[)AT, JANUAR~Y 7, 19I9i THE MICHI AN .AILY :1 AUF: 1 '.l'1 I nihts Ice Battle Postpone '9 TANS TO TANK TITLES: Wolverine Natators Resume Hard Work I 'M' HitsnGophers in Big 9 Debut' By SY SONKIN Scheduling Michigan and Min- nesota to open each other's cage season makes it seem like that omniscient little lady, Fate, had it all figured out that this would be more than just another Big Nine contest. It's pitting last year's Confer- ence champions against the man (who guided them there. AND THIS TIME that man is out to shake loose the All-Con- ference center he had bottled up for two years. Last year the Wolverines took the Minnesotans twice by scores of 43-41 and 56-45. The first game saw the under- dog Michigan club edge a Gopher quintet led by towering Jim Mc- Intyre. eight free throws for a 16 point total. Credit for stopping his floor work was given to the Michigan center, Bill Roberts, who was forced to leave the game on per- sonal fouls with four minutes left to play. This was the first time Roberts had started a game, and the an- nouncement came as a complete surprise. IT WAS A TOUGH assignment, but the lanky center came through. When the second game was over, it was found that the now- favored Wolverines had been exactly twice as good in hold- ing McIntyre. He made two field goals and four free shots for eight points. * *. IN THE FIRST contest McIn- tyre had to contend with a man- to-man defense; Cowles used a zone defense in the second to stop him. SPOUTS DICK HURST, Night Editor Under Cowles the Wolverines did a complete turnabout. In- stead of the Conference door- mat, they have become the team to beat. Michigan is now an outfit with confidence in its own ability to play on the same court with any team in the country. * *u AND THE performance of the Maize and Blue so far this year under Coach Ernie McCoy has done nothing to destroy that con- fidence. Now Cowles has to beat that team which he took two. years to mold into a Conference title- holder, and he has to do it with an outfit made rip mostly of sophomores. His is the job to break through a defense that was two years in building. THIS IS especially true in the case of McIntyre. In four games against Cowles-coAched teams, "Big Jim" has been held to 36 points. After teaching his boys how to stop the tall pivotman, Cowles now has to teach Mc- Intyre how to get around the defense he so patiently built up. It must be pointed out that, al- though Cowles has come up with a fine looking sophomore in "Whitey" Skoog, who has aver- aged 15 points in eight games, and despite the fact that Bud Grant and Wally Salovich have finally begun to hit the mark in the last few games, there's little chance of a real Gopher offensive threat if "Big Jim" is stopped. Team Plays Queens Six a Toniorrow Wyoming Storm Delays Puckmen A snowstorm in Cheyenne, Wyo., has forced the postpone- ment of tonight's hockey game be- tween the Michigan sextet and the Queens University squad. Tomorrow night's contest will be played as scheduled. En route to Ann Arbor after their highly successful western swing, the pucksters were snowed in at Chey- enne, which has delayed their Ann Arbor arrival by two days. Last reports had the squad approaching Chicago. The team is expected to arrive here late tonight. Athletic officials here said they would ask the Kingston, Ont., team to remain in Ann Arbor until Monday to play off the post- poned game. Tickets for tonight's game will be honored Monday, if the post- poned contest is played. If the Sgaine is not played off, the tick- ets will be valid for next week's contest urith McMaster IUiver- sity. By MERLE LEVIN It didn't take long for sunny Florida to become just a pleasant. memory to Matt Mann's crew of well-bronzed swimmers. Al] the Wolverine tankmen needed was one look at the i-M pool blackboard to decide that Ft. Lauderdale and the Collegiate Swimming Forun is very definite= ly a thing of the past FOR, STARING at them in big yellow letters was this reminder: "Honeymoon is over. From now on we WORK. Remember we have two very important championships to defend." And WORK is just what the defending Big Nine and NCAA champions have been doing all week. COACH MANN has been running (or is it floating?) his charges through sprints and time trials until they can barely lift their arms, and the hard work is paying dividends in the form of reduced times on the part of several newcomers. Freestyler Bob Byberg, breast- stroker Bill Austin and back- stroker Jack Arbuckle look like the best of the sophomore crop while backstroker Bernie Kahn who becomes eligible for varsity competition in February ap- pears at this writing to be the prize package of the season. Kahn was finishing at Harry Holiday's heels during the Flor- ida trip, not bad for a still-im- proving freshman. * * *' HOLIDAY WAS good enough last year to win his second straight Big Nine backstroke title and finish second to Olympic titlist Allan Stack in the NCAA championships. Among the veterans, co-cap- tains Dick Weinberg and Bob Sohl continue to rate among the country's best in their spe- cialties. Weinberg, runner-up for the Big Nine 50 and 100-yard freestyle titles last year comes up against the man who beat him out for the 50-yd. title when he meets Keith Carter at Purdue next Saturday. * *. * WEINBERG finished ahead of Carter when they met in the an- nual East-West meet held dur- ing the Florida trip. Sohl heads a list of breast- strbkers which for sheer depth cannot be matched by any team in the country. His' race against the versatile Carter will be the undisputed highlight of next week's Purdue meet. Some of the other Wolverine veterans are engaged in battling surplus poundage and forthcom- ing finals but, with the exception of Bill Kogan who had his ap- pendi: removed during Christ- mas vacation, the squad is rapid- ly rounding into top physical con- dition. And the amazing Kogan is al- ready paddling across the pool and looking so fit that Mann says he may use him against Purdue. MMMMMMIM". Win ep Wapdn'b6e Dutch Olympic Star Named Year's Top Woman Athlete NCAA Head Cites Su"cess In Sanitv Code Corduroy Sport Coats. . (j~ulor1 1-/.95) $1599 I' NEW YORK-()-Mrs. Fanny Blankers - Koen, comely Dutch housewife who won three indivi- dual Olympic titles in an unprece- dented performance, was named Woman Athlete-of-the-Year for 1948 today in the annual Associat- ed Press poll. The tall blonde from Amster- dam was an easy victor with 34 firsts and 123 points on the basis of her brilliant feats at London. After winning the 100-meter and. 200-meter dashes, she set a new world and Olympic record in the 80-meter hurdles and ran the an- chor leg on the successful Dutch 400-meter relay team. Mrs. Blankers-Koen dethroned Mrs. Mildred (Babe) Didrikson on TOBOGGANS Zaharias of Denver who held the title for the last three years. Mrs. Zaharias was second on her golf play. She drew 16 firsts and 93 points as the result of copping the Women's National Open at Northfield, N.J. Mrs. Vicki Draves of Pasadena, Calif., double Olympic diving champ off the springboard and high tower, was third with 11 firsts and 69 points. Barbara Ann Scott of Ottawa, the Olympic, World and European figure skating queen before she turned pro, was a close fourth. Then came* Ann Curtis of San Francisco who won the Olympic 400-meter free style swim for women and swam a leg on the U.S. 400-meter relay team that finished first. Miss Curtis was woman Athlete - of-the-Year in 1944. This time she had 11 first place votes and 63 points. Snow Strands 'M' Grid Head KIMBALL, Neb.-(;P)-A hand- ful of noted sports figures, in- cluding Bennie Oosterbaan, Mich- igan grid coach, bided their time in Kimball today waiting for transportation to San Francisco and the national NCAA meeting. Snowbound since Monday, these sports figures together with scores of other passengers, were accord- ed the hospitality of Kimball homes while waiting for their train to start moving once again. Other sports figures in the group included: Bill Alexander, Georgia Tech; Paul Bixler, Col- gate; W. J. Bingham, Harvard; (Chairman of the NCAA Rules Committee); Frank Murray, Mar- quette; Eppy Barnes, Colgate; Max Bishop, Navy; Charles Mil- cham, Cincinnati; Charles Grif- fin, Georgia Tech; and Jack Blott, Michigan. I Tomorrow night's contest will SAN FRANCISCO -- (f) - Dr. offer another challenge to the Karl E. Leib, president of the Na- various Wolverine streaks and will tional Collegiate Athletic Asso- give coach Vic Heyliger an inkling ciation, declared today the so- of the chances his team has in, called "sanity code" to clean up once again copping the represen- Droselyvting and other evils was tation to the NCAA tournament. Corduroy Pants 0 0 *0 0 $499 $5.95 42% Wool Slacks S 0, making definite progress, DR. LEIP, professor at the Uni- versity of Iowa, spoke at the San Francisco Press Club. He said there are still many violations of the code, which was adopted as year ago, but maintained a steady decrease had been noted. EARLIER, MEMBERS of the NCAA Executive Committee se- lected New York City for next year's convention, to be held Jan. 12, 13 and 14.s Today's meeting was the first one this week Dr. Leib had been able to muster a quorum to con- duct official business. Some of the members had been snowbound in Nebraska. The top officials approved dates and sites for 1949 national cham- pionships, including the follow- ing: GOLF-Iowa State, Ames, June 27 to July 2. CROSS COUNTRY-Michigan State, Lansing, Nov. 28. The committee also approved a new national baseball playoff plan using regional elimination instead of the former East-West setup. The four-team finals will be held June 23, 24 and 25 at a site yet to be selected. Championships in the past were held at Kalamazoo, Mich. j j 1 M 3 Michigan Tech, one of the four teams who will fight it out for the tourney bid, dropped two contests to the Queens out- fit last week. In addition to the Engineers, Minnesota and North Dakota are jockeying for the bid. The Sioux aren't expected to give the Wolverines much opposi- tion in the race, having lost to cili tiesnwi.lbe available for night at 7:30 at the Intramural Sports Building. the title-holding Michigan sextet twice on the western trip, 8-1 and 11-4. But the Gophers are once again rated among the best teams in the country and are a sure bet to fight it out down to the wire for the bid. The Northland sextet was cut down three times last year by the Wolverines, but out-lasted Michigan in the final game of the four game home and home series. Unbeaten, Michigan has now won seven games and has three ties. In the ten contests played, the Wolverines have scored 64 goals while the opposition has tallied 24 times. LATE HOCKEY Boston 3, Detroit 2. Montreal 7, Chicago 2. i I el% C ( 1 T SHIRTS White, Navy Surplus 44c, Reg. 69c Limit 4 .,1 I ANN ARBOR CRCLOTHING 113 South Main 25% Off G' J ^ f J Q Q /' r.+'^1 . _ 4 ' i ,: f ' ,. 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