aI WEDNESDAY, DEC. 16, 1942 THE MIC141GAN DATT.V PAL ,' ruit.rip JL L JUL -I If l! ODT May Divide Big Leagues f .. PHILADELPHIA, Dec,. 15.- (P)- The Philadelphia Record says the office of Defense Transportation is "giving serious consideration" to a plan for dividing Big League Baseball into eastern and western divisions, proposed editorially by The Record last Sunday. The record quotes Joseph B. East- man, director of the ODT, as saying in Washington today, "Our office is very much interested in the sugges- tion made by the Philadelphia Rec- ord." The leagues, as suggested by The Record, would be made up as follows: East League-New York, Philadel- phia, Boston and Washington of the American League, combined with New York, Brooklyn, Philadelphia and Boston of the National League. West League-Chicago, St. Louis, Cleveland and Detroit of the Ameri- can League, combined with Chicago, St. Louis, Pittsburgh and Cincinnati of, the National League. i -I ARTROj~ T/ S;:iI'I a Frosh Amass 387 Points to Win Track Title Larger Entry Is Big Factor; Ufer Is Star By ERIC ZALENSKI Overwhelming superiority of num- bers gave the frosh thinclads a smashing triumph over their class- mates in the inter-class track meet at Yost Field House last night. The surprising freshmen, taking firsts in the high jump, shot put and mile relay, piled up the amazing total of 387 points to far surpass the jun- iors, sophomores and seniors in that order. The real battle was between the last three named teams with points scored as follows: Juniors, 158/2; sophomores, 157%/2; and sen- iors, 156. Ufer Wins Twice Senior Bob "Hose Nose" Ufer, na- tional indoor quarter-mile king, was the night's only double winner, grab- bing a first in the 440-yard dash in 50.4 seconds, and leading the field home in the half-mile in 2:01. The hot battle in the pole vault saw a virtual dark horse, Ken Fryar, a sophomore, grab top honors with a winning leap of 12 ft. 6 in. Senior Chuck Donahey blazed through the.60-yard dash in 6.5 sec- onds to nose out his teammate, Bill Newcomb. The heated duel in the 65- yard low hurdles between senior Chuck Pinney and sophomore Elmer Swanson saw the former timber-top- per flash across the finish line in 7.7 seconds with red-headed Jack Martin, a freshman, taking third. Swanson took the high hurdles with ease in 8.7 seconds to defeat junior Liv Stroia and sophomore Bill Osgood. Kraeger Wins Shot Thepowerful frosh high jumping trio of Bill Dale, Fred Weaver and Paul Bander gained a three-way tie for first place at 5 ft. 11 in. Fresh- man Bob Gardner barely missed out with a jump of 5 ft. 112 in. The freshman picked up points in the shot put when grid star, George Kraeger, heaved the 16-pound ball 42 ft. 31/4 in. to beat senior George Ostroot and teammate Gardner. Lanky Bill Osgood, sophomore broad jumper, nosed out Pinney for top honors in a tight batle. His win- ning leap of 21 ft. 5 in. just beat Pinney's best effort of 21 ft. 3 in. Gardner was in there again for a third place. Matthews Takes 880 Captain Dave Matthews opened the program with a narrow victory over sophomore Ross Hume in the mile in 4:36.4. Junior Ernie Leonardi sprinted the last lap to grab an easy first in the two-mile run in10:21. Junior Roy Currie was second and Matthews took third. The frosh added 12 points by scor- ing an easy triumph in the mile relay in 3:36 with anchorman Bill Hutchins opening a big gap over the second- place juniors. The sophs were third. Mat Schedule Is Announced Two home meets, exclusive, of matches with service teams. mark Michigan's 1943 wrestling schedule, revealed today by Mat Coach Ray Courtright. Only one service team has beeni carded to date, but Coach Courtright expects to fill his open dates with such squads. The schedule is as fol- lows : Jan. 9-Grosse Ile Naval Air Base. Jan. 18-at Michigan State1 Jan. 23-Ohio State Feb. 13-at Northwestern Feb. 15-at Illinois Feb. 20-Michigan State March 5-6-Conference meet at Northwestern.4 ... L i./ IV A U . .L .F\.T .LI:% PI S 1 L £ .5. L'.5. MLiuiI: ll 4t' u~d~ The Cracker Barrel1 By Mike Man S NEW YORK, Dec. 15.- (UP)- Frankie Sinkwich, for the last two years a member of the All-America football team, has been voted the No. 1 male athlete of 1942. The Youngstown, Ohio, halfback who led Georgia's Bulldogs to a Rose Bowl bid, polled 94 points in a wide- open ballot race that saw the 69 sports editors participating in the Associated Press' annual poll spread their first place votes among 16 ath- He's My Guy ... EVERY once in a while an athlete comes along who seems to elec- trify a crowd by his mere presence. He's the kind of a guy who makes a sports writer's work more than inter- esting by always adding the unexpect- ed. In short, little Morrie Bikoff is what we mean. Bikoff, who saw plenty of action last year as a guard on Bennie Oos- terbaan's cage squad, seems to have that certain intangible something that makes crowds respond every time he makes an appearance on the court. Back when "Bik" was a freshman we remember hearing the colorful -) d p Sinkwich Voted'Top Male Athlete Saturday night, Morrie made only a short appearance. But in that time he sank the longest shot of thfe season and barely missed making a difficult hook shot. When the little guy left the floor, he received a tre- mendous hand despite his short stay in the contest. We may be going out on the prover- bial limb, but we bet before the season is over "Bik" will supply the punch for many a Wolverine win. But whe- ther Michigan wins or loses, Bikoff's presence should make any contest worth seeing. SOMEHOW or other we can't figure our dear Uncle Sam out. Time and again we have heard that some of our nation's best ath- letes have been rejected by the armed forces for some minor physi- cal defect. Only yesterday big Al Wistert, Michigan's often selected All-Ameri- can tackle, was rejected by the Army Reserve because he failed to pass their physical. Now we don't know for sure, but we'll bet you our reserved seat on the Mercury, home against a dough- nut that Wistert is fit for the toughest type of Commando train- ing let alone the Army Reserve. (Just ask any lineman he played against this year.) We can certainly see why there should be some definite physical re- quirements, but certain waivers should be allowed. Right now our government tells us to be sure to use every available means in winning this war. Somehow or other we think Al Wis- tert supplies some of that means. This goes for Dye Hogan, Bob Ingalls and a host of others too. WITH the war department's an- nouncement last night about the Army Reserve and the draft status of college students, it certainly appears that Intercollegiate athletics will shortly be out the window for the dur- ation. All talk of the curtailing or elimi- nating some college sports to save gas, rubber etc., is probably nothing short of stupid in view of the fact that there just won't be anybody around to participate in a Varsity competition. Big Ten officials probably knew what they were doing two weeks ago when they didn't lift the freshman rule, realizing that there wouldn't even be any freshmen around in time to come. F".. ~K~J I Plenty letes. Sinkwich was placed in the No. 1 slot by 15 of the experts and 19 others judged him either the second or third best performer of the year. 3 MERRY CHRISTMAS TO EVERYBODY FLOYD CLARK HARRY TROXELL 5 V.; GIVE THE F' BESTwLOVED MUSIC BY THE BEST-KNOWN ARTISTS ON 4 of them y _ The world's greatest Another?...They're the gifts artists are on Victor that keep on giving! Come in Records. And that is toda'y and do your Christmas one reason why they're such shopping the easy, pleasant, grand Christmas gifts... entertaining way. GIFTS FOR HIM GIFTS FOR THE CHILDREN This Is the Army........P-131 Peer Gynt Suite No. 1 .... M-404 Scheherazade........... DM-920 Songs from Snow White .... J-8 Barber of Seville.......DM-898 Kipling's Jungle Book .. DM-905 GIFTS FOR HER Peter and the Wolf ......DM-566 Greig's Concerto -.Dumbo..........''.'' .P'' Rubenstein ..........DM-900 Nursery Rhymes.........BC-33 A Program of Dinner Music P-127 MacBeth - Maurice Evans and Judith Anderson ...... DM-878 Christmasshoppingmadeeasa HGTS.Pinafore...DC-3 the brand new Victor H. M S.Pinaore.....DCi3 usical Masterpieces GIFTS FOR THE OLD FOLKS Catalog nmakes it easy, Kreisler - My Favorites .. M-910f or 'ou to select the Ia. a "orite niusio of everyone Music of Johann Strauss DM-262 on your Christina list. Rachmaninoff - Contains best - known, Concerto No. 2 . . ...... DM-58 best -loved selections- Concrto o. .......D-58 all types ot" music. Bo, Album of Victor Herbert sure to ask fo it. Melodies . . ..............0C-33 Do Your Christmas Shopping Earfy-s Visit ms today, The World's Greatest Artists are on Victor Records To hear Victor Records at their best, play them on the new RCA Victroto SATURDAY, 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Store Hours Christmas Week: Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday - 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. Thursday - 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. RADIO & RECORDesSH3OP 715 N. University Ave. Phone 3542 a-t MORRIE BIKOFF Mike Sofiak say, "I'd give plenty to play with that guy. He's got color, guts and ability." Despite the fact that "Bik" is the smallest guy to make an appearance o far this year for Michigan, he has isplayed all his abilities as a fine layer. In the Michigan-Marquette game CGOODYEflR S Selfridge Field Favored to Top Michigan Five By BOB SHOPOFF Two winning streaks will be placed on the block when the Selfridge Field Flyers tangle with Michigan's fast- stepping quintet at the Yost Field House Thursday night. The speedy service five will. match its~ record of six victories in as many tilts against that of Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's squad's two straight wins. The Flyers will enter the fray pre-game favorites because they have overpowered all their opponents by large margins. However, the Wolver- ines are on the upgrade, showing im- provement each week, and the Var- sity will be shooting to knock its foe out of the skies. Ex-College Stars on Team The Selfridge Field court team is composed of ex-college and, profes- sional stars and is rated one of the best basketball squads in the state and midwest. They are fast, like the P-40's they fly, they have height and are clever, accurate shots. Although the first five averages over six feet tall, one of the best players on the team is diminutive Bob Roth, a five foot, seven inch guard. Waddell, Semi-Pro, at Guard At the other guard is "Curley" Waddell, who has seen service on many of the semi-pro hardwood quads of the Motor City. To top Capt. Jim Mandler's height, Selfridge Field will have lanky Sam Leiberman, who measures an even six and one- half feet from head to toes. Sam ained his experience with Detroit Central's high school five and with Lawrence Tech. For his play at Tech he was named All-State collegiate enter., Herman Futsch and Andy Pelio will start at the forwards for the Flyers. Both forwards are expert shots and will provide Michigan's improved de- ense with its toughest test of the eason. ,.. t 11 l!gIffillill I aA Books for everyone in the family. NIGHT SHIFT-- THE DAY MUST DAWN - Maritta Wolff Turnbull OUR HEARTS WERE YOUNG SEE HERE, PRIVATE HARGROVE - 4 OUR HEART S kner YHargrove AND GAY - Skinner THE ROBE - PAST -IMPERFECT - Lloyd C. Douglas Ilka Chase THE SONG OF BERNADETTE - 4 Werfel THE MAN MISS -SUSIE LOVED - .Tucker QUEEN OF THE FLAT-TOPS - Johnston CRESCENT CARNIVAL - AND NOW TOMORROW - 4 Frances Parkinson Keys Rachel Field and many other titles to choose from. 1 t l I s r C f L c F fl s+ -- - - -