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February 20, 1943 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1943-02-20

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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Sextet Plays Gophers Here; Mermen agers at Ohi(

) State

Pucksters Seek Victory
In Return Clash Tonight
- 4

l3y WALT KLEE'
The Wolverine sextet will take to
the ice tonight at eight in the Coli-
seum, intent on taking the last of a
two-game series with the Minnesota
hockey team.
The same two teams battled for
seventy minutes last Thursday night
into a one-all deadlock that provided
all the thrills that are known to
hockey. In addition to plenty of fast
skating, fancy stickwork and good
offensive and defensive play on the
part of both teams, the players al-
most broke out into a fist fight in
the third period when Gopher Patty
Ryan and Wolverine Bob Stenberg
exchanged blows just inside the
Michigan blue line.
Pre-game dope seemed to point to
a walk-away for the invading Vik-
ings; but the surprising Wolverines
put up a battle that Coach Larry
Armstrong's boys will remember for
a long while to come. The much im-
proved Maize and Blue fought on
even terms with the Norsemen and
gained a moral victory as a result
of the tie.
Anderson Gets Goal
It appears that Gordon Anderson
was the Wolverine who slipped the
puck past Minnesota's goalie Mac,
Thayer for the only Michigan score
of the evening and not Johnny Ath-
ens, as reported in The Daily yester-
day. To those in the press box it ap-
peared that Dance passed to Athens
who shot the puck into the nets.
As a result of the fine showing in
the first of the two-game series this
week-end, the home team is given an
even chance of upsetting the Gophers
in tonight's contest. This game
should provide the same brand of
hoc1tey as :the first of the series,
which should assure a capacity crowd
I MICHIGAN

at the Coliseum tonight at eight.
It is certain that the Gophers will.
be out to avenge their "loss" and will
try every trick of the trade in a i
effort to stop the Wolverines. The
Minnesota first- line 'of Dick Kelley
and his twoflankmen, Bob Graiziger
and Pat Ryan, will not have the
overconfidence that they did before
Thursday night. They now, realize
that in Bob Derleth and. Bob Sten-
berg they- are meeting a capable de-
fense combination.
Line Spells Trouble
They also will meet trouble fromi
linemen Bill Dance and Roy Bad-
ley, whose defensive play broke up
more than one offensive drive of
the Gophers.
Henry. Loud, the sextet's capta~in,
played his best game of the season
in the nets on Thursday night. He
turned back thirty-four shots at the.
nets, permitting only one to pass hin
for a score. Hank mage several saves
that,were as sensational as has been
seen in the Coliseum this season. He
can be counted on for more of the
same.
llinois Cag ers
Face Badgers
CHICAGO, Feb. 19.-(IP)-Illinois
vs. Wisconsin is the feature game of
tonight's Big Ten basketball card,
not only because two of the league's
best individual stars will be matching
baskets, but also because the chap,-
pionship may well hang on the out-
come.
The Illini, undefeated in nine
games, have contests with North-
western and lowly Chicago after the
Badger tilt, and while the Wildcats
may prove tough in the Chicago Sta-
dium one week later, it's this game-
against Wisconsin-that has Illinois'
coach, Doug Mills, talking to himself.
Andy Phillip, high-scoring member
of the whiz kids, is only seven points I
away from equalling the modern 12-
game scoring record of 184 points set
in 1938 by Purdue's Jewel Young, and
only 11 points below the all-time
12-game high of 188 points made in1
1920 by Illinois' Chick Carney when
a fouled player could designate somex
better shot to take his free throws.

Michigan Five
Banks on Trio
Of ophStars
Strack, Mullaney and
Wiese To Lead Attack.
E I Columbus Series
By DON SWANINGER
Mchigan's up-and-down basketball
team will be pinning the greater share
of its hopes upon the efforts of three
sophomores to keep them 'up' to-
night when they collide with an
equally unpredictable Ohio State
quintet on the latter's home .court.
The three. sophs whose presence is
all importait in the Wolverine lineup
are Dave Strack, Bob Wiese, and
Gerry Mullaney. It was this trio that
played the distance against Purdue
and sparked the Varsity to their 37-
34 win.
Strack Leads Scoring,
Strack,.a guard, virtually unknown
at the beginning of the season, has
since justified himself as a regular
starting player. He leads the team in
scoring in Big Ten competition with
upwards of 50 points and is deadly on
set shots. When he comes to the foul
line, fans refer to him as "Bee-Bee"
eyes, a mark of his accuracy in sink-
ing free throws.
Strack's defensive aptness can best
be shown by the fact that when high-
scoring stars like Wisconsin's Johnny
Kotz, Indiana's Hamilton, and Pur-
due's Ed Ehlers-come to town expect-
ing to have a big scoring night, they
usually leave the floor at the end of
the game rather discouraged because
no matter what offensive maneuver
they attempted, Strack's grinning
face and flailing arms were constant-
ly there to stop.them. Dave is equally
effective on defense and offense.
Wiese Regains Eye,
Though no' superman at keeping
the other fellow from tallying, Wiese
does have something that. the Wol-
verines have;. been .begging for all
season- a left-handed push shot that
has a knack of connecting when it is
needed.,most. For a time Wiese lost
his; shptiag eye, but against Purdue
last Tuesday he gave indications that
it is back again, as he . dropped in
three.field- goals at critical moments..
Third sophomore counted on in to-
night's fray will be Mullaney. A for-
ward, Geary is another player whose
scoring punch has been aiding the
Varsity cause. Tall, rangy, he is being
g-roomed for the center post soon to
be vacated by the graduation of big
Jim Mandler.

Two of the Big Ten's outstanding
quarter-milers, "Blazing" Bob Ufer
and Ohio State's Russ Owens. will
renew their duel of last spring here
Friday night when the Wolverine
and Buckeye track squads pair off in
a dual meet at Yost Field House.
The possibility of a new record in
the 440-yard dash appears strong,
since Ufer has approached the mark
of :49.1 several times. He shares it
with Johnny Woodruff of Pittsburgh.
In view of his national indoor mark
of :48.1, Ufer is capable of breaking
that Field House mark. -
Recent performances and Ufer's
sensational running on indoor tracks
this year give the Michigan star an
edge over Owen, who holds the Con-
ference outdoor crown in the quarter.
Ufer served notice on Owen last Sat-
urday when he ran a 300-yard dash
in :31.4 at East Lansing, two-tenths
of a second off the world record.
When Ufer set his national indoor

440-yard record of :48.1 in the Chi-
cago armory last March he attained
his first of two immediate goals. The
second is to break the world outdoor
record of :46.4 set by Ben Eastman of
Stanford in 1932.
Eyes Half-Mile Mark
Ufer's father, a lumber dealer in
Mt. Lebanon, Pa., held the Michigan
Varsity record in the half-mile from
1916 to 1926. Coach Ken Doherty may
give Bob a chance at this distance be-
fore the year is over. He has run
1:54.8 indoors in time trials and is
confident he can better that mark.
His performance at the Michigan
State Relays last Saturday was
classed by Doherty as "the best run-
ning by a middle distance performer
in one evening that I have ever seen."
Besides his mark of :31.4 in the 300-
yard dash, Ufer turned in a 1:55.1
half-mile, and topped it off with a
:49.1 in the quarter on Michigan's
mile relay jaunt.

Joe DiMlaggio Is in the Army

Ufer-Owen Battle in Quarter
May Feature Meet with Bucks

ALEC

Joe DiMaggio (right),,along with other inductees, is sworn into the
Army at San Francisco by Capt. M._A. Branson (back to camera). The
New York'Yankee outfielder obtained special permission from his draft
board o enlist as a voluntary indnetee.
CLOSER THIS TIME:
Wolverine-Buckeye Swim Tit
To Present CreamofBi TnI

TEMPLE TON

SENSATIONAL PIANIST

THURSDAY, FEB. 25, 8:30 - BILL AUDITORIUM

By JOE MCHALE f
As large as the first Michigan-Ohio
State swimming meet loomed in the
aquatic world, it promises to be over-
shadowed in importance by the re-
turn contest tonight in Columbus be-
cause of the proximity of the Big Ten
meet, March 5-6.
Intervening dual matches have,
proven that the Wolverine and Buck-
eye mermen comprise the class of the
Conference and, probably, of the en-
tire country.
The Wolverines will enter tonight's
contest as favorites on the basis of
their decisive 52-32 victory over the
Bucks Jan, 23, and their superior.
times recorded in later meets. Ohio
State partisans think their team will
shade Michigan.
To do this the Bucks would have to
put on a spectacular showing. Illus-
trating this, a comparison between
the component points in the last
meeting and those necessary for a
Buckeye win would be in order.
Jan. 23 Tonight

the 50, and Patten and Lou Kivi out-
classed him in the 100 last time.
The added presence of Captain
Mark Follansbee for the.Bucks and
the loss by graduation of Michigan-
der Ted Horlenko in the backstroke
would allow Coach Mike Peppe's
swimmers to pick up three more1
points here. But All-American Jim
Counsilman may not be able to again
best Maize and Blue star Jim Skinner
and hustling teammate Pat Hayes.
Finally, this conjecturing demands,
that both Kakama and Jack Ryan
outdistance Mattmari Walt Stewart
in the quarter-mile. Walt will prob-
ably be saved until this race in order
to try to duplicate his second-place
showing in the initial meet, when
he finished ahead of Big Ten champ
Ryan.
On the basis of this figuring, it
would be hard for the Ohioans to
win tonight, but the meet will be bit-
terly contested.

Program
Prelude Arioso......Bach-Templeton
Chorale Prelude: Mortify Us By Thy
Grace............Bach-Rummel
Warum-Aufschwung ..Schumann
Sonata in F-sharp major,
Op. 78...............Beethoven
Intermezzo in E-flat....... Brahms
Intermezzo in C...........Brahms
Prelude in B minor .........Liadov
Prelude in E flat minor.....Chasins
Introduction and Allegro.... ,...'
..."......,Ravel-Templeton
Reharmonized Harmonious Black-
smith (Handel) ........Templeton
Mozart a la Mode......Templeton
Improvisations ...........Templeton
Gnats to Yo (From an orchestra
work, "Insect Suite," written for
and dedicated to Paul Whitenan
..................... Templetoi
Improvisations ...........Templeton

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

MONTY IDA
WO0OLLEY - LUPINO

i
j
J

TICKETS, with tax, $.10 - 9Oc - C60
at Offices of the University Musical Society, Burton Tower

11

with
Corel WILDE " Sara ALLGOOD
Melville COOPER.. Dircf d by Irving
- Comning Sundaiy-

FOR SALE
EXCELLENT balloon tired bike for
sale. Call Lowell Tompkins, 9016.
MISCELLANEOUS
PANTY PHOTOGRAPHS and IN-
FORMAL PORTRAITS by appoint-
ment only. Phone 2-4726.
WASHED SAND AND GRAVEL-
Driveway gravel, washed pebbles.
Killins Gravel Co., phone 7112.
PIANO INSTRUCTION by Edith
Koon, formerly on faculty of the
University Music School. Call
2-3354.
TYPEWRIIERS of all makes. Of-
fice and portable models. Bought,
rented, repaired. Student and Of-
fice Supplies. 0. D. Morrill, 314
South State St. Phone 6615.
LAUNDERING

FOR RENT
SINGLE ROOM for graduate or spe-
cial student. Stay with children 2
evenings. Phone 2-3811. Mrs. F. D.
Elsif or.
TYPING
MISS ALLE- Experienced typist.
408 S. Fifth Ave. Phone 2-2935.
HELP WANTED
WANTED: Pianist to play for sing-
ing at party. Must know Michigan
songs. Call Murphy, 7902.
COLLEGE Qr'high sqhool students to
deliver Michigan Dailies. Good sal-
ary. Call 2-3241, ask for Mrs.
Mosher.
ALTERATIONS
STOCKWELL & MOSHER-JORDAN
residents-Alternationp on women's
garments promptly done. Opposite
Stockwell. Phone 2-2678.
WANTED
MAKE MONEY-on your used cloth-
ing by phoning Claude H. Brown,
2-2736, 512 S. Main.

M O
6 3
6 3
8 1
1 8
8 1
8 1
4 5
3 6
8 4
52 32

Medley Relay
220-Yard Free
50-Yard Free
Diving
100-Yard Free
Backstroke
Breaststroke
440-Yard Free
Freestyle Relay

M O
6 3
3 6
6 3
1 8
6 3
5 4
4 5
1 8
8 4
40 44

COME TO

uofZisCTA
Stag -

An observation of this. hypotheti-
cal score of tonight's big splash
shows the unlikelihood of such a
large Scarlet and Gray total. In the
first place, it presupposes that Buck.
eye Keo Nakama, NAAU 440-yard
champion, will dethrone Captain
Johnny Patten, Big Ten and NCAA
titlist at 220 yards, at the latter's
best distance. Patten won the first
duel.
Secondly, Jack Martin or Ted Ho-
bert would have to swim faster than
ever before to place second in the 50
and 100-yard sprints. Chuck Fries
and Harry Holiday beat Martin in

1
e
i
1
t

EVANGELICAL LUTHERAN CHURCH
(Missouri Synod)
Rev. Alfred Scheips, Pastor for Students
Sunday at 11: Divine Service for student in the
Michigan League Chapel. Topic of sermon,
"Christ's Sacrificial Love." .
No Student Club meeting Sunday evening.
FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH

-L

LAUNDRY"- 2-1044. Soxt
Careful work at low price.

darnedc.

...

i

RICHARD

TRAVIS

"BUSSES ROAR"
WAR BONDS $SUEL HERE wD r wErf I
Continuous from 1 P.M./

j State and William Streets
Minister: Rev. Leonard A. Parr, D.D.
Director of Music: Arnold Blackburn.
Church School Departments at 9:30 and 10:30
a.m.
10:45 a.m. Morning Worship. Sermon by Dr.
Parr on "The Trumpet Is Blown, But We-?"
Ariston League of high school students meets at
5:30 p.m. Dr. W. S. James will speak on "A
Bright Spot for the Dark Continent."
At 7:00 p.m. Student Fellowship will have a
social hour and refreshments.
Campus Inter-Guild will hold the Student World
Wide Prayer Service in the sanctuary at 8:15
this evening. An impressive program has been
arranged. Townspeople as well as students
are urged to attend.

STARTING TODAY!

4 DAYS ONLY

Meet the "Gang"
at MARSHALL'S

FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
409 South Division St.
Wednesday evening service at 8:00
Sunday morning'service at 16:30
Subject: "Mind"
Sunday School at 11:45
Free public Reading Room at 106 E. Washington
St., open every day except Sundays and holi-
days from 11:30 a.m. until 5 p.m., Saturdays
until 9 p.m.
ST ANDREW'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH
Church: 306 N. Division St.
Student Center -State and Huron Streets.
The Rev. Henry Lewis, D.D., Rector
The Rev. John G. Dahl, Curate
George Faxon, Organist and Choirmaster.
8:00 a.m. Holy Communion.
11:00 a.m. Junior Church
11:00 a.m. Morning Prayer and Sermon by Mr.
Dahl.
5:00 p.m. Choral 'Evensong (Music by Schola
Cantorum)
FOR UNIVERSITY STUDENTS
(at Harris Hall unless otherwise indicated)
8:15 p.m. Interguild World-Day of Prayer Serv-
ice, Congregational Church.
Tea, Tuesday and Friday, 4 p.m.
Evening Prayer; Tuesday, 5:15 p.m., Chapel
Holy Communion and Breakfast, Wednesday and
Thursday, 7:30 a.m., Chapel
Intercessions, Friday, 12:10, Chapel
LUTHERAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION
Sponsored jointly by the Zion and Trinity
Lutheran Churches.
ZION LUTHERAN CHURCH
E. Washington and S. Fifth .Ave.
10:30 a.m. Church Worship Service. Sermon by
Rev. E. C. Stellhorn.
TRINITY LUTHERAN CHURCH
E. William St. and S. Fifth Ave.
10:30 a.m Church Wnrshin S ri'rr kn

After the 10

o'clock

for MARSHALL'S

RICH'-TEST Malteds

FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
120 South State St.
Ministers: Charles W. Brashares and Ralph G.
Dunlop.
Music: Hardin Van Deursen, director.
Mary McCall Stubbins, organist.
9:30 a.m. Class for University Students. Wesley
Foundation Lounge.
10:40 a.m. Church School for Nursery, Begin-
ners, and Primary Departments where young
children may be left during worship service.
10:40 a.m. Worship Service. Dr. Brashares' sub-
ject is "The First 'Must'."
6:00 p.m. Wesleyan Guild Meeting for University
Students. Supper and fellowship hour.

Sodas

Sundaes

Sandwiches

w~ m '~p'

I

,I

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