t° PAGE SIX TUFI, MIFUlrc l N 1 irlrV WIDTVAW Walk NTAVSvv ftle dft m ..:.:...:.:. " 111 L' lfl l{.ilZ1V1'l l >1H1LZ 1 FRIDiAY, JALNUAR~Y 31, 19i64 4 lcemen Take On Colorado 675 ENTERED: Michigan Hosts Track Relays IF By PERRY HOOD Michigan's high-scoring hockey sextet will come to grips with WCHA cellar-dwelling Colorado College this weekend with hopes of taking over undisputed first place in the conference. The Wolverines are presently tied with Minnesota in the stand- ings, while the Gophers will tackle tougher Michigan State. WANTED CARRIERS TO DELIVER -1 Colorado comes into the series with a 1-3 league record. sporting a sole 6-2 victory over Michigan State, losing out to the Spartans in the second game of the pair, 5-4. North Dakota handled the Tigers in style, 7-2 and 5-3. Four Straight Michigan meanwhile has rolled ahead to four straight victories, two of them over perennially stub- ef Duel Tops Bartsch-Gra Dual Swim Meet Action born Michigan Tech. The Wolver- ines piled up 11 points against the Huskies to strengthen their over- all season scoring average at 7.75 goals per game. Leading Michigan scorer is jun- ior Gary Butler with 20 tallies and 20 assists for 40 points, followed by captain Gordie Wilke and sopho- more Wilfred Martin. Martin is tied for the league scoring lead with John Simus of Colorado, after piling up two goals and three assists against Tech last weekend. Beat Wolverines Twice In the first intercollegiate games ever played by Colorado in 1940 the Tigers swept two games from the Wolverines, and repeated this performance during last year's dismal season. The Michigan men hold the edge in the rivalry how- ever, with 26 victories against 18 defeats, two matches ending in ties. Senior goalkeeper Art Warwick will be facing Michigan's Bob Gray. Warwick, averaging well over four goals-against per game this year, finished last year with a 5.0 goals-against average. Gray, meanwhile has held opponents to less than three goals per contest. By CHARLIE TOWLE Michigan's assistant track coach Dave Martin will attempt to turn bat-infested Ydst Field House into an indoor track palace at the Michigan Relays today. With 675 entrants from some of the leading colleges and universi- ties in this area represented, the FREE RELAYS Today's Michigan Relays and all other home meets sponsored by the United States Track and Field Federation will be free to all students showing their ID cards, Coach Don Canham has announced. relays promise to be exciting track and field fare. Some of the insti- tutions sending trackmen are Michigan State with dashman Sherman Lewis and twg-miler Dick Sharkey, Western Michigan, K e n t u c k y, Chicago, Bowling Green, Central State and of course defending Big Ten co-champions, Michigan. The relays are the first meet Martin has organized since assum- ing the assistant track coach's duties at Michigan. Yesterday Martin, nursing a cold, was fran- tically trying to convince a print- ing concern that he had indeed ordered 2,000 programs and not the 200 he had received. For the relays Martin has sched- uled 32 events. In line with the Michigan Track and Field.Federa- tion's, sponsors of the meet, policy of developing all ages and groups in track, Martin has scheduled five women's events, five novice events, two high school events and twen- ty university and college level events. Evening Events Most of the senior events are scheduled for the evening starting at 6:30 with the high jump finals and finishing up at 10:15 with the university mile relay. The first running event is the shuttle hurdle relay at 7:15. The only senior men's event scheduled for the aft- ernoon is the broad jump, which opens the relay at 1:00. Some of the more interesting events on the schedule are the two-mile and distance relays and the high jump event. The relays will feature the crack teams from Big Ten cross country champion Michigan State, Western Michigan and Michigan. The high jump will feature Michigan's Al Ammerman, Bob Densham and the Littlejohn brothers of Kalamazoo, all capable of going 6'9". In addition to these, Bowling Green's Andy Schramm, a national class two miler, should keep Michigan's Chris Murray busy. It's all free with a student I.D. card today. Phone 662-3241 1-3 P. M. 14P iP4YgFtl i oat4ll# L .4 By BILL BULLARD A backstroke duel between two of the best in the country, Mich- igan's Ed Bartsch and Princeton's Jed Graef, will highlight tomor- row's dual meet between these two teams at 4 p.m. in the Matt Mann Pool. Bartsch is currently one-up on Graef, having won the NCAA 200- yard backstroke title over Graef last March. But the Tiger senior has turned in better times than Bartsch so far this season and probably qualifiestas the favorite in tomorrow's race. Even Record The Princeton squad as a whole does not appear to be as strong as in recent years. After placing tenth or better in the NCAA Meet the past three years, the present dual meet record of 3-3 is not im- pressive. The Tigers have no one to re- place graduated Gardiner Green, an NCAA co-champion breast- stroker at 100 yards last season, but sophomore John Kalmbach has already set one varsity record and tied another and has been a help in dual meets. Kalmbach swam these times against Navy in December. His 2:07.1 in the 200-yard individual medley broke the old Tiger record by almost a second. In the 200- yard butterfly, Kalmbach tied the mark of 2:05.0. Another outstanding team mem- ber is Scott Andrews. The senior diver is undefeated so far this season. 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