYS OR WEDNESDAYS. Brothers BOWER Syoo P Courtright Dethroned as NCAA Champion Michigan State Rival Michigan's wrestling captain, as+ Takes Close Decision NCAA 155-pound champion ended} today as he lost a 2-0 decision to CHAMPAIGN, Ill., March 29- Gale Mikles of Michigan State. (P)-The reign of Bill Courtright, I The bout proceeded cautiously. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN -- I Z -l FLOWERS uperbly PH 16 S. University Phone 4422 Flowers by Wiore (Continued from Page ) To Say-About Pilate's Question?" 6 p.m., Guild Supper. 7 p.m., Guild Play, "Sanctuary." Memorial Christiaai Church! (Disciples of Christ): Reverend F. E. Zendt preaching, Morning Wor- ship, 10:50 a.m. Nursery for chil- dren during the service. University Lutheran Chapel: Services, 9:45 and 11 a.m.: Ser- mon by the Rev. Alfred Scheips, "Certifying Confirmation Convic- tions." Gamma Delta, Lutheran Stu- dent Club: Supper meeting, 5:15 p.m. Lutheran Student Association: 5:30 p.m., Zion Lutheran Parishj Hall. Supper, 6 p.m. Program will follow supper hour.j Bible Hour, 9:15 a.m. at the Cen-' ter. Morning worship services, 10:30 a.m. in Trinity and Zion Chur'ches. First UTnitarian Church, Edward! H. Redman, Minister. 10 a.m., Unitarian - Friends' Church School; Adult StudyI Group. 11 a.m., Service of Worship. Sermon: "Much People Brought Branches," Edward H. Redman. 5:30 p.m., Vesper Service, Ser- mon: "What About Immortality'?" Edward H. Redman. 6:30 p.m., Unitarian Student Group Supper and Easter Party. and after a scoreless first round, Mikles escaped for one of his two points. Through the third round, Mikles rode Courtright and was awarded his second point for time{ advantage. Court right's arch-rival Dave Shapiro of Illinois,, wrestling in the 165-pound class, suffered two defeats in the semi-final competi- tion. William Nelson of Iowa State Teachers, who subsequently went on to win the title in the 165 di- vision, defeated him 7-6 in the semi-final match. In the con- solation match, Shapiro lost out to Fred Dexter of Cornell College, 8-6. Cornell College Victorious Little Cornell College of Iowa, with an enrollment of 700 de- throned Oklahoma A. & M. as team champion, amassing a tptal of 32 points to finish 13 points ahead of Iowa State Teachers College. Oklahoma's Aggies, seek- ing their seventh straight N.C.A.A. title finished third with 15 points. The only individual to retan his title was Bill Koll of Iowa Statei Teachers, 145-pounder, who was voted the outstanding wrestler of the meet by coaches and officials. I Other Winners Other winners include 121- pound Dick Hauser of Cornell who is National A.A.U. champion, Rus- sel Bush 128-pound grappler from Iowa State Teacher's College and Lowell Lange of Cornell in the 136- pound class. COACH FRITZ CRISLER six days a week, until the middle of May. Ililkene Leads Tackles Despite the absence of an equal number of grid letter winners who are out of the spring football lime- light for one reason or another, the ten lettermen present will not be without competition in bidding for their old slots, At the tackle posts the arm'ay of grid material is formidable. Along with Captain Bruce Hil- kene, Bob Ballou, the 1946 Chi- STORES AT 214 SO. STATE ST. - 1115 S0. UNIVERSITY 1 f - - -- - - - - - U t r . + ; ! , Look your best in clothes cleaned by THE MODERN 1 AzT I ER CIGARETTE1 CASES SA NIA LWOOD BOXES Sier and Ivory Inlay ORIENTAL ART OBJECTS EASTER CARDS 3nCa .AiShop ACROSS FROM TI-IF ARCADE - 330 MAYNARD METHOD I It's the finest in scientific, ODORLESS dry cleaning! SEE the difference-FEEL the difference. . . You'll KNOW the difference'.! 1 ',. , ,,; ;" rf i / % '? r .i i '' / 4 I fi i FOR THE YOUNGER SET! EASTER BOOKS with the Easter Bunny! Golden Egg Book ................ $1.00 White Bunny with the Magic Nose . . 1.00 A Surprise for Mrs. Bunny . .... .50 The Golden Bible ...... . 2.50 ' Easter Surprise .. . ....... .. 1.50 A Tale for Easter .............. 1.00 AlR'l S BOOKSTORE (met ready for SPRING r Unity: Special Spiritual Com- Purdue's Big Nine 175-pound munion Service, 11 a.m., Unity champ added the National Title to Chapel,.310 S. State St. his laurels by taking a 10-6 deci- Student Discussion Group, 7:30 ;ion, p.m. Subject: "The Impersonal -_ T ikets Go on Sale. Noonda prayer services thriough. ikt ~ nS l Holy Week at 12:10 except Thur') For Tiger Opener First Church of Christ, Scien- DETROIT, March 29-('P}--Re- tist, 409 S, Division St. served seat tickets for the opening Sunday morning service at home game between the Detroit 10:30. Subject: "Reality, 'Figers and the Cleveland Indians Sunday School at 11:45. j April 18 will go on sale at 9 a.m. Wednesday evening service at this Monday and the Briggs Sta- 8 P.m . dium box office will remain on C CLEANE RS 630 S. Ashley Phone 4700 !. I w 2 4V Look to the CFMPUS BOOTERY Meeting of Friends: 4 p.m., First Presbyterian Church. Program will be given. Book review by Wil- liam Schlatter. Friends and visi- tors invited. until 5 p.m. Available tickets are those re- maining after mail reservations and block purchases by various civic organizations and uncheon clubs have been filled. EASTER GOLF TENNIS , i - - v Wid I. s at the rOLD" sign These Famous Makes will insure com- plete satisfaction at prices you can af- fordl. Florsheims. . . Bostonians... Wevenbergs. Special Student Breakfasts 7:00 - 11:00 A.M. b $.0 -$8.50 - $10.50 RRCHERY ,I in.X ov9-4YRiUU JI .I !1 'TNi VU1 / e 0 IIe ^11 1 V4%*.U I C R- N ^t 1 U I® I® .4f #I