THURSDAY, APRIL 4,1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY lpAt4-v CvuvkT TIlE MICHII~A1V WITTY A tXl1L i, V Lr' Myers, 0 Rodriguez Foiled In AA U Swim, Mat Tests s/ DAYTONA BEACH, Fh la. -- I GEORGE BREEN-He broke his own national mark to win the 1540-meter freestyle event of the AAU swimming meet at Daytona Beach, Fla., yesterday. Masters Golf Tournament S Middlecoff, Hogan Favored }or not he performed or how he George Breen opened the Nationalr performed - were available). AAU Indoor Swimming and Div- A post-graduate student at ing Championships with a record Courtland State Teachers College breaking victory in the 1500-meter in Courtland, N.Y., .Breen repre- freestyle yesterday. sented the Buffal Athletic Club. The 1500-mete~ race was the Breen bettered his own nation- first of 15 events to be decided in al mark for the event with a time the four-day meet. of 17.34. His old record, set at There will be four events to- Ithaca, N.Y., last month, was night and five each. Friday and 17:44.5. Saturday night, preceded by trials} (Michigan's Fritz Myers, re- each afternoon. cent winner of the event in thee-i. c NCAA meet, failed to place. HGHeinrich Second, No details on Myers - whether Calif., a 16-yr.-old high school pu- pil was second to Breen with a I time of 18:55.6. ta i T o0 Raymond Ellison of The New, Y; Haven, Conn., Swim Club was thidrKesPeeTsodCoy;adt by Experts N.Y., fourth; Frank Nauss of , b,, yNorth Carolina Athletic Club, fifth and Charles Fagman of Cincin-I nati, sixth. and professional crop in the Several other Michigan swim- United States and four foreign na- mers will compete unattached in tions, indicated they would start. the meet, most of which will take The previous high was 84 starters place today and tomorrow. These last year. Invitations to the Masters are gained only by,past achievements. Canceled They go to former Open, Amateur Michigan will not play and Masters champions, the top Wayne State in baseball on Ap- players in previous major tourna- ril 24 and 30 as scheduled, since ments and members of interna- these dates fall during Wayne's tional teams. Ten foreign players vacation period. were invited on the basis of their performances. include NCAA champion Dick With virtually every golfer of Kimball in the low-board and importance in the world on hand, three-meter diving; diver John speculation about the likely win- Narcy, who captained the Wolver- ner has centered around a half- ines during the past season, and dozen or so who have proved they Dick Hanley, freestyle star. can play well here.h last week, won a decision over Jim Kinyon of Great Lakes Naval Training Center. About 500 fans were on hand for the 46 first-round free-style matches yesterday afternoon, Free-style events will continue through tomorrow. On Saturday, Greco-Roman contests are sched- uled. In one of the fastest matches of the afternoon, TommyEvans, 147- lb., defending champion from the Tulsa, Okla., YMCA, pinned Larry Wright of Oregon State in 37 sec- onds. Bill Carter, last year's 125-lb. AAU champ from San Diego, pinned Leroy Gmozel of East Lan- sing, Mich., in 11:59 of a 136-1b. match. WAYNESBURG, Pa. -A')-- Bill Fischer, defending 160-lb. Ama- teur Athletic Union champion from the Baltimore YMCA, yesterday won a decision over Mike Rodri- guez of Michigan in a first-round match of the AAU Wrestling Tour- nament at Waynesburg College. In another 160-lb. match, Doug Blubaugh, of Stillwater, Okla., and winner of the 160-lb. NCAA title -Courtesy-John McMahon MIKE RODRIGUEZ-He was defeated yesterday in a first round match of the.AAU championships by defending champ Bill Fischer of Baltimore. Royals Move to Cincinnati Pistons Get K nick Stars NEW YORK, ( --d The New York Knickerbockers and Detroit Pistons announced a five-player deal yesterday, which sent Mel Hutchins to New York in exchange for Harry'Gallatin and Nat "Sweetwya ter " Clifton., In addition, the Knicks pick up the rights to Detroit's firsts1957 draft choice, while the Pistons get the rights to Dick Atha, currently on the Knicks' reserve list. Clifton is a colorful performer who played with the Harlem Globetrotters before switching to the Knickerbockers in 1950, In 71 games this season, Clifton scored 762 points. He was one of the cir- cuit's top rebounders. Gallatin ranks as the "iron man" of the National Basketball Association, In nine seasons with New York he took part in 666 con- secutive games. He was the Knicks' leading scorer this season with a 15-point average and was the best' rebounder with 725. Atha is a former Indiana State star. He played one season with the Knicks and then was farmed out to a minor league. AUGUSTA, Ga. (/P)-The biggest of all Masters golf tournaments gets under way today with a rec- ord field of 102 amateurs and pro- fessionals and without one player who can be singled out as the fa- vorite. Began in '34 The Masters started out in 1934 as a rather informal golf party for Bob Jones and some of his friends. Since then the tourna- ment has grown in size and sta- ture until it has become one of the most important of the season. And the 6,980-yd. par 36-36-72 Augusta National Course has ma- tured so that the greatest skill and endurance are required to win on it. This year's entry list passed a milestone when more than 100 golfers, the pick of the amateur ROCHESTER, N. Y. ()-The Rochester Royals of the National Basketball Assn. yesterday became the Cincinnati Royals as Les and Jack Harrison announced they would take the club west in the fall. "We hate to leave Rochester," the Harrisons said, "but the NBA trend is toward bigger cites." The Royals thus become the sec- ond NBA club to announce a change of home base for 1957-58. The Ft. Wayne Pistons will switch to Detroit. Economics dictated the move, said the Harrisons, co-owners of the Rochester franchise. I DOORMATS AGAIN: Three-Team Fight Seen In AL Second Division i R 1' 11 I'd Middlecoff Favored i (This is the last in a series or four articles analyzing the Major League baseball teams before the start of the 1957 season.) By PAUL BORMAN Lou Boudreau, Charlie Dresser and Paul Richards are three Am- erican League managers whc aren't going around boasting about how their team will win the pen- nant. The three, managers of Kan- sas City, Washington and Balti- more .respectively, are all hoping for better finishes, but don't plan on winning the flag. Boudreau Gambles Kansas City unwillingly occu- pied the cellar position in the Ju- nior Circuit last year. Manage] Lou Boudreau gambled over the winter in two big trades with De- troit and New York. He gave up Jim Finigan, Eddie Robinson, Bob Shantz and Art Ditmar to name a few and re- ceived "Rip" Coleman, Mickey McDermott, Tom Morgan Bob Cerv and Irv Noren. On paper the Athletics aren't anything to get excited about be- cause they have a roster of ques- tion marks. Washington Sleeper? Seventh-place W a s h i n g t o n could be the sleeper team of the supposed have-nots. They boast two big guns in Jinn Lemon and a t I; r Roy Seivers, two sluggers which give the opposing pitchers nighty. mares. Catcher Lou Berberet is solid behind the plate and at bat, while Ed Yost supplies more than ade- quate third base strength consid-. ering the lack of good third base- men. First base is solid with Pete Run- nels who hit .310 and knocked in 76 runs, but the big worry is in the pitching staff. Chuck Dressen can't claim one top-notch hurler, but if some of his throwers come through, look out. As general manager and field manager Paul Richards did quite a commendable job with Baltimore. Pitchers Come Through Because pitchers like George Zu- verink, Ray Moore, Don Ferrarese and Hector Brown came through, the Orioles finished fifth without any mentionable hitting support. This year's roster finds them still lacking at the plate. The consensus choice is CaryE Middlecoff, current U.S. Openc champion and Masters winner int 1955. But more than any other thek golfers seem to fear Ben Hogan,r the grim-faced little Texan. S Idle since last summer, Hogan has put in his usual intensive practice session in Florida and then here and has some excep- tionally fine practice rounds. He has won the Masters twice, was runnerup twice and set the tour- nament record of 274 in 1953. Sam Snead and Jimmy Demar-! et, the only three-time Masters winners, and Australia's Peter Thomson, British Open champion for the past three years, must be reckoned with as well as Jack Burke, last year's winner.I Other leading performers in- clude Jay Hebert and Arnold Pal- mer, former PGA champion Doug Ford, and Dow Finsterwald, re- garded as No. 1 among the young- er pros. ', rJ res men Several Wolverine freshmen also will compete unattached, in- cluding Alvaro Gaxiola, Ann Ar- bor diver, and backstroker John Smith, and Carl Wooley, sopho- more, who was ineligible for Var- sity competition this year. EXHIBITION BASEBALL Detroit 8, St. Louis 5 (10 innings) Chicago (A) 8, New York (A) 4 Pittsburgh 2, Kansas City 0 Washington 4, Cincinnati 3 Brooklyn 2, Milwaukee 2 (10 in- nings, called by agreement) Philadelphia, 3, Boston 1 Cleveland 13, New York (N) 6 Chicago (N) 6, Baltimore 2 ANNOUNCEMENT BY Illinois College of OPTOMETRY Applications for admission to classes beginning September 9, 1957 are now being received. Three year course of professional study Leading to the Degree of Doctor of Optometry Requirements for Entrance: Two years (60 semester hours or equivalent quarter hirs.) in spe- cified liberal arts and sciences. WRITE FOR BULLETIN TO: REGISTRAR ILLINOIS COLLEGE of OPTOMETRY 3241 So. Michigan Ave. Technology Center, Chicago 16,11M. Daily Classifieds Bring Results F i Now you can enjoy your sharp hair styling by relaxing in modern comfort, amid soft mu- sic created by our new FM hi-fi. 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JOHNSON Engineering Placement Office today for appointment At UCRL, there are unique opportunities to work with some of America's outstanding leaders in nuclear research and to utilize the most expansive facilities , in this field. Here, new ideas and techniques are traditional and there is the opportunity to do what has never been done before. Plan now to meet with UCRL's representatives. They will give you full details on opportunities in your field and discuss future openings at the Labora- tory's Livermore and Berkeley sites in Northern California's San Francisco Bay Area. Current UCRL projects include: Nuclear Weapons, Nuclear Rocket Propulsion, Controlled Thermonuclear Energy, Particle Accelerators, High-Speed Digital Computers, Critical Assembly and Reactor Research VAN HEUSEN IVY BUTTON-DOWNS are featured. at QUIMBY, WISC. (March 3). Police today arrested the foul felon who heisted the cash reg- ister at Jones' Gas Station. When arrested, the base serv- ant of the devil kept mutter- ing, "Drat the shirt, drat the shirt.'. Let's look at the events leading up to this story. After the holdup, the police quizzed Victim Jones. Jones couldn't identify the yegg. "The wan- ton jackdaw who cabbaged my cash wore a mask," said Jones. "The only distinguishing fea- ture about him was his shirt. A beauty! The collar was ab- solutely free of wrinkles. Oh, he was a neat one!" Meanwhile, the scoundrel, knowing that his wrinkle-free and enviably-neat collar was a dead giveaway, tried desper- STREET AT LIBERTY ST A TE ately to slip some wrinkles into it. He stamped on it with hob- nail boots. He slugged away at it with a club. But not a wrinkle! So later, as he skulked down Main Street, his shirt was noticed, admiringly, by a detective and he was arrested lickety-split. Good work, copper! By now you will have guessed that the miscreant wore a Van Heusen Century Shirt. But of course! 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