THE MICHIGAN DAILY After Absence Starting Lineup Indefinite For Schedule Opener Against Mchigan State By DICK SIMON This is a tale of courage, of a man who fought against tremendous odds and emerged the victor. The man in question is Ohet Au- buchon, star guard of the Michigan State basketball squad that will help the Wolverines open their 1941-42 season here Saturday night in Yost Field House. Back inthe 1939-40 season the In- diana cager was playing brilliant ball along with two fellow Garyites, Max Hindeman and Bob Phillips. All three were juniors and they were setting a torrid pace for the Spartans who won 14 and lost six-two of these de- feats suffered at the hands of Michi- gan. And Chet's. great playing ability did not go without recognition either, because he was placed on the All- American team at guard. Then it happened. Aubuchon be- came deathly ill with a severe strepto- coccus infection and was forced to remain out of school last year. For weeks, he hovered on the brink of death, but finally with his fine physi- cal condition being the deciding fac- tor, Chet managed to pull through with flying colors. . He's back this year just as good as ever and .eager to get a crack at the Wolverines, because he's never been on a Spartan team that has beaten Michigan. In his sophomore year, the Maize and Blue won two thrillers, 41-34 and 30-25, while the following season the Green and White fell to the tunes of 33-27 and 32-27. The five foot, ten inch senior scored five points against fort Custer in State's i first game and last Monday led the Spartans to p, well-earned victory over Central Michigan College, 29-23, by topping thescorers with eight po~ints. SPORTFOLIO 0 New Javelin Ruling 0 Hits Michigan Hard By HAL WILSON Daily Sports Editor IF Junior Center To Start Spartan Game J OHNNY WISE is an athlete with- out a sport. He has plenty of sympathy for those gridmen who were attending the University of Chicago when in- tercollegiate football was abandoned by the Maroons two years ago. For John, a junior on the track squad, is now in a similar spot. Last weekend in Chicago the as- sembled Western Conference Ath- letic Directors voted, upon recom- mendation by Big Ten track and field coaches, to abolish the jave- lin event from Conference compe- tition. And to Wise, the only re- turning veteran javelin thrower in the league, that's a real setback. AS A SOPHOMORE last spring John took fourth place honors with a heave of 176 feet 5% inches in the outdoor meet. And since the first three place-winners as' well as the fifth man have collected their diplomas, Coach Ken Doherty natur- ally enough expected a lot from Wise in the forthcoming outdoor cam- paign. The javelin was given the perma- nent toss by Conference officials last weekend only after a bitter session. Arguments against were mainly: (1) the event is a dangerous one for, both' spectators and contestants; (2) it has proved to be detrimental for the participants the' last few years, re- sulting in innumerable sore muscles and dead arms. Some of the track mentors felt that a complete abolition of the event would be unfair to present competitors, that if at all, it should be abandoned at some set date in the future, preferably three years hence. But after a stormy session, the javelin throw was finally erased from Conference events, by a vote of 6-4. THIS IS a double Mjekey Finn for Wolverine Coach Ken Doherty, since the Michigan cinder squad pos- sessed not only the lone returning veteran, but also the most brilliant sophomore prospect in Maize and Blue history, Pete Wege. This young husky casually tossed the javelin some 196 feet 6 inches lass spring which not only shattered the year- ling record but also bettered the winning mark in the Conference out- door by nine feet. In addition, another returning Wolverine, Bob Tillson, copped sixth place in last year's champion- ships and was also counted on for points this season. Thus some nine or ten almost certain points have been lopped from Michigan's total next spring. * * * SPORTS HASH: Jack Butler and Paul Kromer, Wolverine grid- men on last year's combination, re- * * V Coach Bennie Oosterbaan is .still looking for a combination to work with capt. Bill Cartmin, Leo. Doyle and Jim Mandle'r. Bob Shemky, Mel Comin and aalph Gibert are all play- ing such good ball that Bennie is having a difficult time figuring which one to start at forward along side Cartmill. And to make matters even tougher, he's having the same trouble filling the guard position. Don Holman, Morrie Bikoff and Bill MacConnachie are waging a battle amongst them- selves to see who gets the nod when Saturday's game rolls around. Oosterbaan put the team through a hard two and a half hour drill yes- terday, the last long one before the opening tilt. The squad has been working' hard and long and are' in excellent shape. Joe Louis Wins Memorial Award For Fine Record NEW YORK, Dec. 10-(P)-For his record-breaking reign as king of box- ing and the job he did in turning back seven challengers this year, Joe Louis today won the Edward J. Neil Mem- orial Award as the man who did the most for the sport in 1941. The Boxing Writers Association of New York, making the annual award in memory of the Associated Press sports writer and war correspondent who was killed in Spain in 1938, voted the trophy by acclamation for the first time in the four years it has been awarded. The previous winners were Jack Dempsey, Billy Conn and Henry Armstrong. The Brown Bomber will receive the trophy at the boxing writers' annual dinner Jan. 14. + s ceived their wings from the Navy Air Corps last Sunday and were as- signed immediately for action at Pearl Harbor . . . little Davie Nelson, who's done a pretty good job of bringing big athletes down to his size, declares that it'll be a real ex- perience fighting someone nearer his own stature like the Japanese. Wild Bill Combs, captain of last year's wrestling team, has with- drawn from school . . . after com- peting in k the Midwestern AAU Meet in Chicago this weekend, Bill plans to head for Texas to visit his mother, then join the Fleet Marine Corps . . . Paul White, sophomore wingback, goes into University Hospital Saturday for a surgical operation on his right shoulder . . . the Whizzer in- curred the injury, a separation of the clavicle, in the Michigan State game, missed two contests, thek re- turned against Northwestern and finished out the season with a spe- cial brace. ASIDE NOTE To Those With Rights of Suffrage: I don't want to be Santa Claus . . . I am not running I am mean to little children . . I don't like reindeer . . . I took a bluebook yesterday and had to put quotation marks around all of it . . I am no good . . . I don't want to be Santa Claus. -- Buy a Goodfellow Edition -- Trials To Show Track Prospects By BOB STAHL Michigan's track squad will wind up its pre-Christmas conditioning program at the Field House Satur- day afternoon with the first intensive time trials of the season. These trials will give backers of the Wolverine thinclad aggregation their first real chance t see how powerful a crew Coach Doherty will present against Michigan's opponents when the first meet rolls around next February. Up until now, the cipder- men have been running under wraps, but Saturday they will be aiming at the Field House records and can be expected to really turn on the heat. With a team that lost many of its most consistent point-getters through graduation, the time-trials will give Coach Doherty an opportunity to see just how his new sophomores will fit into the picture. The cap-and-gown bugaboo took its heaviest tollof the middle-distance and, long-distance events, leaving the Wolverines with good runners in both the mile and two-mile but with none 'of the deep reserve strength which has been so characteristic of Michigan track teams of the past, and it is from the ranks of the sophomores that Do- herty must develop this reserve ma- terial. Saturday's trials will be open to the public and all track fans are wel- come to come down to the Field House to watch the 1942 thinclad crew in action. . 1 '"a fY} lY ' Y i r -°g' 3 r ' r y Y :f'r. K , .. . ..tnq. ,, ,$<~ i i By REV JONES Michigan's hockey sextet will be seen in action in Ann Arbor nine more times this season, according to the official schedule which has just been announced. Eight encounters away complete the 18-game card, of which one, the London A. C. battle,j has already been played in the Coli- seum. Play Port Dover Saturday j Second opponent will be the Port Dover outfit which meets the Wol- verine puckmen this Saturday night, also on Michigan ice. Little is known about the boys from Port Dover, al- though Coach Eddie Lowrey says that they play in about the same league as the London A. C. Play resumes after Christmas va- cation as the Wolverines journey to Houghton, Mich., for a two-game series with Michigan Tech on Jan. 3 and 5. Last year Tech took it on the chin twice in meetings with the Uni- versity team. The- Point Edward club, of Sarnia, Mich., will attempt to repeat the win of the Sarnia A. C. last year, when it plays here five days later on Jan. 10. Meef Conference Champs First -Conference encounter will be with the Illinois team on the Colise- um ice on Jan. 15 and again two days later. The Illini were the Con- ference champs last year, and this season have a team as good if not better than last. Pouring on the punishment, the Michigan squad travels to Minne- apolis the next week for two games with Minnesota. The Gophers are Twenlty Beautiful Aquabelles Will Present Ballet; Varsity Swimmers To Stage Special Events By BUD HENDEL The barker chants: I delighted cash customers can be ac- "Step in line. one at a time, don't commodated. It's the big Swim Gala rush, shove, push people around. No here in Ann Arbor tomorrow night, with a diamond ring, a wrist watch ndeedy. it's not a strip-tease, there's and a wooden whistle in every bath- not a hula-hula gal in sight, and ing suit." we've positively got no jitterbugs in the entire cast. And it's the gospel truth. For Coach "W n.Matt Mann has the greatest Swim yWr can. man our teeth, curl Gala in the history of the Michigan yiournair, mae you eellike a mIG water carnival all lined up and ready lionaire, btwet canegive you a BIG to wheel out to the paying public show, the bigg est ever staged ini at 8 p.m. tomorrow. Meechegaan. We'vc got 20, yes 20- t8pm oorw count 'em. beautiful mermaids fresh One of the headline events will be from sparkling triumphs in the bi the water ballet, featuring Kay Curtis Windy City of Ch ,ccaoh ready t and her world famous troupe. These dance for you n the greatesteaquatic girls, who make the water sizzle with ballet performance to ever hit 'lil old their beaut'y, will do everything but Ann Arbor. the fox-trot when they go through their routine in the Sports Building Get your tickets now for this x- Pool. Reports from Chicago, where travaganza of natatorial perform- they have been performing, state that ances. Fifty cents a head for every the troupe puts on an act unsurpassed man, woman and child and only 1000 by any. Big Jim Mandler saw service all last season as a sophomore when he finished second in the team's scoring. The six foot four inch junior has shown much improvement in th#practice sessions so far this season and great things are expected of him. He is an excellent ball-handler and his favorite shot is a one-handed push shot from the pivot posi- tion. The big center hails from Chicago and is one of the four letter- men on this year's squad. W-- Puck Squad Encounters Tough ScheduleW it Nine Hoe Tilts strong as usual and are expected to repeat their triumphs of last season, on Jan. 22 and 24. The Wolverines return home for the last contest of the semester, meeting the Paris A. C. of Paris, Ont., on Feb. 14, after a three-,week layoff. With the coming of the second se- mester and the expected raising of several of the at present ineligible players to eligible status, Coach Low- rey 'expects to take a greatly improved team with him when he goes to Col- orado Springs on Feb. 21 and 22. Object of this trip is the Colorado College sextet, who last year downed the Wolverines once and were held to a tie in the other of their annual two contests. Gophers Invade Ann Arbor On Feb. 26 Minnesota comes to Ann Arbor for the last two of their four encounters with the Michigan team. Next on the list is Michigan Tech, which plays the third and fourth in its series on March 5 and 7. This will be the last time the Wolverines will be seen on home ice. Two games at Champaign with Illinois climax the season. The In- dians; will be out to finish up their year with two victories, but the Mich- igan team can be counted on to make it tough for them this time. Beginners' fencing tournament will start at 1:30 Saturday after- noon in the Sports Building, third floor. Only those persons who be- gan fencing this fall are eligible to sign up with Ray Chambers Fri- day afternoon. Entries will also be accepted at the I-M office. Duquesne Willing' In Post Sesaon To Play Contest PITTSBURGH, Dec. 10-(P)-Of- ficials of Duquesne University tonight granted the school's undefeated and untied football team permission to play a postseason game in Washing- ton New Year's Day for the U.S.O. and British War Relief. The permission specified, however, that the opponent must be either Minnesota, champion of the Big Ten, or the University of Texas. The invitation came from Wash- ington.. liii, iil u / , a' y, if.,_! . i l ' - f i" 4 . . a e'. y: of b .S ie, # $.t., , :; ! . .m. F LEURS POUR A FILLE! ROBES for lounging, for You may have difficulty understanding our French, but any date will understand the de- sirability of our choice blossoms. 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