THE MICIIIG :%' DAILY TUESDAY, JANUARY 5;1960 THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY. JANUARY ~ * V ... JL 0, IV V I gagers Win Two Lose Four in Vacation Action $ iehigan Winless on Coast;. ops Miami Here Saturday Icers Down Canadian Club In Only Two Games Played By DAVE ANDREWS Michigan's basketballers, beaten three times before the holiday break, rebounded slightly over the vacation by winning two of the six contests played in the two week span. Behind "the resurgance of Johnny Tidwell and Terry Miller, and the increased scoring and re- bounding punch of sophomore Scott Maentz and Lovell Farris, the Wolverines upset Tennessee Dec. 19. Then after the discourag- ing series of defeats in the Los Angeles Tourney, Coach Bill Peri- go's cagers came back home to down Miami (Ohio) last Satur- day, 72-64. Michigan 70, Tennessee 60 Behind a 31-point splurge by Tidwell, the Wolverines came from behind to chalk up their first win of the year. Tidwell, hitting from all over the floor, sparked the second half comeback that overcame an early Tennessee lead. Fresh from their victory over Tennessee, Michigan's cagers were foiled in a bid for two in a raw by a tall Denver squad, as they prepared for the coast tour- ney. The Wolverines were unable to put together a consistant attack, dropping their fourth game of the year. UCLA 93, Michigan 68 Despite a 32 point outburst by Miller, and 18 points by Tidwell, Michigan was never in the ball game as UCLA rolled to an easy victory in the Wolverines' first start on the coast. Stanford 59, Michigan 52 In their second tournament start the scrappy Wolverines bat- tled Stanford down to the final* minutes before running out of gas. The rangy Stanford team trail- ed Michigan by one point midway" through the second half but a closing spurt won for the Indians. Northwestern '79, Michigan 72 In the final game of the tourna- FG FTA-FT PF Pts. Avg. ment for the Wolverines, North- western pulled the same stunt that Stanford did as they closed fast for a 79-72 win. The Wolverines, behind by five points at the half, tied the count 61-61 with seven minutes remain- ing in the game, but seven con- secutive Wildcat points spelled the end. For his play on the coast, Mil- ler was named to the All-Tourna- ment second team. Michigan 72, Miami 64 Returning home after the Los Angles Tourney, Perigo's cagers put together a balanced scoring attack to top Miami. The eight point bulge was not easy to come by however, as with but 13 minutes remaining in the game, Miami led, 48-44. Tidwell and Miller= then put the game on ice for Michigan with a display of fine jump shooting. Next game: Michigan State -- Saturday. -Daily-Jim Benagh BIG TEN ACTION AHEAD - Wolverine basketball coach Bill Perigo and leading scorer John Tidwell look over the scouting reports on Michigan State as the Michigan cage team prepares for its Conference opener against Michigan State Saturday at East Lansing. wrestling Team Splits on Road Trip; Defeats Keen Protege at Syracuse By DAVE LYON Associate Sports Editor Michigan wrestling coach Cliff Keen should by now be accustomed to seeing one of his former pupils coaching an opposing team. Such was the case in Michigan's last dual meet, at Syracuse Dec. 18, when Keen's grapplers squared off against the Orangemen of Charley Scandura. The Syracuse mentor wrestled on Keen's 1951- 52-53 squads. Another Pupil Another Keen protege, Harold Nichols, will bring his Iowa State team to Yost Field House Satur- day afternoon to battle the pro- WildeatsiTop Hoosiers "mising Wolverines. Nichols grap- pled for Keen's 1937-38-39 Michi- gan aggregations. A Lesson Keen gave Scandura an 18-6 lesson at Syracuse, and would like to beat Nichols, too. Iowa State has one of the nation's better teams, and a Michigan victory Saturday will serve notice to the rest of the Big Ten that Michigan will prove an able host for the Conference meet in March. Coach-of-Year In five years at Iowa State Nichols-coached teams have won one Big Eight title and finished runnerup twice. Last year he was named wrestling's Coach of the Year. He will bring a representative team Saturday, with depth and talent, captained by NCAA and Big Eight 130-pound champion Les Anderson. The Wolverines will the East's powers. That win came the day after a tough 19-12 loss to Penn State, one of the nation's best. "Jitters" "We had opening-meet jitters against Penn State, and wrestled much better against Syracuse," Keen said. Also working in Michi- gan's favor is the fact that the Wolverine encounter will be Iowa State's first dua: meet of the sea- son. Keen said there is a possibility injured veteran Dennis Fitzgerald may get into action. The 167- pound junior, a 1959 Big Ten runnerup, is recovering from a rib injury incurred just before Michi- gan's first meet. Lead Attack Spearheading Michigan's efforts on the Eastern trip were 130- pound soph Ambi Wilbanks and 147 - pound junior Jim Blaker. By MIKE GILLMAN The Michigan hockey team,; with its vacation action abbrevi- ated by the cancellation of the, two-game series at Los Angeles, played but two games over the Christmas break. In this twin bill the Wolverines; defeated the University of Toron-1 to twice, by the scores of 4-2 and3 6-1. In the first game the Blues of Toronto proved to be much im- proved over their showing earlier in the month when the Wolver- ines stopped them on their own ice. Toronto's goalie Bob Giroux put on a great show through the first two periods to give the visi- tors a 2-1 lead going into the last stanza. Last Period Rally But the Wolverines turned on the steam and poured 23 shots on goaldin that final frame to take the decision. The wi aning and insurance shots came off the stick of cap- tain Bobbie Watt within 40' sec- onds of each other. Gary Mattson got the credit for the clincher as he deflected Watt's 20-foot screen shot past Giroux. Seconds later, Watt fired an identical shot into the nets to put the game out of. reach. Coach Al Renfrew's squad had an easier time of it the next night as they overpowered the Cana- dian team, 6-1. The Wolverine at- tack in this game was led by sophomore wing Joe Lunghamer, who hit three times for the hat trick. LA Series Cancelled The Wolverines were then' scheduled to play a two-game set in Los Angeles, but were notified that the contests were cancelled due to a lack of interest on the coast. Only about $400 worth of advance tickets had been sold for the series, and $5,000 was needed to break even. And so, with a three-week lay- off, the Wolverines will be tossed into the middle of the league wars this weekend against a team that has developed into one of the powers of the Western Intercolle- giate Hockey Association - Mich- igan Tech. While the Wolverines were idle, Tech traveled out to Denver and Colorado College and split with both teams on strange ice. Season's Surprise But the season's real surprise team has been Colorado College. The Tigers, picked as cellar dwell- ers in pre-season polls, are cur- rently riding atop the league with a 9-2 mark. Until the split with the Huskies, their only setback 1i had been the 8-2 drubbing they suffered against the Wolverines here in the league opener for both clubs. Still the leading scorer for Michigan, despite being only the number eight goal-getter on the squad is Bob White, with only two goals but 15 assists. Leading in goals scored are senior Steve Bo- chen and sophomore Bill Kelly, who each have seven. Michigan Scoring G A TP PM B. White 2 15 17 26 Bochen 7 5 12 4 Kelly '7 4 11 2 Mattson 5 6 11" 0 Watt 4 7 11 4 Lunghamer 6 4 10 2 Cushing 4 5 9 12 Kolb 2 7 9 4 MacDonald 2 5 7 6 Mateka 3 3 6 12 Hinnegan 3 4 7 0 Nielsen 0 3 3 6 Palenstein 1 1 2 2 C. White 0 0 0 0 Wilson 0 0 0 0 WCHA STANDINGS Colorado Col. Denver Michigan Tech MICHIGAN North Dakota Minnesota Michigan State W S 8 1 2 0 0 rLt 2 2 3 1 3 7 7 T 0 1 0 1 1 Y Pct. .800 .773 .700 .500 .367 .063 .063 Pullover-Shawl Collar $6.95 Assorted Colors This Week in 'M' Sports Friday HOCKEY: Michigan vs. Michigan Tech, here, 8 P.M. GYM: Michigan vs. Navy Pier, here, 8 P.M. SWIMMING: Michigan vs. Western Ontario, here, 7:30 P.M. Saturday BASKETBALL: Michigan at Michigan State, 8 P.M. HOCKEY: Michigan vs. Michigan Tech, here, 8 P.M. WRESTLING: Michigan vs. Iowa State, here, 3 P.M. SWIMMING: Michigan at Big Ten Relays (East Lansing), 3 P.M. Sweater Sale Bulky Knit-Boat Neck All Wool-$4.95 Assorted Colors elcome Back STUDENTS 715 North University Many Other Styles To Choose From AT LOW PRICES SAM'S STORE 122 East Washington Y i 1' ยข# ,r ;,# Tidwell 66 Miller 52 Farris 37 Maentz 36 Myer 4 Clark 19 Robins 6 Donle , 4 Schoenherr 0 Sangster 0 Zimmerman 0 Lyons 0 Robison 0 58-42 30-24 55-37 17-10 6-5 22-11 4-3 I3-6 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 0-0 25 177 12 128 33 111 28 82 5 5 21 49 12 15 16 14 5 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 19.6 14.2 12.3 9.1 6.5 5.4 5.0 2.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Cage Squad Weakened By The Associated Press EVANSTON - Bill Cacciatore, a 5'11" sophomore, pumped in 27 points tonight and led under- dog Northwestern to a 61-57 vic- tory over Indiana. The loss was the second in a row for the Hoosiers, pre-season favorites to win the Western Con- ference championship. Walt Bellamy, 6'11" pivotman, was high scorer for Indiana with 27 points, getting 15 in the first half. In its Big Ten debut, Northwest-r ern hit .438 from the field to .296 for the Hoosiers. * s s Iowa Stops Badgers MADISON -- Iowa posted its first Big Ten basketball victory of the season tonight, defeating Wisconsin, 71-64. Sophomore Don Nelson, 6'7" center, paced the scoring for the Hawkeyes with 22 points, 14 of them on free throws. The score see-sawed all through the game as the Badgers suffered their eighth loss of the season, their second in conference play, against only three victories. Iowa is now 9-3 and square in the con- ference with a loss to Minnesota. * * * OSU Smashes Illinois COLUMBUS - Jerry Lucas and Larry Seigfried teamed up to score 56 points and lead Ohio State's Buckeyes to a walloping 97-73 victory over Illinois here last night. Ninth-ranked Illinois, now 7-2, was never in the game after the first few minutes. The Bucks (8-2) grabbed the lead for good at 13-12 on a tip-in by Lucas, who wound up with 30 points. Joe Roberts added two more and Seigfried three to start Ohio State off. Lucas hit for 30 points and Seigfried 26. Titans Keep Rolling DETROIT-With all five start- ers hitting in double figures, De- troit defeated Creighton 94-78 last night, posting its 10th vic- tory in 11 basketball games this season., Detroit's sophomore duo of Dave DeBusschere and Charlie North accounted for 47, points. DeBus- schere hit for 24 and North 23 despite the visitors advantage in height.- Detroit also out-rebounded the, Bluejays 62-48 and posted a scor- ing average of .443 for the game. Creighton, which now has a 5-5 have to be good to win. Each gained two victories. Their prospects were bolstered Three others - Mike Hoyles, by' the, ease with which they con- Karl Fink and Fred Olm - won quered Syracuse, regarded among one and drew one. WOLVERINE SPORT SHORTS: Geny Signs ithAFL a r The LITTON Study-Work Advanced Degree Program for Engineers, Scientists, Mathematicians he Litton Study-Work Program towards an advanced degree assists the student who might not otherwise be able to finance graduate education. While gaining experience in our research and development lab- oratories you are normally able to earn your master's degree in four semesters. You may qualify if you are a candidate for a BS degree in electronics-oriented engineering, science or mathematics. For full information see your college placement office -Or write to Mr. Joseph Cryden, Director of Advanced Scientific Education ES LITTON INDUSTRIES Electronic Equipments Division, Woodland Hills, Los Angeles, California. _; RICH ROBINS ..scholastic troubles Last season's Wolverine foot-' ball captain, George Genyk, has joined his teammate Darrell Har- per in signing a professional foot- ball contract. Like Harper, Genyk signed with the newly-formed American Foot- ball League. The former Michigan guard will report to the training ,amp of the Detroit Titans. Har- per will be seeing action with the Buffalo Bills. Another former Wolverine is trying to hit the pro ranks in a second sport. Ron Kramer, who starred for Michigan in both basketball and football and has been with the Green Bav Packers of the NFL for two seasons (seeing limited action due to injuries), has been working out with the Detroit Pis- tons of the National Basketball Association- in an attempt to make the Piston roster. C h r i s t m a s vacation activity found Michigan's gymnasts, head- ed by coach Newt Loken, play a big part in the National Gym- nastics Clinic at Sarasota, Fla., Dec. 26-31. Wolverines Tom Osterland and Al Stall placed high in the an- nual North-South meet, a high- light of the clinic. Osterland was third in the trampoline and Stall fourth in the sidehorse. Coach Loken and his daughters, Chris :13, and' Lana, 10, gave a trampo- line exhibition as did grad. Ed Cole, last year's NCAA trampoline champion and Ron Munn, last year's AAU and Pan-American "tramp-champ." Munn, compet- ing unattached in the North- South event, won the trampoline easily for the Yankees, as the con- test ended in a 40-all draw. Doctor Loken (as the Sarasota papers called him) also did his share of participating, in the Vet- erans division, by taking fist in the parallel bars and trampoline, and second in the overall stand- ings. two of the hurdles but still man- aged to finish third. McRae then rocketed to a heat victory in the 60-yd. dash with the time of :06.5 but did not com- pete in the semi-finals. Terry Trevarthen, a n o t h e r newcomer to the Michigan var- sity, placed third in the shotrput with a toss of 51'1". Junior Frank Geist came away with second place honors in the quarter mile with his time of 51.4. Jack Steffes, another junior, re- corded a leap of 21'8" in the broad jump to take fourth place in that event. 1960 BARBER RESOLUTIONS '~1 "We will strive to bring you the finest in barber science and techhiques. Our service, workmanship and sanitation will be at its best." THE DASCOLA BARBERS Near the Michigan Theatre ,' i' .4 Michigan's already thinly manned basketball team suffered another discouraging blow this week as it lost four players for various causes. Dick Myer, a 6'6" junior center from Cincinnatti, came down with a kidney infection along with an inflamed throat and will be lost! for an indefinite period. Coach Bill Perigo was counting on Myer to give the team added strength up front following his fine performance in the North- western game in the holiday tour- ney. Rich Robins dropped out of school for the remainder of the semester and Denis Robinson left the teambecause of a heavy academic burden. 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