PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, 194;7 PA1~! ~rr THE MICHIEAX DAILY SATURDAY, JANUARY 28, fl*67 " _-.- T Stars.(Sky), Stars (Sports) and Doc A, * * By HOWARD KOHN and CLARK NORTON "O, thou art fairer than the evening air Clad in the beauty of a thousand stars." -Christopher Marlowe It's a good thing Chris didn't take Astro 112. It might have cramped his style. "The next time you go out on a date and he says, 'There are a thousand stars out tonight,' just tell him that it's closer to 2500," venerable Doc Losh reminds her students. Doc Losh. A triple-threat tiny tornado with stars in her eyes-an Astro prof, a freelance Michigan sports public-relations girl and a campus tradition. Wally Weber, her pep-rally col- league, contends, "Students con- tinuaily flock to her classes, she's a tremendous motivation force for promoting enthusiasm and she's a monument in the Michigan ath- letic tradition. It's hard to beat ingredients like that." "I've always been interested in y g ~ l athletics," reminisces Doc. "I "Many faculty members don't teeming with hundreds of students.1 wasn't ever an athlete myself, of think highly of athletic tradition, Doc makes an all-out effort tok course, even though I did roller But Doc Losh is sold on Mich- establish a personal relationship skate as a little girl. igan's," Weber explains. with each. She often interruptsc "But I'm not a sports analyst. "The University benefits when her own lectures to chide absen-r I don't care much for pro sports, our teams win. Of course, winning tees, "I had a feeling that chap and I don't know very much about at any cost isn't right, but the I would skip today. the various plays. What keeps me Rose Bowl did encourage contri- "But, even with the studentss interested are the Michigan stu- butions from the alumni," she who have problems in understand-t dents involved," she explains. declares. ing Astro, I find very few who dis-c "I think the athletes appreciate "Just let people have a losing like it." Part of the reason could t it when someone cares about what team and look at all the criticism. be the professor.E they're doing." Everyone becomes a Monday "I've always been interested in1 Indeed, they do. morning quarterback. What would teaching. When I was a little girl, Last spring Ron Kramer and Michigan be without athletics?" r Terry Barr presented a trophy, Not that she takes academics *Peclassificants! honoring scholarship and sports- lightly. 441911 manship, to tennis captain Karl The 68-year-old whiz kid of the Doc Losh is not retiring! "I'll Hendrick. The trophy, sponsored star set who's served on the Uni- have to retire some day, but it by the 'M' club, was given in the versity faculty since 1927, is sec- won't be this year." Students c name of Hazel Losh. retary-treasurer of Phi Beta may feel assured that if they Kappa's Michigan chapter and the sign up for her Astro courses, Both Kramer and Barr were East Central district. she will be there.s students of Doc before going on "People don't realize how much '1 to football stardom in the pros. time I spend on activities like Phi I was always the teacher when v "I'll never forget that she always Beta Kappa. They think I spend we played 'school,'" she recalls. had time for a word of encourage- all my time at pep rallies," she "I've had to make the choice | m " rmmar Pr hours in the day for me to do both." But she always has time to dis- cuss her two main loves: astrono- my and athletics. UFO's?, Last winter telephone callers be- sieged her with queries about mul- ti-nefarious UFO's. "Personally, I don't believe in flying saucers. I think they're a natural phenom- enon. Of course, I may get picked up by one sometime." She doesn't believe in the space race, either. Maybe Now They'll Listen "Why don't they let the moon be. We have enough problems here on earth. Wait'll they get motor cycles up there." Or girl cheerleaders down here. "It would be too much like high school to have girl cheerleaders. The gymnasts are more in keeping with the Michigan tradition." That could be why innovations like last fall's homecoming queen cannot break the tradition of Michigan's first queen-Doc Losh. ment,S rememoers Barr. Souvenirs re torts. between doing research and teach- c Although her classes are always ing because there aren't enoughb We Want Doc Crammed into every niche in her office are autographed re- minders of past and present sport eras, A hockey stick, a souvenir football, a varsity jacket, a team picture. "There have always been fain- Snow Stops Gym, Mat Shows C I z t 1 DWARFED BY PILES OF PAPER, Doe Losh peers from behind her desk on the eighth floor of the PA Building. The Doc spends much of her time counseling her students and boosting pep rallies. * * * * NBA ROUNDUP: , Celtics Overpower P 76ers Surge Past Ro By The Associated Press BOSTON-Sam Jones and John Havlicek sparked a second-half comeback and the Boston Celtics streaked to their seventh straight National Basketball Association victory last night in defeating the stubborn Detroit Pistons 112-106. Jones hit for 15 points and Havlicek for 14 as the Celtics ral- lied from a 64-54 halftime deficit. Jones, finished with 26 points and Havlicek with 23. The Pistons jumped off to a 32-20 first-period lead as the Cel- tics managed only a pair of field goals by Jones in the first eight minutes. Boston connected on just six of 27 floor shots in the first 12 minutes and then began the game of catch up. Boston went ahead for the first time, 83-82, on Don Nelson's tip in with two minutes left in the third period. The lead was ex- changed until Jones hit on a jump shot, breaking a 101-101 tie with just under five minutes to play. The Celtics promptly pulled away for their fourth victory in seven meetings with the Pistons. Eddie Miles and Dave Bing top- ped Detroit scorers with 21 points{ each. Player-coach Dave Debus- scherer contributed 19. Wilt' Dunks Royals PHILADELPHIA -Wilt Cham- berlain, who took only four shots in the first three quarters, led a rally in the final 12 minutes that. carried the Philadelphia 76ers to to a 110-107 National Basketball Association victory over the Cin- cinnati Royals last night. Chamberlain appeared satisfied merely to hand the ball off in the early going although he had many opportunities to drive, to- ward the basket. With their 7-foot-i ace inactive from the field, the 76ers blew a 15-point lead as Oscar Robertson led the Royals to a 98-95 advan- tage with 4:16 remaining to play.I Chamberlain, who scored 12 of his 17 points in the final quarter, collected eight of the 76ers' last 15 points. He tied the game at 98 with 3:05 to go, dunked a basket to deadlock it at 100 after Robertson had given the Royals a two-point edge and sent the 76ers ahead 101-100 wit ha free throw at the 2:11 mark. After Jon McGlockin tied it again at 101, Wally Jones drove for the basket and put in a field goal that sent the 76ers ahead to stay. Gal Greer, with 25 points and Jones, with 25, led the Philadel- phia offense, while Robertson, who hit on 14 on 27 from the field and 11 of 12 from the foul line, wound up with 39 points. The victory was the 21st in the last 23 games for Philadelphia, ous athletes in my classes," beams Doc. "And many of them come Phip and Chip Fuller were going with Illinois and Iowa as for- mat all-star match. The event, back to see me fom time to time." to perform stunts never before at- midable challengers for the West- to be sponsored by the Amateur While in Pasadena for the 1965 tempted in floor exercise. Dick ern Conference title. The Mich- Wrestling Coaches' Association, Rose Bowl, she had a chance to Richards was going to do likewise Iigan State meet will take place will be the first East-West all- return a visit to the radio studio on the parallel bars. at Ann Arbor Feb. 15, and as star tournament. Only seniors will of Tom Harmon-another former If it hadn't been for a 24-inch Loken puts it, "All our efforts are be eligible for the tournament, to Astro student. snow blanket on the Windy City, being directed toward preparing be held on April 8, after the reg- these three gymnasts could have for the Spartans; we'll have to be ular NCAA national championship tried out their new routines to- in peak condition, for they have tournament, day. The University of Illinois'Ialready demonstrated their tie- Keen said of his appointment, Chicago branch had been sched- mendous ability in all events." "It is a wonderful honor." uled to compete against the Wol- Video Aid In additon to Keen, Gerald verines this afternoon at 1:30, but In order to aid the Wolverines' Kehman of Lehigh will coach the the unexpected deluge put a halt preparation, Loken obtained a contingent. to any plans for reaching Ann Videocorder, which enables him Harold Nichols of Iowa State, is to n s Arbor. to film each man as he goes a product of Keen's coaching, and Coach Newt Loken had hoped through his routine, and then im- Myron Roderick of Oklahoma to use several freshmen in the mediately replay the tape. This State will handle the chores for meet as he had done against enables both coach and gymnast the western squad. oy a ls Western Michigan a week ago. to catch any flaws in the per- Cs Newcomers Jim D)e Boo on the formance, and hopefully will lead CHICAGO -A basketballdou- side horse, Ron Rapper on par- to a smoother and more precise ! bleheader featuring top-ranked who on Tuesday had their 36- sUCLA and scheduled for the Chi- game home court winning streak allel bars and Charlie Froeming routine. Stadium last night was post- on rings had all performed bril-' Due to today's cancellation, the! cago Saimls ih a ot slashed by the Boston Celtics, liantly against the Broncos com- next Wolverine meet will take poned until tomorrow afternoon. Philadelphia boosted its fantastic ngaway with first place finishes. place two weeks from today, Feb. Brigham Y o u n g University, Eastern Division-leading record to Seek Record 10 at 3:30 p.m. The opponent will which was scheduled to play Chi- 47-5 as it beat the Royals for the Constantly working for improve- be Eastern Michigan, a squad cap- ago Loyola, was enroute to Chi- fourth time in five games this ment Loken had set another goal able of scoring from 170-180. cago from Detroit by train. season for this meet. Were seeking a UCLA will meet Illinois at 2:30 7-1191 total score since the highest The wrestling match scheduled p.m. tomorrow, preceded by the P o Standin g - score registered in this year's col- 'for today between Michigan and Brigham Young-Loyola game. legiate competition is a 190.9 by !Minnesota in Minneapolis has UCLA arrived in Chicago after Eastern Dvslon Pct the perenialy strong Southern been called off. Coach Cliff Keen being detoured by the violent Philadelphia 47 5 .904 - Illinois squad." and his matmen were not able to snowstorm which caked Chicago Boston 37 12 .755 S' The Salukis, last year's NCAA get an airline flight to Minnesota with 24 inches of snow. New York 25 28 .472 2212 champions, compiled this score in because of the current blizzard Tonight's games between the Cincinnati 21 27 .438 24fortashsntbe ps-{ x-Baltimore 12 42 6.222' 3 a meet last weekend with Mich- conditions throughout the mid- four teams has not been post- Western Division igan State. The Spartans, hitting west. poned. x-San Francisco 32 18 .640 - their routines in exceptional fash- The meet has tentatively been St. Louis 2?28 .440 z0 SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: Chicago 22 34 .393 13 ion, racked up a hefty 190.2 points cancelled, with only a slight pos- DAVE WEIR Detroit 20 32 .385 13 to fall only .7 of a point off sibility that it will be rescheduled. Los Angeles 19 31 .380 13 Southern's pace. Wolverine mentor Keen hasĀ® x-Late game not included. Before the start of the Big Ten been selected to be one of the YESTERDAY'S RESULITS - Big----___---_-1_-.__..-e._-----__ F EAT U RING:- A WIlDE Selection of Summer Sublets Information on Apartment Living reprinted from the Off-Campus Housing Booklet AND LOTS MORE - - ~ s- ----~-~U -1 4 4 A QWICKJ KICK f -GORDIE HOWE, the National Hockey League's all- time scoring king, was named the second winner of the Lester Pat- rick Trophy yesterday for out- standing contribution to hockey in the United States. Howe, who has scored 703 goals in 21 seasons with the DETROIT RED WINGS, was the unanimous choice of a six-man selection com- mittee headed by NHL President Clarence Campbell. The 38-year-old right-winger will receive the trophy at the second annual Lester Patrick Award Dinner in New-York Feb. 20. Philadelphia 110, Cincinnati 107 Boston 112, Detroit 106 Baltimore at San Francisco (inc) TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at Cincinnati Boston at New York Chicago at Detroit Baltimore at Los Angeles TOMORROW'S GAMES New York at Boston season, Loken rated MSU along coaches in an all-new post-season Subscribe To THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pole Vault Record Set In Frosh Track Tourney tos ngeles at, cago -_- San Francisco at Cincinnati --- - Philadelphia at St. Louis -- -- - - -- H AS A LLOWE D TWA TO OFFER A MORE CONVENIENT JET FLIGHT FOR MORE PEOPLE AT A REDUCED COST NEW AND FINAL N.YC.LONDON. .. MAY 18 PA RIS - DETROIT . . . J ULY 14 ek New Round Trip Fare .. $50.0 \ TWA BOE ING 707 J ET A Yost Field House was pretty quiet last night until 6:45 p.m. when Ron Shortt, a Michigan pole vaulter, set a new freshman rec- ord by vaulting 14'7". Due to lack of competition the rest of the re- sults included no new recordĀ§. Of the 49 groups scheduled, only Eastern Michigan, Bowling Green, Pioneer Track . Club, Hill Park, and the Wolverines were repre- sented. Shortt won the pole vault at 14'4", and then decided to try 14'7". He quit after 14'7" so he could participate in tonight's var- sitR meet. Shortt, last year's Mich- igan state high school pole vault- Ing champion, had previously vaulted 14'5" for his personal high. The old meet record was set by Carl Watkins last year by vaulting 14'2". In the shotput, Geoffrey Petrasek, another "M" frosh, miss- ed' the old record by five inches when he put the shot 49'7". Two Michigan milers, Ken How and Gary Gold, ran an extremely close race as How edged out Gold in the stretch. Their times were 4:19.5 and 4:20.6, respectively. Sprinter Solomon Esbie showed great promise in the 60-yard dash. Solomon's time of 6.4 seconds may not seem overly impressive, but the Wolverine coaches believe he can do better against tougher compe- tition. All of last night's action was confined to the freshman and nov- ice division. The varsity relays get underway this afternoon at 1:30.