ESDYFB ~5 14 ~THE TMCfliGvAN DAIlLY VP. T 7TL Indiana Forfeits Three Matches Pitt Next Foe As Matmen Score 25_13 WinI On Dual Card , By HOE SELTZER This isn't exactly what might be called spot news, but here comes the belated cover on the Wolverine-Indi- ana grapple grudge last Saturday night at Bloomington. Strange things went on in Hoos- ierland that evening, the most bizarre of which was Michigan's being hand- ed 15 points of its 25-13 win on a sil- ver platter even before the meet had started. This is not to be construed as a gesture of Southern Indiana hos- pitality. It was due to defaults which BULLETIN CLEVELAND, Feb. 24. -(IP)- Rapid Robert Pastor turned slug- ger tonight and after exploding the myth of Lem Franklin's famed fistic dynamite, fought on to stop the Cleveland Negro in eight rounds before a yam-packed crowd in the local arena. Pastor weighed 181; Franklin 1971. coach Billy Thom was forced to make in the 136-, 165- and 175-pound matches because of the illness or in- Juries of his regular entrants in those divisions. Michigan's pair of legitimate falls were effected by 145-er Johnny Johnson and ten pounds heavier Marv Becker. Johnny is a mite unorthodox in his mat technique. He does not kitzel around too much with the standard arm holds and body attack in gen- eral. He believes that concentrating on a guy's head and belaboring it none too gently with a series of lock holds and wrenches soon induces a state of grogginess in the foe which makes him susceptible to being hori- zontaled dorsal side down. This novel system was highly effic- ient against Indiana's Fred Tone and at the end of 5:34 unorthodox and Johnny had prevailed with the Hoos- ier prone on the mat under a bar arm and a half-nelson. Mar Becker needs no headline when he wins. Even when he wins on a pin. Marv has been invincible this season when wrestling at his regular 155 pound weight. Therefore the only supplementary material A FEW SOU N D $N WAR TIME TRIPS1 which need be added is that he slap- ped a pretty good boy name of Nat Hill flatter than a flounder on the mat in 4:16. We lost some matches Saturday night too of course. In the 121 pound go Dick Kopel spent a fruitless and goat grabbing final two periods try- ing to catch up to Herb Farrell, who had a point advantage and was in- tent on keeping it. Herb was a very swift fellow and Dick did not catch up, therefore he lost, 3-2. Al Wistert smiles in abashed fash- ion when asked what happened Sat- urday night. It is reported that Al was going great guns against Hoosier Bob Patty and had piled up a 3-1 point advantage early in the first period, when suddenly he decided to perpetrate something very tricky. Al was in the midst of the ruse and do- ing right well when suddenly the 260 pound freight train that was Patty collapsed on his chest and irrevoc- ably pinned his surprised shoulders to the mat. Extremely embarrassing, the entire incident, says Al. Michigan Tank Crew Will Face Hawke yes Here By BUD HENDEL A battle-scarred Michigan swim- ming team went to work yesterday afternoon. With last Saturday's stunning de- feat at the hands of Yale's natatorial Goliath still rankling in every Wol- verine's mind, the Maize and Blue tankers tightened their belts another notch and made ready for the Iowa invasion this Friday night. Preparing For Collegiates But as they practiced for the com- ing meet 'with the Hawkeyes, their talk and their thoughts' drifted far away from the task at hand. Confi- dent of victory in their next three dual meets with Iowa, Michigan State and Minnesota, favored to re- peat as Big Ten champions in the approaching Western Conference, Meet, Coach Matt Mann's crew dwelled upon only one thing-the National Collegiates at Harvard on March 27 and 28 which will bring them once again face to face with their conquerors of last week. For Michigan, the defending title- holders, won't feel the pressure then as they did Saturday. No longer will they worry about what Yale can do. They found that out Saturday night, and from now on their every effort will be bent in the direction of beat- ing the mighty Eli aggregation. Feel They Can Do Better The Wolverines feel that they are a better team than the one which so ignominiously fell before the light- ning Bulldog power. They will read- ily admit that Yale deserved to win, but they won't admit that the Elis are as superior to Michigan as Satur- day's score, 59-16, would indicate. When the Collegiates roll around they intend to prove their point. Coach Mann is now dickering with Bob Kiphuth, mentor of the Yale mermen, for a four year contract with the Elis. As yet, his efforts have met with little success. Whether the Bulldog schedule is already full, or whether they don't want to risk their record against Michigan next year, when they won't be the great team they are now, is a matter of con- jecture. The Iowans are expected to provide the Wolverines with little trouble this Friday. Their main strength lies in the diving where Capt. Vic Vargon and Leo Biedrzychi carry the colors, and in the sprints where Don Wen- strom will challenge Michigan's Capt. Dobby Burton and Gus Sharemet. Lloyd Leads Qualifiers Lloyd House led Residence Hall track qualifiers in the half-mile re- lay last night, with the fast time of 1:37.9. The three other teams which will meet Lloyd in the final test dur- ing the Pittsburgh track meet on Fri- day, finished in the following order: Prescott, Tyler and Williams. For Thinelads Varsity Favored To Win After Superb Showing In Notre Dame Meet By BOB STAHL With a 58-46 victory over a stub born Notre Dame aggregation last Friday night to its credit, the Wol- verine thinclad crew prepares this week to face a mediocre band of Pitt Panthers in Yost Field House Fri- day in the final warm-up before, the, all-important Big Ten indoor meet scheduled for Chicago on March 6 and 7. Termed by Coach Ken Doherty "the finest team performance in Michigan track history," the cinder- men's victory over the Irish indicat- ed that the Michigan squad will en- counter little difficulty in subduing the Pitt runners, who have been de- cisively defeated in several previous contests this year. Ohio State hand- ed the Panthers a severe 76-28 lick- ing in a dual meet two weeks ago. From all indications, Pittsburgh's Harold Stickel and Bill Carter will be the men most likely to threaten Michigan's chances of making a clean sweep of the meet's events. Ac- claimed as two of the finest sprinters in the East, Carter and Stickel have both been clocked in 6.2 seconds for the 60 yard dash, which is two-tenths of a second better than the best time ever recorded by Michigan's sprint stars, Capt. Al Piel and Al Thomas. Stickel will also double in the low hurdles against Thomas in what might prove to be the closet race of the evening. The Pittsburgh speed- ster has run the 60 yard lows in seven seconds even, and Thomas, along with Michigan's sophomore timber- topper, Chuck Pinney, has run the 65 yard lows in 7.6 seconds this year. What differece the added five yards distance will make to Stickel is diffi- cult to predict. Outside of these two events, thej Maize and Blue trackmen have bet- tered the best that any Pitt man has done in every race and every field event except the pole vault. Bar- ring earthquake, fire, flood or any similar disaster, then, the only diffi- culty the Wolverines will encounter Friday night will be in setting new meet records. % PORTFOLIO Credit Given Where Due * Doherty Praises Team B y HAL WILSON Xk - Daily Sports Editor NO FINER COMMENTARY on last weekend's track triumph over Notre Dame's favored cinder powerhouse can be shoved into the public eye than that afforded by a reprint of Coach Ken Doherty's weekly bulletin board communique written solely for the benefit of his team: VARSITY TRACK DID YOU KNOW THAT- February 21. 1942 Your victory last night was perhaps the finest TEAM performance in Michigan track history. From the standpoint of men doing their best, it compares favorably with the 1935 Conference meet when a 3:20 mile relay team ran 3:15.2 for a new Conference record and the cham- pionship. Sixteen men turned in new personal competitive records: Mc- Carthy, Byerly, Lahey, Sears, Ingersoll, Glas, Leonardi, McKean, Mor- ley, Kautz, Ufer, Maclear, Lievense, Hirsch, Kennedy, Schmidt. That the best time John McKean has ever turned in for a one and half mile practice run was 7:11, and that he ran 7:13 last night while running the full two miles. That the coach is as proud of John Roxborough's effort as with that of anyone on the team. He was boxed throughout the entire last lap and attempted the only thing possible at the time-fight for the place he knew he deserved. Watch him run from now on . That George Petterson was pulled out of the letter winning relay team at the last minute and yet could still smile at the coach when he left the field house. -KEN DOHERTY rTHIS, REMEMBER, was not written for public consumption. It was not slanted with the idea of impressing any body of readers. It represents only a coach's sincere message to his trackmen--and it took more than a couple minutes of profound thought before Ken would okay its presence here. Which leads directly back to last Friday night, and the joyous locker room scene in the Wolverine quarters. Frank McCarthy, Bob Ufer, Al Thomas and the rest of the crowd-pleasers trouped in for their showers. They received general congratulatory shouts and comments-and they deserved them, for they turned in magnificent performances against the Irish. But the guy serving as the magnet for the bulk of the locker room acclaim that night was a 130-pound senior, whose name-was stuck un- obtrusively among the rest of the summaries merely as third in the two-mile run: McKean. He was the athletes' athlete that night. YOU would have to know Johnny's background to realize the underlying reasons. John is a team runner. He has never won a first place in col- legiate competition. A year ago he did not even make the trip to the Con- ference indoor championships. His is one of those seldom-glorified tales of the athlete who overcame physical obstacles by unflagging, tireless work and perseverance. Last week Johnny turned the gruelling two-mile grind in 9:36, far better than he had been clocked in before. And he will do better. McKean finished third last week. That isn't news. Johnny's coach and teammates turned to him first when lavish praise for their great victory was in order. That is. I I Cagers Hit Scoring Column: Jim Mandler Leads Quintet In 61-3'7 Win Over Maroons . L I: g ti 'Aid Ll\ r "SAVE WAR MATERIAL" "Every trip you take by Super-Coach instead of by car you'll be saving two gal. ions of gasoline out of every "three!l You'll also be making possible similar economies in metals, fabrics, and rubber l" "AVOID WEAR ON TIRES" "Go easy on those tires of yours--go Greyhound when- ever bi~iness or relaxation calls you out of town. It assures extra life for those precious tires you can't re- place-and for your carl "TRAVEL IN MID-WEEK" "There are no 'priorities' on travel for relaxation t But you can help to avoid unnecessary crowding by traveling during the mid-week period whenever possible - leaving extra seat- space for soldiers and war workers over the week-ends." "SAVE FOR DEFENSE BONDS" OW RT By DICK SIMON BUCKET POP-SHOTS: The Wol- verine cagers bounced back into the victory column Monday night, 61-37, at the expense of the happy-go-win- less Chicago Maroons . . . who have now taken it on the chin, as far as Big Ten battles are concerned, for 30 consecutive times. Everything the Michigan team did was right . . . at one point in the second half when the Maize and Blue reserves were in against the Chicago second team, the Wolverines made 10 points in one minute .. . Jim Mand- ler had a field day . . . scoring 23 points ... and even at that he only made one bucket during the last five minutes of play. As a result of their victory, the Wolverines are now tied with Ohio State for eighth place in the Confer- ence standings . . . both have won four and lost nine. Morrie Bikoff, flashy sophomore, injured his shoulder in the Iowa game Saturday night and wasn't even permitted to don a uniform for the Chicago tilt . . . when he got back to Ann Arbor yesterday morning, the diminutive forward had X-rays taken to determine the extent of his in- jury . . . but nothing will be known definitely until this afternoon. Although he is still wearing dark glasses, Leo Doyle seems to be none the worse off for his recent eye in- jury . . . in fact the lanky junior seems to have improved his shooting eye . . . in the Iowa game he scored nine points ... and against the Ma- roons he hit the hoop for 11. Serving as assistant to Assistant Coach Ernie McCoy in the Chicago contest who is taking charge of the team in the absence of Bennie Oos- terbaan was none other than Michi- gan's Athletic Director Fritz Crisler .. the Varsity grid coach is not new to the cage sport ... as he was quite a star in his undergraduate days at Chicago . . . and even coached one year at Princeton. Oosterbaan sent the team a wire before the game Monday . . . in which he told them his son was improving . . . but that he was going to stay in Tucson, Ariz., a little bit longer. 11 Jackson.......$ .80 $ 1.45 Battle Creek . 1.70 3.10 Kalamazoo ... 2.15 3.90 Grand Rapids 2.75 4.95 Gaylord....... 5.10 9.20 Petoskey...... 5.75 10.35 Chicago....... 3.95 7.15 Los Angeles ..38.90 70.05 GRFYIOUND ; 1t Ai TERMINAL 116 W. 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