4 " 'fffE1MICHfIGAN DAILY ±1116)9L Tennis; Baseball Teams OffforSunnySou thland Williams House Wins Dorm Indoor Track Championship Chi Phi Annexes Water Polo Crown; Sigma Phi Epsilon Paddleball Titans yC 4> * * * By DICK BUCK A powerful Williams House track squad ran to the residence hall indoor track crown last night in Yost Fieldhouse by taking firsts In four of the nine events. Williams scored 23 points, al- most twice as many as Allen- Rumsey, their closest opponent with 134 points. VIC BOUCKAERT, sparking the Williams attack, proved to be top point man for the meet with firsts in the 65-yard high hurdles and broad jump. Bouckaert did the highs in 9.0 and jumped 19'2"'to inish ahead of teammate2Erle Kauffman, who did 18'4". Kauff- man also took a first place with his 2:18,4 halt mile. The most sensational per- formance of the meet was pro- vided by Chuck Fisher of Wil- .** Dorm Dashes HIGH HURDLES - Won by Vic Bouckaert, Williams; 2-Bruce Sanson, Adams; 3-Mary De Winter, Prescott; 4-Henry Cloots, Tyler. Time: 9.0.' 60-YARD DASH-Won by Dave Ma- loney, Allen-Rumsey; 2-Ben Bray, Cooley; 3-Irv Stewart, Hinsdale; 4- Bob Whitacre, Alien-Rumsey. Time: -.6. MILE RUN-Won by Chuck Fisher, Williams; 2-Glen Coury, Hinsdale; 3-Bob Moon, Tyler; 4-Jack Brown, Allen-Rumsey. Time: 5.19.5. 440-YARD DASH-Won by Blaine Harper, Gomberg; 2-Bob Whitacre, Allen-Rumsey; 3-Terry Kochanny, Strauss; 4-Paul Anderson, Allen- Rums;;. Time: 57.4. M80-YARD kUN-Won by Ere Kauff- tan, Williams; 2-Faustino Bernadett, Hayden; 3-Wayne Holmes, Prescott; 4-Bil Morris, Cooley. Time: 2:18.4. SHOT PUT-Won by George Flint, 'Taylor, 36' 1%1'; 2-Bob Richardson, Gomberg, 35' 9"; 3-Mary De Winter, Prescott, 34'4%'; 4-Bob Jewell, Allen- Rumsey, 33' 10%". POLE VAULT-Won by Ralph Kief- er, Hayden, 9' 3"; 2-jim McClurg, Gio'berg; 3-Norm Gabel, Hayden; Sheldon Chambers, Williams; Dick Alexander, Taylor; Art Townsend, Allen-Rumsey. . HIGH JUMP-Won by Ben Bray, Cooley, 5'51"; 2-Faustino Berna-dett, Hayden; 3-Glen Coury, Hinsdale; 4- Bill Weber, Strauss; and Hal Kiefer, Hayden. BROAD JUMP-Won by Vie Bouck- aert, William, 19'2'; 2-Erle Kauff- man,, Willams; 3-Gerald Kochanny, Strauss; 4-Dave Maloney, Allen-Runm- S ey. liams in the mile. Fisher stepped in the lead spot at the f mile mark And was 100 yards ahead of his nearest opponent by the time he crossed the finish line; his time being 5:19.5. Behind Fisher were Glen Coury of Hins- dale House, Bob Moon of Tyler, and Jack Brown of Allen-Rum- sey. George Flint of Taylor House took top honors in the shot put competition with a heave of 36' l1a". GOMBERG'S Blaine Harper ran a 57.4 quarter-mile to edge out Bob Whitacre of Allen-Rumsey and Jerry Kochanny of Strauss, Paul Anderson, another Allen- Rumsey man claimed fourth place. Kicking the bar but not top- pling it, Hayden's. Ralph Kiefer soared 9'3" in the pole vault to win over Jim McClung of Gom- berg, who had cleared 9'0". Dave Maloney stepped out in the 60-yard dash to keep Ben Bray from becoming a two event winner. Bray had previously won the high jump with a leap of 5'5". Maloney, an Allen-Rumsey man, claimed the second place team's only victory. Behind Williams and Allen- Rumsey in the team totals were Hayden House, 12x/, Gomberg House, 11, Cooley House, 9, Hins- dale House, 7, Prescott House, 6, Taylor House, 5%, Strauss House, 4x, and Adams House, 3. In fraternity paddleball Sigma Phi Epsilon captured laurels with a 2-1 victory over Sigma Alpha Mu. * * * THE SIG EPS came out on top in the doubles and in one singles match, which Nonny Weinstock brought home the lone Sammy score in the other singles event. Chi Phi dunked Sigma Chi and Jim Balog in annexing the fraternity water polo champion- ship, 3-0. Sigma Chi teammates noticed that Balog, a varsity football player, had been under water for an unusual length of time and hauled him out looking a little blue in the face. He Was taken to Health Service where he was pro- nounced all right. Seven Men In Annual FloridaTrip Coach Bill Murphy and seven members of the varsity net squad leave today for their annual jaunt to the Southland and a hard week of tennis against the toughest of competition. Those making the trip are: Mike Schwartz, Bob Curhan, Al Mann, Jay Webb, Jim Holtz, Jim Ste- phens and Pete Paulis. Lettermen Steve Bromberg, Gene Barrack and Jack Smart are not listed on the traveling roster because of other commitments. * * * STILL UNDECIDED about who to play where andwhen, Murphy hopes to clear up several question marks in practice matches against Rollins Colleg and Florida State College court teams. It will be the Michigan men- tor's first chance to examine the squad's play on outdoor courts this year. Thushfar the weather has limited the netters to the indoor confines of the Sports Building's courts. Rollins College, a school always noted for its fine tennis teams, poses the stiffest test for the Wol- verines. Coached by Jim McDoug- all, the Rollins racquetteers waltz- ed to seven wins as against two Registration is stil in pro- gress for a new course in fly and bait casting to begin after the vacation. Men and women interested in taking the course which will consist of two hourl per week should sign up imme- diately in Room 4, Waterman Gym. --D. Rigan close losses last season. 1948 and 1949 Rollins squads went; unde- feated and were crowned national collegiate champs both years. * * * THIS YEAR'S Rollins crew is paced by two Mexican Davis Cup stars, Alfredo Millet and Alberto Danel Millet won the singles championship in the Florida Open earlier this spring. Florida State is of unknown quality this year, but has al- ways turned out a winner in the past. Murphy will be particularly in- terested in' the performance of Holtz, Stephens, Mann and Paulis.+ All four are newcomers to the Michigan varsity tennis scene, and haven't had much of a chance to show their wares. Schwartz, Curhan and Webb all played last year. Play during this trip will largely determine who will be playing in the first regularI season match on April 26, when the Wolverines meet Indiana on the Ferry Field courts. Duke University's golfers, who! have never lost to the Wolverines, promise to give Michigan more trouble next week. The Blue Devils have downed the Michigan linksmen on all five of the Wolverines previous trips to Durham, North Carolina. Iast spring the Southerners blasted the Wolverines, 23-4. * * * MICHIGAN WILL tackle Duke on April 10, after meeting Wakef Forest next Monday and North Carolina two days later. Thist year's trip to the South will markt the sixth straight year that the BOB CURHAN . . . veteran netter DAVIES DEFENDS Golfers Face Perennial Foes on Spring Journey Fisher Names Six Pitchers For Eight Southern Contests Squad of Seventeen Opens 28-Game Slate CROWN: Six 'M' Natators Entered In AAU Championships Michigan golfers have met Wake Forest, North Carolina, and Duke. Duke is expected to be as strong this year as they were last season when the Iron Dukes garnered the Southern Confer- ence golf championship and lost only one dual match. This lone defeat was administered by North Carolina, 14-13, in a re- turn match. Only Lou McLennan, who play- ed in the No. 1 slot for Duke and was Southern Conference indivi- dual champon, is missing from the 1951 team. * * * MIKE SOUCHAK and Henry- Clark, who tied for third place inI the Southern Conference tourna- ment last year, pace the Blue Dev- ils this spring. In addition Duke coach Ellis "Dumpy" Hagler has lettermen George Toms, Jim Pol- lock, Paul Hardin, and Dick Fos- ter back from last year's squad. Jim Dawes, a 1950 letterman who did not play last year due to illness, and John Eisinger, a promising sophomore who sparked the freshman team last 'year, add depth to the Blue Devil squad. Duke will have a decided ad- vantage over the Wolverines in respect to preparation for the dual meet. Duke will have faced eight other schools before meeting Mi- chigan, while the Wolverines will) have met only Wake Forest and' North Carolina before engaging the Iron Dukes. * The golf season gets underway for Southern colleges during the third week of March, after several weelps of outdoor practice. EXHIBITION BASEBALL Brooklyn 11, New York (A) 1 Philadelphia (N) 3, Boston (N) 1 Cincinnati 4, Washington 3 Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis (A) 2 Cleveland 5, New York (N) 0 Boston (A) 13, Houston 2 With Georgetown at By BOB LANDOWNE With the announcement yester- day of a six man pitching corps, baseball coach Ray Fisher and 17 players journey south today to play the opening portion of their 28 game season schedule. They will take the field tomor- row against Georgetown Univer- sity at Washington in the first of eight games included in their spring vacation tour. * * * NONE OF the half-dozen pitch- ers named has had any real col- legiate experience, and for this reason Fisher waited until the last minute before making the all- important- decision. The hurling staff consists of two juniors, Dick Yirkosky and Milt Heath, a pair of sopho- mores, Jack Corbett and Garbi Tadian, and freshmensRalph Fagg and Norm Wisnlewskl. Neither of the junior mounds- men are lettermen. The only ac- tion that either of them saw was by Yirkosky in a short stint against Wayne University last season. ' * * 'I. BOTH YIRKOSKY, a Chicago boy, and Heath, who hails from Waban, Mass., throw lefthanded. The sophomore duo of right- hander Corbett, a Westfield, N.J. boy, and Detroiter Tadian, another righthander, has been the most promising on the hurl- ing staff, and along with Heath and Yirkosky should see the most action on the mound for the Wolverines. The two freshmen making the trip were the last to be decided upon. Fagg is a righthander while Wisniewski is a southpaw, which Washington Tomorrow gives Fisher three of each to work with. * * * THE REMAINDER of the trav- eling squad shows few unexpected inclusions though many Of the names may be new to the Michi- gan diamond scene. The infield seems to be well set with Captain Brace Hay- -nam at shortstop, and lettermen Gil Sabuco at second and Bhll Mogk on first. Freshman bon Eaddy has taken over the third base job to complete the Wol- verine infield. Patrolling the outfield/ will be Bill Billings, Frankie Howell and Jerry Harrington who are all junior lettermen. Doug Peek, a senio, 'll hold down the catching post With some assistance from freshman Dick Leach. Rbunding out the squad are newcomers Paul Lepley and Dan Cline, who are being taken along as reserve infielders or outfield- ers. The vacation schedule: April 4-Georgetown at Washington, 5-Maryland at College Park, 7-Dela- ware at Newark, 8-Fort Meade at Fort Meade, Md., 9, 10-Andrews Air Force at Washington, j1i-George Washing- ton U. at Washifgto,.12-Virginia at Charlottesville. A Vacation Haircut! It's a COLLEGIATE CUT Styled to Please 8 Barbers-No Waiting The Daseola Barbers Liberty near State By HERB NEIL Six natators will represent Michigan in the National A.A.U. Indoor Championships which get underway with the swimming of the 1500-meter event tonight at New Haven, Connecticut. National collegiate champions John Davies and Bumpy Jones, freshmen Ron Gora and Jim Mc- Kevitt, and Bernie Kahn and Bob Byberg, both of whom swam for the Wolverines last year, will carry Michigan's colors into the A.A.U. championships. dThe meet con- tinues tomorrow and Saturday. THE NEW HAVEN Athletic Club and Ohio State are expected to battle it out for the team championship. The New Haven group is composed of present Yale swimmers and Eli graduates. The addition of a few top col- legiate swimmers of past years may give Yale natators Wayne Moore, John Marshall, Jim Mc- Lane, and Dick Thoman the necessary lift 'to edge out the Buckeye swimmers. Ohio State outscored Yale, 94-81, in the NCAA meet last weekend, in which the Wolverines finished third with 49 points. Ohio State will have its national collegiate champions, Ford Konno, Dick Cleveland, Jack Taylor and Yoshi Oyakawa, on hand for the A.A.U. meet. In addition the Buck- eyes will garner added points from the efforts of its diving contingent of Bob Clotworthy, Morley Sha- piro, Joe Marino and Jerry Har- rison. meet last weekend, will defend his A.A.U. indoor crown in the 220- yard breaststroke tomorrow night. He will also attempt to capture the 100-yard crown Saturday night. The Michigan co-captain placed second in this event last year, behind former Wolverine, Charlie Moss. Jones, Michigan's other 1952 national collegiate champion will swim in the 300-yard indi- vidual medley tomorrow night and the 150-yard backstroke on Saturday. Jones took a third in the A.A.U. indoor medley race last year. GORA AND McKB ITT will swim the 100 and 220-yard free- style races tomorrow and Satur- day night, respectively. Gora set an American 150-yard free-style record of 1:21.3 two weeks ago. FIVE WHITEWASHINGS: Rolfe Bemoans Tigers'Lack Of Hitting in Grapefruit Play r + i + i By ROD COOK The Detroit Tigers have closed their Grapefruit Circuit exhibi- tion play but the memory lingers on, and manager Red Rolfe looks to have his hands full toughen- ing up the weak spots that have been exposed. The Bengals have lost 12 of 21 games, 5 by shutouts, and are plainly suffering from lack of hit- ting power. There is no one on the entire team who is hitting well. DEFENSIVELY, the big prob- lem in the Tiger camp is first base. Vic Wertz, veteran Detroit out- fielder, was given a prolonged try Bicycle Races ' The IFC and International Stu- dents Association are jointly spon- soring what is believed to be the first bicycle races ever to be heldt on the Michigan campus.1 The event is scheduled for April 30th, from 3:30 to 5 p.m.7 Included in the day's program will be a wide variety of cycle9 races. Featured is a two mile race, and also one in which partners will take over on the two seaters. Also planned is an obstacle race and a slow-poke race, in which the last one over the finish line will take the honors. A local band will be on hand for intermission entertainment, and prizes will be awarded to the win- ning contestants. Further infor- mation may be obtained by con- tacting Naeem Rathore. at the position by Rolfe, but it appears that he will return to his right fielder's job. The position will be shared by two players, Don Kolloway against left handed pitchers, and rookie Ben Taylor against right- handers. Kolloway has got only two hits in his few appearances at bat, but young Taylor ap- pears, potentially at least, to have the hitting power to take the position outright. s s KEN JOHNSON, a Tiger acqui- sition from St. Louis, carries most of Rolfe's hopes for fresh blood in his pitching staff. He got pasted for 10 runs in two innings in his debut, but in his next start, against the Senators, he gave up two runs in six innings. A couple of clubs closed out their exhibition schedules with a piece of bad news. Ted Williams, the prop and stay of the Bostpn Red Sox went to the Marines, nd the Giants' brilliant leftfielder Monte Irvin suffered a double fracture of his right ankle sliding into third in an exhibition game with the Cleveland Indians. Irwin was the backbone of the Giant slugging attack last season, hit- ting .312 and leading the National League in RBI's. PHOTOS COPIED DeLuxePrhnts $1. Original picture returned. Send any size photo or negative. Federal Wallet-Size Photo Co. P. O. Box 2448 Kansas City 6, Mo (No C. O. D.'s Please) PERSONAL DATA SHEETS for job applications may include your picture I tho graphed by THE EDWARDS LETTER SHOPl 711 North University CANDIES For the Easter Basket - in the wearing, packins It's the Van Heusen with the soft col Ewodt wrinki ties ' g or laundering shirt lar that r 5 NEW RAMBLER delivered in Ann Arbor for $1844.10 including Radio, Weather Eye Air Conditioning Heater, Foam Seat Cushions, Directional Signals, Custom Steer- ing Wheel, Custom Upholstery, Electric Clock, Local Taxes Extra. DECORATED EGGS Colorful decorated eggs-trimmed in artistic floral designs. Choice of 4 flavorful centers-fruit and nut, coconut, butter creams and maple walnut, each coated with rich smooth milk or dark chocolate. Beautiful to look at-wonderful o eat. Names decorated on eggs if desired. From Sac to 4.25 w W- A Pent up dollars re-gain their friskiness at it's interesting to see how men who haven't been in a clothing store for months act here this Spring. You see, when they were last inside of a men's store, good suits were $85 . .. quality hats were $15 and now these same grade suits are $65 and won- derful hats are offered at $7.50 . . . and the dollars they have saved act like a colt in clover. CHOCOLATE MOLDED NOVELTIES The complete assortment of molded novelties. Standing Rab- bits, Sitting Hens, Rooster and Cart and other char- acters from Easteriand. 35e to 3095 You can't wrinkle the collar...your suitcase can't wrinkle the collar.. your laundry can't wrinkle the collar ... ever! And that soft collar stays crease-free without starch or stays. White BUNNY NEST Easter Baske Contains Easter Jelly Eggs -Decorated Eggs-Cboeo- late Novelties and special Easter candies. .3 EW- . A A A I -Or, I