'SDA JANUARY 14, .hI 2 T rTE MICH UAN DAILY Natators To Face Grand Rapids In ]Wt Mann' Expets Little Trouble In Engagement Wolverines To Even Test By Allowing Handicaps; State AAU Meet Next By BUD HENDEL Coach Matt Mann's titleholding Michigan swimming team will dis- play its wares for the first time in 1942 when it meets the Grand Rapids Y.M.C.A. at Grand aRpids today. The Wolverines expect little trou- ble from the Grand Rapids mermen, aid the bill tonight will take the form of a warm-up for the all im- portant first Big Ten clash of the season against Ohio State's Buckeyes here on Jan. 24. In fact most of the races will be of the handicap nature in order to give the llome team a more even chance against the Maize and Blue water powerhouse. Also listed in the breather classifi- cation for the Michigan natators is the scheduled State AAU Meet in East Lansing Saturday night. Then next week Mann and his lads will meet the invading 'Scarlet horde from Columbus. This Michigan-Ohio State tussle will mark the first time in two years that the schools have met each other ip a dual meet, and fireworks aplenty /are in store for the spectators in the Sports Building Pool one week from this Saturday night.. Both teams are perennial powers in the natatorial world, and the Buckeyes loom as the biggest threat to the Wolverines re- peating as Conference champs. The Michigan schedule received a jolt yesterday when it was learned that the Wayne University dual meet billed for Jan. 21 was cancelled at the request of 'the Detroit school. The encounter with the Tartars was supposed to be the first major trial for the championship Mann-men, but the meet between the two schools scheduled for March 18 is still on th books. Tonight's engagement with Grand Rapids will be the third for the Wol- verines this season. Hogan Defeats Thomson LOS ANGELES, Jan. 13.-(0-Ben Hogan of Hiershey, Pa., birdied the enghteenth hole to defeat Jimmy Thomson of Del Monte, Calif., by one stroke in the play-off today for the $10;000 Los Angeles Open Golf Cham- pionship. FAST By ART HIL4. 4tu h f Not See /1ction. As For Hockey. . WHAT'S the fastest, toughest, roughest game in existence? And, at the same time, the best spectator sport ever devised by man? 1 Well, there may be a divergence of opinion on this question. For sheer. joughness, a certain few will cer- tainly hold out a claim for the an- cient Indian game of lacrosse. Many of those who have traveled in Latin countries or the Orient maintain that there is no faster game than jai-alai. Football will draw plenty of votes on the spectator appeal score. But for a combination of every- thing it takes to provide thrills in an athletic contest, this depart- ment will cast its vote for hockey every time. Don't get us wrong, our favorite' sport is baseball. But we'll take the Lice sport for universal appeal and (although, doubtless, mayr will) we don't see how anyone can disagree. A girl we know used to sit home Saturdays during the football sea- son because she thought the Maize and Blue gridiron forces (whom we all considered so fine) put on an extremely dull exhibition. "The only sport I like is baseball," she told us. We saw her the other day and she had altered her opinion slight- ly. During the holidays, she had seen a hockey game. "it's wonder- ful," she enthused, "I'll never miss the chance to see another game." And this is no isolated case. How often have you heard someone who has .just seen his first baseball or football or basketball game give out with something to the effect that he couldn't see what all the excite- ment was about. This almost never happens in the caseof hockey. In innumerable cases,' puck fans are made during the course of a single game. So it is fitting, we think, that hoc- key has risen from the obscure sport it was 30q years ago to a position as one of the thr e biggest profes- sional sports in America. Of course, the people up in Cana- da didn't take any such length of, time to realize what a great game it was, both to watch and to play. ,They were contesting for the Stan- ley Cup," emblematic of world hoc- key supremacy long before the United States knew what the game was all about. HOCKEY. hs had its great mo- ments, too, just as any other sport. There was the time, back in 1904 we think (we're a little hazy on the exact year) when the boys who .dug for the precious yellow metal up around Dawson City, Alas- ka, threw a team together and chal- lenged the famous Ottawa Silver Seven to a match for the'Stanley Cup. The Ottawa club obliged and, although the visting Nuggets (for so the Miners called themselves) didn't win, they were treated to some of the best hockey they had ever seen. The Silver Seven won in two straight games, taking the clincher by a score of 23-2 and a guy named Frank McGee (whom, we understand, they still talk about up north of the border) tallied exactly 14 goals. That game would have been a great one for some' of the people to see who complain about the lack of scoring in hockey today. Then, there is the famous story of little Georges Vezina, generally considered to be the greatest goalie, who ever donned the pads. He contracted tuberculosis at the height of his career and was advised by doctors to quit the game im- mediately if he expected to live. Georges pointed out the fallacy" of this reasoning. "Playing hockey may kill me," he said simply, "but quitting the game would bring the end a good deal quicker." So Georges played . . . and died. His death came in mid-season and those who were there say that the last game he worked was as master- ful as any he ever turned in. There are a hundred other color- ful tales of the game but space will not permit of a recounting here. Suf- fice to say that from the fabulous Silver Seven and Frank McGee down to the Boston Bruins of today with their great Sauerkraut Line, hockey has provided more than its share of pulse-tingling excitement to the sporting world. This week, the people of the little old German village of Ann Arbor will be afforded an opportunity to see collegiate hockey at its abso- lute best. Eddie Lowrey's Wolver- ine sextet is scheduled to take on the great Illinois aggregation which is (with the possible exception of Dartmouth) the best college club in the land. Michigan fans wince when they think of what the Illini did to the Maize and Blue puckmen last sea- son. Just for the record, the two teams met four times and Illinois won all four contests, 7-1, 8-2, 4-2, 4-1. Sad to say, the results will probably be little petter for local fans this year. Illihois is just as good if not better this season. So a capacity crowd would be in order. Such play- ers as the colorful Amo Bessone, George Balestri, Aldo Palazzari, Russ Priestley and all the rest are sure to put on a real show. And don't for- get the possibility of an upset win for Michigan. In hockey, any team that battles all the wa'y has a chance. Morrie Bikoff,'flashy little soph- omore basketball player, may be forced to remain on the sidelines Saturday when the Wolverine cagers tackle Minnesota. Morrie was injured by a foul during the surprise Michigan victory over Northwestern Monday. Wrestlers Help Keen To New Breath-Holding Championship By' IOE SELTZER One thing stands out most clearly as a result of the first two wrestling meets this season: Coach Cliff Keen can hold his breath longer than the champion pearl diver of Aloha Island off New Zealand. Saturday night he set what was be- lieved to be a nev world's record when he ceased breathing for 30 straight minutes, waiting for Ray Deane to bring home the first Wol- verine victory in the third match against Penn State. But last night he showed that this was a mere warm-up as five long matches had to come and go, 55 minutes in toto, before Mary Becker flopped his foe's shoulders down and dried the cold sweat on Cliff's fore- head with the five-point start of Michigan's second-half scoring spree. Weak In Light Weights The gist of the matter is that if you split the Michigan mat squad into the four lower weight classes and the four upper ones, you have what is known as two horses of decidedly different colors. Because the 121- and 128-pound weight classes have to date shown themselves to be woe- fully undermanned, while the 136- and 145-ers may be termed highly uncertain, which is to say erratic. Ah, but from 155 pounds on up. A distinct pleasure for the coach. Last year Mary Becker was a definite nonentity, and now within three days he trots out on the mat of battle and scores two sensational victories, one on a fall and one on a near-fall. Bill Courtright has to date handled his men with consummate ease, and later in the season, when he gets some pin, holds down cold, he'll be trading in those three-point decision victories for five-pointers. Galles Still Stars When Jim Galles was a sophomoreI he was already a shining light on a squad which sported no small num- ber of those personalities. As a jun- ior last year Jim copped the Confer-1 ence light-heavyweight title. And this year . . . Well, friends, Jim ain't get- ting any worse as the years roll by. And now, comes Johnny Greene.I Man, last night was a riot. John stalks out, picks his man up and whango! State's nose is scraping the mat, Greene astride his back, all in the matter of one minute or less. So far John has done right fine, he has followed offensive wrestling tech- nique to the letter. Now all he has to do is pin him, Which he sets out to do. But suddenly John stops his ex- ertions and looks mutely, patheti- cally toward the bench. He doesn't say it but you can read it. "Great guns, Cliff!" his eyes cry out, "You forgot to show me a pin hold." Saturday night the Varsity meets Michigan State in the Field House. And by that time Cliff will have taught Johnny a pin hold. He also hopes he will have taught some of his lighter weight men how to bring home the bacon in the way of points gained. Because Cliff sincerely hopes he is never called upon to set any new breath-holding record. He insists he is the nervous type and that his doctor has repeatedly warned him to watch the old blood pressure now that he is at an advanced age. Track Season Starts Feb. 14 Cindermen Hard At Work For Triangular Meet With its first meet exactly one month from today, the Wolverine varsity, track squad has been hard at work since Christmas vacation rounding intd shape and the Field House cinder track is reverberating to faster and faster footfalls as the thinclads speed up their times for their respective events. The month of February will see the track squad swinging into the thick of its winter schedule. Coach Doherty will take his charges to East Lansing Feb. 14 for a triangular meet with Michigan State and Michigan Nor- mal, then on Feb. 27, the Wolverines will play host to the Pitt Panthers, who have long been a power in east- ern track circles; and Feb. 20 Yost Field House will be the scene of ac- tion for a dual meet with the very strong Notre Dame aggregation. Fans are already looking forward to these three meets to afford them some kind of an indication of how the Wolverines will fare in the indoor Conference meet, scheduled for March 6 and 7 at Chicago. BIG TEN CAGE STANDINGS W L Pct Pts OP Illinois ...... 3 0 1.000 157 129 N'thwestern ..3 1 .750 200 162 Minnesota ...3 1 .750 198 173 Purdue ......3 1 .750 184 109 Iowa ........3 1 .750 181 159 Indiana ......2 2 .500 161 186 Wisconsin . . .1 3 .250 175 166 Michigan . .. .1 3 .250 126 152 Ohio State .. .0 3 .000 123 159 Chicago......0 4 .000 132 242 U ALLEYS The UNION i WALKeOVER BROGUES __ is geed no breaking ini Mellow Scotch grain ... stout flexible soles ... comfort from the first step. And inside: Walk-Over "Silver Linings"* stay smooth mile after mile. BROADMOOR. :i i 2. MAY WE SHOW YOU SOME EXCEPTIONAL VALUES IN RINGS, BRACELETS, OR PENDANTS IN I I uw AN&U _I