AY, FEB. 9, 1943 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE 4atmen, Pucksters Triumph; Cagers Lose Two to Indiana Hatmen Gain Upset Victory Over Indiana Opland'Performs Hat Trick' In 6-4 Win over Point Edward V Wolverines Favored To Defeat Spartans Here Tomorrow Night Michigan's surprising matmen were I the "fair-haired" boys of the Big Ten after Saturday night's sensational 14- 12 victory over a favored Indiana grappling crew at Yost Field House. The triumph over a Hoosier mat squad, rated as the most powerful in the Conference, sends Coach Ray Courtright's Maize and Blue charges Into tomorrow night's battle against Michigan State here as favorites. The match opens at 7:30 p.m. in the Field House. In an earlier match the Spartans squeezed out a 19-14 triumph over a Michigan team that was minus Cap- Uain Manly Johnson who stayed home with a cold. Johnson Faces Maxwell Featured match will find Johnson matching wits with the Spartans' 1942 national titleholder, Bill Maxwell, at 145 pounds. There will be many eyes on the State's Jennings twins, Bo and tut, also last year's national cham- pions, who will wrestle at 136 and 128 pounds. Johnson, Big Ten champion at 145 pounds, lost to Maxwell in the nationals last year. Coach Courtright expects to make several changes in his lineup, includ- kng Pete Speek at 155 pounds instead All candidates for battery posi- tions on the varsity baseball team should report at Yost Field House by the middle of this week. Bill Kopeke, Senior Manager of George McIntyre, and a substitute for the ailing Bob Allen at 165 pounds. The Maize and Blue grapplers split eight matches with the invading Roo- sier "cavemen," earning the team vic- tory on the strength of Dick Kopel's pin of Archer in the 128-pound class. Although a 121-pounder, Kopel had little difficulty pinning his man in 7:22. The opening match saw Larry Lof- tus, a sophomore with lots of promise, easily decision Indiana's Angelopou- los, 5-0. The invaders gained their first victory at 136 pounds when Rob- bins whipped the game Hal Rudel, 8-1, with a display of clever mat tech- nique. McIntyre Wins at 145 George McIntyre was too good for Indiana's 145-pounder, Norman, and won a 6-3 decision. Another Hoosier, Galonka, had little trouble with Mich- igan's Allen, winning the 165-pound contest with a 7-2 score. In the best match of the evening, Captain Johnson was in rare form as he decisioned the powerful Wilkensen, 10-7. Johnson piled up points with repeated take-downs over his bewil- dered Hoosier foe. Harry Traster, second-place winner in the 1942 Big Ten campaign, easily defeated the Wolverines' Tom Mueller at 175 pounds, 6-0, and Bochneicka added another Hoosier triumph by decisioning Johnny Greene, 4-0, in the unlimited division. BASKETBALL SCORES Great Lakes 57, Northwestern 36 Illinois 50, Ohio State 36 Wisconsin 74, Chicago 30 By WALT KLEE Bob. Opland's third period "hat trick" in last Saturday night's hockey game brought the Wolverines their first victory in six starts over a fighting Point Edward team. The three Michigan goals in the final pe- riod, to one for the Canadians, made the score 6-4 in favor of the home team. Only a handful of spectators watched the sophomore flash, Op- land, score his three goals and Bob Kemp score two goals and two assists in his swan song for the Maize and Blue. Michigan Takes Lead The game featured plenty of fast skating and offensive tactics that kept the meager gathering on the edge of their seats from the word go. After Logie Allen had pushed the puck past Hank Loud for the first of his three goals for the evening, the Wolverines went into the lead on two markers by Kemp and Bob Derleth. Spartans To SwimfHere To morrow Billed as the last home swimming meet of the season, the thrill-packed Michigan-Ohio State affair has called forth an encore for Coach Matt Mann's marvelous mermen. Arrange- ments were finally made for a meet- ing between the Wolverines and the Spartans of Michigan State here to- morrow night. State, never a power in the aquatic world, had most of its hopes for this year vanish before the season even started. The armed services pls an elbow injury have swept seven of Coach Charles McCaffree's brightest prospects right out of the beautiful pool in Jennison Field House. So, in their lone contest of the year the Spartans were completely swamped by a Buckeye squad still wet from the splashing administered in Ann Arbor by the Mattmen. The score was 62-19, only a victory by Jack Newton in the 50-yard freestyle sav- ing the East Lansing boys from a total whitewashing. Team Seeks Record The Wolverines will not be swim- ming half-heartedly, in spite of the prospect of not too much competition. In fact, Matt has announced that the medley relay team will attempt to smash the American record for the standard 300-yard distance. In.the Ohio meet the trio of HarryHoliday, Pat Hayes and Ace Cory came just two and a half seconds short of the mark of 2:51.9 set by Princeton in 1939. Two more weeks ofcondtioning and the insertion, of either Lou Kivi or Chuck Fries into the freestyle slot may very well turn the trick.- Only five men are back from last year's Spartan team. Newton and Harold Hefferman are sprinters, Lar- ry Luoto and Warren McNichol are returning divers and Jim Thomas is a veteran distance performer. The best breaststroke performer in Michi- gan State history, Chuck Bigelow, shattered an elbow recently in a fall so the burden in this event will fall on sophomore Bob Knox. Backstroker Harry Cooley is another good soph. This lead was short lived as the Can- adians came back to knot the count just as the initial period came to a close. The second period saw Kemp's sec- ond goal and Allen's third. Opland Begins To Move After ten minutes of battling be- tween the blue lines, the Canadians took a one-goal lead on a ten-footer by Ted Garvin. The Wolverines then moved on the offensive and Opland, on a pass from Roy Bradley, pushed the puck past Rutter for the first of three, and the score was again knotted. The Canadians then put five forwards on the ice to try to score, but the strategy backfired as Opland skated all alone up the ice, past in front of the nets to draw Rut- ter off balance and fired the puck into the nets from five feet out. The Point Edward strategy came to grief again, as Kemp intercepted a pass in front of Loud and passed out to Opland who had scored again before the Canadians could form a defense. The game ended with the Wolverines staving off the final ef- forts of the visitors deep down in their own ice. Triumph Is Eighth in Row For Hoosiers (Continued from Page 1) Johnny Logan and Ralph Hamilton had shot Indiana into a 6 to 0 lead in the first few minutes the Crimson steadily pulled away to a 26 to 12 half-time lead. At the start of the final period In- diana kept up its bombardment of the basket and was ahead, 44 to 22, when Comin and Gibert sparked a Michigan drive that cut the Hoosiers' final margin to 15 points. * * , State Is Track Foe Tonight (Continued from Page 1) tain Dave Matthews whipped around 11 laps of the Garden track in 1:56.5, and was just a yard behind when he passed the stick to anchorman Bob Ufer. Ufer breezed through his half- mile in 1:56.3, beating New York Uni- versity by several yards. Earlier in the evening, Ufer had pushed Hugh Short, sensational Georgetown runner, to a terrific 1:10.2 in the special 600-yard race. This tied the world record set by the late John Borican. Ufer's time. of 1:11 broke the old Millrose record of 1:11.2 established by Jimmy Herbert, who was third. Another special event saw Man- hattan's Fred Sickinger stave off the last-second surge of Matthews in the 880-yard race to win in 1:54.9. Dave trailed by four feet and was clocked Johnny Ingersoll and sophomore Bob in 1:55.1, a new Varsity indoor rec- Hume will battle State's mile ace, Bill ord, breaking the mark set in 1939 Scott, while Ernie Leonardi and Bob by Dye Hogan at 1:55.3. Hume will try to take first and sec- Keyed up by their triumphs at the 'ond in the two-mile from Page and Garden, the Michigan trackmen were Horski. favored to turn back "the most pow- Chuck Pinney is favored to take erful track squad in Michigan State the 65-yard low hurdles with sopho- history" in a dual meet tonight at mores Elmer Swanson and Jack Mar- Yost Field House. First field event, tin battling it out with Dodge and the pole vault, starts at 7:15 p.m., Buschman for second and third. Bud while the opening track race, the Byerly is the Wolverines' best bet in mile, begins at 7:30. the 65-yard high hurdles, with Swan- Barring last-minute shifts, the fea- son and Liv Stroia strong choices. tured events should be the 880-yard Doherty will select his mile relay run with Captain Matthews in the quartet from Alkon, Pinney, Jim top spot, and the quarter-mile dash Sears, Willie Glas and Ufer. which pits "Hose Nose" Ufer against In the field events, Doherty has State's Dale Kaulitz. George Ostroot in the shot put, Pin- Coach Doherty will enter sprinters ney in the broad jump, Bob Segula Bill Newcomb and Len Alkon in the and Frank McClear in the pole vault 60-yard dash against the Spartans' and Bill Dale and Liv Stroia in the Hughie Davis and Jim McCarthy. high jump. Box scor MICHIGAr Comin, f.. Wiese, f. .. Mullaney, f Gibert, f.. Mandler, c Strack, g:. Doyle, g. Lund, g.. Totals. INDIANA Logan, f... McGinnis, Hamilton,: Lewis, f. .. Williams, c Wittenbrak Denton, g. Swanson, g Cowan, g. e. THE LINEUPS MICHIGAN POINT Loud G Stenberg RD Derleth LD Kemp RW Opland C Reichert LW N G F . . ... ... . .. 2 3 ........... 0 0 f........... 0 1 . ... . .. .. .. 2 2 2 2 .0 0 .12 9 G F .4 0 f. ........ 0 0 f...........3 2 ....... .... 0 0 . .. . . .. 4 2 cer, g...... 2 0 . . . . . 1 0 .5 2 .1 0 PF TP 3 7 0 0 1 1 0 6 4 4 0 9 1 6 0 -0 9 33 PF TP 2 8 0 0 2 8 1 0 2 10 2 4 0 2 1 12 1 2 11 481 EDWARD J. Rutter L. Rutter Dodds Maughn Prudence Fillion Michigan Spares: Athens, Bradley, Anderson. Point Edward Spares: Allen, Cu- zens, Garvin. SCORING First Period Michigan: Kemp unassisted (15: 55); Derleth from Kemp (18:46). Point Edward: Allen from Garvin (15:27); Allen from Cuzens (19:47). Second Period Michigan: Kemp from Opland (19: 50). Point Edward: Allen from Gar- vin (12:28). Third Period Michigan: Opland from Bradley '(11:41); Opland unassisted (12:23); Opland from Kemp (18:36). Point Edward: Garvin from Allen (9:51). PENALTIES First Period Stenberg (2 minutes). Second Period Athens, Maughn, Garvin, Cuzens (all 2 minutes). Third Period L. Rutter (2 minutes). Totals...........21 6 A DR. KENNETH N. WESTERMA . Phonologopedist e ,{ .........:"..;.;... /i ;.". b:'c ::i::; ib-. . I' iVi,.I ! i: _'o VOICE AND SPEECH DEVELOPMENT A N D CORRECT ION Studio: 303 South State ..? For Appointment Call 6584 before 9 A.M. * Second Semester Textbook Economy at FOLLETT'S Every Book for Every- Course -and Every Used Book at a Saving. That is what makes it worthwhile to buy all your textbooks from FOLLETT'S MICHIGAN BOOK STORE I BARGAINS in SAVE at 'FOLLET'S I E oa or NEW IF YOU PREFER I * STUDENT Cash SUPPLIES Exchange at FOLLETT'S where you will find better facilities for trading. I Your OLD BOOKS good as CASH . them along. ore as Bring 1! mum. - - - - - -