V THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA C, E TIYItEE T U E.... .... .....M.IC......H....I....A....N. -. D A..I............Y PAG"T f Buckeyes Br To I-M Pool By DICK HURST That man is here again. William "the whale" Smith, OSU's renowned and perennial middle distance swimmer, will toss his 6 ft. lin., 215 pound hulk into thcl I-M Pool Saturday afternoon when the Buckeyes meet the Wol- verines in what should be one ter- 6ific dog fight of a swimming meet. SMITH IS PROBABLY the world's greatest middle distance swimmer. He holds every world record in free style events, be- tween 220 and 880 yards. He has won 23 national championships since he began competing in 1941 BILL SMITH . flyin' Hawaiian ing 'Whale' Saturday and last year he captured both ,he 220 and 440 yard title in the ,1CAA and AAU meets. Lots of people have been worried about the big Hawaiian. Last year about NCAA time critics were ;yelling that he was 'washed up," that the "whale" had too much blubber growing around his ribs, but he really fooled them, winning both his specialties. Last summer he landed an Olympic berth and took the 400 meter race whipping France's Alexj Jany and America's Jimmy Mc- Lane in the Olympic record time of 4:41. He then anchored the 800 meter American relay team to a world record of 8:46, Bill covering the 200 meters in 2:09. *~ *. * BACK IN 1944 Smith set the standing world marks in the 200 meter and 220 yard free style events when he went the short course distances in 2:06.2 and 2:07.1. That was five years ago. Three years before that Smith set the 400 meter and 440 yard marks with performances of 4:38.5. The boy's been in the swimming business a long time. Billy is better known among the swimmers as "Lala" from the Ha- waiian meaning "crazy" (spelled and translated by one of the Mich- igan swimming team). HE HOLDS BOTH pool records here for the 100 and 220 yard free style events. A fine champion, he is also nnPeof Sximri' mn By HERB MUNZEL Possessing the enviable record of 19 victories in 22 dual meet bouts for Michigan, Bob Betzig is one of the brightest spots in the Wolverine wrestling picture, He has defeated ail nut one of his Big Nine opponents in his first two seasons here, his other two losses being to M.S.C. Spartan Gale Mikles is the only man to hold two victories over the Michi- gan captain. OF HIS 19 wins here, 15 have been by pins, but Bob doesn't set- tle for just one pin in a contest. In last year's Northwestern match, he pinned his man in 1:44 of the second period only to come back in the final round with another fall. Then there was the time in last season's Conference meet that he pinned Ken Marlin of the Illini three times in one bout and still didn't win. The jacknife cradle hold, which he used to accomplish this feat and which he uses to gain many of his pins, was declared illegal and the bout was awarded to Marlin. In the 1947 Conference cham- pionships, Bob gained a fall in the preliminaries, lost to Dave Shapiro in the finals, and added another fall in a consolation match. * I * THE SAME JINX held in the meet of last year, as the Wolver- ine captain pinned Iowa's Carl- son in the prelims before losing to Marlin. Whether tre Michigan mat squad comes' out on top of a meet or not, it is usually Bet- zig who provides the spark for his team and he is always a leader. He has been elected captain two years in a row, the second man in Michigan's u r tliiug history to wt so lion- oled. Despite all his success, Betzig is still modest and unassuming, except, that is, when he gets on the mat. There he works with aggressiveness and almost clock- like precision, which more than pays oft', PIN WHEEL! Betzig Continues To Shine for Matmen AP SPORT FLASHES NEW YORK-(P)-The Boston Pendleton was purchased from Bruins strengthened their hold on the Chicago Giants of the Negro second place in the National American League, where he batted Hockey League last night by .340 last year, whipping the hapless New York Only the Cleveland Indians, Rangers, 3-2, before 11,146 fans in with 12, have title to more Negro Madison Square Garden. players in their organization than BROOKLYN--(/P)-The Brook- the Dodgers. lyn Dodgers added the 11th Negro * * * baseball player to their organiza- EAST LANSING-(')-Michi- tion yesterday when they signed gan State tried desperately to win James Edward Pendleton, 23-year a game for its retiring basketball old righthanded hitting short- coach, Ben Van Alstyne, last stop. The player was assigned to night, but couldn't quite made the + Paul of the American Associ- grade and bowed to Notre Dame ation. 43 to 41I. ation. 43 to 41. m E. f t 1 1 G s w i \X '- rte' 6nAn 4#uj 4ne .. in these dual-purpose spring shirts r , K , TT /1 0 S ' l ' \; ,.'. k <,> BOB BETZIG ... mat champ 495 'M' Must IHcdt Sharpshooters 1o (;ain ~WittOver 111ch()y(es * *I t / I Sports Slants by Tom Paprocki (Pap' to millions) is the country's No. 1 sports cartoon. Pap' presents strik- ing pen and ink profiles of the day's athletic hero or heroine in this news- paper starting soon. It's the Hall of Fame of Sportsdom. Watch for this great feature, w <. .w /°' f 2 a "I VS s, f 4 d e a n: I Intramural News There will be an added feature S. A. M. 34, Phi Gam 30 in the Michigan-OSU track meet Sigma Phi 51, T. K. E. 24 Friday night, as four fraternity Sigma Chi 27, Kappa Sig 22 relay squads hit the cinders in Delta T. D. 33, Zeta Psi 32 the annual IM 880 relay contest. Alpha Delt 55, Tau Delt 15 The four teams who qualified Delta Chi 35, Kappa Np 11 in the trials last night were Beta Sigma Nu 34, P. Kappa Sig. 18 heta Pi, Phi Delta Theta, Delta Residence Hall Upsilon, and Sigma Phi Epsilon.' Paddleball The Betas were first, running a Vaughan 3, Anderson 0 1:43.2 half-mile. Second were the Hinsdale 3, Strauss 0 Phi Delts who nosed out the DU's Williams 2, Winchell 1 by one-tenth of a second in the Faculty Volleyball closest race of the evening. Mathematics 3, Public Health 0 The Sig Ep's, running in an- Army 3, English 0 other :heat, tied the third place Aero Engineers 2, Navy 1 time of 1:43.9 set by the DU's. Law 3, Phy. Engtneers 0 Fraternity "A" Basketball INDEPENDENT BASKETBALL Theta Chi 30, Theta Xi 19 Lazy Aces 52, Mich. Co-Op 10. Delta U. 38, Z. B. T. 17 Turks 23, Chinese 14. Acacia 31, Triangle 24 Filipinos 55, Indians 3. Alpha Sig 22, Trigon 20 FRATERNITY "B" BASKETBALL Chi Psi 49, A. T. 0. 18 Phi Sigma D 1, Kappa Nu 0 Psi U. 40, Lambda Chi 14 (forfeit). ~rre tire C OLiI but things i ke good BOOKS (re falIWXyS Worib GOLD! Ihe UUe iivr f W11r1r11ki .11 s mosL If the Michigan cagers are to opular winners. Not only do the ans cheer him but even his op- stop Ohio State Saturday night, onents have gotten into the habit they'll have to stop three of the f applauding his performances, most prolific scorers and accurate His versatility is amazing, marksmen to be found in the Big During the war he even swam Nine. the back stroke leg of the med- Cnerg ley relay team for Great Lakes. Center Bob Raidiger and for- During this same tour of duty wairds Dick Schnittker and Bob he became the only man to win Donham have (lumped a total of six gold medals in a NAAUJ 338 points in 11 games, and all meet. l-have ldit for two-pointers on over At that meet he won the 100, 30 per Cent of their shots. 20 and 440 yard free style events, , ot inchored the 400 yard relay team, RAIDIGER'S .351 ranks second. ed off the medley relay team with in the Conference, just eight per- is back stroke stint, and was high centage points behind Minnesota's point man of the meet. Jim McIntyre, while Schnittkerl And he hasn't lost his touch. and Donham have marks of .3311 [wo weeks ago the big boy beat and .302, respectively. Wally Ris in the 100 yard free tyle, besides taking care of the The Buckeye center's 163 irst place points in the 220 and markers is tops for the Ohio 140 yard free style events. Inci- quintet, and is good enough to ientally, Ris is the Olympic chain- place the Ohio pivotman in a pion at 100 meters. second-place tie, with Purdue's So the "Whale" will be here Howie Williams. Saturday afternoon to see if he But for the fact that he missed an have the whale of a time he's two Conference contests, Schnitt- accustomed to when he runs into ker, who last year led the Bucks Michigan's sprint star, Dick Wein- in scoring, would in all likelihood berg, and middle distance star, be giving his teammate and Mr. Matt Mann III. Williams a run for their money ~& - ~ by SANDLER OF BOSTON GENUINE MOCCASIN with Handsewn Vamp and back $795 AAAA to B- to Size 10 in the race for Conference scoi- ing honors. IN HIS NINE starts to date. the six-foot five-inch forward has sunk 42 shots from the floor and a similar number of free throws for a total of 126 points, or :gi average of 14 points per ao: . I As it is, he's now holkiinl dowi the t""b"r "i"ne slat ir kthe race. Donhaui ,standing six - feat - three-inches, is the "sirimp" ofI the three, both in sie and Scof- ing. He's used much as is Minne- sota's Grant: setting up the ball for the other two front men and taking shots when the opposition assigns an extra guard to take care of one of his mates. He's still managed to sink 30.2 per cent of his throws, and has contributed 99 points to the Buckeye total.j F' ;:; f ..,_ Tan, Maroon, Blue, Rust, Green RACBIDEAUIHARRIS For Comfort... on Those Active Sport-Filled Days Ahead ... or for Just Taking It Easy ... .. . and com"fort is what our full -cut, long-wearing sport shirts will give you! Come in. Look over M1hlusky collection. "WHERE THE GOOD CLOTHES COME FROM" 119 South Mdin Street ANN ARBOR 1 Smo e olA#c£t/CA'Y -0 O4' :,r o £ ElifL devdinf Luckies' fine tobacco picks you the drifter Closest thing to barefoot freedom . . . the upper leather goes under the entire foot to cradle every step. 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