PAGE SIX T H E MICHIGAN DAILY S State Defeats Matmen, 17-13; Sextet Beaten By Illino UNDAY, JANUARY 19, 194 's, 6-2 e*) Kopel Upsets National Champ; Becker Twins Great lii Defeat (Continued from Page 1) pinned-yes, I said pinned-the Spartans' National Junior 121 pound cham- pion, Herb Thompson. After more than a period of a savage see-saw battle for each single point the Michigan sophomore suddenly brought the fans screaming to their feet with a quick reversal that culminated with his cementing Thompson's shoulders to the iat with a double arm tie-up over the head. The time was 5:53. It is with a head bowed low in deepest humility that the writer recants his words of yestermorn apropos of Dick Kopel. There were two other victories on falls. In the 128 pound struggle State's National Collegiate titleholder, Cut Jennings, had just too much onI the ball and overcame the magnifi-5 cent challenge thrown at him by Varsity's Mauritz (Bunny) Ander- son in his collegiate wrestling debut. Bunny fought the battle through to the last second with an unconquer- able spirit, but was finally downed in 7:37 by a bar arm and half Nel- son. S POUTFOLIO0 " Chicago's Athletic Plan SPurdue's Curriculum By HAL WILSON _DailySports ditor * * * * Captain Jim Galles submerged him- self one weight division to 155 pounds and pinned a game, but outweighed and completely outclassed Johnny Marrs of State in 4:20. Both of Michigan's Becker boys, Mel and Mary, were bested last night, but each can hold his head high even in defeat. Mel was tossed into the arena against the Spartan's regular 145-pounder, Bill Maxwell, but re- cently recovered from a shoulder in- jury. It was a battle of titanic fury all the way, Mel's first in varsity com- petition, and the final score of 11-5 in State's favor can give no idea of the Wolverine's heroic performance against a national champion. Mary Becker regularly wrestles at 145 pounds. Last night he faced off against John Spalink in the 175 pound contest. Going into the fray spot- ting a more experienced foe from 10 to 15 pounds, only -his indomitable will to win staved off a first-period fall, and enabled Mary to fight on even terms a physically and techni- cally superior opponent to whom he finally bowed by -a point score of 12-8. Ray Deane had Bo Jennings of Bast Lansing on the run throughout the entire final three minutes of their 136 pound scrap. But Bo's clever de- fensive work enabled him to maintain his slim 3-2 lead and thus cop the decision. Something's the matter with Bill Courtright. Last night he*was shift- ed to the 155 pound match, where it wat well believed he could success- FELLOW named T. Nelson Metcalfe holds the position of Athletic Director at the University of Chicago. This title plus a five- cent piece will buy a package of gum almost anywhere in the United States. Mr. Metcalfe, it seems, holds a minimum of authority in his posi- tion under the present setup at the Midway institution. Often shoved into the embarrassingly - brilliant Oublic spotlight because of the foibles of Chicago's athletic program, Met- calfe now is currently on the pan for the Maroons' new system of phys- ical education. r1 Maroon authorities, nettled in- to action by numerous pointed comments, have adopted a pro- gram for physical preparedness of male students at Chicago. This new plan, it was announced, was arranged upon request from the Army and Navy to broaden and step up athletic programs in order that time may be saved in military training. "UT into this plan, the academic- minded University of Chicago of- ficials injected a half-way measure to end all half-way measures. Despite heated objections of the stu- dent newspaper and Chicago metro- politan ,apers, Maroon authorities have stubbornly decided to back up their physical preparedness scheme by "social pressure" rather than by compulsory training periods. According to Metcalfe: "It will be up to the athletes to exercise social pressure on their fellow students in the dormitories, fraternity houses, and classes." The sports editor of the Daily Maroon, Werner Baum, charac- terized the idea of "social pres- sure" as "silly, senseless, wrong in principle and inefficient." Then he went on to say: "Un- doubtedly the fault is not Mr. Met- calfe's. For years , it has been JOHN GREENE fully turn back State Captain Tuffy Merrill's bid for victory. But Corky was entirely too lethargic out there on the mats, and when pitted against one of the visitor's National Junior champions that you can't be and get away with it. Bill lost, 8-4. In the evening's closing attraction Johnny Greene turned time back two months and worked the old football tackle to such fine advantage on Spartan Mike Dendrinos that he kept the latter liberally spread all over the mat for nine minutes and there- fore was awarded a walkaway 7-1 decision. common knowledge that the ath- letic department here is a pawn of the administration to a degree unequalled at any other Western Conference institution. I know as a fact that a compulsory setup was proposed but that it was turned down by elemets in the adminis- tration." EVIDENTLY the idea behind the "social pressure" scheme is that any system of compulsory physical education would be out of step with the entire Chicago plan which is based upon individual initiative. Commenting on this, Baum de- clares: "The plan for conditioning is absolutely sound and is excellently designed for its purpose. But it must be made compulsory or it will not be efficient. If the administration feels that social pressure is more within the spirit of the Chicago plan at a time like this than, is compulsory athletics, I can only feel sorry for their blind, stubborn outlook." It's difficult to see how any plan depending solely on the loose term "social pressure" for enforcement can succeed. Athletic Director Metcalfe himself, according to the Daily Maroon, was in favor of com- pulsory training until he bucked the admiiistration. THOSE who need the physical training most, those who lack the physical equipment requisite for the welfare of our nation most will likely be least affected by any such course of action as that adopted by the University of Chicago. Students such as those who devote the great- est part of their waking hours bur- ied in a book, who rarely take time out even for a movie, who have, through many years of physical in- activity, acquired a dread of exer- cise-and there are more of these, perhaps, than you may realize-will be ipoved but slightly by "social pressure." An example of a much more in- telligent approach to the problem at hand-whipping the greatest number of people into fit physical condition as quickly as possible- can be found down at Purdue Uni- versity. Last spring the school adopted an eight-week selective course in physical training for which 223 students registered. Based upon several measurable events, these men averaged an im- provement of 16.9 percent.r LAST FALL Purdue added a re- quired course to its curriculum. Students affected by the new ruling -approximately 1,000 men-received one hour academic credit for two hours of supervised activity each. week plus one hour of vigorous op- tional outside physical activity. Com parative tests on measurable events showed an improvement of 25 per- cent. Contrast the figures. The com- pulsory training plan covered 1,000 students, the voluntary less than one-fourth. The former program gave an average improvement in physical skills of 25 percent, the voluntary less than 17. PURDUE UNIVERSITY officials - have adopted the compulsory physical education training plan. They have decided not to tolerate half-way measures. Collins, Hillman Score Michigan Goals; Penalties Feature Contest (Continued from Page 1) and scored one minute later (11:20). The marker was turned in by Bob than half of the first 20-minutes was Miller, with Clint McCune getting an played inside the Illinois blue line. assist. A little more than eight min- At 6:20, however, Louis Ferranti utes later Miller got his second goal brake loose and after a good pass Sof the night to give the visitors a 4-1 edge. from Clint McCune, the big defense- Action continued to gain momen- man blasted the first score into the tum at the start of the third period. Michigan nets. This marker gave the Finally, at 3:06, Doug Hillman scored Illini a 1-0 lead at the end of the on a fine pass by the ever-battling first period. During the period Hank Collins from behind the Illini nets, Loud, Michigan's goalie, was farted and the Wolverines drew closer with Loud, Michign gale, was fioed the score now standing at 4-2. to make but one save. The Illinois Illinois then started to really turn on the pressure, and within the next two minutes they countered two more goals, the first by Aldo Palazzari (4:07), and the second following close behind with brother Mario taking a double pass from Aldo and DePaul ang scoring (5:05). The remaining 15 minutes were the wildest of the battle. Johnny Braidford and Ed Reichert were sent crashing into the boards by hard body-checks. Both had their wind knocked out, but recovered and were able to continue. With but 0:48 see- onds to play, Paul Goldsmith was victim of the hardest check made all night by tough Amo Bessone. BOB COILINS net-minder, Ray Killen, turned back only seven Wolverine tries. Illinois began turningonthe heat in the second period, and the gener- al all-around play of both squads started to roughen up a bit: At 4:08, Roland DePaul took a double-pass from the Palazzari brothers and countered, giving the Illini a two- goal margin with which to work. Six minutes later (10:29) Bob Collins, who turned in his best game of the season, set the 650 fans into an up- roar when he cracked a hard shot into the Illinois nets from 20 feet out. The excitement of the fans began to grow with every second, and the pitch was kept up by the hard-check- ing of both teams. With their lead reduced, the Indians went to work are used and endorsed by ANNES SCHNEIDE WORLD'S No. I SKIER Ohio State, Michigan Are Pre-Season Favorites To Take Indoor Track Title By BOB STAHL It is with great anticipation that the Wolverine cindermen are looking forward to the Big Ten indoor meet, scheduled for March 6 and 7 in Chi- cago, for this year the members of the track squad will not be out to retain the title which they held for so long-this year, the Wolverines will be out to regain the title which was taken away from them by a bunch of fast-stepping Hoosiers from Indiana last spring. The race for the Western Confer- ence indoor title might turn into a free-for-all this year with Michigan, Indiana, Ohio State, Illinois, and Wisconsin all possessing plenty of power. It is more probable however, that the all-important week-end in March will see the Wolverines and the Buckeyes battling it out for first place with Indiana, Illinois, and Wis- consin placing next in that order. Graduation Hits Hoosiers .The way the drug-store track ex- perts down at the Field House have it figured out, both Michigan and Ohio State should be capable of scor- ing, somewhere around 45 points, which is usually plenty to take the title home to roost. Indiana, in spite. of the excellent showing made last year, when the Hoosiers took both the indoor and outdoor crowns away from the Wolverines, has suffered heavily from graduation this year and, at the most, is not expected to amass more than 30 points. It is the Buckeye; who are expected to be the class of the Conference this year. With such established stars as the sensational Bob Wright in the high and low hurdles, Leroy Collins in the 440, Ed Porter in the half, and Gene Kiracofe in the two-mile event, Buckeye coach Larry Snyder has turned up with an impressive crop of sophomores this year who are determined to take the Big Ten crown back to Columbus, Wolverines Strong In Sprints The Michigan team, which is ex- traordinarily strong in the sprints this year, should outpoint the Buck- eyes in the 60 yard dash. Capt. Al Piel and sophomore Lenny Alkon have both sprinted the distance in 6.4 seconds this season, a plenty fast time in any conference, but they will receive plenty of opposition from Ohio State's Capt. Ralph Hamnond, second place winner in the outdoor meet last spring. The hurdle events will probably be all Ohio Mate, with the long-striding Wright, who mopped up in most of his races last year, completely re- covered from all the minor injuries which have dogged his footsteps in the past. Frank McCarthy, Wolverine timber-topper is an almost certain second-place winner in the highs, however, while Al Thomas, dark horse of the hurdlers this year, and sophomore Chuck Pinney will give Michigan strength in the lows. Field Events Even The Buckeyes and Wolverines are just about evenly matched in the field events, with Ohio State pre- dominating in the high jump but Michigan holding most of the bright- er prospects in the shot put. The outcome of the meet might conceiv- ably depend on the outcome of the mile relay then, but this does not offer much of a clue. Both teams have an abundance of quarter-milers who are capable of running a very good mile relay, so that this event too will probably be a tooth-and-nail battle down to the finish tape. r 1 .~ SLei4 SlP~ We are Proud to Announce the of ANN ARBOR'S NEWEST AND FINEST RESTAURAN P"REKETE-S SUGAR "BOWL TUESDFY, JRNUf RY 20 it i, withIi just--i6ile pride that we offer you foods that. ae u sur passed for line quality and fre'_siness. Our reputation is our most valuable business asset, and we safeguard it by giving you only the best of everything - at prices that are very moderate. Once again the popular SUGAR BOWL is open to the public - featuring it's delicious 'food and drinks, amid the beauty and luxury of it's new and outstanding decorations, truly Ann Arbor's finest restaurant. 6 RABIDEAU HARRIS CLOTHES are 100% in accord with the Government of this, our UNITED STATES and are co-operating in this tremendous undertaking, for all out prosecution of the war to its ultimate victory. 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