its, -~ t JIlL i~dICi-tiGAN DAILA Michigan Swimmiwg Team i Leads ~~~0 Ten inI 4'. _______________________________________________________________________ ankmen Face Northwestern. Here Saturday Wolverines Bid for Fourth Conference Triumph of Season By JIM LEWY By defeating Ohio State Saturday,' the University of Michigan swimmers proved that they will be the logical favorites to recapture the Conference title which they lost to the Buckeyes; last season. Despite the efforts of Keo Nakama, the Hawaiian ace of the Ohio squad, the Wolverines took the team win- nings with comparative ease. The Buckeyes were able to garner but three first places, two by Nakama, and one by diver Bobby Stone. Mich- igan swept the remaining events with rather poor showing by the inexper- ienced Scarlet and Grey team. Nakama Noses Out Maloney Paul Maloney, Wolverine quarter- miler, finished a bare two yards be- hind little Nakama, in the 440-yard event to turn in one of the best show- ings of the afternoon. Michigan's Merton Church, Conference cham- pion in the 50-yard free style event, made a better impression Saturday, than in previous meets this season, by winning the 50 and 100-yard free style races. As expected, Heini Kessler, Wol- verine breaststroke ace, won the 100- yard breaststroke event with little trouble. He finished far ahead of his nearest opponent, Steve Ruback, of the Maize and Blue squad. In the backstroke race, Bill Cooley nosed out his teammate, Johnny McCarthy, to make a clean sweep of the sprint events for Michigan. Northwestern Meet Saturday The Wolverines captured both the 150-yard medley and the 200-yard free style relay from Ohio. Regular tankers Church and Chuck Fries swam with freshmen Bob Branch and Larry Koppin to take the longer event for Michigan. Buckeye diver Bobby Stone easily won the event from Michigan's John Krygoski to provide Ohio with its third and last first place of the afternoon. Next Saturday, the Maize and Blue natators are hosts to Northwestern's Wildcats. The purple squad has been the only team to give the Wolverines a close fight this season. Michigan won the previous Northwestern dual swim 46-38 by winning the last two events to nose out a victory. Michi- gan will be gunning for its fourth straight Conference win in Satur- day's meet which will be a preview of the Conference meet to be held in Evanston Feb. 19. Babe Ruth Has Birthday Party NEW YORK, Feb. 7. - (P) - The Bambino still can cut the cake. He did it today, literally, on his 50th birthday, just a few seconds before it slipped from the table to land frosted-side down with a squashy bop on the floor of the little den lined with pictures and souvenirs of the days when Babe Ruth was making baseball history with home runs. He's a gentleman of unwanted leis- ure now, restless as a caged bear and filling in his days with bowling and innumerable appearances at bond rallies which have left his voice a hoarse croak. He'd love to go over- seas to entertain the servicemen, but he says half a dozen doctors told him "I'd die before I got there." So he does the best he can for the war effort and uses bowling in winter and golf in summer as an outlet for his nervous energy. He's a 165-av- erage bowler, but can't go more than four games of an afternoon. "My knees give out on me," he explains candidly. He weighs about 240 now, less than he did when he was playing for the Yankees, but in his blood-red lounging pajamas he still looks like he had been invited to a pot-luck supper and swallowed the pot. He saw only four or five baseball games last year, as he had to take his daily golfing exercises or his tonnage would increase overnight. TAKING IT EASYI By ED ZALENSKIr bally Sports Editor Editor's note: This is the last column of Sports Editor Ed Zalenski, who left for Officers' Candidate School at Fort Knox, Ky., last night. My Last Impressions of Michigan . . T TOOK at least four days, five different typewriters and a ream of copye paper to write this column-my last as Daily sports editor. It seems as if I started it 50 times, and tore the page out with disgust. Too much has l happened in four years to retell in a few hundred words, especially when itt rushes into your mind in a confused mass and tries to force its way out . . Whatever I've done, what I'm doing, or what I am-it all has its roots in that first year at Michigan. It was an important year for me. Everything goes back to 1940-Daily, ROTC, my friendship with Coachl Ken Doherty and his aide, Chet Stackhouse. . . As I look back I realize how vital each has been in making my years at Michigan the fullest andE happiest of my life. The Daily was my big interest from the start. Everything I did revolved1 around it. When I reported to Coach Stackhouse as a freshman track can- didate, I had no visions of being a star. You have to live, talk and feel al sport to know it. I had tried my hand at most of them before Michigani came into the picture. I spent one year with Stack and one with Ken on the Varsity squad-just enough to know that they and the boys on the team were to be my best friends at Michigan.' Last fall, I added another sport to my list-wrestling. Coach Ray Courtright was a fine man to work under. And the Michigan men I met, wrestled with and list as my friends are tops. I learned a lot that may come in handy soon in a different way .. . Y LIFE as a civilian student at Michigan ended March 18, 1943, when the Michigan ROTC was activated. Two weeks at Fort Custer, certain- ly not the most pleasant in my life, and I returned to campus as a G-1 pri- vate in stiff, new clothes reeking of moth balls. May ended and I wrote what I thought was my swan song as Daily sports editor. June 1 was my first day as a trainee at Fort Knox, Ky. This, I felt, was the beginning of what I visioned would end with the duration and six months. Four months in the Armored Force were far more pleasant than I had imagined. It was rough and rugged, but two years of track and one of wrestling gave me the jump on my buddies. There were times when I thanked Corky for being patient and teaching me what he knew about wrestling. I'll never forget the night I wrestled with a 6 ft. 4 in., 205-pound, -would-be Minnesota end on a rough barracks floor. The boys in my platoon respected me after I pinned this giant twice in 20 minutes-something I could never have done, if .my years at Michigan had been ordinary ones. Basic training was over and my mind was all set for Officer Candidate School. Unfortunately, there was no room then, so I was sent back to Michigan to await an opening. I had plenty of time to think since coming back and I realize now that the best soldiers are those who have kept active in athletics, scholastics, social life-. These four months did more than just give me a rudimentary edu- cation as a soldier. I met many athletes, big names and little ones. I realized how much better they were prepared to do a job for Uncle Sam than their non-athletic buddies. Sports, I learned, were valuable in soldier training. WTrH ALL of that behind me I returned to Michigan and started on my last lap toward a degree and commission. Three months have gone by and everything that I looked ahead to was here at last . . . Only a few technicalities separate me from an A.B. degree. The big job is ahead-17 weeks at Armored Force Officer Candidate School at Fort Knox., If all goes well, I'll be commissioned by July and the Army will take Michigan's place. The good-byes make leaving painful, especially on top of the happy memories being left behind. There were many whom I had no oppor- tunity to see before leaving. I hope they will accept this good-bye in its place. When the war is over and life is normal again, I plan to enroll in Michigan's School of Law-as a civilian. Pucksters Make Good Showing In Victory over Paris Sextet (rapy eis Meel Indiana in Final lussle of Year wolverines Unb eate In Previous Matches; Eye Con erence Title By HANK MANTIO Sweeping seven of the eight match- es here last week, the Wolverine wrestling team swamped a valiant Minnesota crew, 25-3, and now have their sights focused on Bloomington. where they will meet Indiana Satur- day, in their last match of the cur- rent campaign. Michigan rolled up one of the larg- est wrestling scores in a long time against the Gophers, who were en-! tirely outclassed by the Maize and Blue powerhouse. However, Minne- sota put up a good scrap and, "It's hard as close as some of those match- es were, to get such a big score against them," stated Coach Ray Courtright. Gophers Had Few Veterans Minnesota was shy ofrveterans as they only had one letterman, Capt. Bill Aldworth, and he was injured. The only other man on the squad who had any previous experience to speak of was Verne Gagne. But the Gophers hold no animosity against Michigan, and as Coach Stanley Hansen put it, "I figured from the beginning that Michigan had the toughest team in the Conference, but it was good experience for the boys." Captain Johnny Greene was the only Wolverine to lose a match and that was so close that the decision could have gone either way with a little luck. Greene got two take- downs on his opponent, but they were not counted, as the boys were ruled off the mat and had to start in the referee's, position again. There was no doubt that Greene would have taken the advantage on those two falls and the outcome of the battle would have been a different story, but as the score stands, Johnny suf- fered his first disheartening loss of the season. Weber Waxes Witty The witty remark made by fresh- man football coach, Wally Weber, at the match, stating that. "The Min- nesota team would go great guns in the South Pacific getting all of those zeros," could easily sum up that dual Conference meet with Minnesota. Yesterday the Michigan squad started preparations for their last dual meet of the year against a weak Hoosier wrestling team, also shy of veterans. This will be the last match for the undefeated Wolverines until the Conference finals in Chicago Feb. 19, and if they come through this encounter in fine fashion, Michigan will enter the finals as an overwhelm- ing favorite to cop the 1944 Western Conference title. Irish To Have Grid iaterial CHICAGO, Feb. 7.-(P)-You can put Notre Dame in your winter book as having another powerful foot- ball team next fall-for the luck of the Irish is still going strong. Notre Dame is the only big school listed in the Navy's new basic V-12 training program for 17 and 18-year old high school graduates in the Chi- cago region, and Lieut. Henry Pen- field of the Navy Aviation Cadet Selection Board disclosed today that the Irish probably would get most of the area's top prep gridders. Lieut. Penfield, captain of the 1923 Northwestern football team, said that under a new plan of placement the boys would report to Notre Dame by March 1, in time to participate in spring drills. They will remain ir training for eight months, graduating about Nov. 1. They thus would bE available for almost all the footbal: season. Selection of schools is more or less up to the boys-"So you can see,' said Lieut. Penfield, "just how muclt of the crop Notre Dame probably wit get." O'Donl Uninterested In Big League Berth SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 7. - /P) - Frank "Lefty" O'Doul said today ht was "not interested in any majoi league managership." O'Doul, who is beginning his tent year as skipper of the San Franciscc Coast Leagu, Club, added that werE he to consider a big league bertt "The Boston Braves would be a swel: club to be with. Bob Quinn (presi- dent of the Braves) is a fine fellov and a good friend of mine. I likE Boston and the fans there are great It would be an ideal major league set-up. "But I'm going to stay right herc IWolveri!nes Impressi In Wins over Hoosie By BILL MULLENDORIEC Bolstered by a double victory over. Coach.I-Harry Good's tsurprisingly strong Indiana cjtin tet. Miclngan 's cagers enter the home stretch of the 1943-44 basketball campaign this weekend with only two more games remaining on the schedule against Chicago and Northwestern. The two wins over the Hoosiers gives thevWolverines a Conference record of three victories against sev- en defeats, good for seventh place in the Big Ten standings. In capturing second and third Conference tri- umphs, Michigan managed to look s cii'wsb S,,bsiilule vastly overconfident Mic tet take the floor agains five which had been gre and also outfitted with fense. Forward Claude gave one of the finest ey 1 back-court shooting eve sinking "impossible" sho most every angle to sen fighting Hoosiers into a was stubbornly defende final minutes of play. Commenting on this g baan observed that M "rather lucky to win" sized the fine spirit an provement of the H "Michigan," he said, "t expecting to romp to an ed victory and was caug by the inspired play of I Wells Stars One of the few bright Saturday game was the formance of Wells, wh Michigan's third- st throughout most of the s was substituted for Hirs game and came throug points and some finev backboards to provide t final victory. The weekend also sa to form of forward Dav hadn't been playing up standards. Strack start in great style but slump Purdue series. In the tw Indiana Strack gathere 31 points to lead the W King Still in Lead. Forward Tommy K somewhat from his bli set against Ohio State a gain 28 points in the tw spite his slump, King lead in the race for B ing honors, although Dick Ives whose 43 po ance against ChicagoS shattered two individua ords. For Indiana this ga third of the campaign .w in the last few minut Hoosiers had led all the Good tersely summed u in a few words, "Too mE and not enough experie dited Michigan's fast b ing the outstanding me tor in their success aga The game left Indian way tie for the cellar wi iate prospect of rising eighth or ninth. The now entrenched in sev can climb at least two n with victories over Chic and Northwestern the weekend. Feldman To P NEW YORK, Feb.7 Feldman, New Yorkt whose illness brought h rating and a physical b summer, today receiv cian's approval to pl this season. Title Race vf her 'Wil Run I Boston Meet On Saturday chigan ciun- t an Indiana IDasl Vte'aI To Miss atly inspired (:ol1 etitin M iigan a new de- Retherford Contest with Broncos xhibitions of r seen here, By BILL LAMBERT ots from al- Bob Ufer, Michigan's veteran dash d the hard- ace, will leave Thursday for the Bos- lead which ton Athletic Association's invitation- d until the al games which take place Saturday night and will compete in the 600- , Oster-yard dash. ame an was This means that "Bullet" Bob will not be here for Saturday's track meet and empha- with Western Michigan's thinclads. d great im- He will be out to make up for his oosier 'five defeat in the Millrose 600-yard dash ook the floor in which he placed fourth Saturday othr opsd-night. When asked- about Bob's ht flatfooted showing,Coach Doherty said, "A 600- Endina."yard dash on 'an eleven-lap board track necessitates the utmost relaxa- spots in the tion, and Bob's failure to be able to stellar per- relax in the first quarter mile re- o has been sulted in his tying up in the stretch." tring center Relay Team Fails To Crack Record eason. Wells The 2-mile relay team, composed ch late in the of Ufer, Ross and Bob Hume, and h with seven John Roxborough, although they suc- work on the cessfully defended 'their 1943 title by he spark for winning their specialty in 7:53.4, fail- ed to crack the record to which they w the return had come so close in practice. This e Strack who could be blamed to the fact that there to his usual was a lack of competition, and the ed the season Wolverine foursome was merely run- ped after the ning against time. Had the boys been 'o games with pushed, the time probably would have d a total of been much faster. olverines. The time schedule at the Gardens Saturday night was such that Ross ing fell off Blume was scratched from the Wana- istering pace maker mile. The space between the nd could only mile run and the 2-mile relay was o games. De- too short to allow 'lume to get back retained his into running shape. As he was not ig Ten scor- expected to grab any high honors, sharpshooter against such a star-studded field, he )int perform- was at his prime for the relay. Sunday night Both Bob Segula and Elmer Swan- Ll corng ee-son fared as well as they were ev- p scoring rec- peted. Segula reached13 feet In rme was the the pole vault, but the others went ;hich was lost on up to 14 which is almost tops in tes after the the nation. e way. Coach p the reason Meragden Takes any freshmen rnce." He cre- 1,i iu ix ourney reak with be- chanical fac- PHOENIX, Ariz., Feb. 7. - P) - rinst his club. Smooth stroking Harold (Jug) Mc- ia in a three- Spaden of Philadelphia, the winter th no immed- season's top golf money winner, add- higher than ed a $1,00 war bond to his earnings e Wolverines, by shooting a 70 for a two-stroke enth position, victory today over Byron Nelson of otches higher Toledo, O., in an 18-hole playoff ago Saturday to decide the Phoenix Open. e following Deadlocked yesterday at the end of 72 holes with 273's, 11 strokes under par, Nelson and McSpaden were still lay Ball even and still shooting better than par golf at the turn today. 7.-()-Harry Nelson, recent winner of the San Giant pitcher Francisco Victory Open, in which Mc- im a 4-F draft Spaden was runner-up, picked up a reakdown last stroke on the 16th when McSpaden ed his physi- got into trouble and took a bogie. But ay ball again the amtch reached the turning point on the 17th. REX WELLS both very good and very bad, win- ning the first game in the series by an overwhelming 65-49 margin and barely eking out a 4i6-44 thriller in the second c(onhest First Win ImpressiveI The initial triumph was an espec- ially impressive one from the Wol-, verine standpoint as Coach Bennie Oosterbaan's charges ran up their largest point total of the season against a thoroughly bewildered and outclassed Hoosier squad. Ooster- baan was especially pleased with the fine play of center Elroy Hirsch who gathered 22 points and controlled both backboards almost singlehanded in the rout. Indiana was at a disadvantage in this first contest,'having had no op- portunity to scout the Wolverines be- fore the game. The Hoosier aggrega- tion, composed entirely of 17-year old freshmen, put up a game fight but were no match for the high-step- ping Wolverines. Saturday night's contest saw a By JO ANN PETERSON Consistency is not one of the out- standing features of the Michigan hockey, team. Six starts-three wins and three losses is the record the squad has made, and in any of the six games the final outcome could have been just the opposite of what it was. Coach Eddie Lowrey's proteges are able to play hockey if they want to, and they seem to want to just every other week. Team Cooperates Last week-end in humbling the Paris, Ont. club, 6-2, the team played coordinated hockey. It was Ted Greer who united the forces of the forward line and led four of the attacks on the Paris goal, but it was notable that every man on the squad was playing hockey-not flawless but good hockey. The passes were accur- ate and clean, and both forward lines were back-checking carefully. Much of the difficulty that has hampered sharp play in previous games was entirely missing. Saturday night's game was a good one from the standpoint of the spec- tator. The first period was not in- spiring and as Lowrey said, "Those boys looked terrible." Fortunately for the Maize and Blue chances, the Paris sextet also failed to show any spark during the first period. It was a slow twenty minutes with both sides lacking the punch to make a concentrated drive towards a goal. Second Period Play Superior When the second period started it was an entirely rejuvenated varsity squad that hit the ice., Whether Lowrey's bitter between-period words had anything to do with the change is not a certainty, but whatever was the driving force, Michigan had a new and infinitely better team. The Paris defensemen, John and Tom Torti, seemed incapable of deal- ing with the new fury that possessed the Michigan forward line. Two minutes after the period began Ted Greer, assisted by wings Johnny Jenswold and Vince Abbey, made an assault on the goal which resulted in the first tally of the evening. Less than five minutes later this fast- breaking trio had rung in a total of four goals. The Canadian club tight- ened up at that point, but the job had been well and efficiently done. Defensemen Bob Henderson and Tom Messinger played canny, im- pressive hockey. Both men cleared the puck to the wings, and showed no desire to center it in front of the nets which has been the cause of more than one goal for shrewd op- ponents. Yesterday the squad spent almost the entire practice period shooting, which Lowrey indicated was a neces- sary preparation for Saturday's re- turn battle with the Vickers Sports Club which defeated Michigan - two weeks ago, 4-3. 4 MONTH INTENSIVE College Students and Graduates F(t t it:THEY WANT TO CALL HOME --- - - - - - - - -------------- - - - - - - - - - -- h=Ht WAR PLANTS KEEP LONG DISTANCE CIRCUITS HUMMING ------------------mmmmmmm------- -------- --mm- ii ae-t addition Io an old tradition" The 1944 EINSIN Don't be left out! Tkc rlAinel r r-'ucrc rn r i n fnCt Il 1{.II~ GOVERNMENT WAR AGENCIES NEED THE WIRES ------------------------------------------------ That's why we ask you to make only really necessary / ,p calls to war-busy areas. And, if the operator asks you I