,W4 1 PAGE BIB! THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28,1957 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1957 'M' Icers Stage Late Season Spurts In Previous Five Championship Bids By BRUCE BENNETT (This is the first in a series of two articles recalling Michigan's hockey exploits in past years.) The scramble for playoff berths in the Western Intercollegiate Hockey League is going right down to the last week again this year and, true to past form, Mich- igan is in the thick of the battle. The Wolverines are currently tied for third place with their arch rivals of last year, Michigan Tech, at 101/2 points apiece. They trail Colorado College by six and one-half and North Dakota by one and one-half. Since those teams finishing first and second are the only ones invited to the NCAA tournament next month, Michigan must fin- ish strongly next week when it engages North Dakota and Michi- gan Tesch in four games if it is to have the opportunity of defending its NCAA title. Nothing New To Michigan Facing such a challenge to gain a league champiofiship or play- off berth is nothing new to Viv Heyliger's teams. For in each of the past five seasons the Wolver- ines have needed a late season spurt to achieve their goal. Back in 1952, Michigan was having t r o u b 1 e shaking the shackles of third place in the newly formed Midwestern Colle- giate Hockey League (MCHL). With five games left it trailed Colorado College and Denver in the standings. Facing elimination from a play- off berth after dropping a 5-3 decision to league-leading Color- ado College in the first of a two game series, the Wolverines bounced back the next night to whip the Tigers, 7-6, on Ron Mar- tinson's goal in overtime. Coaches Vote For Wolverines Sparked by this win, Michigan streaked to victories in its last four games to wind up in a second place tie with Denver. Subse- quently, a four to one vote by the league coaches sent them to Col- orado Springs instead of the Pio- neers. The 1953 season was much the same story, only this time it was Minnesota that plagued the Wol- verines. Then, late in the season, Heyliger made a move that was destined to affect the fortunes of his team for the next two years. Forced by injuries and ineligi- bilities to reshuffle his lineup, he came up with the forward line of George Chin, Doug Mullen and Pat Cooney. This trio turned out to be one of the greatest scoring combinations in Michigan history, ranking with the feared Neil Cel- ley-Johnny Matchefts-Gil Bur- ford combination that rewrote the record books in the 1951 season. Minnesota had clinched a tie for first place during the final week by defeating Michigan State twice and the pressure was on the Wolverines as they squared off with Michigan Tech. But with Cooney scoring four goals, Chin three and Mullen two, plus four by Matchefts, then a se- ProeTennis Jack Kramer and hisbprofes- sional tennis tour will be com- ing to Ann Arbor on March 26. Featured in his tour will be Pancho Gonzales and Ken Rosewall. The matches will be held in the Ann Arbor High School gym. During the past two years Gonzales has been the steadiest performer on the tour. He has beaten Rosewall, Pancho Se- gura, and Kramer. nior, the Wolverines rang up 18 goals in one of the top offensive performances in history at the Coliseum as they hung 8-3 and 10-2 defeats on the northern Michigan school. This gained them a tie with the Gophers for first place in the MSHL. (The second article in the series follows the Wolverines as they polish off great Minnesota and Michigan Tech teams in recent years.) Undefeated Swimmers! Place Perfect Records, On Line Against OSU IL lu ene from th S DE LINES by Dick Cramer thither Pro Sports? Teams Vie' On Saturday By AL WINKELSTEIN The Wolverine natators, Michi- gan's onlyunbeaten team, will put their perfect record on the line' against the toughest opponent, the Buckeyes from Ohio State. Fresh from their impressive vic- tory against Indiana and Michigan State last weekend, the swimmers will attempt to do what has been been virtually impossible for the last few years, beat the seemingly invincible men from Columbus. Ohio State's record reads much like the Yankee's record in base- ball. The last time the Buckeyes suffered a defeat in dual meet competition was in 1955 when the Wolverines nosed them out by a single point. Since 1938, the Buckeyes have taken 12 Big Ten championships, and since 1949, they have a streak of eight straight Conference titles.! In the last three years they have won the national collegiate cham- pionship three times. Last year Ohio State humbled the Michigan swimmers at Colum- bus by a count of 57-36. The Buck- eyles could have taken the meet by an even larger score, but they held back most of their top swim-! mers from the last few events. However, Michigan, with its ex- cellent group of sophomores, is a vastly improved team from last year's aggregation. So far this sea- son they have successfully met every challenge. Most experts 1lg- BILLY COUNT BASIE AAN AND ORCHESTRA featuring E STI E WILLIAMS Y N M IN PERSON IN PERSON! BUDPOI JERI SOUTHERN POWELL TRIO PHINEAS NEWBORN aR. QUARTET CHET BAKER r JIMMY JONES 0 TERRY GIBBS QUARTET LESTER YOUNG 0 ROY HAYNES " featuring TERRY POLLARD ZOOT SIMS RICHARD DAVIS SELDON POWELL 1ROLF KUHN 2 SHOWS - Sunday, March 3 - Detroit Special Matinee 3:30 P.M. - Evening 8:30 P.M. Masonic Temple - Tickets at Grinnell's - Detroit DICK KIMBALL-Michigan's top diver will carry much of the burden against the Buckeyes in this Saturday's meet. If he can crack through the Ohio State diving monopoly, the Wolverines' chances will be greatly enhanced. ured that with a young team, this would be a building season, but Tickets Tickets for this Saturday's swmiming meet against Ohio State will go on sale at 12:30 on Saturday. The price is 60 cents for students and a dol- lar for the general public. The meet starts at 2:30. the team has come along much faster than was expected. The team surpiresd most experts with tremendous wins over Indi- ana, Iowa, and Michigan State. They have shown great improve- ment, and reached their season's peak last Monday against the Spartans. The Buckeyes' record this season is not one to be lightly pushed aside either. They hold very im- pressive wins over the Hoosiers and the Spartans, and will be out to extend its victims to include Michigan. The Buckeyes have the best div- ing combination in the nation. Two of their three divers were members of the American Olympic team, while the third is the NCAA champion. Read and Use ODaly Classifieds PROFESSIONAL sports, generally among our most conservative institutions, may soon have to take some bold new steps if they hope to survive their latest and stiffest challenge. A long-time threat to the pros has finally materialized with the Supreme Court's decision that all sports, with the present excep- tion of baseball, are subject to antitrust laws. The judicial fiction that sports are not business and that they do not engage in "inter- state commerce" has been destroyed in the latest ruling. While baseball was specifically exempted because of legal prece- dence in its favor, quick Congressional action is expected to wipe out this advantage for the diamond sport. Soon all sports will pro- bably be considered liable to antitrust litigation. Chief victim of the new ruling seems to be the present backbone of continuity in pro sports - the reserve clause. This is the section of professional athletes' contracts that gives their teams the option to retain their services even after the contracts expire. The clause prohibits players from jumping to other teams after the end of their present contracts. At the present time, if Robin Roberts could get more money from the New York Yankees than from his present club, the Philadelphia Phils, he cannot deal with the Yanks. He must either agree to terms with the Phlis, get Philadelphia to trade him - or sell their option rights-to the Yankees, or quit baseball. His baseball talents are the exclusive property of the Phila- delphia Phillies. Now the reserve clause itself is quite legal. Antitrust laws do not bar it. What would be illegal in base- ball's - and all other profession- al sports' reserve clauses - is that a person cannot make base- ball his business without accept- ing the clause. All of organizedf$ baseball has combined to restrain trade in the sense that all teams recognize and use the reserve clause. A player who does not wish to include the clause in his contract has nowhere to go ex- cept out of the sport. With professional sports now considered interstate commerce, therefore, Robin Roberts can move over to the Yankees if they are the highest bidder. ROBIN ROBRTS The implications are great. A . . . to the highest bidder? strong advantage is given to the most wealthy teams in each sport. Whatever players they want they can get by outbidding the poorer clubs. Presently, the rich teams can buy up the best prospects among the new players. But at least players that develop for the financially disadvantaged teams are still the property of those teams and do not gravitate, once they've become established, to the most affluent teams. This "emancipation proclamation" is not the great boon to players that it seems. As fewer and fewer teams gain control over an increasing proportion of the best players and as the poorer clubs see less and less hope of ever recovering, the "have-not" teams will be forced out of business. . Even the richest club cannot last forever as all its competition disappears. It can't play games in a one-team league. The result would be a dead sport. How can the pro sports escape their dilemma? Don't forget that any joint action will be just the thing that antitrust laws pro- hibit. It may be that sports, which have kept government at bay for so long, may have to turn to federal authority as its eventual savior. Big Business ... IT IS MORE realistic to have 'professional sports recognized as interstate business - of major proportions. But once the sports are viewed as business, Congress can legiti- mately move to help them just as it has aided other businesses that cannot survive ecessive competition. The aid can be just that Congress will exempt sports from cover- age under antitrust laws. But this leaves the inadequacies of the present system untouched and untouchable, even though it allows the sports to regulate their own competition. A much more radical, but probably better solution would be for legislation that would define the extent of monopoly allowed in sports. Or if Congressional law would be too inflexible, a federal sports commission is certainly within the realm of possibility. Under proper management this would be no more oppressive to sports than the Interstate Commerce Commission has been to railroads. Government action seems inevitable for the solution of pro- fessional sports' new challenge. PRO BASKETBALL?: Pistons May Call Kramer r 6 , MUNNOWAMMMISMO I'- f EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES in YENEZU E LV E A with CREOLE PETROLEUM CORPORATION An Affiliate of Standard Oil Co. (N.J.) Representatives of Creole will be on the campus on FRIDAY, MARCH 1 to interview unmarried graduates with majors in PETROLEUM, CHEMICAL, MECHANICAL and ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING SEE YOUR PLACEMENT DIRECTOR FOR INTERVIEW SCHEDULES ,p I je... JOHN NARY II 1' ByCARL RISEMAN John Narcy, Captain of Michi- gan's swimming team, is a self- taught diver. What is more remarkable, the Gary, Indiana, athlete won the Indianastatehigh school diving championship without the benefit of any coaching! Played Football "I was a football player in my senior year in high school and was very interested in diving," Narcy remarked. "But Tolleston High School did not have a swimming or a diving team." In order to enter the state meet, a competitor was required to com- pete in at least one dual meet. Narcy, Dick Hill, now a football player for Michigan, and another of Narcy's teammates swam, against another high school in a 'dual meet' to make Narcy eligible for the state meet. i' Narcy began to become inter- ested in diving while lifeguarding for a YMCA camp in the summer of his junior year in high school. Narcy and a friend of his helped each other learn how to dive by comparing diving form. Indiana Champion By winning the Indiana diving championship, Narcy had new fields opened to him. An athletic scholarship enabled him to come to the University of Michigan. "When John first came out for practice,", Bruce Harlan, Michi- gan's diving coach relates, "I did not think that he would make the team. But he practiced hard and finally acquired the needed confi- dence at the Big Ten Meet last year where he finished sixth." John is a physical education major and wants to be a high school coach after he gets his de- gree this June. I 11 i I I I Now Version of a record seller 11 Arrow's University collar has been on the campus hit parade right from the start. And now this famous button down collar (with center button in back) is also available in a smart knit shirt! Traditional Ivy League styling > throughout in a pullover >>. A. model, offered in a - choice of two placket lengths: 7" (2 buttons) 12" (3 buttons). Available in solid colors, checks, stripes and plaids. $5.00.r ARR OW- CASUAL WEAR IVY Newest i Pleated Bac Third Button KHAKI an i . A \'Z :: Vi;\ N k i LEAGUE n SPORTSH IRTS ks . . . Button down Stripes . . . Plaids $495 d CHINO SLACKS s . . Belted Backs No Pleats{ $4955 CAPS ,ies F2 DETROIT -- Ron Kramer will consider playing pro basketball with the Pistons when they move from Fort Wayne into Detroit next winter if offered the chance, a Detroit newspaper reported yes- terday. Kramer primarily wants to play vave a WORLD of FUN! Travel with IIlA . Unbelievable Low Cost Earo0 e 60 co ~ .~,,fr. $525 43-65 eyst ,,n, from $99$ uA~l~j. Many lour's include S' 1 M" college credit. UL5 ,.Also .,,,,cost trps to Mexco $169 up, South America $699 up, Hawaii Study Tours $528 up and Aound the World $1398 up. HELEN SARBEY University of Michigan EITACampus Representative Fletcher Hall pro football following his June graduation. Because he is still competing as a collegiate, he has not chosen between the two foot- ball clubs bidding for him, the Green Bay Packers in the National Football League and the Hamilton team in the Canadian Big Four. However, Kramer indicated that if it was possible he would like to continue his basketball career if it would not prevent him from playing professional football. The Pistons have hinted that they will draft Kramer at the pro basketball meeting, although un- til now it was assumed that Kra- mer would decline their offer and the Pistons would merely get pub- licity out of it. "I don't know if I could make the team," Kramer said, "but I'd like to play in Detroit. Kramer, although only 6'4" Is one of the best rebounders in the Big Ten. In Michigan's 12 games in Big Ten competition this sea- son, Kramer has an average of 14.3 points per game. f J All Colors Vip">, A New knit button down shirt by Arrow IVY LEAGUE I I I Plaids and Str $295 PERSONNEL TECHNICIAN ($4,802 to start) One to three positions to be filled in May or June in the office of the Michizan. Civil Service Commission in Lan- This smart knit features the faious collar that uttnis dnwn in front and also in the I I I I I