FRIDAY, EP . 16, 1940 THE MICHIGCAN DlAILY PAGE TEM'. Tech Wingman's Last Minute oal Blasts Hockey Tea mn, 1-0 Game Features Inspired Work By Goaltenders Petaja Registers Deciding Goal With Only Three Minutes OfPlay Left (Continued from Page 1) and somewhat more profitable, eve- ning's work for Michigan Tech as he held the aggressive Wolverines com- pletely scoreless. The win put the Techmen one up on the University in their competi- tion for the mythical state cham- pionship. Each team won a game in their series at Ann Arbor and Saturday night is Michigan's last Defending Relay Title chance to Michigan James Ross Stodden Goldsmith Lovett Samuelson Spares, again even the score. TECH ONE UP Pos. A. T G Me D Al DI C Villen W Sihw W pe ech. eyers gord Mars euve onen etaja -am- Michigan: Collins, C field, Corson, Heddle. Michigan Tech: Briden, MacPhail, Bourne, Baird, Fredrickson, Karam, Johnson. First Period Scoring: None. , Penalties: Bourne, tripping, Vil- leneuve, boarding, Briden, tripping. Second Period Scoring: None. Penalties: Goldsmith, tripping. Third Period Scoring: Petaja, 16:40. Penalties: Samuelson, tripping. Referee: Al Jacobson. Martin, Wolin Solve Toubles For Iowa State By DON WIRTCHAFTER A strange case of waterphobia and an incompleted history course almost left Matt Mann with one diver for the Iowa meet here tomorrow night. It's all under control now though for Strother "T-Bone" Martin found the remedy for his heebee jeebeeat- tack and Jack Wolin made up the incomplete. With Capt. Hal Ben- ham on tap, the Wolverines now have three capable springboard artists to face the invading Hawkeyes. Strange As It Seems Martin's case was truly a strange one. A week ago he became eligible to compete with the Michigan mer- men and started working in earnest for his first big college meet. But something odd came over the sopho- more diver. He felt different on the board. He couldn't feel his dives. The water looked peculiar and far away. "T-Bone" was afraid to go into a high board dive for fear it would ruin the low board dives that he knew well. At the same time he didn't want to dive off the low board since it might have bad effects on his high board dives. Everytime he thought of a back dive, he saw a twist in the middle of it somewhere, and a solid brutal crashing against the hard water below. The kid was in a strange quandary, one that is difficult to overcome. He stayed down at the pool and kept! looking at the water . . . but it was not the same stuff that he used to confidently glance at and pounce into with ease. Solution Found The night before last, Martin ar- ranged with Matt to work out at night when the pool was empty and quiet. He tried it and it worked.a Everything came back, and once again the husky sophomore began1 looking like the "T-Bone" Martina who came to Michigan last year as one of the outstanding diving pros- pects in the nation. Matt Mann will have to choose two< of his three springboard artists to represent the Wolverines tomorrow1 night, but it appears quite certain that Martin, the diver of waterpho-1 bia fame, will take part in the meet. Stan Kelley, varsihy hurdler, re- turns to Champaign today to de- fend his 75-yard low-hurdle cham- pionship in the Illinois Relays. He will face stiff competition in the persons of Roy Cochran, Indiana, member of last summer's U.S. team in Europe, and Charles Had, Michigan Normal, who nipped Kelley in the highs in the meet here Tuesday. Chicago Cage Tilt Promises To Be Unusual By CHRIS VIZAS Soup to nuts may be listed on the menu as the dish to be served at this Saturday's basketball game between the slipping Wolverines and the al- ready flattened out Maroons, who are carrying their nine Conference broth- ers on their shoulders these days as they comfortably rest down at the bottom of the Big Ten pile. The contest may turn out to be a pink tea or the fray can easily turn; into a battle royal with a possible riot of enough hot pepper or what ever kind of spice is needed gets into the tea, and starts the boys boiling over. Hardwood Tricks It appears as if Chicago may be trying to "out Zup" Zuppke, the wily gridiron master mind of the Illini who is always pulling something phenomenal, out of the so-called bag, like a flea-flicker or a flying circus. Only, since Chicago gave up football, have they turned to "Zuppke-ing" on the hardwood. The type of defense Chicago will use all depends on the mood the boys are in. It may be a zone defense which will have Michigan standing around as if they were at a lawn party, while the ball is passed around like a hot potato, or all of a sudden Chicago may take a notion to switch to a man to man defense, and then Michigan will have to resort to its breaking game to score. At any rate it has Coach Bennie Oosterbaan worried, because the Windy City lads are so temperamental that it requires preparation for two distinctly different styles of opposi- tion. The general opinion seems to be that it's easier to prepare for a winning team, whose game is known in advance than a loser, whose plans are unpredictable. Chaos May Reign The zone defense if employed may result in plenty of congestion and jamming on the floor and a little roughing might add some spice to the encounter, and if Chicago starts al- ternating between a zone and man to man defense, chaos will reign supreme and even the Maroons might not know what's going on. That Zuppke spirit that is pouring out of Champaign seems to be infect- ing the rest of the state of Illinois by degrees so anything from a con- servative to a radical brand of basket- ball is likely to be seen when Michi- gan and Chicago meet. Illinois Relays Draw 28 Men From Michigan Canham In Try For Meet Record; Kelley Faces Stiff Test In Hurdles Twenty-eight strong, the largest group ever to represent Michigan at the Illinois Relays, the Wolverine track team leaves for Champaign at 1:37 p.m. today, determined and con- fident that they will dominate the meet again as they have for the past two years since its revival. Michigan has one of the three in- dividual champions returning in the person of Stan Kelley who took the 75-yard low hurdles last year. Bill Watson and Elmer Gedeon, who won the other individual firsts captured by the Wolverines, are both gone. Michigan will also be defending champions in the mile team race. With the exception of the shuttle relay, in which no team is entered, and the individual all-around cham- pionship, the Wolverines will be out after every championship at stake. Hurdle Field Tough Kelley will face some stiff compe- tition in the defense of his title, with Roy Cochran of Indiana, who began to develop toward the end of the in- door season last year, providing the biggest threat. Cochran represented the United States on the team sent to Europe last summer. In addition, Whitey Hlad of Michigan Normal, who nosed out Kelley Tuesday night, will be on hand to try to repeat that triumph. Michigan's entry in the mile team race seems stronger than the team which won last year, with the sub- stitution of Ed Barrett, third in the outdoor Big Tens for Brad Heyl, who will devote his attention to the 1500- meter run. Otherwise, the team will be composed of the same men: Capt. Ralph Schwarzkopf, Jack Dobson, and Karl Wisner. Mile Relay In Doubt The second strongest Wolverine re- lay entry will probably be in the med- ley, with Bob Barnard, Dye Hogan. Tommy Jester, and Schwarzkopf. The mile relay team, which would ordinarily have been the best team, will have a hard job, for two of its members, Phil Balyeat and Jack Leutritz, have only recently begun to get in shape, and they could hardly be expected to do as well as they otherwise would. Stan Kelley will be number-three man, and Warren Breidenbach, Conference 440 cham- pion, will anchor the team. Breidenbach will also be running in the special 300-yard dash, where he will find himself pitted against such stars as Ohio State's Capt. Jack Sulzman, who was second behind Warren in the Conference meet, and Roy Cochran who ran a phenomenal 47.8 second leg on a relay last week- end. May Crack Record After his record-shattering per- formance of Tuesday, Don Canham will be installed the heavy favorite not only to win the high jump, but to crack the relays record of 6 ft., 52 in. Canham did almost an inch better than that Tuesday, so it seems a foregone conclusion that he will add this mark to what should be a lengthy list 1y the end of the season. . IN THIS CORNER By MEL FINEBERG m. Old Dogs And New Tricks . . . IN THE CURRENT ISSUE of The Quarterly Review of the Michigan Al- umnus Herbert Orrin Crisler, sometimes called Fritz, expounds in exactly three double column pages, 210 lines and approximately 1,100 words on "Athletics In Education." In these three double column pages, 210 lines and approximately 1,100 words Herbert Orrin Crisler, sometimes called Fritz, unencumbered himself of the startling revelation that athletics do have a place in education. This is both surprising and amazing--not to mention startling which we believe we did mention in the preceding paragraph. Now, if we start from the hypothesis that athletics do have a place in education, we get along to the rest of the 1,100 words and find, and find . . . Why my good- ness, the article doesn't say anything else. We aren't cognizant of what Herbert Orrin Crisler's attitude toward collegiate athletics was before he came to Ann Arbor but in the short two years he's been here lie's been eminently success- ful in picking up the platitudinous, high-sounding phrases that have resounded through these hallowed halls the past few years. And even so we would take exception to Mr. Crisler's cliche that "there is nothing greater than being a gracious loser together with the de- termination in the heart that the next time it will be a victory. There is nothing finer than a winner who takes victory without :boasting. There is nothing better than athletics to prepare the individual for the ultimate crises of life." Yes, if we wanted to be picayunish about "what is greater" we could think of many things. And when he drags in "at the conclusion of the past football season two million boys hung up their football uniforms and are now pursuing in orderly fashion their aims and objectives while at the same time there were two million young men in trenches in Europe armed with implements of destruction" we suspect him of using a flanker as a decoy to make us forget about the point in your dissertation. Oh well, the words always sound good. Mr. Crisler, we all realize that athletics has a place in education. We all realize that athletics have tremendous moment in the athlete's life. What we're all interested in is seeing that athletics retains its proper place in education. We are faced now with a situation where one of the greatest of American educational institutions feels that athletics, or specifically intercollegiate football, is incompatible with education. An "unidentified spokesman" for that University said that it could not play football and "remain honest." Matmen Leave, For Trip East Penn State Squad To Face' Grapplers On Saturday Coach Cliff Keen's Michigan wrestling team will head for points East and some stiff competition this weekend. Saturday will find the1 Wolverine matmen facing Penn State, perenially one of the strongest squads in the country, at State Col- lege, Penn. The squad left early this morning for its battle with the Nit- tany Lions. Michigan's starters will be the same that faced State recently. Tom Weidig is slated for the 121-pound spot while a newcomer, sophomore Dick French, will wrestle at 128. Jack Sergeant starts at 136 and the vet- eran Bill Combs, who has returned to competition, holds down the 145 berth. Harland Danner, 155, Jim Galles, 165, Don Nichols, 175, and Capt. "Butch" Jordan complete the roster. Stand Even In Series Penn State and Michigan stand even in their series, each having won two meets. The Wolverines came out victorious last year, 16 to 12, and are among six schools ever to de- feat the Lions, Lehigh, Cornell, Navy, Princeton and Iowa State being the other select few. The Easterners' record speaks for itself, 144 meets won. 26 lost, and 5 tied since 1909. The Wolverines will face a team which has only two missing members from the 1939 runner-up to Lehigh in the Eastern Intercollegiate tourna- ment. Returnin lettermen include Carl King. 121, who holds a decision over Weidig, Dave Waite, 128, Frank Bowling Billiards Snooker Goldberg-Morgan Fight Called After Six Rounds OLMPIC ARENA, Detroit, Feb. 15. -(Special to The Daily)-It looked as if Kayo Morgan, the irrepressible as if Kayo Morgan, the irrepressible fight game longer than Joe Palooka, might have jitter-bugged his way dovn the first step of the road to pugilistic oblivion tonight. Morgan. whose machete-like fists have cut swaths from Edinburgh to Porto Rico, met a young man named Sammy Goldberg here tonight and the best man won-Referee Sam Hennessey. Gleason, a 136 pounder holding last year's Eastern championship. Joe Scalzo, at 145, is the outstanding mati on the Nittany Lions' squad. Roy Gensler wrestlers at 155, Capt. Ernie Bortz, at 175, and Warren Elliott, called the most improved by Coach Sppidel, heavyweight. 0 MICHIGAN I RECREATION 525 East Liberty Ono 1 At one juncture Mr. Crisler "ventures to conclude that out of some thousand colleges and universities in our country there are not more than a dozen where athletics have been over-emphasized to the detriment of amateur sport and of education in general." We wonder what does Mr. Crisler mean by over-emphasis? And if there are only a dozen who do over-emphasize (whatever this over- emphasis might be) then the University of Michigan is awfully par- ticular about whom it plays in football. fAnnouncing- OPENING of .I Without straining a cerebellum already over-strained, from an ex- amination period, we can recall that when Michigan was seeking an op- ponent to replace Chicago on its 1940 schedule many groups of universi- ties were thrown out immediately because they didn't conform to standards which Michigan considered desirable. Such leagues as the Southeastern Conference and the Southwestern Conference could not even be mentioned. Su'ie independent teams wcro out because they "gave athletic scholarships. It seems that included in these categories are slightly more than a dozen. "Some say that our present athletic activities have no place in our educational system," Mr. Crisler continues. "They believe athletics, and especially football, should be eliminated because of some evils. They would kill a dog because he had the mange rather than try to effect a cure." Granted, granted. Now we should get to the root of the matter. Let's start curing. Let's keep the old dog but let's teach it new tricks. But no, Mr. Crisler begs the question. He says that "our athletics will endure and con- tinue to grow to a more wholesome state with a high standard as a chal- lenge" but alas, Mr. Crisler proposes no plan, no policy to start reforming. He almits deficiencies but suggests no cures. He admits the mange but denies a medicine. He glories in "being a gracious loser" and "facing the ultimate crises of life" but he neglects facing a crises in football. Let's get down to earth on the football problem or else leave it alone. We prefer the former. STUDENT AGENCY DRY CLEANING "Keep It Ciean" 1209-A South U. Phone 9088 Pick Up and Delivery Better Cleaning at a Fair Price WAYNE TALLIES ANOTHER DETROIT, Feb. 15.-()-Wayne University's swimming team, con- querors of the crack Ohio State tank- sters, defeated Michigan State easily tonight, 56 to 19. hiI -I. eep ~u Things are happening in rapid succession in this changing world of ours and you can't afford to miss out on any of the news, local, national, or foreign. The Michigan Daily brings you this information six morn- ings each week. If your subscription has expired or if you failed to sign up in the fall, be sure to order your copy immediately. Drop in at the Publications Build- ing or call 2-32-41. 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