TIM, MTVllTGN DALLY 610 /AO- ' ivi ine Beats Gop ers in Twelfth; GEHRMANN OUTSHONE: Distance Foursome Breaks Relay Mark Hicks Edges Engstrand In 2-1 Pitcher's Battle Tight Squeak Snecial to The Daily LAWRENCE - Kansas - Mich- igan's great distance medley quar- tet of Art Henrie, Chuck Whittak- er, Jus Williams, and Don McEwen hung up their top performance of the season yesterday as they broke the varsity, field, and meet record with a 10:09.7 timing in the Kan- sas Relays. A tremendous anchor mile by sophomore -Don McEwen won the race for the Maize and Blue four- some. Again his victim was Wis- consin's heralded Don Gehrmann, who seems to be jinxed whenever the Wolverine's top distance star is entered against him. * * * McEWEN BEGAN the last leg of the relay just a few feet ahead of the best college miler now run- ning. But when the finish line ap- peared, McEwen had a huge 25 yard margin over Gehrmann to give Michigan. a first place and a multi-record breaking perform- ance. The time was the fastest eith- er in indoor or outdoor competi- tion this year. It broke the meet record of 10:12.7 set by the Em- poria State Teachers with the aid of former great college miler, Archie San Romani. It also beat the American indoor record and ' was only 10 seconds shy of North Texas State's outdoor American record of 9:59.4 set in the Penn Relays in 1938. The varsity outdoor record of 10:20.1 set with the aid of the great distance twins, the Humes, also fell by the wayside. Oklahoma A&M finished third, DON McEWEN . . . keeps rolling * * * fifth. But none of these three had a chance beginning with the an- chor mile, as Michigan and Wis- consin led the field by 30 yards. The rest of the starting field of ten were strung far back as Wol- verines ran to their decisive win, which was two seconds better than their previous best time set indoors at the Illinois Tech Relays. * * * MeEWEN'S VICTORY was mod- Missouri fourth, and Notre Dameified a little by the fact that Gehr- VARSJTY HOPEFULS: SnDrinir Griddprs Toi is - -- -Tt v t..,n a v a v v a v .vz vv v ,L %-F t In Long Scrimmage By MARV EPSTEIN fact that every one of th More than seventy football play- who dressed yesterday sa' ers wore off the Ferry Field turf action. in the first extended spring scrim- However Oosterbaan a mage yesterday. that five boys had shown1 Comprised mostly of freshman ticularly well, and evidenc and sophomore hopefuls, with only of the flash associated w- a sprinkling of lettermen in evi- sity material. Dave Hill an dence, the group toiled without ell Perry,, formerly teamm interruption for more than three Ypsilanti Central, turned hours. This contact work enabled formances which drew th Coach Bennie Oosterbaan to get reaction from Oosterbaan his first tentative evaluation of the crowd of several hundred results of ten days of practice. ers. Others who were sing by the Wolverine coachi THE MICHIGAN mentor at- Frank Howell, Bob Zatk tached no tremendous significance Ted Toper. to this initial formal scrimmage, All of these tryouts are e the first of a series of Saturday members of last year's fr afternoon workouts which will ex- squad. Perry, hailed by r tend until the end of spring train- standing a good chance of1 ing in late May. ing incumbent lettermen of the end positions, sho Pointing out that no series of amazing combination o plays could be worked at this catching and running at stage because of the limited re- yesterday's tussle. pertoire available to the play- Hill is the most talked callers, Oosterbaan emphasized prospect of all of those str that it was difficult, if not im- to secure tailback position possible, to make any real analy- ell is a halfback, Toper a fi sis of the way things were shap- while Zatkoff is a forme ing up, especially in view of the converted to offensive cent he men w some admitted up par- ed some ith var- nd Low- nates at in per- he most and a onlook- gled out included off and former reshman many as unseat- at one owed an f pass- bility in d about ruggling s. How- fullback, er back ter. mann had run a race previous to his anchor stint. But the decisive margin cannot be overlooked too easily. Twenty-five yards ahead of Gehrmann in any mile race has been a rarity since the Badger star began his college competition four years ago. Gehrmann's other famous de- feat at the hands of McEwen was suffered in the Western Conference Cross Country meet last year when the Wolverine star won by 200 yards in setting a new record. Michigan's other entry, the four mile relay had to be scratched. Aaron Gordon, second best Wol- verine miler, injured his leg in a gym class doing gymnastics, and was unable to run. Kansas took the four mile relay event in 17:34.2, which broke the meet record by 2 seconds. How- ever, this is quite a bit above the American record set by Indiana, and Sweden's world record holders. Michigan Tars In Seven Point RegattaLead With three more races left for today at Whitmore Lake, the Wol- verine Sailing Club leads the field of ten entries in the Fifth Annual Michigan Invitational Regatta by seven points. The Maize and Blue sailors com- piled a total of 76 points in the five races which were run yesterday. De Pauw University, although they have not taken a single first place, Correction Yesterday's Daily erroneous- ly reported that Phi Sigma Del- ta had beaten Phi Delta Theta and that Sigma Alpha Epsilon had lost to Tau Kappa Epsilon in fraternity softball competi- tion. The correct results of those games found SAE win- ning over TKE, 10-5, and the Phi Delts edging the Phi Sigs, 1-0, on Jim Kern's no-hit pitching. has enough seconds and thirds to pick up69 points and second place. THE POINT totals thus far for the other schools entered are: Illi- nois Tech 52, Notre Dame 51, Northwestern 47, Wayne 47,mPur- due (last year's winner) 41, Wash- ington University 40. Jim Johns, Commodore of the Michigan tars, has been th eout- standing skipper of the meet. Johns, who was the top skipper in the Mid-West Collegiate Sail- ing Association last spring, is continuing to prove he still is tops with a perfect record for the day of four straight wins. He might have had a fifth win to his credit if he wasn't disquali- fied when he hit a marker in one of his A division races. Skippering the Wolverine's B di- vision entry, Gene O'Connor has given a very commendable per- formance, taking two firsts, two seconds, and a fifth. *k * *4 THE DE PAUW dinghies are be- ing manned by Tom Floyd and Chuck Tummonds, skippers of the A and B boats, respectively. Both have been hugging the Maize and Blue stern, constantly pressing the Michigan tars. John Rieman is crewing for Floyd while Steve Waxer is as- sisting Tummonds. The weather thus far has been perfect for sailing and if it con- tinues that way today, the remain- ing races should be run off before the two o'clock deadline to enable all participants to get back to their respective schools in time. Don McVitty, chairman of the sailing meets committee in the mid-west, said that all the boat- men have showed good clean sportsmanship which has made this regatta the fine meet it is. By BOB SANDELL Lanky Bob Hicks' masterful four hit hurling and a dramatic twelfth inning rally was the story of the Wolverines' second Big Ten; victory yesterday afternoon at Ferry Field. "Lefty" Hal Morrill's pop bunt finally broke up a brilliant pitching duel between Hicks and Minne- sota's Dale Engstrand to give Michigan a hard fought 2-1 tri- umph and a sweep of the two game series. m * * IT WAS a well-deserved win for Hicks who faced only 28 men in * * * BUCHOLZ WENT to second when Koceski, hitless in five pre- vious trips, laced out a single over second base and then rode home with the tying marker on Morri- son's hard blast to right. The strategy then called for Morrill, who was also having trouble solving Engstrand, to try to squeeze the speedy Koces- ki over the plate. "Lefty" came through with a hard pop bunt past the pitcher that the infield could not pick up in time to nab Leo who raced in with the winning tally. The Gophers had earlier taken a 1-0 lead in the top half of the inning that looked mighty big with the way Engstrand was set- ting down the Wolverines. * * * BILL KRANZ opened the frame with a line double just inside the right field foul marker. Engstrand went down swinging and that brought up the leadoff man. Catcher Glenn Gostic. He rallied to the occasion with a poke into left field to score Kranz with the first run of the game. Hicks then settled down to dispose of Toni Warner and Jim Anderson. Previous to that the Gopners had managed to get only two men as far as second base and one of those was picked off by Hicks. THE WOLVERINES, however, were c o n s t a n t 1 y threatening, thanks to Engstrand's inability to consistently find the plate. His wildness made him hard to hit, though, and the Maize and Blue left 13 men stranded on the base paths. Morison collected two of the four Michigan hits with a line drive double in the third inning besides his important blow in the twelfth. Hicks' control was superb. gHe allowed only one walk over the distance and struck out four. He had the Gophers hitting into the ground as evidenced by Morrill's 20 putouts at first base. Each team committed one er- ror, but there were very few hard chances. It was a pitcher's game all the way. TOTALS 36 1 4*34 * one out in twelfth when win- ning run scored. MICHIGAN Bucholz 2b Koceski lf Morrison cf Morrill lb Palmer c Wolff ss Fancett, rf Painter rf Dorr 3b Hicks p xBerce TOTALS AB 1 6 5 6 5 3 3 1 2 3 1 R 1 1 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 H 0 1 2 1 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 4 5 1 20 4 2 0 a 0 0 0 A 5 0 0 2 7 0 0 4 4 0 E 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 36 2 4 36 22 1 -wVariy-Raiph VCarC BOB H1CKS . ..grounds Gophers the regulation nine innings and al- lowed but one hit until the elev- enth. But at the same time it was a heart-breaker for Engstrand who himself had a one-hitter until the fatal twelfth. He whiffed 13 Wolverine bat- ters with his tricky side-arm deliv- ery, but got into trouble quite a bit in the earlier part of the con- test with his wildness. His fifth pass of the day to Second Sacker Bill Bucholz, and his twelfth of the game, finally led to his downfall. Big iTen WINNESOTA AB Gostic c 5 Warner lf 4 Anderson 2b 5 Holker ss 4 Baglien cf 4 Grakumann 3b 4 Myklebust rf 4 Kranz lb 3 Engstrand p 3 x struck out for Hicks in twelfth Minnesota 000 000 000 001-1 Michigan 000 000 000 002-2 Marmo Nets BiggestGoal Joe Marmo, left wing on Michi- gan's hockey squad for the past two years, took on a lifetime line- mate yesterday afternoon at the St. Mary's Student Chapel when he was married to Miss Ann Rink, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rink of Hornell, New York. Assisting Marmo on the play was Best Man Paul Pelow, also a member of the Wolverine puck squad. Marmo is a senior in the En- gineering college, and his bride is a junior in the School of Public Health. R 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 H 1: 0 0 1 1 1 0 0 13 0 1 6 2 2 2 8 0 A 2 2 1 0 0, 3 9 E 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 Vote Wednesday 11 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN TEAM MICHIGAN Iowa Ohio State Illinois Wisconsin Indiana Northwestern Minnesota Purdue W L Pet. Ii 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 1 0 9 2 2 2 1 1 1 3 0 1.000 .500 .500 .500 .500 .500 .500 .250 .000 MAJOR LEAGUE STANDINGS NATIONAL LEAGUE Spartans Trounce Buckeyes, Penn State in Cinder Contest (Continued from Page 2) Academic Notices Education D151: All observations in the University Elementary School are canceled from April 24 through April 28. Meetings on Tuesday, 3 p.m. and Thursday, 11 a.m. will be held as scheduled. English 303: Meeting of this course, 7:30 p.m., April 24, English seminar room, 3217 Angell Hall. Miss Evangeline Bollinger will dis- cuss her dissertation "Twentieth Century English and American Criticism of Dante's 'Divine Com- edy'." Geometry Seminar: 3 p.m., Tues., April 25, 3001 Angell Hall. "The Edge of Regression of a Surface of Constant Negative Curvature." Prof. Howard Alexander, Adrian College. All interested are invited. Doctoral Examination for Ro- bert James Good, Chemistry; the- sis: "An Electron Diffraction In- vestigation of Surface Reactions in the Flotation Separation of Sul- fide Minerals," 2 p.m., Mon., April "" By The Associated Press Michigan State's balanced track squad turned back Ohio State's Big Ten indoor champs in a tri- angular meet at Columbus yes- terday while at Champaign In- diana's Hoosiers broke three Me- morial Stadium records in a spe- cial four way relay meet. The Spartans, previous victors over the Buckeyes indoors, took r five first places in rolling up 65 /2 points to Ohio's four firsts and 57'/2 points and Penn State's 38, including five places. * * .* MSC's BILL MACK won the mile run in 4:12.1, beating Ohio State's Len Truex to the tape by 4 five yards. 24, 2038 Chemistry Bldg. Chair- man, L. 0. Brockway. Concerts Student Recital: Harriet Risk, Cellist, will present a program at 8:30 p.m., Mon., April 24, Rack- ham Assembly Hall, in partial ful- fillment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Music. A pupil of Oliver Edel, Miss Risk will play compositions by Haydn, Bloch, and Beethoven. The public is invited. Student Recital: Paul Jackson, pianist, will be heard in a pro- (Continued on Page 4) Biggest point getters of the meet were Jim Gehrdes and Will Lan- caster, both of Pena State, who accounted for 23 of their team's points. Gehrdes won both hurdle races and finished second in the 100 behind teammate Lancaster, who also won the 220. At the Champaign meet, where there was no point scoring, In- diana's flying tracksters posted their marks in the 440-yard re- lay, the 880 relay and the distance medley. Illinois set a new record in the two-mile relay and Northwestern's sprint medley quartet set a fifth mark. Iowa was the only partici- pant that failed to set a record. 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AMERICAN LEAGUE Detroit St. Louis New York Washington Philadelphia Boston Cleveland Chicago 4 4 2 1 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 1 2 0 4 1.000 .667 .600 .500 .500 .400 .333 .000 11/2. 11/> 2 2 2/ 2z 4 i II i Vote Wednesday X OPPORTUNITY L.ading life insurance company has unusual sales opportunity for a College veteranseriously lookind for permanent career. Immediate salary and commis- Here Tonight--Gone Tomorrow! "I LIELZAPOPPIN 0Ol1 Music-New Wiords-New Plots Continues thru Tuesday 4 NEW TITLES A4,n. rn.:. . I 11 if i. I .