TILE MLUIiGAN D:41LY linnesota Whips Sextet 6-0; Swimmers Meet Ohio Tonight - - _ . . ----, 7ophers Score In Each Period For Easy Win /Ouch!!!li t t PRESS PASSES Game Enlivened By Fist c Fights; Mariucci Leads His Team In Scoring (Continued from Page 1) with the disk, Spike James had de- flected his shot to Orv Thompson, and when the latter fired a high one, Spike stopped it with his shoulder. The puck rolled off his arm to the ice, Mariucci rifled it inand the Gophers had their first score. Hayden Pickering, flashy Gopher wing, made it two after 2:08 of the second frame had passed. He picked up a loose puck in front of James and rifled a low shot into the nets be- fore Spike had time to set himself. Eight minutes later it was three. After Bert McKenzie had been oust- ed for tripping, the Gophers decided that five men were enough to score a goal anyway. They wound up with two before they returned to "full strength." That Man Again Mariucci intercepted the puck deep in his own ice, skated down the side' with amazing speed to blast past Calvert without even slowing up, and shot a pretty pass to Pickering who rammed it home. One minute later, he carried the mail alone, shooting through the Michigan defense for an open shot and another goal. Bert McKenzie relieved Mariucci in the third period and tore a page out of his book with a well executed goal. Thompson tossed him a pass to the side of the nets, and sophomore defenseman flipped it into the far corner past James' lunge. The time Michigan Minnesota James, G Falk Calvert D Mariucci Hillberg D Cramp Doran C St. Vincent Cooke W Pickering Chadwick W Paulsen Alternates: Michigan: Lovett, Stod- den, Ross. Minnesota: Anderson, Boyle, McKenzie, Rheinberger, Kar- anen, Thompson, Hokanson. Officials-Art Leaver (Windsor), Roy Reynolds (Chatam). First Period 1. Minnesota - Mariucci f r o m Thompson, 18:04. Penalties, Hill- ' By BUD BENJAMIN berg, Cramp. Second Period 2. Minnesota-Pickering, 3. Minnesota-Pickering riucci, 10:36. 4. Minnesota-Mariucci, Penalties: Stodden, Mariucci, Hillberg. Third Period 1:08. from Ma- 11:06. McKenzie, The Swim Of Things ... I IKE two chess players weighingj 4 their every move, Matt Mann of Michigan and Mike Peppe of Ohio State battle at a game of wits to- night, and the winner will probably be heralded as the coach of the finest swimming team in the nation. With the Intramural Pool their board and a crew of outstanding swimmers as their pawns, these two gentlemen will stare at each other across the churning waters of the Natatorium, each attempting to anti- cipate the next move. In such a contest split second decisions are made, decisions which may well determine the victor of tonight's meet. Trying to fathom what intricate double jump the two men may resort to as a means to their end, is obvi- ously impossible. The manipula- tors themselves must wait for the unforeseen to pop up before they decide which move is most feas- ible. 5. Minnesota - McKenzie f r o m Thompson, 3:00. 6. Minnesota-PaulsoA, 14:36. Penalties-Hillberg, St. Vincent.. Cagers Leave For Iowa; Rae Remains ere the meet. If Michigan can take this one, the Buckeyes will have to go all out to win. But the edge should go to Ohio with Harold Stanhope, Johnny Higgins and Billy Quayle rated over the Wol- verine trio of "Good-Time" Charley Barker or Bill Beebe, Johnny Haigh and Tom Haynie or Bill Holmes. / In the 220-, we picked Tom Haynie,' Bob Johnson of Ohio, and Ed Hut- chens in that order. Loophole :-Will Johnson beat Hutch and will Haynie be yanked in favor of sophomore Jim Welsh who can win? In the 50-, Ohio appears weak. Either Barker or Beebe can win but probably only one will swim this event. Then can Michigan's Holmes beat out Johnson or Johnny Hart- line? An will Johnson swim this one? The dive may bring up an upset but in any event Michigan probably won't be benefited. Earl Clark may beat out his favored teammate Al Patnik but both rate ahead of the Michigan entries. The 100- free should go to Quayle. The Ohio junior is prob- ably the fastest in collegiate circles. But how about second and third? Will Mann try to pick up valuable place and show points by putting Haynie and Barker in here? Or will Holmes be able to beat out Johnson for third place? The backstroke is another tough one. Barker can win but so can Beebe or Stanhope. We'll take Beebe, Bar- ker and Stanhope in that order. Johnny Higgins should win the breast-stroke but here again the runner-up spot will' be all-important. Can Haigh beat out Alex McKee? We , think so. Varsity Matmen Rally To Down Nittany Lions. Don Nichols And 'Butch' .Tordan Win Final Bouts To Give Team Victory - STATE COLLEGE, Penn., Jan. 19. -Special to the Daily)-By virtue of a referee's decision in the final bout, in the heavyweight class, the Univer- sity of Michigan's wrestling team opened their Eastern invasion by downing Penn State, 16-12 here to- night. Points garnered by falls in the, 136 and 156 pound division proved to be the visitors' margin of victory. The Wolverines came from behind after the Nittany Lions had annexed the first two bouts by decisions. Weidig Is Beaten Tom Weidig, inexperienced Michi- gan sophomore, fell a victim to Carl King's clever grappling in the 121 pound class. Apparently stronger, Weidig took the smaller Lion to the mat at the outset, but was unable to hold the advantage. The Michi- gan grappler was able to reverse once with five minutes to go, but King soon took the advantage of the bout. It was a close tussle in the next division, with Penn State's Frank Craighead showing superior skill to overcome Carl Mosser in a split bout. Jim Mericka, Wolverine 136 pound- er, took the advantage at the outset and with his opponent, Frank Glea- son, having an advantage of head scissors, the Wolverine used this to his own advantage to pin Gleason in five 'minutes, 58 seconds. Nichols Gets Pin Wasting no time, Capt. Hal Nichols, pushed sophomore Frank Horpel all over the mat and finally threw the Nittany Lion with a simple leg pick- up, giving the visitors a 10-6 ad- vantage. State .sophomore Joe Scalzo, 155, gained an easy decision over Rex Lardner. Scalzo took Lardner to the mat with two minuteq gone, and ex- cept for one short-lived reverse, Scal- zo, with three near falls, got the referee's nod. Capt. Don Bachman, Lion 165 'pounder, duplicated last year's result, working from under- neath to gain the decision over Frank Morgan and put State ahead 12-10. Morgan gained the advantage at the start, but was unable to hold the ap- parently stronger Bachman in a see- saw struggle. Buckeyes And Wolverines Meet At I-M In Battle Of Champions (Continued from Page 1) Ohio's Johnson. Johnny Hartline orj Bill Howell. The meet might well be over at this time. If Michigan can takeefirst and second in both 220- and 50-, or' win the medley relay the Wolverines may emerge from a year's submerg- ence and rise again to the pinacle. Patnik Should Win The diving, both first and second places, should be conceded to- the in- vaders. Al Patnik, National cham- 'pion, is superb and Earl Clark, a sophomore, is not far behind. Michi- gan's entrants, Hal Benham and Adolph Ferstenfeld, placed third and fourth in last year's Nationals but Patnik and Clark, barring an upset, should prove too good. The free-style will probably go to Ohio's Billy Quayle who turned in a 52.5 century in the first Ohio meet last year. Barker, Beebe, Holmes and Haynie are all entered here with the last two the likely starters. Those Sophomores Again The backstroke has the sophomore triumvirate, Beebe, Barker and Holmes pitted against Woodling and Stanhope. In last year's AA.U.'s, Beebe nosed out Stanhope for fifth by a touch after the latter hit a bad turn and the Ohio sophomore will be out for revenge. The breast stroke should go the way of the dive and the century with Olympian Johnny Higgins, butter- flying his way to victory. Johnny Haigh will have to fight it out with Alex McKee, runner-up to Jack Kas- ley of Michigan, in the National Col- legiates two years ago. IPRACTICALI T RA IN I N G II with an In the quarter, Ohio will have to fight for its points. Welsh and Hay- nie can win but Ed Hutchens may swim instead of the Wolverine cap- tain. For Ohio, it will be between Johnson again, Howell and Tron- stein. If the meet goes like the pair did last year, the final event, the free- style relay, will determine the/but- come. Peppe will probably send John- son, Howell, Howard and Quayle out in an attempt to stop Beebe, Barker, Hutchens and Haynie. This event might be the peg on which the meet will hang. The admission will be $.25 for stu- dents with identification zards and; $.75 general admission. Tickets may be secured in advance at the Admin- istration Building. YOUR PROBLEMS SOLVED! We prepare scholarly book reviews, debates, essays, papers, speeches, graduation theses. Any subject promptly. 50c per typed page. Also translations (All languages) rea- sonably. Expert Research Co., Box 36, Jackson, Ga. 4 Michigan Center To Make Trip; To Meet Ohio Unable Varsity Monday Babe Paulsen ended the scoring for the evening in the closing minutes when he stole the puck from Stodden aid skated in on James to score on. a short flip. The time was 14:36. Play Is Half-Hearted Michigan's play was half-hearted on occasion, especially in the early minutes of the game. There was a general reluctance in the Wolverine ranks to mingle too freely with Mr. Mariucci, the Eveland (Minn.) assas- i, who is a native of the town which sent Mike Karakus and Frankie Brimsek to the major leagues. The big boy wasn't pulling his punches in those early moments and combined with Ken Cramp, his defense mate, he gave Marty Falk, Gopher goalie, a quiet evening. Spike James, as usual, had his regu- lar nightmare in the Michigan goal. With his defense being outmaneu- vered and cohtinually penetrated, James was peppered repeatedly from near and far. His efforts prevented the evening from qegeneratifig into a complete 'travesty. Penalties mounted as the game progressed with eight misdemeanors being called during the evening. Capt. Les Hillberg of Michigan was sentenced four times, once for a run in with Mariucci and later for a simi- lar row with Frank St. Vincent. An 11-man Michigan basketball squad boards the train for Iowa City at 1 p.m. today and by the~.time they return Tuesday local fans will know whether it's thumbs up or thumbs down on Wolverine Conference hopes. TIe weekend engagementswith Iowa and Ohio State should show if the 1939 Varsity quintet has the stuff it takes to get up after being floored twice in a row. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan an- nounced yesterday that the traveling squad will include his regular first two teams minus center Jim Rae, plus forward Dave Wood. Rae's in- jury will keep him home for the first time in two years. Wood, a hard-working junior, is fast and his play this week earned him the eleventh place on the squad. Danny Smick, Tom Harmon, Char-' ley Pink, Eddie Thomas, and Capt. Leo Beebe will take the floor tomor- row night against the Hawkeyes and the second five will include, John Nicholson, Mike Sofiak, Russ Dobson, Milo Sukup and Herb Brogan. While Bennie worries about hid team's poor shooting which produced a bare 16 per cent accuracy average in the last two games, Iowa's Coach Rollie Williams is gleefully celebrat- ing the contrary state of affairs. Recalling the swift smart passing and the "make your shots good" skill of his team in their two victories over Purdue and Chicago, he is hoping for a repeat performance against Michi- gan. "I thought my boys handled the ball better than any Iowa team of Tonight the two swimming arma- das of Ohio State and Michigan meet to decide the winner of the first round of the battle for national col- legiate supremacy. The winner should be the group which boasts of superior performers, but an important part of this meet will be fought from the respective benches. The two squads are so evenly matched that victory may well be determined by strategic placement of personnel. Each coach has sufficient leeway in arranging his slate; and the decisions are made, in many cases, just before the event begins. Thus today it's Mann versus Peppe, and as these two pilots steer their courses, sports analyists will watch their deviations from the charted route with keen expectation. For in this refinement of an apparently cut and dried affair we have an element of suspense-a spice and zest which adds a red hot flavor to tonight's en- gagement. THIS column makes no pretense of having fathomed tonight's out- come. In collaboration with George Andros, former sports editor of The Daily and a keen student of swim- ming, we have rather gone throiih~ the various events trying to pick out the loop holes and question marks in each event. The first event, the 300-yard medley relay, might well decide recent years," he said Wednesday. They worked in for short shots and played two exactly opposite styles of basketball efficiently. They were alert on rebounds and the defense was good." That's not exactly an understate- ment and it indicates that Michigan7 must show a reversal of form if they, hope to move on to Columbus with a second victory marked up in the win column. At present, the Wolverines' point total is 117 for their four Conference games and only two teams, Chicago and Northwestern, are lower. Indiana tops the Big Ten scoring with 149 points while the tenacious Minnesota defense has the best record in that department, having held their four opponents to 110 points. Going Out Of Business Sale, MEN - Here's the Greatest Sale of the year! Hundreds of Milton's Fine Suits, Topcoats hl MILTONS Who'll swim the 440- for Michigan? If Haynie swims in the free-style relay he won't go the quarter. Here again Welsh, a comer, should win. But can Hut- chens hold off Johnson? Or will Johnson swim this one? How good is Bill Howell? Will Woodling forsake the back-stroke for this one? But Michigan is good here for at least six points and pos- sibiy eight.- The sprint relay should decide the meet but here again entrants are doubtful. For Ohio, it's likely to be Johnson, Howell, Howard and Quayle; for Michigan, Beebe, Barker, Hut- chens and Haynie. But Welsh and Holmes can do the century in pretty rapid fashion. It all comes down to a matter of "ifs and maybes." Will Haynie swim in the distances? Will Beebe or Bark- er swim the medley? Will McKee beat Employment __Goal Intensive business courses qualify quickly for positions as Stenographer, Bookkeep- er, Office Assistant. Longer courses qualify for Secre- tarial, Accounting, and Bus- iness Administration posi- tions. Active Employment De- partment contacts leading business firms regularly. All graduates were placed in 1938. and Overcoats Price Groups: . .. in Two Low $1385 $1785 Odd Trousers t ] f 7 A J f l t Haigh? Will Johnson beat Hutchens , in the 220-? Will Michigan beat Ohio State? Yes. WRESTLING SUMMARIES 121 pound-Carl King, Penn State, defeated Tom Weidig. Referee's de- cision. 128 pounds-Frank Craighead, State, defeated Carl Mosser. Referee's decision. 136 pounds-Jim Mericka, Michigan, defeated Frank Gleason by fall in 5:58 with a reverse chancery. 145 pound-Capt. Harold Nichols, Michigan, defeated Frank Horpel by fall in 3:12 with a leg pickup. 155 pounds-Joe Scalzo, Penn State, defeated Rex Lardner, Ref- eree's decision. 165 pounds-Capt. Don Bachman, Penn State, defeated Frank Morgan. Referee's decision. 175 pounds-Don Nichols, Michi- gan, defeated Ernie Bortz, Referee's decision. Unlimited-Forrest Jordan, Michi- gan, defeated Warren Elliott. Ref- eree's decision. Referee-Ben Bishop, Lehigh. GROUP 1 Regular priced up to $3.95 GROUP 2 Regular priced up to $5.50 * New students accepted each Monday. 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