JANUARt 18, 1942 THE MIHIGAN DAITY ::+..:.:. ... . .-.v ..x:. ..v ys a. . _. , x.z .s ..;ate., a ,.. YY Y- YY yYY I YI iY YYYI Y W Y i i " Minne Record Crowd. Of 15,000 Sees Varsity Beaten. Mandler Scores 1Points; Bikof f Starts In Place Of Captain Cartmill (Continued from Page 1) injured ankle, took runner-up hon- ors with six points. .The rangy Gophers had difficulty getting theirheavy artillery into ef- fective use and& were held goalless during the first five minutes of the game. It was all Michigan until Go- pher forward Jaros bucketed a long one to break the ice for Minnesota. Ajax followed with a free toss and then there was no stopping the Go- phers. Minnesota left the court at halftime with a 22-16 advantage over the Wolverines. With Smith and Mattson bombard- ing the Michigan basket alternate- ly,, the Gophers boosted their lead and jumped ahead by 11 points with about 12 minutes of the final quarter remaining. Coach Dave MacMillen began sub- stituting freely in his Gopher line- up and the Wolverines automatically came to life. Bob Shemky, /reserve forward, dropped two field goals through the basket and Mandler bucketed another before the Go- phers could stem the inspired up- rising. With Mattson and Smith back in the lineup, the Gophers checked the Wolverines and put the game on ice. Michigan moves to Madison Mon- day night to face the Wisconsin Bad- gers who nosed out the tough North- western Wildcats in a close battle, 49-46 tonight. Coach Bennie Oosterbaan, Wol- verine pilot, experimented with a new combination against Minnesota, starting Morrie Bikoff and Mel Co- md at forwardsnMandler at center and Leo Doyle and Ralph Gibert at guards. I Whips Michigan Cagers On Home Court, 44- ---- - - - u Wolverines Dominate State AAU Swimming mf '2 el < ) Wildcats Lose To Wisconsin In Close Game " 1 i Natators Place Ohio State Trims Hawkeyes As Illinois Trounces Chicago CHICAGO, Jan. 17.-(P)-A bat- tling Wisconsin team staved off Northwestern's last minute rally at Chicago Stadium tonight sending the Wildcats to their second consecutive Big Ten defeat, 49 to 46 and sending the 13,289 fans on hand into a frenzy. Basket for basket the Badgers matched Northwestern's efforts until they put on the clinching blow with seconds remaining. Lanky Ray Pat- terson got loose on a fast break for the game's final score. The Wildcats could do no more than throw a wild floor length pass before the gun sounded. The crowd sensed a thrilling fin- ish when Wisconsin held a 43 to 38 lead with three and a half minutes remaining. Another one of Russ Wendland's flashy one-hand shove shots closed the margin to 43 to 42. Henry Clason's long goal finally put the Cats ahead, but Charles Ep- person hit from the side for Wiscon- sin. Wendland then repeated to give Northwestern the lead again but Bob .Sullivan hit a one-handed side shot for the Badgers and Patterson fol- lowed with the deciding goal., Hume Twins Set New Field House Records Bob and Ross Hume, the twin cannonb~alls from Canonsburg, Pa., cut up thercinders at the Field Hyouse yesterday afternoon during the Michigan frosh_ squad time trials. Ross bulleted around the indoor cinder path three times and was clocked at 1:24 flat for the 660-yard dash, breaking the old record of 1:24.5 set last season by Johnny Rox- borough. Not to be outdone, Brother Bob churned the cinders for five laps and was timed in 2:37.9, eclipsing Ernie Leonardi's old mark of 2:38.1 BASKETBALL SCORES Pennsylvania 52, Yale 34 Penn State. 34, Pitt 30 Ohio U 40, Miami 32 S. Carolina 38, N. Carolina 36 First In Four Of Ten Events Burton, Patton, Sharemet Make Blanket Finish In 100-Yard Free Style By BUD HENDEL (special to The Daily) EAST LANSING, Jan. 17.-The swimming might of Michigan in- vaded the beautifully new Jenison Field House pool here on the Michi- gan State campus to completely dom- inate a triangular meet with the Spartans and Wayne University to- night. One national and two state cham- pionships were billed on the list of events, and Matt Mann's mermen. swept through to a clean cut, undis- puted victory in each of these races, copping the National A.A.U. junior medley relay crown as well as the State A.A.U. 150 yard backstroke and 100 yard free style titles. First to be decided were the titlists in the national event, and it was the only championship encounter of the night in which the Wolverines re- ceived any kind of a threat. Senior Dick Riedl, swimming the backstroke leg for the Maize and Blue, jumped off to an early lead and handed breaststroker Tommy Wil- liams a six yard advantage, but the butterfly star of Wayne, Victor Dene, overtook Williams to give his free style man, Ray Nivers, a two yard lead over Michigan's Johnny Patten. Then jolly John went to work and although Nivers was tough, Patten was tougher and when the race was over Johnny touched out the Wayne entry. The winning time was 3:04.5. The next championship to be de- cided was the State A.A.U, back- stroke. But for all that, it may have just as well been a practice session in the Sports Building pool in Ann Arbor, since the Varsity natators made a clean sweep of first three places, with Dick Reidl once again starring. This time the senior took the individual title, ifinishing just ahead of teammates Ted Horlenko and John Weise in the time of 1:41.4. The other title race w adsa mere duplication of the last one as far as results are concerned. Once again three Michigan men finished one, two three-this time winning the State B~uck eyes Win COLUMBUS, o.. Jan. 17.-(P)- Ohio State pulled its first Big Ten victory out of the fire tonight, de- feating Iowa, 54 to 52, on sophomore Jimmie Sims' field goal in the last 30' seconds. It was Ohio's first win in four Western Conference starts, broke a six-game losing streak for the Buckeyes and was Iowa's second loss in five league games. After trailing into the last eight minutes of the game, the Buckeyes came to life and spurted into a lead but Iowa came back to go out in front again with three minutes to go. After that the lead changed three times. Max Gecowets, Ohio's pint-sized guard, finally sank a free throw to tie the count at 52-52 with 30 seconds remaining. Immediately afterward, Gecowets stole the ball from Milton Kuhl, Iowa's six-foot, six-inch cen- ter, dribbled the length of the floor and passed to Sims, a third-string forward, who dropped the ball through for the winning point. Illini Win Ag~ain CHAMPAIGN, Ill.. Jan. 17.-E/)-P Paced by big Andy Phillip who sank four baskets and four free throws for 12 points, Illinois clung to its unde- feated. leadership of the Big Ten basketball race by defeating Chi- cago 54 to 26 tonight. Although the Illinois offense couldn't get started for the first eight minutes, at which point the score was tied at 4-4, the leaders soon began to roll and piled up a 29 to 9 margin by halftime. Then Coach Douglas Mills removed his regulars and used second, third and fourth string men liberally the rest of the way. The victory was Illinois' fourth straight in Conference play and Chi- cago's fifth straight setback. Greschke Wins Title Mary Frances Greschke, '45A, add- ed another to her long list of cham- pionships yesterday as she captured the Novice Women's title in the an- nual Midwest skating meet at Chi- cago. k DOBBY BURTON GUS SHAREMET A.A'.U. 100 yard free style crown. Oficial king is Capt. Dobby Burton who covered the distance in the com- partively slow time of 54.8 to nose out teammates Patten and Gus Share- met. This was the race that was supposed to provide the fireworks of the evening, but Bill Prew, National champ from Wayne, failed to put in: an appearance and afford the Maize and Blue stars any real competition outside of themselves., Wayne did enter Guy Lumsden, however, who formerly held the National 50 yard title, but the Michigan leader and his teammates had little trouble in taking him into camp. But the Wolverines weren't im- pressive in one event, and the same three who ran away with the 100 yard duel were the ones who took it easy here. Neither Burton, Patten nor Sharemet were able to qualify for the 50 yard free style handicap, and Harold Hefernan, Spartan soph- omore, won the finals in the time of 25.3. The fastest time for the dis- tance, however, came in the second qualifying heat when Bud Difloe, se- nior star from Detroit's Southeastern High School, did it in 23.7. Fresh- man Mert Church was the only Wol- verine natator to reach the finals, where he finished third. T-Bone Martin, Michigan's color- ful diver, really proved himself a crowdpleaser as he twisted his way to 315.6 points and first place in the low board fancy=diving contest. Sec- ond to the Mann-coached ace was teammate Lou Haughey who gar- nered 244.2 markers. The flashy Mar- tin had the spectators rimming the pool in alternate flurries of thrills and chills as he squirmed his way through the air and to victory. The only other two events in which the Wolverines were entered were the 100 yard breaststroke handicap in which sophomore Dave Levy ffin- ished second and the 220 yard hand- icap where Church again qualified for the finals. Sunday at the Wolerie 209 SOUTH STATE Pineapple orT omato Juice or Chicken Noodle Soup Pickles Olives Fried Unjointed Chicken, Southern Style Grilled Sirloin Steak, Chili Sauce Glazed Sweet Potatoes or French Fried Potatoes Creamed Peas Buttered Carrots Julienne Pineapple Apricot Salad Hot Rolls and Butter Ice Creagn Tea, Coffee, Milk Guest Price45 Dinner Served from 12:15 to 2:00 BASKETBALL SUMMARIES MICHIGAN FG Comin, f .... ....'.. 0 Bikoff, f.............1 Ma'ndler, c . ............5 Doyle, g ... ........... 2 Gibert, g ..............1 MacConnachie, g. .... 0 Shemky, f. ............ 2 Cartmill, f..... .. 2 Total.. ........13 MINNESOTA FG Smith, f ............. 4 Jaros, f .............. 3 Mattson, c ............ 6 Thune, g............. 2 Ajax,g ............... 4 Lind, c ................ 0 Roth, g .............. 0 Exel, f................0 Burke, g............. 0 Nelson, c.............0 McDonald, f.......... 0 Totals ............19 FT 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 2 6 FT 3 1 = 1 0 1, 0 0 0 0 0 0 7 TP 2 2 11 4 2 0 5 6 32 TP 11 7 13 4 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 44 , r a r _ - 1 f _ x :,, ti Score at half: Minnesota 22, Michi- gan 16. Free throws missed: Michigan, Co- min, Bikoff, Mandler, Shemky, Doyle. Minnesota: Smith, Mattson, Ajax 2. Personal fouls: Michigan: Bikoff, Mandler 3, Gibert 3, Shemky. Min- nesota: Smith, Mattson 2, Thune, Ajax 2, Lind 2, Roth, Exel 2, Nelson. FRESHMEN! e CONCERTS For an "A in Extra Curricular I there's one activity to be considered before all others' W\hether your taste ruis to business work, ad vrtil g., sports, ol' wx11..ing) p -y ROBERT CASADESUS Distinguished French Pianist Mon., Jan. 19, 8:30 ROTH QUARTET Feri Roth Julius Shier Rachmael Weinstock Oliver Edel CHAMBER MUSIC FESTIVAL , Friday and Saturday, Jan. 23-24 Three concerts in the Rackham Building Daily offers YOU opportunities in each of these fields. So, next semester, when you're eligible for a campus activity, be sure the Daily heads your list of what you'd like to do. I 1