THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, TWI~ MTCWJGAN~ DAILY TUESDAY, ... 1orthwestern Sets ildcats Extend Win Streaki to Eight r Back Michigan Cagers, 83-7v Combined Wolverine-Spartan Ice Squad To Challenge Russians in Detroit Tonight ith Hot Second-Half S (Continued from Page 1) field goal in the first 10 min- of the second half.f y that time Michigan fell 141 ts behind-a stunning blow to am that was only one point n, 39-40, at the intermission. Michigan started the game well and succeeded in its original de- fense plan -- stopping 6'9" Joe Ruklick, a center who had been averaging 25.0 points per game. From 25 feet out, George Lee hit three straight push shots in oring Spree' the opening moments to counter- act the scoring of Jones and Ruk- lick, giving Michigan a 10-8 edge. Lee kept dueling Jones and Mantis in field goals while Michi- gan dropped in 11 straight free throws-including eight by Burton.- Meanwhile, Farris - although' only 6'3"-Rogers and Burton took turns guarding Ruklick and held him to just a pair of first-half field, goals, Gain Edge Terry Miller and John Tidwell' hit back-to-back jump shots with 1:30 to play in the initial half to give their team a 39-36 edge. But Mantis dumped in a jump shot and then set up Ruklick for a hook shot and the 'Cats never lost the lead again. A major factor in Michigan's threat to Northwestern, a team that lost only to North Carolina, was rugged a rebounding line. Bur- ton pulled down 23, Tidwell grab- bed 13, and Lee had 12, Strong Rebounder Ruklick, a strong rebounder ally season long, pulled in only nine- one behind team-leader Jones' 10. But the Wolverines could find the range on only 31.2 per cent on its 93 field goal attempts while their foes had a 47.7 game per-, centage. Statistics -Daily-Harry Strauss UP AND IN - Wolverine guard Terry Miller (31) drives in for two points in the second-half of last night's game. The Wildcat's Willie Jones (3) who scored 10 of 13 field goal attempts, vainly attempts to block the shot. '1W' Runners Impressive In Annual Holiday M Aeet By HAL APPLEBAUM Traditional rivals Michigan and Michigan State will temporarily bury the hatchet as they combine hockey teams in an effort to upset the invading Russian Olympic squad at Detroit's Olympia tonight at 8:30. Spartans Bolster Squad The Wolverine squad, plagued by manpower deficiency all season.! will be bolstered by Spartan goalie Joe Selinger, defensemen Ed Pol-' lesel and Butch Miller, and for- wards Joe Palano, Dick Hamilton, Fred De Vuono and Bill Mac- Kenzie in their attempt to upset the Russians who are undefeated in thiee contests in America. The visitors opened their tour with three games against the U.S.E Nationals. The opener was a 5-5 tie, but the Russians came back tof win easy 8-3 and 7-1 victories in1 the other two battles.y Stellar Goalies The addition of Selinger gives the Michigan-MSU squad three stellar goalies. Michigan Coach Al Renfrew and State mentor Amo Bessone have decided to let Jim Coye, Ross Childs and Selinger play one period each. rickets are still available and can be obtained before the game at Olympia. During the Christmas vacation the Wolverine icers lost two games while winning one. The U.S. Na- tionals overpowered them 6-2, and the series with St. Michaels was split, the. Wolverines winning the opener 8-2, while losing the second contest 6-4. MICHIGAN SCORING LEADERS Michigan scoring this year: Player Goals Assists Total Hutton 6 16 22 Hayton 3 14 17 Mattson 9 6 15 White 5 9 14 MacDonald 6 5 11 Cushing 4 6 10 Watt 5 3 8 Bochen 3 4 7 Horner 2 4 6 Gourley 1 1 2 Childs 1 1 2 The Wolverines found them- selves overmatched against the' Nationals, who used their superior, manpower to good advantage and finally wore down Michigan in the! final period, scoring four times to, win. The Michigan goals werej scored by Bob White and John Hutton. Last Friday night the Wolver- ines found the shoe on the other; foot as they faced St. Michaels, whose squad was left short-handed TENNIS PRO: Kramer Signs Cooper SYDNEY VP) - Ashley Cooper, sYDNYlia'str-plAschleyiooe hopes of regaining the Davis Cup Australia's triple champion of from the United States later this amateur tennis, yesterday joined year. Mal Anderson, his Davis Cup Kramer is paying Cooper 20 teammate, in the professional per cent of the receipts and is ranks. guaranteeing him $100,000 over a The addition of Cooper gave three-year period. promoter Jack Kramer an attrac- The only other pro who received tive challenger for Pancho Gon- 20 per cent is Gonzales, the cham- zales, king of the pros. It also pion, who defeated Hoad in a long struck a heavy blow to Australia's tour last year. when four of its players and its goalie failed to catch the train. The reduced squad offered little oppositiou and the Wolverines roImped to an 8-2 victory with Gary Mattson scoring three goals. The next night the missing St. Michaels players finally arriveA and took a 4-0 lead in the first period. The Wolverines rallied to tie the score in the second period, but St. Mike's, one of Canada's top junior teams, tallied twice to win. r -=_---- -Daily-Peter Anderson TOURNEY WINNERS-Michigan co-captains George Lee (center) and M. C. Burton receive the Motor City Holiday Tournament Q l T. I.. lL X U .1 1V Trophy. Lee also received a tropt player." Both were named to the FIichigan Fl rVith Holid6 By JIM BENAGHI Michigan's basketball hopes took holiday upsurge to give Coach, ill Perigo his fastest start in his ven years with the Wolverines, The Michigan quintet recorded ins over Delaware, 82-58, in a re-Christmas game; Princeton, -58, and Detroit, 93-68, in the otor City Tournament victory; nd Purdue, 82-75, in the Big Ten pener. Six Game Win Streak The wins gave Michigan a six- ime victory streak and brought e season record to 7-1. Michigan ran away from the otor City tourney field by easy lumphs, placing three men on le all-star team, and getting a easant surprise with the spark- ng play of Lovell Farris at cen- r. Farris, Who never started a ame before the tournament, was amed to the all-tourney five ong with Burton and George' ee. Lee was voted most valuable ayer. Although only 6'3", Farris andled rebounding and playmak- g in the pivot well enough to arn the starting job from Gordie )hy as the tourney's "outstanding e all-star team. ve Prospers 11/y Victories points a game since he became a regular. This has been a real boost to an already high-scoring four- some of John Tidwell, Burton, Lee and Miller. Tidwell High Scorer Tidwell, a second-team all-star at the tournament, was the high scorer in both games, scoring 21 and 22 points respectively. However, the climax of the va- cation schedule came in last Sat- urday's conference opener as the Wolverines stunned Purdue with a 19-point halftime lead. The game was played at Lafayette, Ind. Purdue had been an 11-point favorite and was rated along with Northwestern and Michigan State as the best of the Big Ten this year. Before the night was over, Pur- due Coach Ray Eddy told the Michigan team that its perform- ance was the best he ever saw against his quintet on the Purdue court. TEAM SCORING Games Pts. Ave. Tidwell, g 8 151 18.9 Murton, f 8 149 18.6 Lee, f 8 141 17.6 T. Miller, g 8 92 11.5 Farris, c 7 44 6.3 Rogers, C 8 43 5.4 N'WESTERN FG Jones, f .......10 Berry, f ....... 2 Rukiick, c ..... 4 Becker, g ...... 1 Mantes, g .....10 Brandt,.f ...... 3 North, c ....... 1 Campbell, g .... 1 TOTALS ....32 MICHIGAN FG Burtor,f ...... 6 Lee, f ......... 8 Farris, a ...... 1 Tidwell, g ..... 8 Miller, g ....... 5 Rogers, c ...... 0 'Kingsbury, g .. 1 Robins, g :.... 0 TOTALS ....29 HALFTIME: FT 6-9 2-3 8-13 0-1 3-3 0-1 0-0 0-0 19-30 FT 12-13 5-6 1-2 0-2 1-3 0-0 1-2 0-0 20-28 PF TP 4 26 4 6 3 16 2 2 4 23 0 6 1 2 2 2 20 83 PF 5 3 3 4 2 3 1 0 21 TP 24 21 3 16 11 0 3 0 78 A small contingent of Michigan trackmen got in their first licks at competition this season in the sixth annual Holiday Track Meet sponsored by the University of Chicago Track Club at the Uni- versity of Chicago field house Dec. 27. There was no team competition in the meet as all runners com- peted unattached. "We weren't too well represent- ed but those boys who made the trip did very well, especially for this "early in the season," said coach Don Canham. Robinson Stars The highlight of the evening was the 60-yd. dash which was won by sophomore Tom Robinson, who edged American Olympian Ira Murchison by a step. Robinson's time of 6.2 tied the meet record held by Murchison. Wolverine hurdler, Pete Stang- er, set a record in the 60-yd. high hurdles as his time of 7.5 erased his own mark set the year before. He finished third in the low hurdles. Landstrom Wins Other Wolverine winners were Eeles Landstrom who took the pole vault with a leap of 14' and Jack Steffes whose jump of 23'6" was tops in the broad jump. Sophomore Lester Bird twice broad jumped over 24' but both jumps were disqualified. He wound up third credited with a leap of 22'6". In the shot put Ermin Crownley took third. Captain Mamon Gibson tied for two seconds. He jumped 6'4" in the high jump and managed to clear 13'6" in the pole vault. "Robinson and Stanger were great," stated Canham. "Stanger was tired before the low hurdle finals. It was his sixth race in eight hours and at this stage of the season it's too much running. "Tony Seth qualified in the 880, but felt sick so he didn't run in the finals. Bird made some great leaps, but unfortunately he fouled. Steffes turned in a fine perform- ance. The Wolverines' next engage- ment will be in the Michigan AAU meet which will be held in Yost Field House Jan. 31. USC Heads NCA A Titlists KANSAS CITY (P)-The Uni- versity of Southern California has replaced Yale as all-time team champion of the National Collegi- ate Athletic Assn., NCAA statistics show. The Trojans won three national team championships, in baseball, tennis and track and field, last year to bring their total to 26 against Yale's 25. Oklahoma State ranks third with 23. Others: Michigan 19, Illinois 15, Ohio State 13, Princeton 12, Stanford 10. Southern Cal's triple triumph last year is the first such feat in the 76-year annals of National Collegiate Championship compe- tition, the NCAA said. COMPLETE FORMAL RENTAL SERVICE Tice & Wren 107 S. UVersiy Ave. STORE HOURS: 9 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. ------------ 1 Northwestern 40, Michigan 39 SCORES Northwestern 83, MICHIGAN 78 Iowa 80, Michigan State 68 Indiana 77, Purdue 69 Illinois 77, Wisconsin 51 Cincinnati 85, Bradley 84 (double overtime) Kansas State 59, Iowa State 56 TOP TEN Top Ten teams with won- lost records through Saturday, Jan. 3: 1. Kentucky (11-0) 2. North Carolina State (9-1) 3. North Carolina (8-1) 4. Kansas State (9-1) 5. Michigan state (7-1). 6. Auburn (8-0) 7. Cincinnataj (6-2) 8. Northwestern (8-1) 9. Bradley (8-0) 10. St. Johns (9-1) ANN ARBOR CIVI C THEATRE, INC. presents WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE'S "JLIUES CAESAT R" January 8, 9, 10 LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE Curtain Time 8:00 P.M. Box Office Open January 6-10 Call1 NEXT PRODUCTION: "CAT ON A HOT NO 8-6300 TIN ROOF" has averaged over 11 OSE TO PITTSBURGH: Wrestlers Prepare To Face Indiana By DAVE LYON ichigan's wrestling team, which :ed uninspiring in dropping a i decision to Pittsburgh, Satur- ,has its work cut out when In- na comes here for a dual-meet lay. he Big Ten has several better- n-average teams this year, and Lana appears to be no excep- i. "They'll be as tough as Pitt,' Y Wolverine Coach Cliff Keen. Place Second he Wolverines looked good le finishing second to Pitts- gh in the Wilkes College. open nament, Dec. 29-30. Although Michigan grapplers won indi- tal titles, they performed well ugh in preliminary rounds to ass enough points for second e. ut Michigan started off on the ng foot against Pitt in a dual- t Saturday and at the end of matches, the score was Pitt Michigan 0. Then Dennis Fitz- ild and Fred Olin gained draws sophomore Karl Fink, making first dual-meet appearance, i a decision. rolverine Mike Hoyles, sched- i to compete at 123 pounds wed up 12 ounces overweight he had to forfeit his match ee decisions and a fall later gerald drew to give Michigan .e points on the scoreboard. Squad Criticized :een, while saying that the meet could have easily been :h closer, was critical of his ad' offensive inentness. He So Keen will try to correct this slow to heal from a September juries still hamper much of the sudden fault in his team's per- operation. Meanwhile, Murray has team. formance before Friday. He is still dropped three straight dual-meet Michigan's best performances in mddecisions. the Wilkes meet came from Fitz- bothered by the old problem of Then there is Ambrose Wilbanks, gerald, Don Corriere, and Dick injuries. former Michigan high school Fronczak. Corriere and Fronczak Captain Larry Murray, the champ from Ypsilanti, who has took thirds and Fitzgerald finished squad's only senior, remains a been advised to forget wrestling runner-up in his class, losing to question mark. He is still bothered for three weeks to a month because former NCAA champ Doug Blu- by a right knee which has been of a chest injury. Other minor in- baugh in the finals, 10-4. STORE HOURS Daily 9 to 5:30 .I~AV ON i 148 , /"i"/'f"W C ,~uu e $1 95