Cagers Wind Up eason Hockey Team Set To Break Losing Streak Me Cet anadian Sextets Here Friday, Saturday With seven contests remaining on its slate, Michigan hockey team will attempt to break its three-game los- ing streak with a pair of matches this weekend. Invading the Coliseum Friday night will be the senior amateur squad from Paris, Ontario. Another senior Canadian outfit, the Brant- ford Hockey Club, will furnish the opposition for Coach Vic Heyliger's crew Saturday night. Heyliger expressed confidence that Al Renfrew will be in condition to play in both contests. However, if the .Maize and Blue puckster is side- lined, the Wolverines will call on Chet Kuznier, third-line forward, to take his place. Heyliger also announced that the games with Michigan Tech for Feb. 22 and 23 at Houghton, Mich., have been postponed to Mar. 1 and 2 to let the Wolverine pucksters take their final exams. Pucksters May Enter League Michigan hockey Coach Vic Hey- liger announced today that the Wolverines will petition the U. S. Intercollegiate Hockey League for membership when the rules com- mittee of that body meets in April. The loop which boasts Army, Dart- mouth; Harvard, Yale, Colgate, and Princeton as its members was sus- pended for the duration of the war in 1941. However, most of its schools have fielded teams this year and the league is scheduled to resume active competition next year. Michigan has played bot i Yale and Colgate in the past but has never held membership in the league. SPORTS NEWS+ VIEWS+ COMMENT By BILL MULLENIDORE, Sports Editor CRADUATION from an institution such as the University of Michigan is an experience to be viewed with mixed feelings. There is, of course, much to look forward to. But there is also a great deal to look back upon. We have been doing a lot of both lately. We have completed our sundry requirements for graduation and will be duly recognized for that achievement, come Feb. 23. At'the same time, we will be closing out seven semesters' work on The Daily. A lot can happen in seven semesters. Men and events furnish a backlog of experience that asserts itself time and again in memories, pleasant and unpleasant. Our rind right now is spilling over with a veritable flood of recollections of the past, which, we suspect, will aford us many happy remi- niscences in future years. We could mention a lot of things that have wandered into our (pr- ception during these past few hectic pre-final and pre-graduation days. We could talk of pleasant associations with men like Fritz Crisler, Ray Fisher, Bennie Oosterbaan, Ken Doherty, and the rest of the gang in the Athletic Administration Building. WE COULD recapture the feats of some of the famous Wolverine athletes of bygone days, figures like Elroy Hirsch, Don Lund, Tommy King, Gene Derricotte, Mert Church, Bill Daley, Dave Strack, and a host of others. We could recall football games, basketball games, track meets, and other events without number that have stirred our imagination over the years. But if we were asked to single out one particular memory that stands cut aove all others, the one we expect to keep with us longest, we would point to none of these. We would, instead, turn to what may seem to be a trivial incident, one of those everyday "human interest" stories the re- porter runs into every day, but which often leave a more lasting im- pression than other, bigger happenings. It happened back in the early fall of 1944. We were. still a rather green newcomer to the ways of the sports writing world, not too certain of our- self, and very much elated with the prospect of writing our first football story. The occasion was the opening of football practice, the place Ferry Field, the time an unidentifiable afternoon, probably in late July or early August. We had duly interviewed the various members of the coaching staff, had dexterously avoided flying footballs, and exploding flash bulbs, had taken voluminous and largely illegible notes, and were preparing to de- part with sanity unimpaired by the confusing panorama of action going on about us. We were threading our way from the field, when a lone, stoop-shouldered, grey-haired man, standing all by himself along the sidelines caught our attention. "'WHO's that?" we asked our cohort, a worthy better versed in Michigan football lore. Our crony studied the object of our inquiry for a moment, then said: "Why, that's Fielding H. Yost, the old man himself.". Fielding H. Yost! The mere sound of the name made us pause in our tracks. It was our first sight of the legendary "Mr. Michigan," the man who built Wolverine sports from the barest beginnings back in 1900 to the status they enjoy today, the man who coached the "point-a- minute" teams, the man who engineered the building of the Michigan athletic plant, in short, the man who made Michigan athletics. On an impulse, we walked timidly over to the grey-haired patriarch and haltingly began a conversation. As interviews go, it probably didn't amount to much. We were too frightened to do much more than stammer a few inane questions. "How do they look to you?" we finally managed to blurt out. A gleam came into the old man's eye. He gazed thoughtfully out over the field where 100-odd men were showing their stuff under the watchful eyes of the coaches. We could tell he wasn't thinking of us. IHe was thinking of the past, of the squads he had greeted in former opening days, of the stars he had coached, of the games he had won, of the teams he had molded. THEN the 72-year-old Yost turned to us. "Too early to tell yet, but they look big and fast. Might be a team there. Why I remember . . . " He launched into a discussion of the "good old days," recalling endless anec- dotes, bringing to life men long dead and games long mere entries in musty records. We hung on every word, not daring even to pause and scribble down what he had to say. It was over all too soon. "Well, I have to be getting along now," Yost finally said. "But I'll be back out here. These boys look pretty good." There was the faintest touch of regret in his voice as he said goodbye and shuffled oft toward his car. Perhaps no one will ever know how badly Yost yearned to shed his role as a passive spectator and once more take up active duty in behalf of his beloved "Meeshigan." Fire horses die hard, they say, and Yost was, and still is, a long way from being dead. His spirit is not dead. It is not the spirit of a man, but the spirit of an institution, the spirit of a long tradition whose end it not yet in sight. That spirit will live forever. It is embodied in the hearts of men who have taken up the reins passed to them by. others, in the minds of the men who bring perennial glory to the name of. Michigan, in the very walls and atmosphere of the Field House. It is an intangible spirit, a spirit hard to recognize, yet a spirit always there. Never have we seen it flame so brightly as on that sunny autumn afternoon when Fielding H. Yost, the man who brought that spirit to life, made it live all over again. It is the spirit of Michigan. Long may it live, with such men as Yost to give it eternal life. 1' 1 1 Training for business at government expense N EARLY all veterans are en- titled to attend school un- der thed . I. Bill. This provides up to $500 per year for tuition in approved schools; plus $65 per month for maintenance for single men; $90 per month for those with dependents. Job [objectives SOME of the occupations in business offices, for which our courses prepare, are as fol- lows Accountant Civil Service Bookkeeper office positions Office Clerk Secretary Office merachine operator Many of our graduates have advanced to executive posi- tions, or have their own busi- nesses. Our Employment Depart- ment receives far more calls than we can fill. You may be- gin any time. Courses range from 9 months to 18 months in length.. We have an adult stu- dent body, with whom you would feel at home. Many vet- erans now attending. Phlone 7831, visit our oflficer, or mail attached coupon for free bulletin. Business College William at State Ph. 7831 Please send your latest bulletin on the BG. I. ill, without obligation. M'y Name............... Address ................ I I I 1"' A Be Prepared for Cold Weather! Wear a WINTER-TEX Overcoat A splendid selection from which to choose. To retail at $45.00. Others $35.00 up MA LLORY H ATS (They're Cravenetted) $6.50 - $7.50 - $10.00 WOOL REEFERS Plaid and Solid Colors $10.95 to $18.50 Store Hours: 9 to 5:30, Sat. 9 to 6 . / Art Reiiier H~onored At Stirgis BanqueA Art Renner, captain-elect of the football team, was honored at a ban- quet attended by 250 persons held yesterday at his home in Sturgis. Fritz Crisler and T. Hawley Tap- ping and Robert O. Morgan of the Alumni Association were among the guests at the function. Your Eye Q. (quality) will swing upward when you try 1 I . Yl FltFt ircvisibl cv l, ss" I I i I