71URSDAY, MARCH 27, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE THURSDAY, MARCH 27, 1952 PAGE THREE MERMEN BATTLE AT PRINCETON: 1, II I 11 I. NCAA Swim Meet To Onen oda New Tartan Grain OSU, Yale Favored to Win; 'M' Natators Vie for Third Fine Record Oklahoma Wrestlers NCAA Choice .yHERBCOHEN about by the inability of Lee to 11 By HERB NEIL The two top swimming powers in the country, Ohio State and Yale, meet head-on this weekend in the NCAA meet which gets underway at Princeton, New Jersey, with the 1500-meter race tonight. The Wolverines should battle it out with Michigan State and Princeton for third place in the national meet. John Davies and Stew Elliott, Michigan co-captains, along with Bumpy Jones, Don Hill, Tom Benner, Rusty Carlisle, Wally Jeffries, John Ries and Jim Wal- ters will carry Michigan's hopes into the meet. The Wolverine contingent will leave from the Willow Run air- port at 9:00 this morning. No Michigan man is entered in the long 1500-meter grind tonight. Yale and Ohio State are ex- pected to battle it out for top honors as they did last year when Yale emerged the winner. It will pit the Buckeyes' Ford Konno, Dick Cleveland, Jack Taylor, and diving 'contingent against Yale's John Marshall, Wayne Moore, Richard Thoman, and Kenneth Welch, A close battle and a new inter- collegiate record may be in the making tonight when the Buck- eyes' Konno and the Elis' Marshall clash. Konno is present holder of the intercollegiate mark of 18:11.5 which he set at the Big Ten meet three weeks ago. Michigan's Davies will attempt - to repeat his 100 and 200-yard1 Big Ten breaststroke victories in the NCAA meet tomorrow and Saturday. His chief competition will come from Princeton's Bob Brawner, who won both the races in last year's NCAA meet. Davies was forced to miss the meet last year because of an eye infection. * * * Elliott, who was the leading Wolverine performer in the NCAA meet last year, finished third in the 100-yard breaststroke and sixth in the 200. The 200 will be swum tomorrow night and the 100 on Saturday. Michigan's medley star, Jones, will again take on Indiana's Larry Meyer, whom he barely beat in the Big Ten champion- ships, in the 150-yard individual medley. In addition he faces a fast man in Robert Mattson of North Carolina State Saturday night. Carlisle will also swim the medley for the Wolverines. The Wolverines' sprinter Hill will swim the 50 tomorrow night, and Benner will join him in the * * * '1W' Golfers By HENLEY GURWIN When the Wolverine golfers step up to the first tee at Wake Forest on April 7 for their first dual meet of the year, they will take with them an enviable record of golfing achievements. Since 1922, when Michigan first began competing in golf, the Maize and Blue have compiled eleven Western Conference Champion- ships, six of which have come within the last ten years, and two national championships. * * * FROM THE years 1922 through 1934, when they were crowned champions at the National Inter- collegiate Tournament at Cleve- land, the Wolverine golfers com- piled the amazing record of 66 wins, only eight losses and two ties. Again in 1935, Michigan won the National Championship, de- spite a loss to Northwestern in a dual meet. It was the first loss for the squad since 1932 when Ohio State performed the feat. Coach Bert Katzenmeyer, now! starting his seventh year as golf mentor, has led the linksmen to Conference titles in 1946, 1947, and 1949. Last year the squad finished fourth behind Ohio State, Purdue, and Wisconsin, on a rain- soaked course at Evanston. IN COMPETITION last season,' the Wolverine sextet compiled an eight won, five lost, one tied rec- ord. This included the spring trip to the South in which the Maize and Blue were victorious over only Wake Forest. North Carolina eked out a narrow victory and Duke trounced them, 23-4. In Big Ten action, Michigan defeated Ohio State and Mich- igan State twice, won decisions over Indiana and Illinois, split a pair of matches with Purdue, and tied the Wildcats of North- western. When the NCAA wrestling meet opens at Fort Collins, Colorado tomorrow, Oklahoma's defending national champions will be favored to walk off with top laurels once more. The Sooners, who are coached by a former Michigan grappler, are expected to lead all the teams by virtue of their fine season's record. * * * AMONG OTHER important vic- tories they have defeated Okla- homa A&M by a very decisive Bulletin CHICAGO-(P)-Chuck Da- vey, scholarly southpaw from Michigan State College, last night zoomed to the top flight among welterweights, by scor- ing a technical knockout over Ike Williams, former world's lightweight champion, in 1:47 of the fifth round. The scheduled 10-round bat- tle was halted by referee Wil- liam Doty with Williams stag- gering and unable to defend} himself under Davey's relent- less two-fisted attack. Williams was on the verge of crashing to the floor of the rink when ref- eree Doty waved Davey to his corner as the winner. score; and the Aggies are regarded as second choices behind only Oklahoma. Michigan which has a chance to take home top laurels in two weight categories will be enter- ing Snip Nalan at 130 pounds and Miles Lee at 157 pounds. Both are sophomores who have come a long way since the begin- ning of the season. Nalan won six of eight regular season meets, but reached his peak in the Big Ten meet held in Ann Arbor three weeks ago. In that meet he swept through all confer- ence opponents and emerged with I-H Scores VOLLEY BALL Education 4, Political Science 2 Romance Languages 6, Indus- trial Social Research 0 PADDLE BALL Law Club 3, Alpha Chi Sigma 0 continue in the match after his elbow had been injured. The Michigan grappler was ahead on points at the time. When Lee met Hoke again in the Western Conference cham- pionships, he came very close to beating him, and only succumbed to the Spartan flash on the basis of a referee's decision. * * * ALONG WITH Oklahoma, Ok- lahoma A & M and Michigan- Purdue, Indiana and Princeton are expected to enter wrestlers with good chances of winning. The Aggies will be entering the largest squad of fifteen men in an attempt to outman the rest of the competing teams. But perhaps quality and not quantity will win out in the end. Spring is Here! Try our collegiate hairstyles -today 8 barbers - no waiting The Dascola Barbers Liberty Near State N'EW THIS STYLE $15.50 Other Styles $12.95 to $17.50. Sizes to 15 in some styles. WANTY & REULE Downtown - 210 S. Main St. I 1i I Read and Use Daily Classifieds * wr ,. FORD KONNO . . . Hawaiian hurricane 100 Saturday night. Cleveland and Clark Scholes of Michigan State appear to be the men to beat in both races. * * * Michigan's other free-stylers, Jeffries and Ries, will see action in the 220-yard free-style tomor- row night. Jeffries will also swim the 440 Saturday night. Coach Matt Mann will probably use Hill, Benner, Jeffries, and Ries in the 400-yard free-style re- lay tomorrow night and Jones, Davies, and Benner in the 300- yard medley relay Saturday. MILES LEE * . . mat man the 130 pound title after defeating Michigan State's Bob Gunner. LEE WON four of six regular season meets, and finished third in the WesternnConference. His two dual meet defeats were at the All-Campus fencing tourna- ment will be held tonight at 7:30 in the Boxing Room of the Sports Building. --Rod Grambeau hands of Bob Hoke of Michigan State and Ron Carterfield of Pitts- burgh. The Pitt defeat was brought :. i 1 t i A SPRING DAY is the most wonderful luxury ever invented and you don't have to be rich to enjoy it. IT'S FREE. 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THAT IS TAKEN to mean the 22-year-old hurler from Egypt, Pa., now a sergeant in charge of ath- letics, will be available to the Phil- lies soon after the opening of the major league baseball season April 15. A great deal, from the Phil- lies' slant, hinges upon the re- turn of Simmons. From all reports, Simmons has not lost his fine touch. Although he naturally has devoted himself chiefly to the more serious business of soldiering, he has managed to keep in top trim as a pitcher awaiting the day of his demobili- zation. THEREFORE, Manager Eddie Sawyer and all the Phils are con- fident Curt will go a long way to- ward putting the whiz back in the team which two seasons ago delighted baseball fans with its youth and zing. CHICAGO (AL) 8, CLEVELAND 5 TUCSON, Ariz.--(/P)-The Chi- cago White Sox exploded with five runs in the ninth inning yester- day to whip Cleveland's Indians, 8-5. In that inning the Sox got the first two men on base via walks from Lou Brissie. Then Gerald Fahr replaced Brissie and the Chi- cagoans collected three hits, the third a home run by rookie George Wilson. LEFTHANDER Chuck Stobbs hurled a two-hit shutout in his five-inning stint. But Harold Brown, who followed Stobbs to A the mound, gave up five runs and VAN HEUSEr The American Leaguers, defeat- ing the Pirates for the fourth time in a row, nicked Necciai for three singles in their big inning. The Pirates out hit the Brownies 9-6 but couldn't put their hits to- gether until the 9th when they scored both of their runs. * * * N. Y. (NL) 9, CHICAGO NL) 6 PHOENIX, Ariz.-(P)-For the second straight day, the New York Giants yesterday spotted the Chicago Cubs four runs, then ral- lied to beat them, 9 to 6. It was the seventh victory in a row for the National League cham- pions who now have won 11 of 18 games played. * * * THE GIANTS hammered out 15 hits this afternoon, with Bobby Thomson, Alvin Dark and Whitey Lockman contributing home runs. 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