WEDNESDAY, FEB. 24, 1943 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FAGS THREE 'Waiving Freshman Rule Has Dual Purpose'--- Crisler lw Spring Sports To Be Helped ByNew Move (Continued from Page 1) In addition to waiving the fresh- man ruling the Conference voted eli- gibility to members of the armed ser- vices on active duty, who may be as- signed to member schools. The Navy has intimated that it will allow these men to gompete, while the Army has inferred the opposite. Waiver of the freshman rule will be the salvation of all Big Ten teams in football, since it is estimated that at least 75 per cent of the candidates next fall will be first-year men. Be- cause of stricter entrance require- ments, Michigan will benefit least by the new freshman rule. Spring Sports Helped By making the waiver effective for 1943 spring sports, members of the current 1946 class will be allowed to participate in baseball, tennis, golf and outdoor track as well as any N.C.A.A. meets held during the spring semester. The new setup will be a boon to Michigan's four spring sports, par- ticularly track. Coach Ken Doherty's Varsity squad, woefully weak in field events, will add eight possible point- winners to its squad for the outdoor campaign from Frosh Coach Chet Stackhouse's strong yearling team. Chief among the new Varsity pros- pects are George Kraeger and Bob Gardner, shot putters. Kraeger has tossed the 16-pound ball'45 ft., 8% in. for the second best mark in frosh history, while Gardner has thrown it 44 ft., 6/2 in, High Jumpers Good Three frosh high jumpers have cleared six feet consistently in prac- tice. Paul Bander and Fred Weaver have leaped 6 ft., 1 in., while Gardner has cleared an even six feet. Stack- house has a 12-foot pole vaulter in Gene' Moody, and strong prospects in the running broad jump. Varskin Baydarian has leaped 22 ft., ' in., while Gardner has jumped over 21 ft. Add seven men in the track events and the result may assure Michigan of its most powerful outdoor team in history. Coach Ray Courtright's Varsity golf team will also benefit with the All students, including eligible freshmen, wishing to try out for varsity tennis, report to the Sports Building at 7 o'clock Friday night. Coach Weir Ladle Replaces Bat Joe DiMaggio, New York Yankee star, wields the big stick in the stewpot while on "kitchen police" duty at the Army reception center at Monterey, Calif. He was in- ducted at San Francisco Feb. 17. addition of a tall, red-headed links ace in Duncan Noble, currently listed as top man on the University frosh golf team. Noble, who constantly shoots in the low 70's, is Coach Courtright's cur- rent choice for the fourth spot on the 1943 golf team of Captain Ben Smith, Bob Fife and Bill Ludolph. "There are several other boys who show defi- nite possibilities and may land Var- sity berths," Courtright disclosed. Baseball, according to Coach Ray Fisher, will be strengthened. "I don't know yet what I have on the fresh- man squad,"'Fisher declared yester- day, "but I am positive that there are at least five boys who will be poten- tial Varsity men." Fisher named Bob Nussbaumer, a highly-touted Chicago boy, as a defi- nite outfield candidate, and Ann Ar- bor's Dick Walterhouse for any posi- tion except pitcher. Tennis Coach . Leroy. Wier was heartened by the new freshman rul- ing which will allow him to use Roger Lewis, former state high school net titlist, who is currently the leading man on his yearling squad, and sev- eral other bright prospects. Track Win, Hinges on Mile Relay Victory in Friday night's important dual meet between the powerful Mich- igan and Ohio State track squads will probably hinge on the outcome of the final event on the program-the mile relay race. The invading Buckeyes pack morel punch in the field events to make up' for the Wolverines' superior strength on the track, and there is a strong possibility that the teams will move into the climaxing race with an even number of points. The Maize and Blue thinclads, without a mile relay team at the start of the indoor season and only Bob Ufer certain of a place, have accom- plished the feat of placing four men together who currently rank as the Conference's top team. Varsity Coach Ken Doherty started building a team around Ufer, national indoor quarter-mile champion, and now has five good 440-yard dash men from which to choose the other three places. The Wolverine mentor has rounded up Jim Sears, an unknown quantity last season, who has run :51.4; Willie Glas, a 4:27 miler of 1942, who has also run :51.4; Len Alkon, a sprinter, who turned in a quarter in :51.9; Chuck Pinney, crack low hurdler, with a :51.8 quarter to his record; and Art Upton, a virtually unknown sopho- more, who has run :52. Ufer's best time of the season is :48.8. "All of the times listed for these boys are from a standing start," Doh- erty pointed out, "and the boys will all run faster in a relay race from a running start. I feel confident that our relay quartet can nip the Buck- eyes, especially under pressure. Blackhawks Beat Bruins BOSTON, Feb. 3.- UP)- The Chi- cago Blackhawks spotted Boston's crippled and undermanned Bruins three early goals and then, sparked by the veteran Johnny Gottselig, cut loose with such a terrific attack that they pulled out a 7-5 victory tonight before an 11,288 crowd at the Boston Garden. While gaining their first victory on Boston ice in more than a year and their second road triumph of the cur- rent National Hockey League season, the Blackhawks took full advantage of the Bruins' casualty list. Pucksters Seek First Big Ten Win at Illinois , By WALT KLEEt Still seeking their first conference1 win of the year, the Michigan stick- men will entrain this afternoon for Champaign, Illinois, where they will meet the fighting Illini sextet in a two game series tomorrow and Sat- urday. The ever improving team held its final practice last night before taking on Coach Vic Heyliger's favored sex- tet, hoping for an upset victory in at, least one of the tow contests over the weekend. The Illini split with thea Gophers in their only other Big Ten; contests two weeks ako, after forfeit- ing two to the Gophers several weeks back. The same team that tied one and lost one against Minnesota's Gophers this past week-end will make the trip. Defenseman Bob Stenberg will play in both games in spite of a re- currance of a knee injury in the sec- ond period of Saturday's game. Stenberg, as a result of fifteen min- utes in the penalty box over the weekend, has really earned the title of Michigan's "bad man." His body checking and puck stealing has im- proved much during the past few weeks and it is hoped that a bit of tape' around his injured knee will enable him to continue playing his fine game at defense. Things do not look as dark for the Wolverines as they did last week this time. Both lines have shown that they pack a potential scoring punch. Led by Bill Dance, who centers the first line, the Maize and, Blue will be really in there all the way. Dance al- most scored twice all alone in the third stanza of Saturday's game, when he split the Minnesota defense and was all alone in front of the Min- nesota nets. It was only the sensa- tional stickwork of Mac Thayer that prevented two Michigan goals. Dance will be flanked by Roy Brad- ley and Gordon Anderson, two veter- ans of two seasons of play for the Wolverine hockey team. It was Brad- ley who tallied both Michigan scores Saturday on passes from Anderson and Dance. The second Michigan line, paced by By DON SWANINGER Having twice fallen before second half spurts fashioned by a surprising Ohio State quintet, the fortunes of Michigan's basketball five can well look to better days in the near future as they meet a woefully weak Chicago team in the Yost Field House this Saturday. Although hailing from the state of Illinois where, according to all indi- cations, the Big Ten title is to rest this year, the Maroons bear no re- semblance to their college neighbors, the miraculous whiz kids of the Uni- versity of Illinois. In fact, it can safely be said that the Maroons bear no resemblance to anyone. They stand apart like a buck private in a room full of generals. And they command just as much respect from the other teams in the Big Ten. Lost 38 Straight They have lost 38 consecutive Con- ference games over a three-year per- iod, and this season opposing squads have pierced their tissue-paper de- fences for an average of 58 points per contest. If you want to see the Wol- verines look like champions, this Sat- urday evening is your best bet. Michigan's two game stay in Columbus was a rather disastrous one. In the opener they showed some- l\,}_ two field goals and a free throw in the last sixty seconds to give the Ohioans a 46-44 decision. The second clash promised also to develop into a nip and tuck affair, the first half ending with the two teams deadlocked at 17-17. However, in the second session the Buckeyes complete- ly dominated the play and ran away with the weary Wolverines, 53-38. Al Wise and Max Gecowets finished' with 14 and 16 points, resepctively, for Ohio, while Jerry Mullaney and Dave Strack paced the Maize and Blue with 10 points each. After their breather with Chicago, the Wolverines will return to the Field House Monday night to conclude their season, meeting Northwestern who defeated them earlier in the year, 49-32. r Ii I Chicago Next---Cagers' Hopes Rise I IL . SWIMMERS FIND SECONDS IMPORTANT, TOO: Stewart 's 440 Showing Climaxes Meet By JOE McHALE Last Saturday's Ohio - Michigan swimming meet was even closer than the 43Fl-401/ score would indicate. The Wolverine team, up against a rather uninspired Buckeye squad in the first dual contest in which the Maize and Blue mermen rang up an impressive 52-32 victory, found itself having to work hard for every point in the return engagement. Coach Mike Peppe had evidently instilled some fire in his Bucks for, as hard as the Wolverines tried, they could only end up three points ahead of the hard-splashing Ohioans. This means that Michigan will have to really work for the Big Ten meet on March 5 and 6 if it is to come out ahead of the threatening Buckeyes. The highlight of last Saturday's thrilling battle was the next to the last event, the 440-yard freestyle. Ohio was behind, 321-301/, but the sensational Buckeye sophomore from Hawaii, Keo Nakama, was an almost sure bet to win the race from Wol- verine Walt Stewart and Jack Ryan of the Scarlet and Gray, Big Ten champion at the distance. However, if Ryan beat Stewart, the meet would go to the Bucks by one point, despite the certain triumph of Coach Matt Mann's foursome over the comparatively weak Ohio sprinters in the 400-yard freestyle relay. Stewart had had a fairly easy time out-dis- tancing the Stater in the first contest, and Ryan was out to gain revenge and to prove to the hometown throng that he was still of championship caliber. So, with the fans at fever pitch, the race started. Nakama, as expec- ted, went out in front early. Walt and Ryan, however, kept even for the first part of the race. The Ohioan would pick up a yard at every turn and the Mattmen would, just as surely, gain back that distance every length. Coming out of the turn at 400 yards, Ryan was again a yard ahead of Stewart. Walt evened this gap and, with all the fans almost mad with excitement, exploded a perfect turn to enter the home stretch a yard ahead of the Buck. Swimming those last fifteen yards stroke for stroke, the duo finished with just that interval between them. The Michigan relay team immediately dove in the water and jubilantly swarmed over the hero of the meet. I ii i t I77 liiiIII I I