FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Trac kmen To Run in Montreal, New York Meets SPEAKING f i tt A BY GEORGE FLINT S * , 4> McEwen,Hickman, Gordon, Ross Will Appear in Garden Nine Wolverines To Compete in Canadian Pre-Olympic Test; McEwen To Face Wilt CONPLAINTS ARE NOTHING NEW around this newspaper, which makes mistakes often and doesn't pretend infallibility. We received one recently which we will have to admit is valid. It concerned the naming of Doug Lawrence to the basketball cap- taincy, and Daily coverage of the cage situation generally. Not that we completely overlooked Lawrence and the basket- ball team this year. But it is a sign of the times in Michigan athletics that a team which doesn't produce doesn't produce headlines. % Basketball this season was not a winning sport. Nor was Lawrence a great ballplayer. Neither of these facts, however, can adequately condone the general sentiment on campusthat a losing team is not worth supporting or talking about. Lawrence Shows New Trend... MICIGAN BASKETBALL has never been great-but with a view toward next year it may be said that it will probably be good. Lawrence is exemplary of this new trend. This writer has had personal contact with the captain-elect -which illustrates to him the idea of "new blood" in the Michi- gan cage sport. Back in Indiana, where the hoop sport is closer to a disease than an activity, both of us participated in the game when we were barely young enough to read. Backyard and alley games played on the basis of no holds barred gave all the partici- pants a competitive urge which is not equalled in many states. Never a large man, Lawrence made his high school team by dint of good ballhandling and a large serving of hustle. He still retains both of these propensities. They are what makes the Hoosier cage carnival the great thing it is at the high school level. The little package of dynamite named Lawrence came to Michigan although many of his basketball buddies went to Michigan State, which had almost an all-Hoosier squad this year. He played against such former teammates as Gordon Stauffer, Bill Bower, and DeNeal Hartman this season, and hustled all the more for it. Now he's been elected captain of the Wolverine basketball team, almost a thankless honor these days if the fans' attitude is con- sidered. There is no doubt that the Michigan team of 1951-52 was a poor team--but it was a young team and a colorful team. Given better coaching and encouragement from the student body, it could make a name for itself in the 1952-53 season. Track Picture Brightens SMINGTIME IS HERE and aside from any general hilarity accom- panying its arrival sports fans can give thanks for a chance to get outdoors to watch Michigan teams in action. If spring air is indeed an elixir, there is a good chance that it will breathe new life into at least one Wolverine team. Coach Don Canham's cindermen, after losing a close battle to Illinois in the indoor Conference meet, may get enough extra bounce from the switch outdoors to win a title at long last. It's possible to list the following as definite outdoor assets: Milt Mead, who didn't practice during the indoor season, should be able to improve enough to better his fourth place spot in the Conference Van Bruner, shut out of the low hurdles indoors, is more likely to be a threat over the longer (200 yards) distance. He is not primarily a sprinter, as is Illinois' Willy Williams, and thus a. longer distance places more emphasis on form, which Bruner has in large quantities. And one field event added outdoors con. currently adds strength to the Canham cause. It's the discus, where Fritz Nilsson should be the class of the Big Ten, as he is now in the shot put. Coach Canham has said that Nilsson's track future is brighter in the discus than in the shot put, and with steady improvement the big Swede could shatter a few records this spring. The Conference meet is many weeks away, but we'll go out on a limb right now and predict a reversal of the Illinois-Michigan one-two finish when the outdoor carnival is run off. Illinois Battles Dayton Tonight In NCAA Opening Cage Round i * By JOHN JENKS It will be a big weekend for Don McEwen and his little band of fel- low Canadian thinclads. Today they head for their native land, nine strong, and the Eastern Canadian National Championships to be held in the huge Monteral Forum this evening. THEN TOMORROW night Mc- Ewen, John Ross, Bill Hickman and Aaron Gordon will perform in the Olympic Fund-Raising Games in New York's Madison Square Garden. An estimated crowd of 10,000 track fans will jam every nook and cranny of the Montreal sports palace McEwen and George Lynch, transfer from Illinois, will repre- ent Michigan in the two mile run. Rich Ferguson of Iowa, who ran a fine two mile in the Big Ten in- door championship, will cavort with the Wolverine pair in the event. * * * JACK CARROLL will face that man again-Mal Whitfield-in the 500-yard race. Last week Whitfield displayed true Olympic form in de- feating the Hamilton Harrier in the 600-yard run. Another track great, Herb Mc- Kenley, a former Illini and Olympian, and Penn State's sensational sophomore, Ollie Sax, wil be on hand to round out the field. Michigan's ace miler, Big Ten indoor champ John Ross, is the odds-on favoite to be the Canadian mile champ. His source of compe- tition wil be Notre Dame's Jack Alexander, whose best effort is a 4:15, six seconds slower than Ross' best. * * . FRESHMAN Ross Coates will match talents in the 50-yard dash with Don McFarland, sprint champ from McGill, while car- toonist-hurdler Van Bruner will take on Gordon Crosby, Canadian national hurdle champ, in the 50- yard highs. Michigan's other entires are Jeff Dooley in-'the 1000-yard run,1 Bill "Slim" Barton in the junior 500, and freshman John Moule in the junior mile. An all-Cana- dian mile relay team will also bear the 'M' symbol. New York's cinder fans and Michigan bQosters will have a chance to see Ross run the mile against Don Gehrmann, and Mc- Ewen run the two mile against Fred Wilt, besides seeing the two mile relay team in action. DON McEWEN . ..and his band Detroit Wins, 7-3, Over Ranger Six DETROITMP)-The Detroit Red Wings tuned up for the forthcom- ing playoffs by hitting for their highest scoring total of the season as they blasted the New York Rangers and substitute goalie Lorne Anderson, 7 to 3, last night. EXHIBITION BASEBALL SCORES Philadelphia (N) 2, Detroit 0 Boston (N) 14, Milwaukee (AA) 12 Pittsburgh 8, Seattle (PCL) 3 a Brooklyn 4, Cincinnati 0 Boston (A)N14, Washington 8 New York (N) 4, St. Louis (A) 3 New York (A) 5, St. Louis (N) 2 4Chicago (N) 7, Chicago (A) 1 Cage Finals Continue in Intrarurals Hardwood finals continued last night as Phi Alpha Kappa edged out Alpha Kappa Kappa in the second place profesisonal frater- nity basketball playoffs, while Al- pha Sigma Phi defeated Alpha Delta Phi in the third place social fraternity playoffs. Characterized b yhard, fast play- ing, the Phi Alphas came from a 12-11 half-time deficit, to decision the Alpha Kappas, 29-21, scoring 18 points in the second half to their opponents' nine. Free throws proved the margin of victory as the Phi Alphas made 11 out of 12, eight of which oc- curred in the second half. SPRINGING FROM a 10-0 lead in the first quarter, the Alpha Sigs went all the way to defeat the Al- pha Delts, 23-15. In the fourth place social fraternity champion- ships, Alpha Epsilon Pi outpointed Tau Kappa Epsilon, 31-21. In the independent league, the Checkers swamped the Bye Nots, 53-21, and the Freshmen Aces, led by 24 point Al Mann, downed the Hawaii "B" team to the tune of 52-44, for the third and fourth place titles, respectively. In the second place semi-finals, Hawaii "A" defeated the Hurons, 35-19, and the Escheators ploughed past Health Service, 34-25. PRE-MEET ATTRACTION: Michigan Natators Seek Five American Records Michigan's record - shattering swimmers of 1952 will attempt to add five more American marks to their collection in an added at- traction at the dual meet with Wayne tomorrow evening at the Intramural Pool. The assaults on the American record book will take place at 7:30 p.m., half an hour before the meet competition gets underway.. THE MICHIGAN breaststrokers will be out to erase three relay marks, while Don Hill, Ron Gora, and Jim McKevitt will try to write two new individual free-style records into the books. John Davies, Stew Elliott, Bumpy Jones and Rusty Car- lisle will swim an 800-yard breaststroke relay, while Jim White will join them for the 1,000-yard relay and Tom Ben- ner will swim the last leg of the 1,200-yard race. The existing marks for the re- lays are 10:08.6 for the 800, 12:51.2 for the 1,000, and 15:36.1 for the 1,200. All were set in 1939, Ohio State holding the 800-yard relay mark and Michigan establishing the other two. TO BETTER the 800-yard rec- ord the Wolverine foursome will have to average 2:32.1 a man for each 200. Davies, Elliottt, and Carlisle have all turned In under 2:30 this year, while Jones has not swum the 200-yard breaststroke in competition this season. In the free-style departrpant, Hill will be out to set a new Arm- ican 75-yard record. The present mark is held by Ohio State's Dick Cleveland, a 35.7 effort. Gora and McKevitt will attempt for the second time this year to break the American 150-yard free- style record of 1:21.4. Gora swam a 1:21.5 race last month in edgwgg out McKevitt. GET INTO THE "SPRING" OF THINGS No parking problems! DRIVE RIGHT THROUGH for BEER - WINES SOFT DRINKS-- SNACKS There are interesting engineering opportunities for you in the Bell Telephone System. To get the facts, see ~ur representatives who will be here for personal interviews at ENGINEERING PLACEMENT OFFICE MAR CH 24, 25, 26, 27 Within the Bell System are jobs for every type of engineering ability with unlimited opportunities in these permanent, rapidly growing fields of public service: * RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT-Bell Telephone Laboratories. * MANUFACTURING AND DISTRIBUTION-Western Electric Co. * ATOMIC WEAPONS-Sandia Corp. 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REGIONAL play also opens to- night at three other cities: at Raleigh, N.C., Kentucky vs. Penn State, and Noth Carolina State vs. St. Johns; at Kansas City, Kansas vs. Texas Christion, and St. Louis vs. New Mexico A&M; and at Corvallis, Ore., UCLA vs. Santa Clara, and Wyoming vs. Oklahoma City. For the first time, Illinois will r encounter an opponent they'll have to look at eye-to-eye as Dayton sends 6-8 John Hoan, 6-7 Don Meineke and 6-5 Chuck Grigsby against the Mlini's 6-9 Johnny Kerr and 6-8 Bob Peter- son. The rebounds will tell the story, and Big Ten partisans believe2the 235-pound Peterson and 205- pound Kerr will prove more rugged under the boards than Dayton USED MOTORBIKES from $75.00 KIDDIE KORNER . Phone 7187 564 So. Main Time Payments Available Van Ron: soft, rounded collar. An up-and - com. ing cam us avorite with a slightly formal (but never stiff1) look. Traditional button-down. 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SAW J Onward Christian Soldiers Sweet and Low -- Choral Favorites Chorale Great Sacred Choruses from the Classics Songs for the Easter Season Mass In G (Polene) The Shaw Chorale also participates in RCA Victor Recordings of the Symphony No. 9 (Beethoven) ; excerpts from Porgy and Bess (Gershwin) ; gems from Romberg shows; Rigoletto (Verdi); Cantatas, No. 31, 140 (Bach); and in U 0 11 11