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February 16, 1947 - Image 7

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1947-02-16

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

MICHIGAN D

3 d

/0IA

elay Sets

World iark as Swimmers

F

v

igan TrackmenWhipMSC

I

IFonville Shatters Shot

y- d
e run-Won by Bar-
s e c o n d, Dianetti
ird, Gibbard (MSC).
).9.
dash-Won by Sche-
); second, Johnson
hird, Morrish (M).

I

I

Record Three Tim'es,

-Won by Short
Forrestel (1);
(MSC). Time:

d high hurdles--Won
Smith (MSC) ; second,
(MSC); third, Chris-
(MSC). Time: 8.2.
jump-Won by John-
[SC); second, Fancett
bird, MacAdam (lMSC).
jump: 23 ft. 10 in.
nile run-Won by Bird-
; second. Kessler (M) ;
[orris (M). Time: 9:40.2.
jump-Won by Milne
second, Harris (M). tie
rd between Beckford
Dolan and Gardner
inning jump: 6 ft 41 in.
put-Won by Fonville
econd, Kraeger (M);
-endrinos (M). Winning
ft. 6 in.
d low hurdles-Won by
th (MSC); second, .
(MSC); third, Martin
ime: 7.4.
vault-Won by Bower-
.C); second,. tie be-
teody (M), Ulvested (M),
'(MSC), Carr (MSC),
uritsen (M). Winning

Michigan's mile relay quartet
came through with a four-yard
triumph in the final event last
night at Yost Field House to give
the Wolverine thinclads a hard-
fought 60 1/15 to 53 14/15 victory
over Michigan State in the first
Maize and Blue dual encounter
of the year.
With the outcome of the meet
resting on the relay, the Wolver-
ine foursome of Bob Mann, Mel
Detwiler, Dick Forrestel and Hugh
Short, posted a 3:24.1 time to
win the event and the meet for
Michigan.
Charley Fonville, Michigan's
Olympic prospect, highlighted
the evening's proceedings, which
saw one Field House and four
meet records fall by the way-
side, as he three times shat-
tered his own shot put mark,
ending up with a final heave
of 53 ft. 6 in.
Herb Barten, Conference in-
door half-mile champ, more than
took up the slack left by illness
which forced Don Queller out of
action, by taking both the mile
and the 880. He outkicked highly-
touted Jack Dianetti with a spark-
ling 4:19.9, then came back to
take the half from teammate
George Vetter, who turned in his
best effort since returning from
service.
Barten got away last in the
half-mile and trailed until the

bell lap when he kicked past the
field to win going away. Vetter
came up fast to edge out another
Wolverine, Joe Hayden, who was
disqualified for cutting in on the
turns, automatically giving Mich-
igan State's Bill Scott the third
place point.
Michigan scored a sweep in
the two-mile run as indoor
Conference title-holder Chuck
Birdsall broke the tape five
yards ahead of fast-finishing
Rog Kessler, with Alex Morris
outlasting Roy Niemeyer for the
show spot.
Birdsall, pacing himself beau-,
tifully, put together two 4:50
miles for a final clocking of 9:40.2,
his best time of the season.
In the quarter-mile, Hugh Short
and Dick Forrestel outran State's
Jim Fraser, as the Michigan cap-
tain' went under :50 for the firstI
time in the current campaign,
being caught in 49.9.
. Michigan State's strength in
the dashes and hurdles offset
Michigan's power in the middle
distances. The Spartans' sensa-
tional freshman, Fred Johnson,
had a comparatively bad night,
even though he set a new meet
mark o 23 ft. 10 in. in the broad
jump. Unthe 60-yard dash he
was nosed out by teammate Bob
Schepers, with Wolverine Jim
Morris taking third.
Johnson was upset, both lit-
erally and figuratively, in the
65-yard low hurdles as he fell
going over the fourth hurdle.
Horace Smith, the Spartans'
only double winner, took the
event in 7.4 to equal the Field
House mark and shatter the
meet record. Smith, a Spartan
footballer, copped the highs in
8.2 as State swept the event.
Jim Milne of the Spartans set
another meet record in the high
jump with a leap of 6 ft. 41/4 in.,
to best Michigan's Bob Harris.

Badgers Win;
Illini Climb To
Second Place
Gophers Clip Purdue
OSU Upsets Spartans
By The Associated Press
CHICAGO, Feb. 15 - Little Bob
Cook, Wisconsin's classy forward,
broke loose for ten points in the
last half tonight as the league-
leading Badgers came from behind
to overwhelm Northwestern, 54-
42, and gain their eighth Big
Nine basketball victory in nine'
starts before some 18,500 fans in
the Chicago Stadium.
* * *
CHAMPAIGN, Ill., Feb. 15 -
Illinois climbed over Indiana into
the runner-up spot in the Big
Nine basketball race with a well-
paced 59 to 50 triumph over the
Hoosiers tonight.
Forward Ken Menke, with 17
points, paced the Illini to their
sixth league victory against three
defeats to keep them within strik-
ing distance of first-place Wiscon-
sin. Illinois held a 34 to 24 half-
time margin.
MINNEAPOLIS, Feb. 15-Min-
nesota walloped Purdue in a high-
scoring Big Nine basketball game
here tonight, 81 to 69. Jim Mc-
Intyre, lanky Minnesota center,
counted 30 points to bring his
season's total for all games to 279.
EAST LANSING, Mich, Feb. 15
-A season-long victory famine
on the road was ended for Ohio
State University's basketball- team
here tonight as the Buckeyes
broke a half-time deadlock to
down Michigan State College, 58-
46.

CHUCK FONVILLE

S.,

# * *

Wolverines Sub merge Northwestern,
53.31;Stager Tops Freshman Record

Basketa..;
(Continued from Page 1)
fouls helped build up the Iowa
margin. When Bob Harrison left
the game via the foul route with
two minutes remaining, Wolverine
victory hopes vanished.
BOX SCORE

Iowa
Ives F . ... .
Wier F ......
Straatsma F.
Wilkinson C,.
Spencer G,... .
C. Wilkinson C
Hall G .......
Totals .......
Michigan
Suprunowicz F
McCaslin F ..
Wierda F .....
Roberts C ...
Wiesniwski C
Harrison G..
P. Elliott G..
Mikulich G .,
C. Elliott G.
Feinberg G.
Totals.......

FG FT
4 2
.2 6
..4 1
.4 5
.3 1
;1 0
.0 4
.18 19
FG FT
F5 3
. 2 1
.1 0
.2 2
0 0
..4 2
.1 2
1 2
0 0
1 0
.17 12

PF
1
4
3
3
1
0
2
14
PF
2
4
2
4
4
5
4
1
3
0
29

TP
10
10
9
13
7
2
4
55
TP
13
5
2
6
0
10
4
4
0
2
46

i

II

I

Big Nine Standings

1

By CLARK BAKER
Blazing home in the fastest
time ever recorded for the event,
Michigan's 300-yard medley re-
lay team paced the Wolverine
swimmers to a 53-31 triumph over
Northwestern before 1,100 cheer-
ing fans last night at the Sports
Building pool.
It was a world record perform-
ance all the way as the Maize and
Blue trio of Harry Holiday, Bob
Sohl and Dick Weinberg sprinted
home 40 yards in front of the
Wildcat threesome in 2:50.5,
three- tenths of a second better
than the mark set in 1943 by Hol-
iday, Pat Hayes and Johnny Pat-
ton of Michigan.
Weinberg Clinches Record
Holiday set the record-smash-
ing attempt off on the right foot
with a sparkling :58.3 for the
first 100 yards. Sohl kept Wol-
verine hopes alive with a fast
1:01.6 for his "century" and then
Weinberg clinched the new mark
with a blistering :50.6 on the an-
chor hundred.
Maintaining the dazzling pace
set by the medley relay team,
Wolverine Gus Stager wiped the
National Collegiate f r e s h m a n
mark for the 220-yard freestyle
event off the books with a fast
2:12.3. The Maize and Blue year-
ling led Wildcat Bill Heusner all
the way but had to stave off a,
last 25-yard challenge by the
Purple ace to hit the wire first.
Heusner Takes "440"
Stager's winning time lopped
three-tenths of a second off the
Cats Drowned
300-yard medley relay-Won
by Michigan (Holliday, Sohl,
Weinberg. Time: 2:50.3 (New
American and world record).
220-yard freestyle -Won by
Stager (M); second, Heusner
(N); third, Coates (M). Time:
2:12.3 (New National Collegiate
freshman record).
50-yard freestyle - Won by
Alien (N); second, Witherspoon
(M); third, Lehman (M). Time:
:24.
Low board diving - Won by
Trimbrn (M); second, Trum-
ble (N) ; third, O'Neill (M).
Points: 110.
100-yard freestyle - Won by
Weinberg (M); second, Allen
(N) ; third, Grspin (M). Time:
:51.8.
150-yard backstroke--Won by
Holliday (M); secid, Johnson
(M); third, Tannehill (N).
. Time: 1:35.1.
220-yard breast stroke-Won
by Sohi (1); second, Martin-
chick (N); third,. Upthegrove
(M). Time: 2:22. .
440-yard freestyle-Won by
Reusner (N); second, Stewart
(m); third, Tannehill (N).
Time: 4:51.2.
400-yard freestyle relay--Won
by Michigan (Sanford, Wither-
spoon, Coates, Crispin). Time:
3:43.5.
Hockey..."
(Continued from Page 1)
stopped a shot from Jim Prick
with a gloved hand while lying
prone on the ice. The only marker
of the second frame, which was
mostly dominated by the North-
men, was countered by Jim Alley,
who also scored one of the Minne-
sota goals last night, as he broke
away at the blue line and made a
shot good into the corner of the
Maize and Blue net.

-DAY

teammate Art Johnson
150-yard backstroke in 1:
big Maize and Blue star
the way and finished 1
ahead of Johnson. Bob
hill of Northwestern wo
third.
Weinberg churned to
yard' triumph over Bud I
the Purple in the 100-ya
style. The Wolverine sox
sped to his best time of t
a sparkling :51.8. Sohl,
for the pool record in t
yard breast stroke, mis
mark but won easily in
just eight-tenths of a sect
the record.
Allen Tops "50" Sprint
In a duel for second
hind Sohl, Northwestern
Martincheck bested W
Bill Upthegrove by fou
Allen copped the only ot.
for the visitors when h
the Wolverines' Bruce
spoon and Bob Lehman in
yard freestyle sprint. Alle
ning time was :24.
In a hot diving duel off
board, Michigan's Ralpl-
born triumphed over
Ronnie Trumble, 1944 B
champ, and Wolverine
O'Neill. Trimborn's 110 t
5.6 points better than Ti
O'Neill finished a close th
103.2 points, missing on
dive.

DICK WEINBERG
* * *
former 220 record set back in
1939 by Howie Johnson of Yale.
Heusner returned to take one of
the Wildcats' two firsts for the
night by sprinting in the closing
40 yards to nose out Wolverine
Wally Stewart in the 440-yard
freestyle marathon in 4:51.2.
Stewart's second-place clocking
of 4:52.2 was the best of his ca-
reer.
Michigan's medley trio all re-
turned to take their specialties.
Holiday breezed to a win over

IL

L EI

SERVIC

ElR01OID

Wisconsin.
Illinois .....

1

r, "'
i66, D Bp

s TEA

Indiana
Minnesota ..
MICHIGAN
Purdue .....
Ohio State .
Iowa ......
Northwestern

W
8.
6
4
5
4
3
t2
2

L
1
3
3
4
4
5
5
6
7

Pet.
.889
.667
.571
.556
.500
.375
.375
.333
.222

P. OP
494 462
462 401
384 363
504 500
386 378
441 489
405 450
478 474
421 458

on

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in lobster dinners. Now, once again, it is possible for
us to serve you this choice sea-food as you want it.
For your enjoyment we obtain the best lobsters
there are, those shipped in from Maine. These lobsters
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The prompt service and delightful atnosphere of
the dining rooms add greatly to the pleasure of an
excellent dinner, and we invite you to dine with

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

DRY CLEANING
IF BROUGHT IN TO EITHER OF OUR STORES C
MONDAYS, TUESDAYS OR WEDNESDAYS.

WANTED TO RENT

S soon.

0

WANT TO RENT: Garage. Preferably
reasonably close to Union. Call L.
Combest, 4145, leave message. )12
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPING: theses, term papers, ad-
dresses, etc. Duplicating: notices,
form letters, programs. A. A. Typing
Service, 232 Nickels Arcade, Phone
9811. )1
LOST AND FOUND
LOST-Ronuo:. pigskin cigarette light-
er. Sentimental value. Contact Bar-
bara Boynton, 3013 Stockwell Hall.
Phone 2-4471.
LOST-- Would Professor who attended
scientific meeting at League Feb. 8,
and took my overshoes from check-
room, please return them or call Don
Patterson 2-4401, 107 Adams.
LOST: Last Friday, dai'k horn-rimmed
glasses. Vicinity of League. Reward.
Phone 2-4561. Renee Shumer. 2)7

The l/l/evel /kte/

126 East Huron

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LOST: Tan Hickok Billfold containing
student's receipt and other valuable
papers. Reward. Contact Ralph
Knopf, Dorm. 10, Rm. 4, West Lodge,
Willow Run. ) 21
I'M BLIND v.ithout my glasses, thirsty
without my liquor card. If you found
black Corday tag in Schwabin's Mon-
day night reward is yours. No ques-
tions. Call Libby, 2-1146. nd n )2
YELLOW GOLD Diamond and emerald
ring lost sometime since holidays,
possibly in Angell Hall. Great sen-
timental value. Reward. Call J. Hirsh,
2-3734. )6
LOST-Green Sheaffer's fountain pen.
"Charles J. Forner" inscribed on it.
Reward. Phone 7730. ) 53
LOST-Loose-leaf, zipper notebook, let-.
ter therein. Reward. Phone 2-1533.
Mark Harris, 305 N. Revena. .50
LOST-Leeds wrist watch. Tan leather
strap. Lost on Jan. 21. Reward. Con-
tact D. Gate. Phone 8751. )15

TAILORING and SEWING
DRESSMAKING and Styling: Special-
izing with Vogue for that new Spring
outfit, Call for appointment. Mrs.
Ringinen, 2-2604. 5)
ALTERAT(ONS Ladies Garments. Coats,
Suits, and Evening Dresses. Near
Stockwell. Phone 2-2678. )13
DRESSMAKING and alterations, also
teacher of sewing. Miss Livingston,
315 S. Division, second floor front.
)33
FOR SALE
FOR SALE-Studio Couch, two end
tables, excellent condition, phone 2-
1994. )51
FOR SALE: Man's lightweight bicycle,
good condition, good tires. Phone
2-1994. )29
FOR SALE: Tuxedo, Shirt, Tie and
Collar. Worn twice. Size 38. Price
$40. Cal 25-7764 after 5:00 P.M. )26
FOR SALE-Men's Balloon-tired Bike.
Call 2-6469.
1941 PLYMOUTH CPE. Radio, heater,
defroster. Unusually clean in and
out. $945.00. No. 56, Vet Village
(Hill and Fifth) after 12 noon.
SEASONED HARDWOOD; Mixed limb
and chunk, 88.00 per cord. We de-
liver 2 cord -or more. Phone Saline,
143F21 collect, or write Glen Hamlin,
Saline.-)9
FOR SALE-Tynewriter, L. C. Smith,
standard. Call 2-2701, evenings. )52
FOR SALE-Tux. Double-breasted, size
37. Glo-grain finish lapels--$20. Good
condition. Hale, 1466 Lenox, Willow
Run. )8
FOR SALE--Set of Dietzgen "Gem Un-
ion" drawing instruments. In excell-
lent condition. $35. Call 7995. )24

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
USE YOUR BRAIN to make spare-time
money; no investment needed. Try
this plan half hour daily; see for
yourself! Dime and 3c stamp brings
details; that's all you spend. Books,
Box 412. Ann Arbor. )20°
WANTED
WANTED: Piano Teacher with patience
for beginners. Call 221 Winchell, W.
Quad. )14
tWANTED : Portable Typewriter. Grace
Fuchs, 1449 Washington Hgts. )19
STUDENT'S WIFE, Willow Village, can
take care of a child days; good ref-
erence. Call Ypsi. 3579-W2. )11
MISCELLANEOUS
A DIRECTOR of Camp Michigama will
interview men for counselor positions
for this s unmer. Room 302, Union,
Wed., Feb. 19, 2-4 p.m. )18'
J-HOP PICTURES: If I took your photo
Saturday night J-Hop and haven't"
contacted you, call at 616 Church any
evening to see pictures. George Ado-
mian.
HELP WANTED
WANTED-Jitterbug Instructress. Light
work, you choose the hours and name
the salary. Write, Robert M. Brown,
West Lodge, Ypsilanti, Mich., or call
Ypsilanti 9262 between 8 and 10 p.m.
)55
WAITERS WANTED-Men to wait on
tables in cxchange for meals. Call
2-2205 between 6 and 7 p.m. )54
FOR SALE--Carinet and tenor sax each
with case. Call 8177 after 7:30 p.m.
) 56
CARRIERS WANTED-To deliver the
Daily. Good pay! If interested, call
2-3241 or ask at Student Publications
Building.
YOU CAN ACQUIRE a skill and experi-
ence that can be profitable to you all
through life. Decide now to enter
telephone work. It's the type of job
that gives you a feeling of satisfac-
tion. Apply at Michigan Bell Tele-
phone Company, 323 E. Washington
St. )35
SUMMER CAMP openings for two wo-
men counselors. Experienced dance
and craft instruction. Jewish clien-
tele. Write J. Carron, 924 Oakland.
)10
ROOM AND BOARD
SPACE AVAILABLE for meals at league
hse. Excellent food. 604 E. Madison;
Phone 4489. )l1
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