THE MICHIGAN DAILY _ _ Cinder Squad To Face Irish PowerFriday Notre Dame Has Strength In Hurdles, High Jump, Shot Put And Distances By BOB STAHL Disregarding the usual procedure of scheduling a "breather" for the second meet of the season, the Wol- verine track team will encounter a veritable powerhouse from Notre Dame in Yost Field House Friday night and, from present indications, the capacity crowd expected for the event Will see the most hotly-con- tested fracas ever staged on the local cinder track. According to reports emanating from the Irish camp, the Notre Dame roster includes a list of potential record-breaking stars who have deemed it their main duty in life to break the long-standing suprem- acy which the Wolverines hold over them. In all the history of dual meet competition between the two schools, the Irish have emerged vic- torious but once in 13 meets. All-Around Irish Power Notre Dame's strongest entrants appear to be Ole Hunter, Frank Conforti and Tony Maloney in the distance events; Keith O'Rourke in the high jump; Jim Delaney in the shot put; Dick Tupta in the half- mile; Bill Dillon in the hurdles and Capt. Ray Roy in the 440. With Hunter, Conforti and Maloney having all run 4:20 in the mile race in earlier meets this year as com- pared to Michigan's best previous time of 4:25, turned in by John In- gersoll and Will Ackerman, it would appear that the Irish have a virtual monopoly on points in this event, as well as in the two-mile. For the longer distance, Hunter set a new dual meet record against the Illini last Saturday of 9:33, which is almost 16 seconds better than Ernie Leon- ardi, Michigan's best two-miler, has done this year. O'Rourke In High Jump The Irish possess one of the best high-jumpers in their history this year in Keith O'Rourke, who has cracked the very high altitude mark at 6 feet 8 inches in pre-season jumping. This is another certain first place for Notre Dame as Frank McCarthy, top high-jumper on the Wolverine squad, has failed to clear the bar over 6 feet 1 inch this year. Another almost certain first place appears to be waiting for the Irish to pick up in the shot put. Notre Dame's big Jim Delaney has tossed the big iron ball over 50 feet, four feet better than the best try of Wol- verine George Ostroot this year. Michigan has its share of stars, too, though. Bob Ufer, the best quarter-miler in Wolverine Varsity competition, is an almost certain win- ner in the open 440 race and will also probably run the anchor leg on the mile relay. team. Capt. Al Piel and Al Thomas, speed stars of the Michi-. gan team, will be out to take the 60 yard dash away from Notre Dame's Jay Gibson. Michigan Strength in 880 The Wolverines, with Dave Mat- thews, Johnny Kautz, Will Acker- man and John Roxboroug to carry their colors, should pick 'up several points in the 880, and Al Thomas and Chuck Pinney might conceiv- ably take the top two positions in the low hurdles. Another first place should be Michigan's with Frank McCarthy competing in the broad jump. From the balance of power dis- played by both teams this year, then, the outcome of the meet might pos- sibly depend on the outcome of the final event of the evening, the mile relay. Whatever happens, though, it is a certainty that the fans on hand Friday night will see plenty of fur fly before the evening's activities are at an end. Don Holman's Diligent Work Finally Wains Nerve Tonics? -Coach Mann Isn't In The Market For 'Em By DICK SIMON This is a story of a little guy with a heart as big as the sunrise. It is the story of senior Don Hol- man, diminutive guard on Bennie Oosterbaan's basketball squad, whose diligent work has finally made him a cage star. After two and a half years of sit- ting on the bench and not once play- ing in a Michigan game and after working tirelessly day in and day out, the tow-headed cager entered the Michigan State contest last Wednes- day night when Leo Doyle was in- jured and proceeded to make himself a fixture in the Wolverine lineup. That night he scored seven points in the short time he played and served notice that the old adage- "Practice Makes Perfect"-still holds., Proved It Then That one game was all "Whitey" needed to prove to Coach Oosterbaan that he made no mistake by insert- ing the Detroit senior into the Mich- igan lineup. Diminutive Don started against Ill- inois last Saturday night and hit the hoop for 12 points to place second to Andy Phillip, Illini guard, for the evening's scoring honors. Once again Monday night it was Holman's aggressive play that spark- ed the Wolverines and kept them in the ball game until the last two min- utes. Even then, he never gave up trying and when he committed his fourth personal foul in an effort to get possession of the ball, and was ejected from the fray, the 4,000 fans finally acknowledged the fact that Don Holman had made his place on the Michigan cage team. Holman Never Gives Up Everybody on the squad, including Oosterbaan himself agrees that there is no harder worker than "Whitey." Oosterbaan remarked, "There is no one on the whole team who has given his all more than Don has since the season began, and when he's out there on the court he never gives up-no matter what the odds are." "Don's back court leadership was needed," went on the Wolverine cage mentor, "and when he went into the lineup, he proved his worth." Not only is Holman a good ball handler on the court, but he is also quite a baseball player, holding down the right field position on Ray Fish- er's Varsity nine. By BUD HENDEI1 Admiral Matt Mann is not wor- ried. And the Admiral doesn't like peo- ple saying that he is. The Admiral's swimming team, Michigan's Big Ten and National Collegiate champions, meet Yale's Eastern marvels here Saturday night and all the big papers are saying that the Wolverine mentor is using up many sleepless nights and dozens of nerve tonics trying to devise a way to beat the Bullodgs. But the Admiral says it ain't so. "Worried?" chuckled Matt, "Why should I be worried? Sure, they're plenty good. But so are my boys." "Look at 'em," said Mann, pointing to a poolful of paddling mermen, "They're not national champs be- cause they can't swim. And they'll give all they've got against Yale, which is all that I can ask. So why should I be worried?" Yale Must Duplicate Times When reminded of the sensational times turned in by the Eli crew, the Admiral had this to say. "On the basis of those things, Yale should be favored. They deserve to be favored. But they'll have to swim those times in this pool before they can convince me that they're bet- ter than my boys. This gang of mine will do their best, and if that isn't good enough, then we'll take our lick- ing." And with that, the Michigan coach put the stopwatch on John Share- met as the husky breaststroker breezed through a time trial. If the Wolverines do get beat this Saturday night, it will bring an end to the most spectacular record ever compiled by a collegiate tank aggre- gation. For when they hit the water against the New Haven natators, they will hit it with an undefeated streak of 35 consecutive dual meets hanging from their belts.' Wolverines Hitting Peak Form But the Maize and Blue mermen, from Capt. Dobby Burton on down, don't intend to have that record broken. Rapidly rounding into top shape, the Wolverines look more pow- erful now than they have at any ocher time this year. An they'll have to be at their peak to keep their streak intact against the Yale threat. The Bulldogs have swept past everything in their path, and are heading towards Ann Arbor with a record-breaking performance chart and a fervent desire to wipe out past defeats suffered at the hands of Michigan. In their last time out against a BIG TEN CAGE STANDINGS W L Pct Pts OP Illinois ........9 1 .900 472 366 Indiana .......8 3 .727 509 439 Minnesota . .. .8 4 .667 542 456 Iowa ..........6 4 .600 474 428 Wisconsin .....6 4 .600 461 425 Purdue ........6 4 .600 425 354 Northwestern ..4 6 .400 452 445 Ohio State . . . .4 8 .333 535 590 Michigan......3 8 .273 388 488 Chicago......0 12 .000 381 690 weak Brown University team, the Eli's lightning quartet of Capt. Howie Johnson, Frank Lilley, Dick Kelly, and Ed Pope smashed the world's record for the 400 yard freestyle relay by 1.1 seconds, setting the waters ablaze in the torrid time of 3:26.6. Johnson, leading off for the Bulldogs, tied Johnny Weissmuller's 15 year old record of 51 seconds flat for the 100 yard freestyle. Saturday night's clash will mark the sixth battle atop the waters be- tween the two schools. The official books show that Yale has won two, while the Wolverines have taken the other three previous encoiriters, the last time being in 1940. The Bulldogs are coming to town determined to even the score. The Wolverines are just as determined to halt the Yale advance. Anyway you look at it, it's the "dream" meet of the year with the two strongest collegiate teams in the country making it unsafe for any world's record that may cross their paths. Cagyers Given A Day Of Rest Jim Mandler Leads Team In Conference Scoring BUCKET POP - SHOTS: Coach Bennie Oosterbaan gave his basket- ball charges a -day of rest yesterday afternoon . . . and then found out that they took a light workout any- how . . . today, however, the Wolver- ines will go through a good stiff practice session in preparation for Saturday's game with Iowa at Iowa 'City. Big Jim Mandler continues to lead the Michigan team in scoring in Con- ference games . . . in the 11 games to date he's scored 40 field goals and 23 free throws for a total of 103 points . . . his closest rival is Capt. Bill Cartmill with 62 points. ' John Logan, sharp-shooting Indi- ana forward, did not play against the Wolverines Monday night .. upon his arrival in Ann Arbor, he was rushed to the Health Service where he is still confined with a heavy cold . . . Leo Doyle, Maize and Blue guard, watched the game from the bench.. . he's still wearing a patch over the eye which he injured in the Michigan State game a week ago. . . but the scrapping junior will probably be ready for action by Saturday. Cartmill is one of the cleanest players that Michigan has had in many a year . . . in 10 Big Ten tilts the Wolverine captain had commit- ted only three personal fouls . . against Indiana, however, the "Wheel" had three called on him be- fore the game was 12 minutes old. Monday night's tilt was one of the roughest to be played on the local court in several years . . . 33 fouls were called during the game. SPOUlTF LIO M Notes From A Notebook 0_C nwritten Columns By HAL WILSON Daily Sports Editor * '4 * HERE'S A COLUMN that will con- sist of a great many unwritten columns. We have a small memo book in which are jotted at infre- quent intervals unclassified ideas for possible future reference. Now comes the last page of the notebook and all that remains are a few key words or phrases, some of which have long since ceased to hold any significance. For instance: SCOUTING REPORTS: That was going to be a little essay on the merits of Michigan's fine football scouting staff, Bennie Oosterbaan, Ernie McCoy, Cliff Keen, Wallie" Weber, Archie Kodros, and the rest ... the superb scouting jobs turned in by Oostie on Northwestern, by Cliff on Columbia, by Ernie on Minnesota, by Wallie on Illinois, etc... much of the credit for Mich- igan's fine grid campaign should go to them. PRESS BOX: This must have been the note of praise for Fred De- Lano and the fine manner in which he supervised Michigan's top-notch perch for the nation's scribes. CHICAGO - ILLINOIS TIEUP: Here was a neat little package of speculation on the opposite views of these two great Midwestern insti- tutions . . . the angle was their radi- cal divergence on the question of how much emphasis was to be given to intercollegiate athletics . . . Chicago, of course, abandoned big-time foot- ball . . . Illinois, on the other hand elevated Ray Eliot, and now watch the upsurge in Illini grid fortunes within two years. COMMERCIALIZATION OF BIG- TIME TRACK CARNIVALS: This one's still good. Watch for it in the future. HUSING, WHITE, NELKER, WELKER?: Never could trace this phrasesdown to fact . . . it hap- pened the day before the Ohio State football game . . Ted Hus- ing, CBS ace, was carrying on a one-man conversation concerning everything that popped into his mind.. . suddenly he asked about Wolverine wingback Paul White, commented that he had seen the Whizzer's brilliant broken field run in motion pictures of the Columbia game, and added that White re- minded him of Nelker or Snelker or some such name as that .. . it never registered. GIRL SKATER: No idea now what thought called for this cryptic mes- sage. JEL COMIN, MANDLER: Here's an easy one-but not tremen- dously significant . . . Comin and Mandler opposed each. other on the hardwoods in high school, of course . Mel received his cage training at John Marshall in Chicago, while" big Jim starred at Kelvyn Park . . . a third cager who played with Comin at Marshall, Jim Lauchiskaus, came to Michigan and was the most bril- liant prospect on that same 1940 freshman team . . . but he drowned in the scholastic sea, and now is star- ring in a small Midwestern college. UFER-FRANKS: This one con- cerns the time trackman Bob Ufer called up football guard Julie Franks one night when he was studying for finals ... Bob said he was Harvey Patton of the Detroit News (who, incidentally, is serving in the Army) and that he wanted an interview . . .declared he de- sired to know just what Julie's chances of beating Bob Kolesar out of his guard berth were ... where- upon Julie bent over backwards with modesty, doubling Ufer up with laughter. DEMPSEY, PERFUMED TELE- GRAM: Just a short note, this one concerns a report by one of the staff members to the effect that Frank Dempsey, Ohio State diver, re- ceived a scented telegram just before the Buckeye-Wolverine swim meet .. take it for what it's worth . . if you take this literally, we'll have to pay you. THOMAS-COURTRIGHT: An oc- currence of just a couple days ago . . . down at Varsity basketball prac- tice, Oosterbaan drafted Eddie Thomas, former ace Wolverine guard, to serve as temporary whistle-blower . .. a little later Ray Courtright, golf coach who aids Ray Fisher in coach- ing the frosh cagers, took the hard- woods and played a while to fill in on one of the undermanned yearling quintets. WEBER, MUNN, McCOY, OOS- TERBAAN, BLOOD: This one is just as recent as it is obvious ... the four gentlemen stepped up yes- terday and donated blood for their country. Varsity Sextet, Colorado Meet ThisWeekend Formidable Tiger Squad stages Comeback Spurt Against Powerful Foes By STAN CLAMAGE Should the roaring Tigers from Colorado College continue to main- tain their present geared-up pace, Michigan's hockey team is going to have plenty to handle when the two sextets tangle with eacn other on Friday and Saturday at the Broad- moor Ice Palace in Colorado Springs. The Tigers got off to a very lethar- gic start when the current season got under way. Winning only two of its first nine contests--one each against the University of California and the highly-touted Dartmouth six-Colorado hadn't been the feared squad of a year ago. That was three weeks ago. Finally, as did the Russians before Moscow, the Tigers completely re- versed the tables when they came to grips with the mighty University of Southern California squad. In their two-game series on Feb. 6 and 7. Colorado held the power-packed Tro- jan sextet to a couple of ties, 6-6 and 2-2. To give a sample of what the Tigers are capable of, here is a recounting of the two ties: The first game, billed as a battle of .goalies,. turned out to be af fight between two brilliant offenses, with Bon Scarlett, Colorado's great net tender, and stocky Clem Harnedy, the Trojan's all-American goalie, definitely taking back seats. Probably no game in Colorado College history has had two such hectic climaxes as did the opener with the Trojans. The lead changed hands throughout the game, and with three seconds left of the regu- lar playing time, the Tigers were out in front, 5-4. However, taking a fine pass from right wing Dick Tougag, Capt. John Richardson slammed the puck into the Colo- rado nets, to knot the count as the final whistle blew. In the overtime, Richardson again scored for U.S.C. after three minutes of play. But it remained for Spike Wilson, the greatest puckman in Colorado College his- tory, to duplicate the performance of the Trojan captain. Again with three seconds to play, Wilson took a pass from little Clean Roy, and the game was tied. Wilson picked the only blind spot which Harnedy possesses, the left should- er, and the whistle blew before an- other face-off could be held. Once more in the second game, Colorado led with less than four minutes remaining. But Richard- son tied the score, which ended at 2-2. MWR --- - - Good Food at -G....{s - pThriofty Prices WEDNESDAY'S SPECIALS NOON olll r: Wistert's Mat Debut Highlights Grapplers' Final Home Match '" -4.----- By HOE SELTZER If the final home appearance of the Varsity matmen Monday night didn't quite come under the head of a nip and tuck affair, (28-6, Michigan, by the way), it did in any event provide some very colorful episodes. The most memorable was by far Al Wistert's wrestling debut against the very merry but murderous mam- moth of the mats, Herb Jackman of Nebraska. Now it was a funny thing about Al. He would allow no advance ballyhoo on his bolt-from-the-blue selection as Cliff Keen's new heavyweight protege. Al was sore afraid of being a flop and preferred to accept a relatively unobtrusive defeat rather than risk the resounding crash stirred up by those who topple from publicity-built heights. Wistert Anything But A Flop But Whitey need have had no fear. He was anything but a flop. He ab- sorbed terrific punishment after tir- ing in the last two periods and twice was so close to being pinned by an Atlas, who strangely enough knew no little' about wrestling technique, that no one would have demurred had lacked, something about starring in defeat. In the case of Al Wistert's performance Monday night it is no cliche. It's the strict truth. This Jackman joker that Al wrest- led was quite a character in his own right. Herb's general contours fea- tured an expansive front porch and a sway back which gave him an ap- pearance aptly described as ludi- crous. Added to this was an Oliver Hardyish manner of lightfooting it about the mat which made for much good humor among the fans. But When He Wrestled .. . And Herb remained thus ludicrous and humorous until the moment he first got his hooks on the mighty Wistert and started throwing him around like a kitten. The man had a" veritable Herculean strength be- neath those deceptive layers of lard. And besides his superior strength Mr. Jackman frequently employed a novel hold which was oddly enough no hold at all.i Al's main offensive tactic was a leg tackle. Jackman's counter was to re- treat a step, forcing Wistert to miss FRIED EGG SANDWICH Soup Salad or Dessert Beverage FRIED FILLET OF COD Bread or Rolls Potato or a Vegetable Salad or Dessert. Beverage N IG HT CHOP SUEY with Rice Bread or Rolls Potato or a Vegetable Salad or Dessert Beverage ROAST VEAL and Dressing Bread or Rolls Potato and a Vegetable Salad or Dessert Beverage 26c 44 44 and another thing - The Michigan Daily Business Staff offers the opportunity to combine the enjoyment of an extra-curricular activity with obtaining valuable business experience. We invite all eligible freshmen and sophomores who are interested to attend the meeting at 3 o'clock today at the Student Publications Building. The Michigan Daily 49c All Prices Subject to 3% Michigan State Sales Tax II