r jt&jimLx x , A.i niju f, 1 Y4 i MICHIGAN DAILY ...~ xs H E~N fA I - v- Sa ~ . . ~ZPi1 7 5.1 .5 Four M' Teams To See Action on (. -'S1 Trackmen To Clash with California in Dual Meet Doherty To Take 20 Thinclads on Trip; Bears Make Season's Debut Against 'M' Whistled renditions of "California Here I Come" reverberated through the track locker room this week as 20 of Coach Ken Doherty's thinclads looked forward to leaving tomorrow for Berkeley, Cal., where they will face the University of California in the first outdoor dual meet of the year next Saturday. As far as predicting who will come out on the long end of the score, Doherty declared that you could "pick the winner out of a hat." Little is known about the strength of the Bears' track team since this will be the first meet of the year for the Californians, who do not have an indoor season behind them. Queller To Run 880 Michigan's power will make itself felt in the middle distance events with Don Queller, who re- turns to action after being out of hcompetition for a month, and lt igs Chuck Low in the mile. Confer- W ln S ence champion Herb Barten and George Vetter are slated to start for the Maize and Blue in the 80. )who have gone uder to nminutes To 'Toron to 1:57.1, the best clocking. The have a fipe propect in Tom Tartzell who is expected to get as DETROIT, April 3 -UP)- low as 4:15 for the mile this sea- Making their few shots count son while Michigan's Queller turn- heavily, the Toronto Maple ed in a 4:16.4 in the Big Nine Leafs moved within one vic- meet this year. tory of the Stanley Cup finals Bears Strong in Sprints tonight by whipping the De- California has four quarter- troit Red wings, 4 to 1, to take milers who have run around the a three-to-one edge in games :50 mark, and will give Wolver- s in their best-of-seven series ines Dick Forrestel and George v before 14,577 fans. Shepherd a close race out west.a The leafs, cool and deliber- The Bears should pick up quite : ate, fired only seven shots on a few of their points in the sprints goals in the first two periods where they have Ray Maples who but made two of them count has been caught in 9.8 for the and then added a pair of easy 100 this season and Donnie An- counters in the final period to derson who has a 9.7 century and maintaih their record of not a 21.6 220 to his credit. having lost to the Red Wings Fonville in Shot and Discus on Detroit ice all season. Michigan's Big Nine shot put Altogether tonight's scrap champion Chuck Fonville leads was tame by comparison with the field of iron ball tossers as Tuesday night's rough encoun- noneofathe California shot put- ter here, won by the Leafs. ter's have bettered 50 ft. Fonville x. Four times one club or the and Pete Dendrinos will also throw other was playing with a two- the discus although they have hads 'man advantage but the only little chance to practice this year. t. time such an edge affected the Since the javelin throw is not scoring was in the second per- a regular event in Western Con- iod when Detroit's Roy Con- ference, Wolverine high jumpersc acher drove in his club's only Bob Harris and Bob Gardner will goal with Jimmy Thompson try their hand in this event but and Bill Barilko of the Leafs the Californians can boast of four both serving time. men who have thrown the javelin Conacher's goal balanced a more than 180 ft. g first period Toronto tally by -- ____s fleet Howic Meeker but the BASEBALL SCORESy Leafs didn't let the score stay Tigers 1 Braves 1 (called 7th t tied long. Ted (Teeter) Ken- . 1 nedy bounced a high shot off innlng) Red Wing goalie Ralph (Red) White Sox 2, Indians 1 a Almas' arm and the Leafs nev- Browns 4, ,A's 1 er trailed after that. Cubs 0, Giants 12 c ___________________ Pirates 10, Phillics 7 Vacation Trips Nine To Face Maryland Today in Southern Debut Wise 14) Start on Mound For Wolverines; Lineup Dominated By Former Lettermen Michigan launches its first southern trip in five years and its 1947 baseball campaign this afternoon when it squares off against the University of Maryland at College Park Maryland. Because he hasn't had a chance to nut his squad through any outdoor practice. Coach Ray, Fisher will probably ride along mainly with his letterwinners for his opening day line-up. Only at third and behind the plate will the Wolverine Pilot be unable to field a numeral AA U Swim Meet Ends 47 Season Maize and Blue natators will write finis to a very successful season tonight and tomorrow when they compete in the Nation- al AAU championships at Colum- bus. Climaxing the affair will be the heralded meeting between Alex Jany of France and Dick Weinberg, American champion in the 50 and 100-yard free- styles.. Weinberg, in his last practice before leaving for Co- lumbus, was clocked in :49.8 for the century, only one-tenth of a second off the existing world's record. Charlie Moss, who has been cholastically ineligible, will make he trip to the AAU's and may be able to compete under Michigan colors. Moss has continued to practice daily and turned in a 51.6 clocking for the "100" in his ast outing. If Moss can compete that will give Michigan another fine free- tyler and materially aid the 400- yard relay quartet. AAU regula- ions allow a man to enter three ndividual events and two relays and this relaxation of the rulings s liable to help the Wolverines considerably. It is possible now for Wein- berg to enter both short distance freestyles as well as the medley and freestyle relays. It would tion to the 150-yard backstroke also allow Harry Holiday to enter the 100-yard freestyle in addi- tion to the 150-yard backstroke and the two relays. Bob Sohl will continue in his wo events, the 200-yard breast- troke and the medley relay, while ivers Alex Canja and Gil Evans will compete in both the high and ow board events. Gus Stager will swinin the 220 and 440-yard freestyles and possibly may enter the 1500 meter marathon. He will also swim the second leg on the 400- yard relay team if Moss is able to compete. Entering the freestyle relay all tangs on the question of whether Aoss can compete for Michigan or got. If he can the Wolverine en- ry will be one of the strongest of ,he meet with Moss, Stager, Holi- ay and Weinberg all capable of Ioing :52.5 or better. CAPTAINS ALL-Chuck Birdsall, Dave Barclay, Bill Mikulich, and Cliff Wise will lead the track, golf, tennis, and baseball teams in vacation activity. Birdsall is California bound, the others head South. Golf Squad Be'dns Dixie Play Monday; Netters To Open Against North Carolina Lin ksinen To Face Six Southern Foes When Michigan's golf team opens the season Monday at Washington and Lee in the first of their six southern matches, Bert Katzenmeyer, the new Wol- verine linksmaster, will carefully view the play of his boys whom he described yesterday as "com- pletely cold." The eight "marked" Wolverine golfers-Capt. Dave Barclay, Ed Schalon, Bill Courtwright, Rog Kessler, Pete Elliott, John Jens- wold, Bill Ludolph, and Paul O'Hara--will accompany Katzen- meyer on the 2,000 mile Dixie tour tomorrow morning in one of the University's 12-passenger lim- ousines. No Practice "The boys haven't had a chance to go outdoors at all in the four weeks of spring practice," declar- ed the youthful Wolverine coach, "but our opponents have been out on the links during this period- we'll be at a definite disadvantage when we tee off." Katzenmeyer added that he has no inkling whatsoever of the strength of the southern golf. teams the Wolverines will face. Stage Intra-Squad Play In an effort to "get at least one round on the course before we meet anybody," Katzenmeyer an- nounced that lie hopes to stage a little intra-squad competition Sunday on the White Sulphur Springs (Va.) fairways, site of Sammy Snead's home course. After Monday's opening affair with Washington and Lee, the Wolverine linksmen face Virginia Polytechnic Institute on Tuesday, and the University of Virginia the following day. Face Tar Heels Katzenmeyer takes his troupe into Tarheel territory to meet Duke University on Wednesday, April 12, and the University of North Carolina on Thursday. Michigan treks back to Virginia a week from today to climax the southern jaunt at Randolph-Ma- con College. All candidates for freshman baseball will report to Coach Ernie McCoy at the freshman baseball diamond at the south- east end of Ferry Field at 3:30 p.m. Monday, April 14. All can- didates will furnish their own gloves and shoes. Determination Plus So determined are Michigan's golf aspirants for the four re- maining varsity posts that two of them-Ken Burke and Mort Cohn-have made special ar- rangements to spend their en- tire spring vacation at Hot Springs, Arkansas "to do noth- ing but play golf." I-M NEWS After dropping the first two games, Harry Goldberg took the measure of Sanford Perlman in the final three to become the All- campus Table Tennis champion. Perlman won the initial games, 21-19 and 21-11, but then Gold- berg's shots began to clip the edg- es of the table. He won the fol- lowing games by the close scores of 22-21, 21-10, and 21-19 with the last game going to match point five times before Goldberg could claim the title. Sigma Phi Epsilon established a new mark in the fraternity foul- shooting tournament as they sunk 203 baskets out of a possible 250 to become the fraternity winners. In the residence Hall League Lloyd House's ten best rounds to- taled 192 for the dorm title, while, 183 baskets were enough to give the Goosers the Independent League crown. The All-campus individual foul- shooting title went to Ray Lan- tos of Lloyd House when he con- nected for 86 out of 100 baskets. ONCE OVER .::. and a- clean shave! Naugle Wins Berth On Tennis Teaim Coach Bob Dixon's southbound tennis team got its eighth mem- ber yesterday as Gordon Naugle won a 7-5, 6-4. eleventh hour vic- tory over "Butch" Skau to sew up the last position on the traveling squad that meets the University of North Carolina, Monday, in the first of four Dixieland vacation matches. Only top seeded Andy Paton's position remained unchanged throughout a hectic week of in- tra-squad play that saw the team seedings completely scram- bled. As a result of the week's play, Dixon's lineup for the opener at Chapel Hill will see Paton at num- ber 1, Fred Otto, 2, Fred Zieman, 3, Dean McCluskey, 4, Captain Bill Mikulich, 5; HalCook, who had been moved in the seventh spot by Dick Lincoln a week ago, re- versed the proceedings yesterday with a 7-5, 6-4, win Lincoln and Naugle make up the remainder of the Southern lineup and Dixon has indicated that both will see some singles action on the tour. From Chapel Hill the team moves to Durham for the match with Duke on Tuesday. Then af- ter a one-day test, it tackles the University of Virginia at Char- lottesville, and Washington and Lee, at Lexington, Va., winner. On the mound Fisher will start his 27 year old ace, Cliff Wise. Wise has looked good in batting cage drills and appears to have lost none of the effectiveness that gave him a 7-0 record last year. Kulpinski or Raymond to Catch For a batterymate, the Jackson jug-handle artist will have either John Kulpinski, stocky sophmore receiver who learned his trade on the Detroit sandlots, or Hal Ray- mond, reserve Maize and Blue catcher last year. In the infield Fisher will start his veteran keystone combination of Dom Tomasi and Jack Weisen- berger with Ted Berce on third and either Don Boor or Howie Wikel at first. Experienced Outfield An experienced trio of garden- ers, will form Michigan's outer defense. Two-time "M" letterwin- ners Paul White and Bob Wiese will be in left and right respective- ly give the Wolverines their only left-handed batting power and Bump Elliott in center picked up a pair of numerals at Purdue be- fore transferring to Ann Arbor. All but Elliott and Wiese are from the state of Michigan. Pitching a Questionmark Michigan's chances for a suc- cessful Dixie trip will depend mainly on how well the rest of the pitching staff shapes up. In Bob Fancett and Bud Rankin, Fisher has a couple of promising fresh- men who have pitched a lot of American Legion ball but need developing. The only other letterwinner in his hurling corps is Dick Scmidtke who did relief work in 1944. Ed Heikkinen and Bob Hick round out the Wolverine other twirlers with the squad. Last year Michigan swept through a 12 game non-confer- ence schedule unbeaten and went on to post an 18-2 record for the season, but the lack of practice this year makes a repeat perform- ance a near impossibility. Pro Gridders Get -Suspension In Football Fix PHILADELPHIA, April3-()- Merle Hapes and Frank Filehoekl,= New York Giants ace backfield players who became entangled In gamblers' attempts to fix the Na- tional Football League's champ- ionship game last Dec. 15, today were suspended indefinitely in the latest chapter of the biggest sport scandal since the 1919 world ser- ies. League Commissioner Bert Bell announced that he had found the two "guilty of actions detrimental to the welfare of the National League and of professional foot- ball," adding: "This suspension prevents the employment of Hapes or Filchock by any club in the National Foot- ball League as player, coach or in any capacity, whatsoever." Nelson Shares Masters Lead AUGUSTA, Ga., April 3-(P)- A couple of veteran campaigners, Byron Nelson and Jimmy Demaret led the field of 58 in today's open- ing round of the 11th annual Mas- ters Golf Tournament with three under par 69's. The two native Texan's, with Nelson now retired at Roanoke, Tex., and Demaret now playing out of Ojai, Calif., had a one stroke lead over seven others who tied at 70. Preguhlian Joins MSC EAST LANSING, April 3-(P)- Merv Pregulman, former Univer- sity of Michigan tackle, joined the Michigan State College squad in spring training today as a part- time assistant coach. O F STEIN World-famous concert planlt whose Chopin Sonata Album for RCA Vitor Records Iiwlnfif wide acclaim. PP As advertised in COLLIER'S FABRICS by RAXON tN st di w to i 11, d d( IN THE' IAND ARTUR RU BICNS 5l..heworld's most want GUARANTEED BY THE MARLIN FIREARMS COMPANY Fine Gras Since 1870 i A TIMELY PURCHASE- JUST ARRIVED - An excellent purchase that is most timely now, when good merchandise is scarce and very expensive. This shipment consists of the finest at no more than the cheapest would cost. Large shipment of Wilson Brothers Shirts, Pajamas, T-Shirts, Sport Shirts, Handkerchiefs. 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