THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE hlli iin Big Ten Gymnastics Crown, Second 4 * * * * * * r DAILY DOUBLE by merle levin, sports co-editor Victors Tally 66 Points, Barthell Stars For 'M' OSU Natators Win NCAA Title IT WAS 9:15. The Daily phone rang and gymnastics reporter MarY Epstein made a lunge for the phone. A look of disappointment crossed his face. It was Elmer Swanson calling to report on Chuck Fonville's effort sin the shot put at the Purdue Relays. Five minutes passed, the phone rang again, Epstein picked it up and the look of disappointment grew deeper. Gymnastics coach Newt Loken was on the phone from Iowa City reporting the sad details of the Big Ten gymnastics meet. Michigan was second to Illinois and the Wolverines' last hopes for a winter sport Big Ten title had gone the way of all other hopes this winter. Not quite the same way, though. Most of the Maize and Blue hopes had gone East - as far as Columbus, Ohio. * * * * JUST ABOUT NOW I'm beginning to discover how the boys who have been covering the activities of the Boston Red Sox for the past couple of seasons feel. Frustrated. It's been a case of so near and yet so far all winter and as far as I'm concerned I wish to heck the Wolverines would get a little nearer. I'm beginning to growl at my friends. If my roommate had gotten up last week to ask me the score of the Michigan-Boston U. NCAA hockey game when I slunk in at one in the morning I probably would have kicked him in the face. This might have proved fatal since he's a member of the Board in Control of Student Publications and you're supposed to keep on the good side of those guys. THE FUNNY THING IS that at the beginning of the season I wouldn't have given a plugged nickel for Michigan's chances of winning a single championship this winter. Then al lof a sudden the basketball team up and whipped North Carolina State and turned in a spine-tingling win over Indiana, Cliff Keen came up with three top-notch sophomore wrestlers, Don Canham unveiled a slew of oustanding track pros- pects, Vic Heyliger's hockey team started wining games as though they didn't even miss Wally Gacek, Al Renfrew, Gordie *Mac- 'Millat1, Cdonie Hill and Dick Starrak, five of the finest colege r pucksters in the country in 1949, and the world in general took on a brighter hue. {. It got darker in a hurry when the basketball team got over their upstart notions and slipped back into the second division berth the experts had assigned them. * * * * BUT WHEN it came time for the Big Ten championships to be run of in swimming, wrestling and track on the fatal weekend of March 3rd and 4th there were the Wolverines ranked up in the front line of title-contenders. Friday, March 3 dawned cold and clear but there was a warm glow in my loyal heart by midnight. Michigan had led the qualifiers for the Big Ten track championships at Champaign and right here in Ann Arbor the Wolverine swimmers who didn't figure to have a chance in the world of whipping Ohio State were only seven points behind the Buckeyes. Saturday night I turned cold. Michigan's swimmers finished second, Michigan's track team finished second, Michigan's wrestlers finished tlird and my bright championshils dreams finished a dead last. TWELVE DAYS LATER Vic Heyliger led his hockey squad on the hegira to Colorado Springs and the promised land of national hockey championships. The coaches and players of the other parti- cipating teams agree dthat Michigan was the best team in the tournament but that wasn't much consolation for the 4-3 decision they dropped to Boston University in the opening round of play. The fact that B.U. then took a 13-4 pasting from Colorado College in the championship game didn't make me feel any better. Not when I remembered the 5-1 and 11-1 decisions Michi- gan had taken from the Westerners during the regular season. That left it up to the gymnasts, undefeated in regular season competition.l Newt Loken has done a tremendous job of building up Michigan gymnastics since the sport was revived here three years ago, but his boys Just didn't have the stuff to cope with Illinois. More woe. NEXT YEAR looks like a great year for the Wolverines. Track and hockey championships seem a certainty, wrestling and gym- nastics prospects look very good. But I won't be around next year. Of course spring prospects look good, but - oh, well. EXHIBITION BASEBALL: Yank Reserves Top Detroit; Reds, Dodgers, Nats, A's Win Special to The Daily IOWA CITY - Michigan beat out arch-rival Minnesota but fin- ished second to Illinois in the twentieth Western Conference gymnastics meetrheldnhere yes- terday. Illinois won with 66 points. THE WOLVERINES, led by Captain Pete Barthell, their only first place winner, scored 37 1/2 points, five more than the Go- phers who were defending team champions. The, Michigan captain took the parallel bars handily, beat-' ing Frank Dolan, individual star of the meet, by ten per- formance points, 270 to 266. Handicapped by a three-week old ankle injury which started to trouble him in the tumbling competition, Barthell failed to defend his crown in that event. although he managed a third behind Irv Bedard and Joe Fina of Illinois. Barthell was high for the Wol- verines with 19 points, more than half of the team total. He started with a third in the side horse, OSU Takes NCAA Third, Wins, 72-52 Bulletin NEW YORK, N.Y. - City College of Ne York continued its torrid pace to take the finals of the Eastern NCAA basket- ball tourney last night by beat- ing North Carolina State, 78- 73. NEW YORK-(IP)-Ohio State's Big Ten champions'had too much poise and finesse for Holy Cross last night and swamped the Cru- saders, 72 to 52, in their battle for third place in the Eastern NCAA basketball tourney. Ohio State, beaten only by one point by CCNY on Thursday. jumped off to an 8-0 lead against a starting team of Holy Cross sec- ond stringers. As things developed, that was the game. THE SCORE was 11-4 when All- American Bob Cousy and the oth- er Holy Cross regulars entered the game after three minutes. They pulled up to 15-9, but that was the closest the H.C. first stringers got. Sparked by its smooth All- American, Dick Schnittker, OSU went ahead, 28-15. A series of long sets by Cousy and Frank Oftring put Holy Cross back in competition at 31-24, but there- after it was no contest. No Title Trial For Joe Louis WACO, Tex., - UP) - Joe Louis said here last night he would not return to the ring but instead has signed arcontract to tour Canada for a circus. Winding up an exhibition tour in America, the former World's Heavyweight champion who re- tired March 1, 1948, after beating Joe Walcott, announced he would go with the Dailey Brothers Cir- cus at a minimum of $1,000 per day. BEFORE GOING with the cir- cus, however, he will go to South America for an exhibition tour of ten bouts. Louis, in a statement to re- porters, thanked the public and press for their support in his ring career. Louis said he did not necessarily want to fight Ezzard Charles, the current champion, and that "They couldn't pay me what I would want to do it anyway. I would want 35 per cent and since there is only 60 per cent for the fighters in a bout, the champion would have to take less than the chal- lenger." Louis said the main obstacle in the way of a title fight would be "All this training routine to get into shape." * * * PETE BARTHELL ...no double and finished with the number three spot in the all-around, which Dolan won with 1,032 per- formance points. THE MOST stunning upset of the contest came in the trampo- line when the Maize and Blue's Ed Buchanan, national champ, was edged by Iowa's Bill Harris by a two-point margin, 262 to 260, in the closest first place trial in the meet. Both men had unde- feated season's records, but Bu- chanan, defending titlist in the event, was heavily favored to re- peat his last year's showing. Despite the fact that he failed to place as high as had been anticipated, sophomore Connie Ettl showed excellent form as he nabbed fourth in the horizontal bar, tied Indi- ana's Norm Shulte for the same position in the parallel bars and finished fifth in the all-around. Ettl was classed as the most pronising first-year man in yesterday's championships by Wolverine Coach Newt Loken. Contributing heavily to the Wolverine's improvement over last year's third place in the Big Ten were Gordie Levenson and Tom Tillman. Levenson grabbed third behind teammate Buchanan in the trampoline with 254 mark- ers while Tillman worked a fifth in tumbling. The summaries: Side horse: 1. Dolan (Illinois) 256; 2. Swanson (Minnesota) 245; 3. Barthell (MICHIGAN) 234; 4. Loken (Minnesota) 230; 5. Hlinka (Illinois) 228; 6. Schulte (Indiana) 227. Horizontal bar: 1. Dolan (Illi- nois) 267; 2. Swanson (Minne- sota) 259; 3. Linder (Illinois) 253; 4. Ettl (MICHIGAN) 244; 5. Hlinka (Illinois) 237; 6. Tie between Flood (Minnesota) and Sorenson (Minnesota) 222. Tumbling: 1. Bedard (Illinois) 289; 2. Fina (Illinois) 252; 3. Barthell (MICHIGAN) 247; 4. Barnes (Illinois) 234; 5. Tillman (MICHIGAN) 226; 6. Loken (Minnesota) 223. Parallel bars: 1. Barthell (MICHIGAN) 270; 2. Dolan (Ill- inois) 260; 3. Loken (Minnesota) 253; 4. Tie between Schulte (In- diana) and Etti (MICHIGAN) 243; 6. Swanson (Minnesota) 241. Flying rings: 1. Palmer (Illi- nois) 253; 2. Dolan (Illinois) 249; 3. Jennett (Iowa) 237; 4. O'Connel (Minnesota) 232; 5. Bartkiewicz (Indiana) 225; 6. Sorenson (Minnesota) 218. Trampoline: 1. Harris (Iowa) 262; 2. Buchanan (MICHIGAN) 260; 3. Levenson (MICHIGAN) 254; 4. Hughes (Illinois) 249; 5. Jennett (Iowa) 241; 6. Cryer (Illinois) 232. All-around: 1. Dolan (Illinois) 1,032; 2. Swanson (Minnesota) 957; 3. Barthell (MICHIGAN) 948; 4. Loken (Minnesota) 893; 5. Ettl (MICHIGAN) 890; 6. Linder (Illinois) 870. Fonville Tops Heltwig, Wns PurdueTitle Special to The Daily LAFAYETTE, Ind. - Charley Fonville made a storybook finish to score sweet revenge and cap- ture first place in the shot put in the Purdue Relays last night. In his last try of the night, Chucking Charley sent the 16 pound shot 53' 111/" to edge Notre Dame's John Helwig, whose toss of 52' 7%" had been the winning effort up till that dramatic mo- ment. HELWIG HAD given Fonville >ne of the few defeats of his ca- :eer two weeks ago in the Illinois Tech Relays when his toss of 54' 1" gave him a seven inch margin hver the former world's record holder. But this time it was different, with Fonville comning from be- hind when the chips were down, to win one of the most import- ant contests since his comeback trail began last January. Helwig, who holds the scholas- tic shot put record, has consistent- ly topped fifty three feet this year, and hit 54' 4" in the Central Col- legiate meet. Fonville's top mark since his comeback began is a 55 feet one inch effort in the Michi- gan AAU meet. Fonville was the only Wolverine trackman entered in the meet. Coach Don Canham had origi- nally intended to enter the shuttle hurdle relay team, but a sustain- ed leg injury to Art Henrie made it necessary to scratch the Maize and Blue's only other event. Michigan State's quartet of Shek, Peppard, Makielski, and Dianetti outdistanced Notre Dame and Indiana teams for a win in the Two Mile relay in the rela- tively slow time of 7:58.8. 19 Gytmncists Get N.umerals Coach Newt Loken announced yesterday the frpshman numeral award winners for gymnastics in the 1949-50 season. Numeral win- ners were Remus Boila, Robert Bourne, Richard Davidson, Rich- ard Eggleton, Jack Ehlers, Earl Harvey, Donal Hurst, John Krom- ski, and William Marx. The list continues with Bruce Mase, John Mills, Donald Mitchell, Otto Molmen, James Potter, Eu- gene Pourcho, Monroe Rowland, Arthur Stadi, Leo Tomkow, and Orville Weaver. Bucks Score 64 Points; Yale,_Iowa, M' Follow Special to The Daily COLUMBUS, O.-Mike Peppe's Buckeyes from Ohio State lived up to the form sheets last night by winning the NCAA swimming championships held here in the OSU natatorium. The Buckeyes scored a total of 64 points to gain a clear margin over second place Yale who had 44. Michigan finished in the num- ber four position with 23 points, just one point behind Iowa. THE HIGHLIGHT of the meet was the 440-yard free style in which Stanford's Ralph Sala scor- ed a stunning upset over Jack Taylor, OSU's stand-out sopho- more. Sala overcame a large de-, ,ficit to win in 4:43.1. Michigan's fourth place comes as a bit of a surprise inasmuch as the Wolverines were generally expected to gain at least a third. It was the last event of the day, the 300-yard medley, which fail- ed to give the Wolverines the extra points they needed to top Iowa. In this race Michigan was given fifth place after a controversy. Michigan's time in this race was faster than fourth place Purdue's but two of the fourth place judges awarded that place to the Boiler-I makers while the third called it for the Maize and Blue. Both fifth place judges called Purdue for fifth, but still the Boilermakers were given fourth and Michigan' was relegated to the number five slot. CHARLIE MOSS was the high- est point-getter for the Wolverines taking second place in both thel 100-yard breaststroke and the 150- yard individual medley. Bruce Harlan, wro won the fancy diving title, was awarded the honor of being the Swim- mer-of-the-year. Stew Elliot took fifth place in the 100-yard breaststroke for Michigan, swimming his fastest time ever done i competition. His time was 1:01.6. MICHIGAN'S other point-getter was Gus Stager who took third in the 440-free style. Captain Matt Mann III did not qualify in this event. There were three new NCAA records set last night. Yale's 300- yard medley relay team establish- ed a new mark for that event in winning in the time of 2:51.2. The other new marks, the 100-yard backstroke and the 100 - yard breast stroke were established by virtue of the fact that this is the * * * first time that the events appeared in NCAA competition. Other team totals are Michigan State 17, Stanford 15, Princeton 12, Texas 11, LaSalle (Philadel- phia) 10, Northwestern 9, Purdue 8, Miami (Fla.) 4, Washington State, Wisconsin, Colgate, South- ern California, Indiana and Army 2, Southern Methodist and Geor- gia 1. * * * Summaries 100-yard backstroke - Won by William Sonner of Ohio State; 2, Dick Fetterman of Miami (Fla.); 3, Howard Pat- terson of Michigan State; 4, Ev- erett Brooks of Purdue; 5, Al- bert Ratkievich of Yale and HaroldeShoup of Michigan State, tied. Winning time :59.1. 100-yard Breaststroke - Won by Robert Brawner of Princeton; 2, Charles Moss of Michigan; 3, Bowen Stafforth of Iowa; 4, Stewart Elliott of Michigan; 5, Bill Volk of Georgia. Winning time 59.9. 100-yard Freestyle - Won by Clarke Scholes of Michigan State; 2, William Farnsworth of Yale; 3, Herbert Kobayashi of Ohio State; 4, Larry Munson of Yale; 5, Frank Dooley of Ohio State. Winning time :50.9. 440-yard Freestyle - 1, Ralph Sala of Stanford; 2, Jack Taylor of Ohio State; 3, Gus Stager of Michigan; 4, Wallace Wolfe of Southern California; 5, David Hoffman of Michigan State. Winning time 4:43.1. 150-yard Individual Medley- 1, Joe Verdeur of LaSalle; 2, Charles Moss , of Michigan; 3, Jose Balmores of Ohio State; 4 Larry Meyer of# Indiana; 1, Hugh McMullen of Yale. Win- ning time 1:31.2. High board-diving - 1, Bruce Harlan of Ohio State; 2, David Y. Browning of Texas; 3, Jack Calhoun of Ohio State; 4, Charles Chelich of Northwest- ern; 5, Joe Marino of Ohio State. Winning total 460.95. 300-yard medley relay - 1 Yale (Ratkiewich, Essert, Reid) 2, Iowa; 3, Ohio State; 4, Pur- due; 5. Michigan. Winning time 2:51.2. * * * (4> 508 E. Williams J Now your all-time "favorites" on R.P.M. RCA VICTOR I i r ST. PETERSBURG, FLA.,-(P) -The New York Yankees and the Detroit Tigers both used reserves in an exhibition contest yesterday and the Bronx Bombers walked away with a 7 to 5 decision, their first over the Tigers this spring. In fact, it was the first time in six games that the Detroiters have bowed to an American league team. The regular Yankee team was at Miami and New York fielded a unit of reserves and oddly- placed veterans. TAMPA, FLA., - (A) - The Cincinnati Reds, hottest team in the Florida Grapefruit league racked up their fourth straight victory yesterday by whipping the St. Louis Cardinals, 6 to 5. MIAMI - (R) - Brooklyn made it two straight over the world champion New York Yankees yes- terday, beating them, 7-2, before a paid attendance of 6,365. Joe Hatten and Clarence Podbielan scattered eight hits among the Yanks, including a home run by Bill Johnson in the fifth inning. ORLANDO, FLA., - (A') - Washington battered Mickey McDermott and Walter Master- son for 13 hits ,including home runs by Eddie Robinson, Gil Coan and Al Kozar, to trounce the Boston Red Sox, 10-3, in an exhibition game yesterday. SACRAMENTO, CALIF., - (') - Rookie Sam Kanelos singled in the last of the 10th to drive in the wininng run here yesterday as Sacremento Solons defeated the Chicago White Sox 2-1 before 2,704 fans. WEST PALM BEACH, FLA., -(W)-Lefty Lou Brissie's return to form and two home runs by rookies gave the Philadelphia Athletics a 9 to 3 victory yes- terday over Buffalo of the In- ternational League. IL I Enjoy Toscanini, Horowitz and Heifetz on 331/3, 45 and 78 r.p.m. RCA Victor Records! RCA Victor now gives music lovers their favorite artists (classical and popular) on the new 33% r.p.m. long playing microgroove as well as the 45 and 78 r.p.m. records. Choose your new 331/3 r.p.m. RCA Victor Records from "the music the world loves best." QThe Moldau (Smetana); Husitska Overt. (Dvorak)-Fiedler-Boston "Pops" Orch. (1-10" rec.). LM-1.........................$3.85 L Highlights from Madame Butterfly (Puccini)-Albanese, Melton, Browning; Weissman, Cond. RCA Vic. Or. (1-10" rec.). LM-2....$4.45 LScottish Fantasy, Op. 46 (Bruch) - Heifetz, Violinist; Chaloupka, Harpist; Steinberg-RCA Victor Orch. (1-10" rec.). LM-4.. . ..$4.45 Q Concerto in E Minor, Op. 64 (Mendelssohn)-Elman, Violinist; Defouw -Chicago Symphony Orch. (1-10" rec.). LM-5............$4.45 L Siegfried: Act 111, Scene 3 (Wagner)-Leinsdorf, Rochester Phil. Or., Farrell, Svanholm. (1-12" rec.). LM-1000................$5.45 R Gaite Parisienne (Offenbach) -Fiedler-Boston "Pops" Orchestra (1-12" rec.) LM-1001....... .....................$4.$5 LScheherazade-Sym. Suite -Monteux-San Fran. Sym. Orchestra (1-12" rec.). LM-1002 .................................$4.85 LThe Swan Lake (Tchaikovsky)-Goldschmann-St. Louis Symphony Orch. (1-12" rec.). LM-1003 ............................ $4.85 QGrand Canyon Suite-Toscanini-NBC Sym. Orch. (1-12" rec.). LM-1004 ....... .... ...............................$5.45 Q Concerto No. 2 in C Minor (Rachmaninoff)-Rubinstein-Goldschmann and NBC Symphony Orch. (1-12" rec.). LM-1005........... $5.45 Q Concerto for Piano & Orch. (Khatchafurian)-Kapell-Koussevitzky and Boston Symphony Orch.(1-12" rec.). LM-1006...........$5.45 Q Carmen (Excerpts) (Bizet)-RCA Victor Chorale & Orch.; Leinsdorf, Shaw (1-12" rec.). LM-1007............................$5.45 jSleeping Beauty Ballet (Excerpts) (Tchaikovsky)-Stokowski and his Symphony Orch. (1-12" rec.). LM-1010................$5.45 LiSymphonie Espagnole, Op. 21 (Lalo)-MenuhinViolinist; Jean Forunet-Orch. Colonne. (1-12" rec.). LM.1011.............$5.45 0 Bolero (Ravel); Ma Mere L'Oye Suite (Ravel-Koussevitzky-Boston Symphony Orch. (1-12" rec.). LM-1012...................$5.45 Symphony No. 5 in E Miror (from Dvorak's "New World")- Stokowski and his Symphony Orch. (1-12" rec.). LM-1013 ..... .$4.$5 r. r?'"fi ".....?."....:4i:S: ?^}:??4:"i:%i:??tF4;:r;"}}:?"'.":i'r.???fi::'4"T:":"} : }:4:?": :?{it"'rr?:?4}f? ::"; ""',;i}}:::}".: f:.. r. ::.. ............ ."v.". .": }.."t:. ttt: t':."..e " t.;":t.".''':'"::??':':':'':^i:v};?:' ":::ti?";":":ti", 'r:.... t t ..............r......,...r.....?.ti ::??:4:?4:::v:..t.,.....r..a......F........:},....... .}}:4:}'F.r.4'r:"a"i:".:?:: 'f.< : ?}'.:". wLk a- c i r lii ti tr lrvqrw-rv £i tote DRUG COMPANY has complete lines of ..1 Q: Puzzles Trick Novelties Esquire Ashtrays IC U, I n ,I 1