T'HURSDAY, MARCH 4, 1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE THURSDAY, MAR01! 4, 1954 THE MICHIGAN IJAILY PAGE THREE OSUTo Defend Title as Swim Meet Opens Here Wolverines Dump Spartan Gymnasts Adams Cops T1wo Events To Spark 56-40 Triumph in Final Home Meet Konno Seeks Big Ten 1500 Meter Championship Today National and World Champs To Compete In Three Day Meet; Buckeyes Favored KING OF THE SHOT PUTTERS: Nilsson Picked To Retain Big Ten Title w By DAVE BAAD Superior depth proved the dif- ference last night as Michigan's gymnastics team racked up its fourth straight victory and sixth in eight starts by whipping Michigan State, 56-40. Each team garnered three first places and a trio of seconds but the Wolverines came through with five thirds to sew up the win. It gave Newt Loken's squad an un- defeated record in home competi- tion. * * * UNPREDICTABLE Frank Ad- ams turned in outstanding per- formances on the trampoline and n tumbling and Lee Krumbholz notched 18 points with a slick all- around exhibition to spark the an- nihilation of the Spartans. Adams, who hadn't won an even since the Minnesota meet two and a half weeks ago, came through beautifully with 257 points in tumbling and a 177 in the opening tramp event. (Only two Judges took part in the scor- ing of trampoline competition.) The burly junior also scored a ,.ourth on the high bar, the only other event he entered. * * * KRUMBHOLZ, who in recent weeks has developed into Michi- gan's most dependable point col- lector, pulled the surprise of the evening when he edged out State's sensational appa'ratus man, Carl Rintz on the high bar. , Both awed the crowd with smooth performances but aft- er a close analysis of the two routines, which included a slick dismount by Krumbholz, the judges gave Michigan's senior star the victory, 267-263. He picked up his other 12 points with a second on the side horse and parallel bars, a third on the flying rings and a fifth in tum- bling. Rintz who finished second last season for all-around performance in the NCAA meet, won two first places by annexing top side horse and parallel bars totals. His seconds on the high bar and flying rings gave him 20 points, tops for the evening. In no event did he collect less than a 263 total. The niost graceful routine of the evening was turned in by the Spartans flying rings specialist, Ken Cook. Cook, who will be a. definite first place threat in the Big Ten meet a week from this Saturday, was almost flawless as he edged out his teammate Rintz by eight points with a neat 274. * * * ALTHOUGH Krumbholz and Dick Bergman both scored totals of over 250 the best they could do was third and fourth respectively. Wolverine captain Mary John- son, who along with Krumbholz and Bergman, was competing in his last home meet was rusty from the inactivity accompanying a wrist injury he received a week ago. His timing was off in spots but he grabbed 11 points with a sec- ond, two thirds and a fifth. FRANK ADAMS ... jumping gymnast Yanks Lose Martin Againi ST. PETERSBURG -(A)- Billy Martin, hero of the New York Yankees' 1953 World Series vic- tory over the Brooklyn Dodgers, received word yesterday that he must report for military service Monday, March 8. Martin said his mother had called from his home in Berkeley, Calif., saying his orders had arriv- ed there and called for him to report Monday morning in San Francisco. * * * MARTIN, the Yanks' regular second baseman for the past two years, said he would fly home from St. Petersburg today. The call to service had been expected momentarily ever since Martin was reclassified to 1-A by his draft board. Martin's departure does not leave the Yankees lacking a sec- ond baseman, however, for man- ager Casey Stengel still has Jerry Coleman available for duty. Coleman was the regular second baseman for the Yanks until he went into service early in the 1952 season, at which time Martin took By LEW HAMBURGER Ohio State's defending cham- pions will send Ford Konno against the field tonight as the Western Conference's 44th an- nual swimming championships get under way with the 1500 meter freestyle at 8:00 here at the Sports Building Pool. The diminutive Hawaiian, win- ner of last year's 1500, has con- ducted a personal assault on the record books all season, climaxing his efforts in last Saturday's dual meet with Michigan by establish- ing a world record and an inter- collegiate mark in the 220 and 440 yards freestyle events, respec- tively. HE IS FAVORED to defend his crown tonight with little effort, but the fight for second place points will be closely contested. Ross "Buddy" Lucas of Iowa, Dick Talbot of Purdue, Don Sammons of Illinois, Jack Beat- tie of Michigan State, and Roc- co Cirigliano, Konno's teammate at Ohio State, are all considered able to capture the second place spot. Matt Mann's Michigan entries will not be known until after the officials' meeting at noon today. * * * TOMORROW and Saturday will also feature record breakers and national champions. The breaststroke event will be a tightly contested affair be- tween Michigan State's John Dudeck, last year's winner at the 100 yard distance, and Bob Clemons, Illinois' defending na- tional 100 yard titlist. Mike De- laney of Michigan and Jim Can- field and Bob Van Heyde, both of Ohio State, are given outside chances. Ohio State's Yoshi Oyakawa, considered by many experts to be the finest swimmer competing this year, will probably be the most solid favorite of the meet when Here again the battle will be for second place. Michigan's John Chase, Purdue's Fred Bautz, Wisconsin's John Hoag- lund will all figure in the race for runner-up spot. MichiganI State's Frank Paganini and Jim Kruthers of Michigan will fight for the remaining places. I The diving events, low and high board, will be one of the highlights of the meet. Last week at Colum- bus Morley Shapiro and Jerry Harrison of Ohio beat Jimmy Walters of Michigan as the three displayed some of the year's most spectacular diving. THIS WEEK Walters will be out to avenge the defeat, and on his home board will be much tougher than a week ago. Michigan State's Jack Helle- wege, Ohio State's third man, Fletcher Gilders, and Wolverine Charley Bates will be fighting for the spots behind the top trio. In the individual medley Bum- py Jones will be favored to run away from the field in defense of his crown, if Coach Mann decides to use his versatile junior in that event. Jones holds the world rec- ord for this event and on that basis is considered one of the best all around swimmers in history. *4 * * BRUCE ALDRICH of Michigan State, Lucien Beaumont, and eith- er of Michigan's Wardrop twins or Ben Ledger of Ohio State will be in the thick of the fight behind Jones, if the respective coaches choose to use these men in this event. The medley relay will be an- other closely contested affair, and, although the composition of the relay teams of the league will not be knownuntilttoday's officials' meeting,. Ohio State will be f a- vored on the basis of the season's performances. The results of some of these races depend, to an extent, on how# Mann decides to use his work- horses Bumpy Jones and Bert and Jack Wardrop. One thing seems to be certain, and that is that the Intramural Building pool records will undergo quite a revision, as may several world or intercollegiate standards. By STEVE HEILPERN Big Fritz Nilsson has dug him- self a rut. The captain of the current Michigan cinder squad wins with such regularity that track fans barely take notice of his victories. * * * THE 6' 6>" 240 pound senior has outclassed his Big Ten oppon- ents in the shot put and discus events for the past two seasons and is heavily favored toretain his shot put title in the Big Ten indoor championships opening to- morrow in Champaign. Nilsson turned in one of the greatest performances of his career last year in the Penn Re- lays when he shattered the Re- lays discus record with a heave of 174' 2" and then won the shot put event with a 55' 9" at- tempt. The tall blonde was born in Svano, Sweden, thirty years ago, and served with the Swedish army during, the World War. He came to the United States in 1949. WHY DID he come? "Well," commented Fritz, "I FRTIZ NILSSON . . . old faithful guess I came to this country be- cause of its reputation as the Land of Opportunity." "But," he added, with a twinkle in his eye, "I really was impressed Tiger Veterans Edge Rookies In Opening Intra-S quad, Game when I saw pictures of the pretty Michigan coeds in the Swedish magazines." We can't doubt his word, considering that he married Barbara Henderson, one of Michi- gan's pretty coe&s, last summer. NILSSON worked in various cit- ies in this country for a year af- ter his arrival, then decided that a college education was the best thing for him. He entered the University in 1950. Fritz has a set practice pat- tern for preparing for a meet. A visitor to Yost Field House on a Monday afternoon would find him jogging around the track, and then taking a few sprints. A half-dozen leaps over the high jump bar would end his warming- up activities, followed by serious work with the 16-pound sphere. He follows the same routine on Tuesday and Wednesday, devoting Thursday solely to shot putting. * * * HE PERFORMED for his native Sweden in the 1952 Olympics, and gave a fine account of himself, placing fifth in the shot put and seventh in the discuss. He can't help breaking out in a deep grin when reminded of his misfortunes in the 1948 Olympic qualifications at Lon- don. He was waiting in the crowded Wembley Stadium lock- er room for his tryout call over the loudspeaker. Because of the noise and con- fusion of the place, he didn't hear his name called, and was auto- matically disqualified. Tired from weary hours of practice, he went to sleep on a bench. Next morning the London news- papers carried banners saying, "Swedish Athlete Sleeps Through Tryout Call." Many of his Big Ten opponents wish that he would still be sleep- ing. Outstanding Cager NEW YORK - (A') - A panel of 184 college coaches named Don Schlundt of Indiana, as the coun- try's outstanding basketball play- er for Collier's Magazine yesterday. He was named to the publica- tion's all star team along with Bob Pettit of Louisiana State, Cliff Ha- gan of Kentucky, Tom Gola of La Salle and Frank Selvy of Furman. The team is identical to the All- America team picked last week by the nation's sports writers and broadcasters for The Associated Press. NO TIME FOR SWIMMING: Krumbholz Stars in Difficult Side Horse Gymnastic Event By DON LINDMAN Gymnast Lee Krumbholz can't be accused of picking the easy spots in his gym work. The Wolverine star considers the side horse, one of the most dif- ficult events in the entire program, as his favorite. Krumbholz turns in some of his finest performances on the side horse, which is other- wise a definite Wolverine weak spot. NOW ONE of the mainstays of the Michigan squad, Krumbholz has worked on the apparatus since "as far back as I can remember." His parents, members of the Amer- ican Turners, were gym enthusi- asts, and their son made good use of the equipment available through the Turners and through a neigh- borhood boys' club. A resident of Chicago, Illinois, before moving to his present home in T a m p a, Florida, Krumbholz was a gymnast and diver in high school. A teammate of Wolverine swimmer Ron Gora at Lane Tech, Krumbholz has dropped swimming to devote all his time to gymnastics since he came to Michigan. Krumbholz has devoted a lot of time into the perfecting of his side horse routines. He and Capta;4 Marv Johnson spent most of their freshman year working on the horse, a difficult piece of appara- tus to master. AFTER a slow start this year, he turned in fine performances against Minnesota and Ohio State to win his specialty. His return to the form which made him the top Maize and Blue side horse man for the past two seasons has con- siderably brightened the cham- pionship hopes of Coach Newt Lo- ken's squad. The 22-year old Physical Educa- tion major has turned into one of the Wolverines' top all-around men in recent, weeks. Last Saturday he garnered 27 points, with four firsts and a third against Northwestern. over for him. he takes to the water to defend Martin had appealed his reclas- his 100 and 200 yard champion- sification to 1-A because he has ships. five dependents. * * He already has served five HE IS UNDEFEATED in these months in the Army-from No- events and his performance last vember 1950 to March 1951-and Saturday against Michigan, which was discharged because he had produced a world record, estab- f our dependents at the time. Ilishes him as even more a favorite. I LAKELAND, Fla. - (IP) - The "Regulars" defeated the 'Rookies," 2-0, yesterday as the Detroit Ti- gers held their first intra-squad game of the spring training sea- son. When the six-inning affair end- ed, Manager Fred Hutchinson was especially pleased with the work of his pitchers. Both teams man- aged to make a total of only sev- en safeties. LEFTY Al Aber and 33-year-old Milo Johnson, a sidearming right- hander, allowed the "Regulars" four hits while Southpaw Bob Cruze and Righthander Dick Don- ovan held the "Rookies" to only three hits. . Both Aber and Johnson al- lowed one run apiece. Aber struck out three of the first four men to face him and then was tagged for a single by Bob Nieman, issued a walk to Bill Tuttle and another run scoring single to rookie Fred Flemming. . * * FRANK Bolling, battling for a second base starting position pounded out an inside the park home run off Johnson. Aber's performance earned him the right to open the regu- lar spring exhibition schedule Saturday when the Tigers meet the Philadelphia Phillies. Aber's name is on a tentative list of STADEL & SIINSI 302 S. Main Street presenis completely washable VAN GAB ... America's favorite gabardine sport shirt 10 pitchers who will make up the Tiger staff for the coming season. But Cruze, Johnson and Dono- van showed they weren't out of contention for starting berths. Hutchinson claimed. "They all looked good for such an early game. I liked what I saw." CRUZE, who was a 12-6 winner at Little Rock before going into the service two years ago, gave up singles to Harry Bright, another second base contender, and pinch- hitter Don Lund in his three-in- ning stint on the mound. He didn't walk a man. Donovan gave up only a single by Johnny Bucha but needed a long running catch by Tuttle to take an extra base hit away from Bright. Donovan was purchased from Atlanta where he posted an 11-8 record last year. The Tigers'plan two more squad games today and Friday as tune- ups for the opening of the exhibi- tion season which will keep the team busy until it arrives in Briggs Stadium April 12. Hawkeyes Prove Conference Surprise In Rapidly-Closing Basketball Season ROMANCE! ENCHANTMENT! Where? THE SLIDE RULE BALL MARCH 20 9-1 League Ballroom 2.50 a couple \ ## . g f : f . Y .. . By WARREN WERTHEIMER Whether or not Iowa gains at share of the Big Ten basketball title, the Hawkeyes still must be nominated as the surprise team of1 the year in the Western Confer- ence.- With only three lettermen back from the 1952-53 outfit and rely- ing mainly on a group of sopho- mores, Iowa was the league's big- gest question mark when the sea- son got underway. The perform- ance of the young Hawkeye squadj throughout the year has probably surprised even its coach, Frank, "Bucky" O'Connor. NOT ONLY did Iowa improve its 9-9 record and sixth place fin- ish in the Big Ten last year, but Ticket Facts ; Big Ten Swimming Meet Thurs. night-admission free. Friday afternoon--60c. Friday evening-reserved seats $1.50 Saturday afternoon-60c. Saturday night-sold out. it also became a title contender and still has a. chance to share in the conference crown. The Hawkeyes have finished their league schedule and are currently in second place with an 11 won, three lost record. Should Illinois defeat Indiana this Saturday night, the Iowa City five will move into a three-way tie: for the conference title. A win by the Hoosiers, however, would give' them the laurels with Iowa taking the second spot. * * * THE NUCLEUS of the Hawkeye team consists of a senior, a junior, and five sophomores, indicating a pretty strong team for a couple! of years to come. Chuck Jarnigan is the only, regular who won't be back with the squad next season. The 6-3j guard has been the steadying influence on the green Hawkeye Iv'n rc .Pfrc.nrA 4 -% nA fin,.. McKinley "Deacon" Davis, the 6-2 forward with the Globetrotter style, is the junior who helped the Iowa five click. Davis, who led the team in scoring during the 1952- 53 season, has dropped off about five points a game this year. *$ * * OF THE SOPHS, 6-8 Bill Logan has made the greatest difference to this year's Iowa quintet. While the Hawkeyes possess a well balanced scoring attack, Logan has still found the hoop often enough to average better than 14 tallies per contest. Carl "Raisin" Cain and Bill Schoof have, along with Davis, given O'Connor a trio of forwards that can run, dump and score. Cain averaged 13.3 a game while it was Schoof with 40 points in the two games with Michigan who did much to bring about the Wolverine setbacks. Milt Schuerman and Bill Sea- berg operate from the guard posts. A pair of tricky ball handlers and very fast afoot, they combine with the aforementioned quintet to give Iowa the fastest team in the con- ference. THE COXSWAIN WHO WANTED TO BE A NUDIST SUJI It Yes, a give y ury ia will p of 4ash to cor THE We ha light 1 $55.00 rS PUJ of ANNEL for SpringY suit of flannel will hat feeling of lux- ur Wardrobe - it ou in the fore front now, and for years because Flannel is ric in men's suits. a new shipment of and light grey at% - ~ ~ 1 The coxswain of a leading university crew didn't like to be tossed in the water after a victory. He didn't like it so much the crew started tossing him in the water any old time they saw him near it. He complained bitterly that it was ruining all his sportshirts. Ile liked nice sportshirts, but all he owned had either shrunk or streaked or spotted. He was not a happy coxswain. With no more sportshirts, he contemplated joining a nudist colony. He told the whole wretched tale to the Dean of Men. The Dean said, "You like really good sportshirts, eh? Something like a fine gabardine?" "Uh huh," the coxswain beamed. "Try this-take 595 clown to the nearest men's store and iet a Van Heusen Van Gab. It's the best-lookin, new ou t Yo it yc hion me fabr ve blue U. Paul Douglas co-starring in Paramount Pictures' "Forever Female" Van I Heusen's Van Gab is shirtmaker-tailored to fit you perfectly. The exclusive col- lar looks great open or closed, -f,