E SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY 26, 1964 olverine Grapplers Down Boilermakers Thinclads Outpoint Chicago Tr Special To The Daily ack Club 4 By BOB CARNEY An aggressive Michigan wres- tling squad scored its third con- secutive Big Ten victory yester- day with a 25-3 pasting of Purdue in chilly Yost Field House. The Wolverines, scoring victor- ies in the first seven matches of the meet, piled up a 25-0 lead be- fore dropping the final decision to the Boilermakers. Michigan will play host to Illinois Monday afternoon at Yost Field House in its next Big Ten encounter. "The boys really wanted to win this one," said Coach Cliff Keen after the meet. They showed real improvement. The aggressiveness Keen refers to was highlighted in the 137 and 147 pound classes, where the Wolverines scored two straight pins. Pins Gary Wilcox, competing in his first home meet, pinned 137-pound opponent Harold Montgomery in the third match. The pin came with only thirty seconds remain- ing in the match, after Wilcox had piled up a 16-4 lead with three re- versals and three predicaments. At this point Michigan led, 11-0. In the following 147 pound match, Michigan's Lee Deitrick copied his teammate's achieve- ment. Deitrick also had to wait until the final minute to gain the pin, which added five more to the Wolverines' team score. At the time of the fall, Deitrick led 7-3, and had clearly outclassed his op- ponent, Kamel Lewicki, with four takedowns and two escapes. Heavyweight Loss Michigan's only loss of the aft- ernoon came in the final match, between heavyweight Bob Spaly of Michigan and Purdue's Bob Hopp. Hopp, obviously wanting only a draw to rule out the possi- bility of a shutout, wrestled de- fensively, forcing Spaly to go after him. Neither wrestler scored a point in the ' first period, but Spaly moved ahead, 1-0, with an es- cape in the second period. Hopp gained an escape himself in the third period, and with one min- ute remaining the match was tied, 1-1. Relaxing his defense, Spaly worked frantically for a takedown and in the process suffered one himself. With these two points, Hopp gained a 3-1 decision and Purdue averted a shutout. "You can't blame Bob," said Keen afterward. "He tried desper- ately for the takedown and was countered." Quick Lead Ralph Bahna, competing at 123 pounds, gave Michigan a quick 3-0 lead in the meet, with a 7-0 win over Purdue's Jon Schrag, by scor- ing an early takedown and clinch- ing it with a third period predica- ment. In the afternoon's second match, 130-pounder Bill Johanne- sen scored a 3-2 win over Purdue's Ralph Trail, in a match that was much more one-sided than the score indicates. After pins by Wilcox and Dei- trick, captain Wayne Miller went to work. Taking down opponent Larry Foster with only twelve sec- onds left, Miller gained a 3-1 de- cision and the Wolverines held a commanding 19-0 lead. Returning Starters Rick Bay competing in his first home meet since returning from the football team, defeated Purdue captain George Reid, 6-2. Bay used takedowns in all three periods to gain the decision, while holding Reid to two escapes. In the 177 pound division, an- other returning starter, Chris Stowell, delivered the victory for Michigan. Scoring a predicament when he had the advantage in the second period, and then escaping from a disadvantage in the last period, Stowell earned a 4-2 deci- sion and boosted Michigan's lead to 25-0. 123-bs.-Bahna (M) dec. Schrag, 7-0. 130-lbs. -- Johannesen (M) dec. Trail, 3-2. 137-lbs. - Wilcox (M) pinned Montgomery, 8:32. 147-lbs. - Deitrick (M) pinned Lewicki, 8:20.. 157-lbs.-Miller (M) dec. Foster, 3-1. 167-lbs.-Bay (M) dec. Reid, 6-2. 177-lbs.-Stowell (M) dec. Mestnik, 4-1. Hvywt.-Hopp (P) dec. Spaly, 3-1. * * * Michigan and Illinois will grap- ple in a Big Ten wrestling meet tomorrow at 4 p.m. in Yost Field House following a weekend of ac- tivity for both teams. Michigan easily gained its sixth win of the season against only one loss with a lopsided 25-3 home floor victory over Purdue yes- terday afternoon. Illinois, on the other hand, had to settle for a 12- 12 tie with Michigan State in a meet that was also held yesterday afternoon. 123-Tino Lambrose (M) vs. Dan Jeffrey. 130-Doug Hornung (M) vs. Fred Aprati. 137-Gary Wilcox (M) vs. K. Jac- obson. 147-Lee Deitrick (M) vs. F. De- vore. 157-Dave Post (M) vs. Clay Beat- tie. 167-Rick Bay (M) vs. John Jeff- rey. 177-Chris Stowell (M) vs. V. D~elarco. SHvywt.-Bob Spaly (M) vs. Dave Russell. time being :32.5 seconds. Dave Kent Bernard cracked the Chi- Romain, picked by Canham as cago fieldhouse record in the 600-on, hiskedprspCtsfom n- yardrunlas niht a Mihign'sone of his top prospects for con- yard run last night as Michigan's ference honors this year, turned track team over-powered the Chi- in a time of :50.4 for a victory cago Track Club, 88-53. in the 440. Bernard's time was 1:11.4. In the high jump, sophomore Competing for the first time this season, the thinclads used the meet as a tuneup for next week's Michigan State Relays. "I think we had a good performance from the team," assistant coach Dave Martin commented. "The Track Club had some good individual competitors, but overall we were just the stronger squad. Some of the conditions in the fieldhouse, especially for the high jump, could have been better, thus we were hampered somewhat." Michigan's Ted Kelly turned in a time of 1:54.9 in the 880 to beat Dave Mellady of the Chicago Track Club. Mellady is a veteran of in- door meets and has run this event in 1:52. Michigan captured nine first places out of the 15 events, with these being balanced about equal- ly between the track and field events. Ken Burnley and Mac Hunter took first and second place n the 300-yard dash with the winning Bob Densham and Al Ammerman took, the first two places for Mich- igan, with Densham going over the bar at 6'71". Canham pieced together a mile relay team of Bob Jarema, Willie Brown, Mac Hunter, and Kent Bernard which placed first at 3:18.9. Disappointments came for the Wolverines though in the 70-yard high hurdles and the shotput. In the hurdles, Michigan's Cliff Nut- tall lost to Willie May by .1 sec- ond and Ernie Soudek fell about two inches short of the winning heave in the shot. In the meet scheduled at East Lansing next week, Michigan will face State, Western Michigan, Miami (O.), Ohio University, and Kentucky. Tuneup 60-YD. DASH-1. Wiebe (C); 2. Reid (M); 3. Brown (M). Time- :06.4. 300-YD. DASH--1. Burnley (M); 2. Hunter (M); 3. Alexejan (C). Time-:32.5. '440-YD. DASH-i. Romaln (M); 2. Kareazes (C); 3. Sweeney (M). Time-:504. 600-Yi. RUN-1. Bernard (:N); 2. McClimon (C); 3. Jarema (M). T8ime-1:11.4 (new fieldhouse rec- ord). 880-YD. RUN-1. Kelly (M); 2. Mellady (C); 3. Norde (M). Time- 1:54.9. 1000-YD. RUN--1. Hayes (M); 2. Casto (M); 3. Sloan (C). Time - 2:15.4. MILE RUN-i. Ryan (M); 2. Pe- terson (C); 3. Sampson (M). Time -4:19.0. TWO MILE-1. Peterson (C) 2. Murray (M); 3. Benedict (M). Time -9:20.6. MILE RELAY-1. MICHIGAN (Ja- rema, Brown, Hunter, Bernard); 2. Chicago Track Team. 'time--3:18.9. 70-Yl LOW HURDLES-I. Loomos (C); 2. May (C); 3. Woodton (M). Time-:08.1. 70-YD. HIGH HURDLES-1. May (C); 2. Nuttall (M); 3. Woodton (M). Time-:08.6. SHOTPUT-1. Cohen (C); 2. Sou- dek (); 3. Schmitt (1). Distance -545". BROAD JUMP-I. White (C); 2. Sweeney (M); 3. Rowser (M). Dis- tance-2'4%". POLE VAULT-1. Canamare (M); 2. Wade (M); 3. Wells (M). Height- 136". HIGH JUMWP-1. Densham (MW); 2. Ammerman (M); 3. Conrad (C). Height-67 'A". '"t.' -Daily-Jim Lines DEITRICK DRIVES-Lee Deitrick, wrestling for Michigan in the 147 pound class this year, has rarely been found in tight spots like this one. Yesterday Deitrick pinned his opponent, Ralph Trail of Purdue, to help Michigan to a lopsided 25-3 victory., Ir FOUR CONSECUTIVE WINS: Icers Slash by Techmen, 5-3 k f IQC ASSEMBLY ASSOC IATION By PERRY HOOD After playing nearly two per- iods to a scoreless tie, Michigan's pucksters came on strong to take a close-played 5-3 decision over Michigan Tech last night before 3,310 screaming fans. Sophomore defenseman Barry MacDonald slapped a long shot under Tech goalie Gary Bauman with 13:37 gone in the third period to seal the victory for the Wolver- ines. A minute later captain Gor- die Wilkie put a long shot into an open Huskie net to add the insurance point. Penalties Popular The first period opened with a series of penalties for both teams and especially hard checking. Both teams were able to waste out the penalty periods. Michigan goal- tender Bob Gray made several spectacular saves, many coming with two Wolverines riding out in- fractions. Penalties again were the bulk of the action in the second per- iod, with the play getting rough- er and the checks harder. Michigan's blossoming "b a d boy," Jack Cole, led the penalty parade with three two-minute in- fractions, including a joint effort for roughing with Huskie Bob Pal- lante after a short melee in front of the Tech goal. With Techman Rickey Yeo in the popular box seat, Martin took Present a short pass in front of the Tech net and slithered a screen shot under eight or nine sticks and legs into the center of the goal to open the scoring for the Blue with three seconds left in the period. The cork was seemingly yanked out of the bottle between periods, unleashing both teams offensive attacks to blast in a total of seven tallies in the final frame. Scoring about once every three minutes, the two squads alternated goals until a 3-3 deadlock was built up halfway through the period. The crowd joined in the ac- tion chanting "Let's go Blue" and "Go Tech go" to add to the gen- eral confusion during the next five minutes. MacDonald then belted in the fourth goal for the Blue and it was virtually over for Tech. Huskie Coach John MacInnes yanked goalie Bauman in favor of a sixth offenseman, but to no avail. Just as Bauman left the ice, Wilkie got the puck at mid-ice and sent a long shot over the blue line on target to close out the scor- ing. Few Fast Breaks In contrast to the open goals of Friday's contest, only one mark- er was the result of a fast break. With one team or the other short one man so often, the defenses had the greatest job of the evening. The series sweep leaves Michi- gan with a 10-2 overall record and a 3-1 standing in WCHA competi- tion. Tech meanwhile drops to a 1-3 record. The Wolverines ad- vance into a first place tie with Minnesota, moving ahead of pre- vious leaders North Dakota and Denver. Rough 'N Tough ros.i! %f 0 IVL'VV"E Coe In d gregry ("From the back of the bus") MICHIGAN Gray MacDonald Polonic Wilkie Butler Cole Pos. G D D C W W TECH Bauman Pallante Wimmer Veo MacIellan Watson First Period Scoring-None. Pen- alties: T-Pallante (tripping) 0:37, 1--Cole (charging) 1:27, M-Mac- Donald (offensive checking) 2:17, T - Leimian (tripping) 6:17; MW- Ferguson (interference) 9:11, T - Chivers (charging) 17:42. Second Period Scoring-M-Mar- tin (Wakabayashi, Butler) 19:57. Penalties: M-Cole (hooking) 6:20, T-Palante (roughing) 13:37, Al - Cole (roughing) 13:37. MW - Wilkie (tripping) 13:42, M-Martin (trip- ping) 17:15, T-Yeo (holding) 19:48. Third Period Scoring-T-Watson (Yeo, Leiman) 2:37, M-Hood (Mar- tin, Read), 5:15, T-Holm (1111, Draper) 8:26, MW-Butler (Wilkie, Cole) 10:56, T-Hill (Holm, Draper) 13:37, MW-Maclionald (Wilkie) 18:40, M--Wilkie (Martin) 19:27. Penalties: M--MacDonald (tripping) 0:49, T- Chivers (tripping) 5:35. IN CONCERT WITH ADDIS & CROFUT popular folk duo SATURDAY, FEB. 1 8:30 P.M. H ill Auditorium Tickets $2.50, 2.00, 1.50 Blocks and individual sales Monday, Jan. 27-Fri., Jan. 31 Noon-5 Hill Auditorium Box Office Sat., Feb. 1, 6:30-8:30 P.M. MICHIGAN MICHIGAN TECH Saves: Gray (M) Bauman (T) 0 1 4-5 0 0 3-3 11 U. 9-29 19 11 9-39 4 I ITHE SIGMA PHI SOCIETY One of the Oldest Fraternities on Michigan's Campus IS PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THE BUILDING OF ITS NEW HOUSE AT 907 LINCOLN (First Block South of Hill, West of Washtenaw) I lush is your opportunity to examine the Greek way of life at eX ichigan for yourself. It begins today, Sunday. You must register this semester to rush. Final registration tomorrow, Jan. 27. K14-I I I AgnVr -i-. ri -+;rrI