SZ N--j), Y, r RY 27, 1 SUNDAY, I ~R~Y 27~ I Out Frigid Gophers, 4-1 Elliott Scores Defense Stars is Fii, Gacek, Burford, 15 Points To fcMilla ni Each Tally Once on Gonhers Wolverine Grapplers Down Surprised Ohio State. 16-11 I it wasn't clickin; in front of the and his big glove proved a thorn By Gopher net like it had Friday. in the side of Minnesota ambi- Before 1Michigan looked tired in sp)ots. tions. Michigan Md Michigan countered with sev- through but finally came to life in the Micha outerdwithwev- season fo third stanz a to break a 1-1 tie. alrheoftswnbtee they dow unable to shake the stalwart Min- GAL BURFORD netted what nesota defense which dogged State de proved to be the winning goal at them all the way down the ice. The W 8:41 of the last period, climaxin On the few times they hat a clear top in ft a,, three way lpassim playvth, ra hot at the net, Gopher goalie Keller, P Jac: McEwen had little trouble. and Jack bouts, and THERE WERE two penalties tling to a in the period. both going to "M" defenseman Bob Fleming. He was IN WI s ut off for boarding and for decidingr body-checking at center ice. cisioned C The second period started just Rath, 6- --like the first, with a lot of ac- throughou z tion, but nothing in the way of utes, with scoring coming from either to shake Michigan or Minnesota. Jack w Both McDonald and McEwen three tin were at their best, although the threw h~i Gopher nettender needed a little Captain assistance from forward Bob and Blue Harris at one point when the ac- tion got especially hot. I. - -----'y - ~- HERB MUNZEL a fair-sized crowd, the wrestling squad came with its first win of the r Coach Cliff Keen as ned a surprised Ohiol egation, 16-11. olverines came out on our matches, with Jack hil Carlson, Bob Betzig,, Powers winning their d Bob Cunningham bat- draw. AT PROVED to be the match, Jack Powers de- OSU's 175-pounder, Tom 1. Powers was on top ut most of the nine min- Rath constantly trying loose by running away. was able to hold on and nes lifted Rath up, and im to the mat. n Bob Betzig of the Maize came through again, al- .r IWHARRIS grabbed the loose puck after it seemed that it was goal- bound. He was given a minor pen- alty for holding the puck more than three seconds. A beautiful pass play hetween McMillan and Gacek set up Michigan's first score. They carried the puck into the Goph- . er zone and McMillan went in - close to make it 1-0 for Mich- -igan at 10:41. Play continued even and then Minnesota tied it up at 13:47, IOLDING TI imi TC- 1ei-ran goalie. Jack McDonald gaveit coring on a shot that McDonald brilliant pleriormni u last night as he succeeded in placing a Bjorkman got credit for the goal, veritable wall betwven th Copher icemen and his nets. Jack with Jerry Lindegard getting the seemed everywhere at once turning in a total of thirty-three saves. assist. n the history of the rivalry that ,the length of the ice. Assists went BOTH TEAMS powered during hey were able to accomplish the to Neil Celley and Connie Hill. the remaining minutes of the pe- eat. Michigan clicked igain, this rod, but to no avail. .Mil gettlinghe gal, ths With the score 4-1, both Jack McDonald was outstand- time hill getting the goal, with teams began to rough it up a ing in goal for the Wolverines the assist going to Burford. little and sticks were carried and made several saves that Both goals came from in close. high. seemed headed for pay dirt. The Wally Gacek "put the game on Neil Celley and Harris of Min- lone Gopher tally came on a ice" for Michigan with the final nesota were sent off for roughing shot that his his shoulder and tally of the game at 12:55 from at 13:50 of the stanza. Harris was caromed into the net. linemate Gordie McMillan on" a pushing Celley, and the Wolverine Minnesota was vastly improved shot fron about five feet out. center retaliated with a stick to Ver the previous night. Thcir * *the mid-section, knocking Harris tick handling looked .Harper and THE GAME opened fast, with to the ice. hey passed with great er ac('iuraey.! Minnesota dominating the play Seconds later, Brumm was sent for about the first seven minutes. off for tripping, giving the Goph- FOR TWO PERIOIS, it looked The Gophers peppered McDonald ers, the odd-man advantage, but ike the Maize and Blue were in with shot after shot. but :"Mac" the Wolverines were able to kill or a lot of trouble. was equal to the task and turned off the penalty and the game end- In contrast to the Gophers, them aside. ed with no further action and things weren't going too smooth- He was particularly brilliant Michigan pressing in near the ly. Their passing was good, but when the Gophers got in close I Minnesota goal. Calling for time out, Perelman de- cided to lose by default, giving Betzig the bout and Michigan five points. In the 121-pound match, Bob Cunningham gave the crowd something to scream about as he gained his 7-7 tie with only one second of the last period remaining. With Buckeye Dick Payne rid- ing for the last 50 seconds of the period, Bob escaped as the time ran out, but the whistle failed to sun1d. Ws HEN OHSTATE'S wrest- lers protested that the time had run out before Cunningham es- caped, Payne 'was awarded the match by the score of 7-6. Then the crowd sounded off and Cin- ningham was awarded one point for the escape and the bout was called a draw. Ohio's Bill Miller built up the largest individual score as he won over Byron Lasky, 11-3, in the heavyweight division. Lasky was completely outweigh- ed by the 244-pound Miller, but showed terrific defensive ability in averting being pinned. Lasky's fast moving antics were too tricky for Miller, as he es- caped three times, and was con- stantly wriggling his way out of the pinning holds. * THE BUCKEYE captain, Dave Ewart, won the 136-pound event handily from Wolverine Tom Mill- er by a 7-2 decision. Phil Carlson's 2-0 decision over highly touted Bryce Keough at 155 left the Ohioan surprised and made Carlson very happy. Phil's two points camne at 2:58 of the first period when he counted on a takedown. During the third frame, Keough was trying hard for a pinning combination, but was unable to roll Wolverine Carlson off his stomach. * * * IN A VERY interesting match, 145-pounder Milt Klein decisioned Jim Smith of the Maize and Blue, 5-3. Although Jack Keller of Michi- gan looked tired during the last part of his bout with Bill Finn- eran, he came out on the long end of an 8-2 decision. JACK POWERS .. . decidedly powerful * * * though this time not in the usual fashion. Powerful-looking Dave Perelman of OSU and Bob got right to work in the first period of the tussle, but neither was able to gain the advantage. AFTER GETTING a reversal "at the beginning of the second period, Captain Bob Betzig was able to get his famed cradle hold on Buckeye Dave Perelman, who let out a yell, evidently in pain. r I I heard1aoutth A.s iloe' A7 AFMA (Special to The Daily) COLUM1US-A foul shot by Jerry Burns with slightly more than two minutes remaining in an overtime period enabled Michi- gan's jayvee basketball squad to eke out a 44-43 victory over the Ohio State "B" team here yester- day. Behind most of the game, Mich- igan knotted the score with two quick buckets by Oscar Agre and Bill Eggenberger to send the battle into overtime. After Burn's free shot, the team stalled for the re- mainder of the game. This was the jayvee's second win over the Buckeyes this sea- son. It marked the close of a high- ly successful year for J. T. White's boys in which they won six out of the nine games they played. Bud Royce and Hal Pink were high scorers for Michigan with 17 and 12 points respectively while Bill Kraker with 10 led the Buck- eyes. Ski Mark Set IRON MOUNTAIN, Mich.-(P) - Joe Perrault of Ishpeming, Mich., won the John Mitchell Ronning Ski Jumping Tourna- ment yesterday as the American distance record was broken five times. TTHAR SHE BLOWS: Sailing Club Hits 'Big Tue,' Threatens East's Domination heard about the Union March 5, 1:00 By BEV BUSSEY (Sports Feature Editor) There was a time when all New Yorkers felt that anyone who didn't live in their Big City was strictly a country cousin-nobody else could come within echo dis- tance of their standards. Somehow a few eastern colleges caught the "holier - than - thou" bug, and appropriated the idea for their own exclusive use. The boys from MIT, Yale, and Har- vard peered down their noses at the Mid-western family trying to make a go of intercollegiate sail- ing. WHEN THE Mid-western Sail- ing Association took hold and like Topsy, "just growed", the Back Bay boys staked out their claims. They claimed Michigan, Notre Dame, Wisconsin and the rest as an "annex" of the Inter- collegiate Yacht Racing Associa- tion, the grandaddy of sailing or- ganizations. That was back in '46. Since then, the weight of the two conferences has shifted. Michi- gan finished second to Yale in an intersectional regatta at Chicago last year. Yet more important, the East- ern sons of sailing agreed to leave their home base and make Whit- more Lake the scene of the Na- tional Regatta this June. HAND IN HAND with the changing attitude of the East has been a changing opinion about the membership of the Michigan Sailing Club. At first, only old salts belonged to it. According to Jim Rukin, con- modore of the club, "We've tried to wipe out.the "exclusive air." We'd like to have anyone who has only an INTEREST in sailing join our group. We can supply the rest-the equipment and the know how." DURING THE three weeks prior to boating time, the club members will be holding school and getting the dinghies ready. Learning nau- tical terms will be emphasized to prepare the newcomers for in- structions when sailing. The plans for on-shore training will be explained in detail when the Michigan Sailing Club meets Wednesday. Rukin urges anyone who is interested to attend the meeting at the Union. _ 4 ;: , vFx, (2-ff MOVIES of NCAA Hockey Tournament. 1:30 and 2:30 BILLIARD EXHIBITION.............. 1:30 and 2:30 SHOW by Westinghouse............. 1:45 and 3:45 BOWLING EXHIBITION............. 1:30 and 2:30 MICHIFISH WATER BALLET....... PING PONG EXHIBITION.......... REFRESHMENTS ...... ........... i* 2 .2:00 a nd 3:30 i t I Late Scores BASKETBALL Oklahoma A&M 40, St. Louis 37 Bowling Green 85, Loy-ola 72 Illinois 81, Northwestern 64 Wisconsin 79, W. Ontario 45 Indiana 76, Iowa 60 NEW YORK - (,'P) - James Scholtz, rangy West Point up- per classman, sent Army off brilliantly in the I.C. 4A Indoor Track Championships yester- day by bettering all known 35- pound weight records with a .. 3:00 .. 3:30 11 I 11 .11 i 1r 77- I I II I .. "round wear that is wear 11 I !1