- AD'TflURDAiDEMER-13 147 :TIEN--WHGlVD l-Y Bob Sohi Cracks Two World Swimming Records Neff, Tillman I-* In . f INew Captains I Co-captains of Michigan's first varsity gymastics squad since 1933 will be Glenn Neff, senior from Elkhart, Ind., and Tom Till- man, junior from Muskegon, it was disclosed by Coach Newt Lo. ken. At the same time, Loken an- nounced that five of the ten Wol- verine cheerleaders have acquir- ed varsity status on the twist-and- tumble squad. They include the newly-elected co - captains and Dave Lake, Bob Willoughby, Bob Schoendube, and Chico Kennedy Onthe basis of two intra-squad meets staged this past month and the practice sessions held this fall the Michigan gym mentor named eight other men to the present 12-man varsity squad-Hack Cop- lin, Dick Fashbaugh, Fred Butt Robert McDonald, Wally Niemann and Pancho Saravia. Marks Set in100-Yard, 100-Meter Breaststroke Spitfires EdgedIn Wild Ice Battle, 4-3 Wolverine Kiefer, 'M' Tankers Dominate Meet; Divers Present Specialty Acts {; . (Continued from Page 1) McMillan Nets Winning GOal in Last 26 Seconds Renfrew Tallies Twice in Second Victory; Hill, Smith Outstanding on Michigan Defense The former world marks were held by Don DeForrest of the York, Pa., AC, who set the 100-yard mark last season and Ralph Hgpgh of Princeton, who established the 100-meter record of 1:07.3 in 1939.1 Sohl also aided in setting an- other record, this one a new American mark in the 150-yard medley relay. He teamed with{ Captain Harry Holiday and Charley Moss, who replaced the ailing Dick Weinberg, as they bettered their own mark of 1:18 lat set last year against Wayne. I. _______________ _______ J UST .v; MEALS Steaks, Chops, and Chicken in the Basket C HAN DAN' COTTAGE INN . 512 East William - One Block from State St. Hours: 11:30 *-1 :30, 5:00 -8:00 Closed Monday 11111 PHOENIX CUSH-N- SOLE ISOK The trio swimming with a five second handicap was clocked in 1:17.4 to set the new mark. The Wolverines of 1948 put on a magnificent performance be- fore over 1,000 spectators as Matt Mann's charges dominated every race. In the 150-yard freestyle a quintet of Michigan natators all bettered 1:30. The race was won by Matt Mann IIL, in 1:26, who barely touched out teammates Gus Stager and Bill Kogen. Dave Tittle and Jay Sanford were less than two stroke behind in the closest race of the evening. A comedy diving act, put on by three Wolverine divers, stole the special events portion of the Gala away from the featured stars, Adolph Kiefer and the National Girl's Synchronized Swimming Champs. Gil Evans, Ralph Trimborn and Tom O'Neill put on a riotous show featured by Trimborn's entrance through the ceiling and O'Neill's antics in a woman's costume Kiefer and his beautiful assist- ant Dorothy Daniels went through a highly entertaining routine with Kiefer finishing up with a 25- yard back stroke stint unofficially timed in :13.1 as he flashed the brilliance that made him the world's greatest backstroker. The synchronized swimmers, under the direction of Mrs. Mart E. DeRosier, also ably demon- strated why they were declared national champions in Chicago last year. On the whole Michigan swim- mers dominated every event they competed in, taking all but three places. In the 100-yard breast- stroke Sohl was followed by Moss and Bill Upthegrove, while in the medley a Wolverine trio of John Donaldson, George Olson and Bruce Witherspoon finished sec- ond while Johnny McCarthy, Tom Coates and Jay Sanford placed third. O'Neill, in addition to his' comedy stint, easily copped the low board diving title as he de- feated Fletcher Gilders, unat- tached, and Barney Cipriani of the Detroit YMCA. In the 50-yard backstroke Holi- day, giving away three seconds in the handicap, touched out Jack Barnes and Donaldson, both fresh- men on this year's squad. Holiday was clocked in :27.0, four-tenths of a second off his record of :26.6. Coates took the 75-yard handi- cap freestyle with a :41.4 clock- ing, nosing out Jack Jensen of the Detroit YMCA, Kogen and Bill Crispin of Michigan dead- locked for third place. In other special Michigan AAU championships, little, elev- en year old Peter Fries, brother of Michigan's great Charley Fries captured the boys under 12 50-yard freestyle in :32.6 as Buippy Jones of the Chikopi Club set a new Michigan rec- ord in the 50-yard freestyle for boys under 16 with a :26 flat clocking. Another entirely different pro- gram gets under way tonight at 8:00 p.m. with the same featured performers presenting their acts. Golf Sehedule Is Annouinced Michigan's 1948 golf team faces a strenuous dual schedule this season as they attempt to retain their Conference crown.. At a meeting of Big Nine coaches in Chicago yesterday a six match dutl schedule was ar- ranged including matches with Ohio State, Northwestern, Pur- due and Notre Dame. In addition a five-way meet with Ohio State, Illinois, Purdue and Indiana has been arranged and the linksters wind up their season on May 28-29 at Evan- ston with the Conference cham- pionships. 11I SHADES OF MERRIWELL- Gord McMillan slammed in game-winning goal against Windsor Spitfires last night with 26 seconds left to play. ... Basketb~all (Contin mued from Page 1) from the I-M league to the big time with an understudy role to Roberts at center. All of these boys except Mc-, Intosh were around last Decem- ber when Western hung a 65-61 defeat on them in Cowle's Michi- gan debut. The little man hasn't forgotten that game and is3 gunning for revenge. However, he faces no easy task. Broncos Tough A mid-western powerhouse year in and year out, the Broncos bring to town a big, experienced outfit that averages 6'2" and boasts three wins and a last minute loss to powerful Long Island in com- petition so far. Coach Buck Read who has post- ed a phenomenal .691 winning av- erage in 26 years at Western against some of the best competi- tion in the land, will field Bob Fitch and Bernie Compton at for- wards, Don Boven at center and Chuck Brown and Mel Van Dis at guards. Boven, Van Dis Stars Boven and Van Dis were the big guns last year when they scored 592 points between them and have shown no signs of slacking off this year. Fitch had a bad year last sea- son after being the team's top point-maker in 1945, but is fast regaining his old form. Brown and Compton cane along fast in the By HERB RUSKIN It took a tie-breaking goal by' Gordie McMillan with but 26 sec- ends remaining in the game to give the Wolverine hockey team a 4-3 victory over the Windsor Spit- fires last night before 1.3U0 wildly cheering fans in the Coliseum. Pandemonium broke loose as the veteran center took a pass frcm defenseman Connie Hill and fired a high hard shot past Gor- don Buckley, Spitfire goalie, who made a valiant, but futile, attempt to halt the puck. The goal broke a 1 minute- old third stanza deadlock which the visitors had gained at 6:50 on a goal by Bob Bailey from Paul Monforton. McMillan was easily the offen- sive star of last night's contest as he scored assists on Michigan's other three goals, making a total of four points. It was McMillan's 100th point in his little over two years with the Wolverines. The visitors started out like a house afire,. in the first period, displaying a high powered at- tack that featured some fancy passing and good stickhandling. Windsor drew first blood when Nonforton flipped the puck to Bill Core who sent it into the Michigan net. Al Renfrew tied it up for the Wolverines, 10 minutes later, teaming up with Renfrew'to end the first period scoring. It didn't take Michigan long to take the lead in the second period, Gacek countering at 0:13 with assists to Al Renfrew and McMillan. The Wolverines maintained the offensive ad- vantage, although the scoring continued in a see-saw man- ner, with Windsor tying it up again at 7:19 on a goal by John Bailey from Cameron Church. Michigan took the lead again when Renfrew tallied his second goal of the game, McMillan again assisting at 13:16. This ended the scoring until Windsor's tying goal in the third period, and McMil- Ian's subsequent clincher. Connie Hill and Ross Smith played their usual fine game on defense for the Maize and Blue, while Jack McDtonald deserves special mention as he made sev- eral beautiful saves in the Mich- igan goal, averting possible Spitfire scores. Windsor's coach, Jimmy Skin- ner, had nothing but praise for the winning Wolverines, stating, "Michigan has a pretty great team and with a little more condition- ing, they'll be really great. We'd like to play them again." Go to the Bose Bowl u 1v /'L or We have one hundred Round-Trip They Said It: Coach Jimmy Skinner, Spitfire mentor, and Gordie Howe and Ted Lindyay, Detroit Red Wing forwards, paid tribute to the Michigan puck squad last night after the Wolverines had defeated the hard-playing Windsor aggre- gation, 4-3. "The lads haven't reached their peak as yet, but when they do, they'll certainly be a wonderful team," Skinner said in the hushed Spitfire locker room after the game. "They'll definitely give To- ronto a good run next week." Howe, who indicated that Mich- igan would improve as the season progresses, singled out Bob Mar- shall as the outstanding W olverine player. "He's the one boy I wouldn't like to tangle with," the Detroiter said. Lindsay completed the praise, stating,"Michigan should do well this year. The boys are rugged and play hard." Sea ts I on Santo Fe's Crock "TH E EL CAP ITAN" $100 Round Trip Gridders Hold Outdoor Drills Michigan's gridders disposed of their third precious practice ses- sion yesterday as they moved out- doors to practice in frigid 26-de- gree temperature. After the removal of an anti- weather tarpaulin the Wolverines ran through signal drills and pass plays on a bare stretch of green surrounded by three inches of snow. Most of them wrere bundled up in hooded sweat clothes and many of the linemen wore heavy canvas gloves to protect themselves against the bitter cold. We print 'em all, No job too large or small. Programs - Tickets Stationery - Announcements ROACH PRINTING 209 E. 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