jFl~ 1MN A. 1 r: i. rt , r reat akes Favored To Cop Team Honors in AAU Meet HERE TODAY*--- . By HARVEY FRANK Sports Editor iop Ranking Swimming Stars Paced by Smith Jerry Kerschner, Dobbie Burton, Walt Ris, Karl Ahlman, T-Bone Martin Add Power JUNIOR 'BITSY' GRANT: Jinx' Johnson To Pace Tennis Squad During 1944 Season Editor's Note: The following column is written by Bill Mullendore, Sports Night Editor who is pinch-hitting for Harvey Frank, Daily Sports Editor. The views expressed are his own and are not necessarily those of Mr. Frank. By BILL MULLENDORE BASEBALL, according to popular definition, is our national pastime. Yet, we find altogether too many people, some of them professed sports' lovers, advocating either a curtailed 1944 major league season of complete elimination of the sport from the national scene for the duration of the war. They argue that any man who is in good enough physical condition to withstand the long grind of a 154-game schedule through the hot summer months should either be in the armed forces or working in a war plant. At first glance this argument might be justified; but a little investigation into the matter 'shows otherwise. Perhaps the greatest testimonial in favor of continuing baseball on a full scale is the desire of the men in the Army and Navy for it to continue. Just the other day there appeared in The Daily a story, writ- ten by a Marine combat correspondent in the South Pacific, which em- phasized the feelings of the men in that particular area. So great is the demand for sports news in those remote places that baseball and foot- ball scores months old are eaten up by the sports-hungry Marines. These men were so insistent in their demands for more and better coverage of U.S. sporting events that the Associated Press has started a special service to meet the need. ON THE ITALIAN FRONT, newsmen have lately taken several polls to determine the feelings of the men in the lines about this question. Almost without exception the soldiers interviewed voted for the continua- tion of baseball on a full-time basis. The men at the front evidently feel that in fighting for America they are fighting for everything in it, and baseball is as much a part of the American scene as automobiles, labor unions and politics. If these men want their favorite sport to go on, the least that the American people can do is satisfy that -wish. To be sure, basebal has no direct connection with the war effort other than as a morale builder. No munitions are turned out during a nine-inning game and no shots are fired, unless you count the occa- sional missile heaved at an umpire. Yet, it would be foolish to say that the game has contributed nothing to the winning of. the war. More than 400 past and potential major league performers have entered some branch of the service at this writing, and the ranks are swelling every day. During the five-month off-season practically all of the play- ers who are still around work on farms or in war plants. And in the summer months they are engaged in something which our fighting men, at least, believe important enough to be continued. To question the patriotism of these men is foolish; their record speaks for itself. So, in view of all this evidence we say emphatically "On with baseball!" Maybe it won't be the same high quality of play with the DiMaggios, the Fellers and the Coopers gone. Maybe the residue of 4-F's, overagers, 17- year-olds, and men not yet called cannot put out the superb brand of baseball which has characterized major league play for the past decade. But the spirit, the fight, the tradition, and what is more important, the game itself will still be there, carrying on not only as a morale booster for servicemen and civilians but also as insurance that the great American sport will always be our national pastime. Again we say, and just as em- phatically, "On with baseball!" Great Lakes will be the top con- tender for team honors in the 1944, National A.A.U. swimming champ- ionships to be held here Friday and Saturday, on the basis of the ease with which they swept aside all op- ponents in dual meets during the' season. The Bluejacket squad is without a doubt the best swimming team ever put together under one banner, and should have litte trouble in winning the team title. The Sailors, who ad- ministered two defeats to the Wol- verines in dual meets earlier in the season are coached by Lt. Walter N. Colbath, former Olympic diving champion from Northwestern. Great Lakes personnel includes Bill Smith, who is the number one man on the team, holding more swimming rec- ords than any other person. He will be defending champion in the 220 and 440 yard free style events, while Dobbie Burton, former Michigan cap- tain, will be in the century and the free style relay team. Kerschner To Swim 100 Jerry Kerschner, 18 year old, looms as one of the best swimming pros- pects in the nation, and will be com- peting in the 100 and 220 yard free styles; Walter Ris, who was a frosh at Illinois last year, also in the 100, along with Ted Hobart, another sprinter from Ohio, who swam with Smith last season, and Bob Matters, breaststroker, Karl Ahlman, who will perform in the dorsal event, with Struther "T-Bone" Martin,tformer Conference diving champion for Michigan, rounding out the squad. Smith, 205 pound whiz from Hono- lulu, will captain this great galaxy of stars for the Sailors. He now holds world records for 200, 220, 400, 440, 800 and 880 meters, as well as other records from varying distances be- tween 600 and 1400 yards. Smith Breaks Pool Record At the start of the present season the 220 record was 2:07.7, but at the dual meet here, Smith set a new pool record of 2:07.8, and tw weeks later, he broke the world record at Colum- bus in 2:07.1. Bill went to Baldwin High School at Wailuku Wai where he played football, basketball, track and base- gall. He is a second class seaman and at the peak of his career, which means that at the meet here. he has a chance to break his own records in the 220 and 440, as well as trying to set a new mark for the 100 yard free style. He will also help Great Lakes try for a new relay record. With the exception of Alan Ford Cronin Sees Bright Future for Red Sox BALTIMORE, March 28.- ()- Joe Cronin is one major league man- ager who isn't moaning, "Ain't it awful," as he looks forward to the 1944 baseball season in general and his own team's prospects in particu- lar. The 37-year-old, slightly plumpish Boston' Red Sox boss fairly beams good spirits. "Sure, I'll see action. I'll probably be in and out there all year, the manpower situation being what it is," Joe said. "I'm looking forward to one of the best baseball seasons in years, finan- cially and competitively," he de- clared, "and if we can keep most of what we have now, we'll be in the thick of the fight all the way." INVEST IN VICTORY BUY WAR BONDS of Yale, every outstanding amateur swimmer in the country will be here, and this gives a clear indication of the value that sports still hold in the minds of all people. Records To Be Broken In the last years of the N.A.A.U. there has not been a single record broken, AAU, American, or other- wise, and in great contrast to that, and because of the good shape of all the competitors, -records are likely to fall at .a rapid pace. The preliminaries in the 220 yard free style, 220 yard breastroke, 300 yard individual medley, 400 yard free style relay, and the low board diving will take place Friday afternoon, with the finals in the five events listed above being run off that night. Preliminaries in the 100 yard free style, 150 yard backstroke, 440 yard free style, 300 yard medley, and the high board diving will take place Saturday noon, with the finals in these events being played off that evening to finish the meet. With the amount of stars entered in each event, the preliminaries pro- mise to be as good as the finals, and every man will have to swim his spe- cialty in fast time to even qualify for the finals. MSC Searches Campus for Baseball Talent EAST LANSING, March 28.-(-P)- John A. Hannah, president of Mich- igan State College, said tonight a registration of baseball players had been started on the campus to de- termine the demand for an MSC baseball team this spring which would meet only local industrial teams and service camp squads. John Kobs, Spartan baseball coach, said so far ten men had signed agree- ments to practice. He emphasized that if a team were formed it would not be a "varsity" squad and would not play other collegiate nines. The question of resuming all in- tercollegiate sports at MSC will be discussed by the faculty athletic com- mittee in May. "JINX" JOHNSON By RUTH 'ELCONIN Alden Johnson, better known to Michigan tennis fans as "Jinx' John- son, is already swinging a mighty racket in preparation for the coming season. I "Jinx" came to the University of Michigan in 1939, and he is now a freshman in Law School. Johnson won his freshman numerals in ten- nis, and in 1940 he was on the varsity team playing number six singles. That same year Michigan won the Big Ten championship, and "Jinx" captured the Conference number six singles crown. As a junior, he not only played number five singles, but he also held down the number three doubles spot with Jerry Schaftlander. "Jinx",,and Jerry brought further laurels to Michigan when they won the number three doubles title of the Big Ten. During the Conference singles play- offs, Johnson's 28 match winning streak, which was started in his soph- omore year, was broken. Captain Last Year Last year "Jinx" was captain of the team, and they ended the season tied for fourth place. He was a pretty busy boy holding down the number one singles spot along with the number two doubles position.k His partner was Roy Bradley, andI they chalked up an-undefeated sea- son until the Conference playoffs when they went down at the hands of Wisconsin. "Jinx" has been called the Bitsy Grant of Michigan, because he is only 5'51/" and has a slight build. He runs around the tennis court like a demon, and his endurance is some- thing to behold. It is hard to believe that a player as small as Johnson possesses such stamina and power. His shots are well placed and his free and easy motion make him an outstanding tennis player. Plays Golf Too Before comningto Michigan, John- son had established quite a reputa- tion for himself not only as a tennis player, but also as a golfer. At Ottawa Hills High School in Grand Rapids, Mich., he won letters in ten- nis and golf. When he was a senior in high school the tennis team won the state high school championship, and "Jinx" captured the state dou- bles title. In 1938 he was runner-up for the state novice tennis crown, and he won the city junior golf championship. "Jinx" believes that the prospects for this season look bright. He says, "There are a number of good players on the team this year, and with a fine coach like Leroy Weir, Michigan will be out there doing her best." Schedule for, I-M Playoffs Is Replanned In a hard-fought contest Phi Chi defeated Sigma Phi Epsilon last Saturday in the first of the two championship games to be played for the title of All-Campus Basket- ball League. Due to a mix-up in the schedule of the I-M Cage League, the cham- pionship games have been re- planned. After a meeting late Friday night of Earl Riskey and the cham- pions of the three leagues it was decided that Phi Chi would meet Sigma Phi Epsilon in last Saturday's cage bout in place of the scheduled game between Phi Chi and the Phi Delta Theta Blues. At the end of the first half of last Saturday's game Phi Chi had out- played a seemingly bewildered Sigma Phi Epsilon team and led them by a score of 28-10. During the second half, however, the Sigma Phi Epsi- lons began to rally and picked up 11 points while Phi Chi added only 13 to their total. The final score was 41-21 with Phi Chi the winning team. Ken Vandenberg and Joe Picard sparked the Phi Chi cagers, bucket- ing 17 and 7 points respectively, and the high scorers of the Sigma Phi Epsilon team were Bob Hicks and Don Tennyson. Writers Honor Dodds NEW YORK, March 28.-(P)-Gil Dodds, world's fastest indoor miler, was voted the outstanding athlete of the indoor season today by the New York City Track Writers' Association. Id Introductory Offer, Present this ad and $1.50 for a Beautiful 8x10Bronze-Tone Portrait at the ALLEN EL HOTEL Thursday, Friday and Saturday March 30, 31 and April 1 Hours 1-8 P.M. Four poses will be taken and proofs shown for your selection No Appointment Necessary Biltmore-Columbia Studio INC. Creators of Distinctive Portraiture I SECRETARIAL and BUSINESS COURSES Unprecedented opportunities in business, government, and post-war positions.. Free Place- ment Bureau. Individual advancement and personal assistance of instruc- tors makes it possible to begin any Monday and proceed at your own speed. Your schedule will be ad- justed to your personal needs. Write, phone or visit the school for further infor- mation. HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE William at State Phone 7831 Ti ers Continue To Train in Cold EVANSVILLE, Ind., March 28.-('P) -The Detroit Tigers started their third week of spring training today with an infield workout that chilly weather cut to 90 minutes, but Man- ager Steve O'Neill cheerily shrugged off the low temperatures. The mer- cury was down 40-degrees from last week-end's balmy 70's. "We've done reasonably well in the two weeks we have been here," Gen- eral manager Jack Zeller agreed. "This is our 15th day and we've miss- ed only two practices because of wea- ther. Besides, we had a tryout camp for a week without a miss. We've got a lot of work under our belts." Outfielder Don Ross has been mentioned as a possible replacement for York if the Tigers' regular first- sacker is called for military service. Ross himself may be classified for li- mited service because of a hernia. O'Neill plans to have Ross concen- trate on right field and first base this season. He had been ticketed as a possible third-baseman for next' week-end's series with the Chicago Cubs, but now it appears that Joe Wood or Edward (Red) Borom will fill that spot until the -arrival of Pinky Higgins. 7- I- I Hey you - They're lining 'up already for a big Michigan weekend ii~ r I I ........._.... __ __, i Have a "Coke" = Sakabona (WHADDYA SAY? ) INFORMAL DANCE " .v..-- :. .. : -. - -_-at. 7 ,f6-' _.t. {'r 1 ' For all Friday 3 to 5 couples Free G-l STOMP For all servicemen and coeds Saturday 3 to 5 k SUNDAY SOCIAL For all couples ...from Bloemfontein to Buffalo -- '' . , Q 1111 I Ii I