Page Nine THE Iv1ICHiGAN DAISY ,, lI .......... THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Schembechler returns By ERIC SIEGEL° Michigan head football coach Bo Schembechler, who suffered a ' heart attack a few hours before the Rose Bowl game New Year's Day, returned to Ann Arbor yes- yesterday after spending two weeks in St. Luke's Hospital in Pasa- dena. Schembechler was released from St. Luke's yesterday morning and arrived at ;Detroit's Metropolitan Airport early last night. The 40- year old coach, accompanied by his wife and mother, was met at the airport by Assistant Athletic Director Bump Elliott and driven to his home in Ann Arbor. Doctors at St. Luke's said Schembechler has made a good re- covery but added he must recup- erate further at his home before resuming his coaching duties. Schembechler is expected to be able to return to work in about a month. However, his recovery may take longer than that, accord- ing to doctors. Schembechler did not meet with the press last night on the advice of his doctors. It was thought that a press conference would h a v e been too strenuous after the four- and-a-half hour plane ride from Los Angeles. - Schembechler did, however, hold a press conference late Saturday afternoon at the hospital in Pasa- dena and told reporters he was eager to get back to work. The first-year Michigan coach indicated that he would curtail most of his banquet and speaking engagements during the coming year, Schembechler was hospitalized in aPsadena when he complained to team physicians of chest pains and upset stomach after having breakfast with- the team the morning of the Rose Bowl game. After receiving an electrocardio- gram test, he was admitted to the coronary care unit of the hospital with what was described as "a mild heart attack." iome He was not allowed to watch the game or listen to it on radio, and has still not been allowed to see the films of the game. Several days ago, Schembech- ler was transferred from the cor- onary unit to a private room. He has been allowed to sit up and walk around during the past week. While he was hospitalized, Schembechler was named the 1969 Coach of the Year by t h e American Football Coaches As- sociation. His award was accepted by Jim Young, the Wolverines' de- fensive co-ordinator. BULLETIN BLOOMINGTON, In. (') - Indiana University f o o t b a l l Coach John Pont said yesterday that he turned down an offer from President Nixon to become head of the Selective Service System. "I decided that I want to coach football," Pont said last night. "It's still my first love." WIPES SLATE CLEAN: Longhorn signal-caller junks academics prior to exams AUSTIN, Tex. (IP-The pressure finally got to James Street, Texas' bandit-nerved quarterback. He dropped all his courses Jan. 9, six days before finals. "He was so work he felt justice to it," intercollegiate who is known1 horns' "Brain{ far behind in his he had not done said Lan Hewlett, athletics counselor better as the Long- Coach." TRIPLE CHALLENGE: Busy weekend faces Tankers By JIM KEVRA Putting their 4-0 dual meet record on the line, Gus Stager's * swimmers head into their busiest weekend of the season this Friday and Saturday as they swim three meets in two days.. Friday night, the Mustangs of SMU provide the competition. Led by their captain Charlie Minder and sophomore Jerry Heidenreich, 4 whom Stager calls "their greatest. all-around swimmer in years," the meet will be Michigan's toughest so far this year. The Wolverines would like to make .up for their 61-52 defeat last year in Dallas and are count- ing on the home pool advantage to help. "Pools are always a little bit different," says Stager. "The home pool advantage is usually around seven points." This makes' the meet a virtual toss-up. Rather than burn out his team vith extra practices, Stager will try to "back off and rest a little ,. bit this week" and work on "more quality and less distance." Sum- ming up, he says, "Weiwould like to win this meet very much." SMU boasts a large number of individual stars but Minder and Heidenreich are clearly the stars of the team. Both were named t All-Americans in the 100-yard but- terfly event while Minder also given the honor in the 200-yard butterfly event. Heidenreich's talents, however, are far from limited to just but- terflyf as he was Southwest Con- ference champion in the 100 and 200 yard freestyle and runner-up in the 500 yard event. The, butterfly is also one of The score on PEOPLES plaza lait night was: : regents PEOPLE 102 950 hours held since midnight December 6th. A spokesman for the B1 u e Panthers- said that, "a great PEO- PLES; victory has been accomplished by the sign being held continuously for a whcle week. Using the thought of Chairman Mao, a new paint had been developed .which had totally foiled " plant dept. efforts to re- capture the,: sign"' Asked if Street got behind be- cause of the pressure of the Ar- kansas and Notre Dame games, Hewlett said: "Exactly." And there was not enough time to catch up before' finals, Hewlett said, because "he has a speaking engagement nearly every night be- tween now and registration." Street is in demand as a speaker at civic clubs and high school football banquets In a speech to high school stu- dents in his native Longview a week after the Cotton Bowl, Street daily NIGH EDITOR: JOE MARKER used his high school study habits as an example-a bad example. He used to make book reports after reading the dust jacket summary, he said, and now "I can't read a lick." Hewlett said Street has state- ments on file with us from all four of his teachers that at the time of his withdrawal he was passing." Because of a Southwest Con- ference rule, those statements are necessary for Street to re-enroll in February and be eligible for base- ball this spring. The Longhorns have hopes of being No. 1 in baseball, too. A second team All-America pitcher as a sophomore, Street has a two-year record of 21 victories and 6 defeats. He has a 1.96 earn- ed run average and has struck out 224 batters in 198-2-3 innings. He has never committed a fielding error. Hewlett said Street, listed as a senior in business school, will need three more semesters to graduate as a result of dropping his courses in accounting, insurance, real estate and statistics. He led Texas to 20 straight victories and a national champ- ionship after taking over as quar- terback in the third game of the 1968 season. U' I This W eek in Sports FRIDAY HOCKEY-a$ Minnesota SWIMMING-SMU at Matt Mann Pool, 7:30 p.m. SATURDAY BASKETBALL-MICHIGAN STATE at East Lansing, 8 p.m. HOCKEY-at Minnesota WRESTLING--PURDUE at Events Bldg., 3 p.m. SWIMMING-PURDUE at Matt Mann Pool, 2:30 p.m. and PRINCETON at Matt Mann Pool, 7:30 p.m. GYMNASTICS-at Michigan State Ban~k On This Fact .. . F } ,. '.. FRESHMAN TIM NORLEN flies toward the finish in the 200-yard butterfly last Friday night against Toronto as he captured first place with a 1:56.5 clocking. Also an excellent freestyler, Norlen is a threat in any free event from 100 to 500 yards. This weekend, Michigan will host three home dual meets, including Southern Iethodist-one of the strongest teams in the nation. Michigan's best events and may well be the key to the meet. Against Toronto in the last dual' meet, both Tim Norlen and Don Peterson swam a fine race and finished one-two in the 200-yard butterfly. Along with his strong showings in the butterfly,. Narlen, a high school All-American from Woad- land, Hills, California had the fastest 200-yard split in the 800- yard freestyle relay in the recent Big Ten meet. This weekend, the versatile freshman may be called upon to challenge the best that SMU has to offer in Heidenreich and Minder. The Mustangs also boast a strong diving contingent led by Scott Pyle and Cal Loock. In last year's meet, Pyle took first on the one-meter board and a second in the three-meter event which was won by Michigan's Dick Rydze. Loock took a second in the one- meter diving. Saturday afternoon, the tankers get a breather as they face a re- latively weak team from Purdue. The Boilermakers boast an inex- perienced team with few individ- ual stars. For Purdue, distanceman Tom Hintz had a pair of second place finishes against the Wolverines Iast year while junior Jim Sharp was runnerup in the 200-IM. All this was to no avail, however, as one year .agoMichigan demolished Purdue 74-49 even though 11 of the top Wolverine swimmers did not compete in the meet. The final duel meet will pit the Wolverines against the Tigers of Princeton. Michigan starts out the meet with a definite advantage as NCAA and Big Ten rules allow the use of freshman but Ivy League rules do not. Still, ,the Tigers are not to be taken lightly. Last year's squad finished 11th in the NCAA cham- pionships, nosing out Michigan State, and sixth in the AAU's. Counnunicf tion on Hip protesters ve for the cause SEX with the DOCTORS SHEARER T uesday, anuary 20 RACKHAM AUDITORIUM 8P.. '_ , j. r ' - G rt' * , , 'f; , ' i ht sa at Ann Arbor Bank, so when the need arises they can strike it rich. "GESTAPO TAFICS IN THE STREETS OF CHICAGO" ANN ARBOR BANK 4 CAMPUS OFFICES " East UbertyStraeet ear tMiynsrd * South it n n esatEst k~ianst " Nadicat Lamart{Forest at Arnn * tlyrntk Roed >