THE MICHIG--AN DAILY SUNDAY, MAR~ 6, I~4O - - - ----- - ------ - -- ------ ------- .. . . . . .. __Grapplers Finishl Tbh ird ; Boilermakzers Win Title. Wolverine Puckst rs ati IIu age Betzi~g, Smith Upset: Powers Wins iU~. ~7 ~ 7 V .E.~../u. qy'~ V~.>~ i. L k~7.v. . With the penalty box occupied dur]ing imt of the con te.$t, the Wolverine pucksters outfought a rugged Michigan Tech sextet last night to win, 8-3. Attempting to halt the rough plaLy which predominated in Fri- da ,y n ight's encounter, the officials called 121 lpenalties. 'fTeWolver- ines comml~itted 13 rmisdemeanor1s w,.hile eighit penalties were called on the Huskies. EVEN GOALIE Jack McDonald participated in the parade to the penalty box. Ile drew a delayed roughing penalty while Dick' Star- rak and Al Renfrew were in the cooler, when Husky wing Marc Olson came into the net. Olson also drew a penalty. Between penalties the Wol- verines found time to blast home five goals in the first period, Another in the second and two more in the final stanza. Wally Grant led the scorers with three goals for the hat trick. Connie Hill collected four points on a goal and three assists. WALLY G'ACEK, Gordie, Mc- Millan, Joe Marmo and Renfrew also tallied for the Wolverines. Jima Ruhi, Ron Nettell andj Connie Adams scored the vis- itor's goals. Playing their best hockey in the opening period, the Wolverines swarmed all over Husky Goalie Jocko Noblet for five tallies. Mich- igan Tech was on the short end ofj a 3-0 score before they were able to take a shot at the Wolverinej net. RENFREW AND GACEK scored the first two Wolverine goals while Tech was to man short. lien - fred taied1. a , 3:53 and Gcka 4:56.11111llassisted on hot I saS a Fllwing -the fac:e-off, Mei- anti'id Ithe length of the ice to scae Iusfirst goial of the evening o. _lh!1+ 'Q'ch licarne back inl 1 ±:z_ e'-onldlperiod and (Hayed the Wovernes oan even: terms IIrIhe at two stanzas. Joe Mar fio(tallied on a screen snot following,' a face-off at 8 :00J ofli tesecond iperiod. Owen rM- A rdle as si sted. JIM, I1I)11L SCO ED the first 11uskiiy goal at. 13:53. The shot was parial ly blocked by McDonald. lki hig'ann Tech's second tally cinwe n the Wolverines were Iagain two mnen short and was liadle by Icon Nettell at 18:49. Grant started the third periodt s('oriflg lby blasting in a r'ebound~ ' htot at 5:26. Neil Celley and Gil lBu.ford r(ceivetl assists on Uth' AT 17 :55, Grant registered hi:; third :goal of the evening for the hat trick. Burford and hill were credited with assists. Tech got itsa final goal just be- fore the final whistle on a screen Shot 'from the blue line by Connie Adarnfls. Mc~D)onalId1}layeta riiotl icr firne gamne in the net mnaking 30 slaves. Noiblet., of Michigan Tech stop~pedl 27 Wolverine shots. DET IROIT--(1>k-Th17e first-place Detroit Red Wings finally ended their non-winning slump after it; had] gone seven games by grab- bing a 6-5 thriller from the Chi- cago Black Hawks. Trfle were 14,232 fans who watched theI (Hawks make their last National Hockey League appearance here last night. WALLY GRANT ..pass the hat Milian made the score 3-0 at 5:03, Renfrew assisting. Hill got his goal unassisted at 7 :10 following a scramble around the Husky net. WALLY GRANT pulled the play of the evening late in the period when the Wolverines had two men in the penalty box. He broke away I; r 711'' l Ill inois ' anllipu>'in a' ci : s 'xiii not only be afte>' tieir 1 Oca 1 out - tinlit Con fercn- be s ta] I r winr ltoorrow v i(i>'hl xvii> tley llez I Miciffl aii t i \(Jst F iel11d1 11 h also cuti to C".11,, upa k -wx'new St atistics, in 0 i1e'coI(1books. The leaIue -] cader., pl'eltly Vci. ainlg the recor~id hull of 66.4 points per <_ame, Ihave seaOred 730j lloints , jus:t. 26 shy of : rplssing the present. Coferenace rnlark of 755 set by the ilb uni, Whi z lds"' iii 191:1 THEYlAR A Ealmost ia >rc bet to surpass t his high pint total, and also to score eitoiuh buck~ts so that they end the seas on abax c 11he xvhi) jewas also ('sLablS! 11(1Ivythe fabulous "Whiz Kids'. Te ][Iiadn have created a lot i moro w ork for the statisticians this scaIsoz. Against Indiana last lM1nday night thtey helped st a new mark for the must points ii one game, as the two teams to- taled a9 points, seven better than the id( record st East year+ by Illaimi.isand Purduae. The Hcoosiers were also the vi- trias(of the Ili ch(),alking iup) a new free throw record. The Illi- nois cagers tossed in 31 gift shots, five more than Wisconsin was able to get against Iowa last season. FEBRITARY 26, they bettered the field goal in 1913. TheHane itomrr'owxni ght will also be the last appearance of Bob flarrisori, Bll Miktiiici', and Bod McCaslin, For tIl(, Iini Pill Eid- soln. ,Jim Mars, rand ick Foley~ will see action for the last time. (Spcil to The Daily) 1',TO-=MINGTON, Ind.-Purdue hdtsecond straight Big Nine ::e.u crow n lase. night to k ig do an the curtain on the lrtet array of grappling talent. it, n eistory of Western Confer- ..;ic e compe tition. lkutekmg up19 points for the' t. or">. tie,,Boilermakers were c 1oe, followed by Minnesota with 18' points, as Michiga n rode into Lhirlac lIe Wxithi 17lpoinlt;. V . A j ONLY FIVE points sep-: am-ait lug te first six teams, Ohio1C IO-a Upsets 'Al' (Agers IFinal Seconds, 6,6 a r IOWA CITY, Ia-It's the big mien who are making the head-, lines in bjasketball these dlays, but a l;hort five foot tenl inch forwardl stepped into the limelighrt here It last night to give Iowa a hard-1 fought win over Michigan's Wol- veri'ines.j LIIt"rI C 'ILIE Mason. shortest man on the squaltd, tossed 1 in a free throw with 30 seconds remaining in the game and the score deadlocked at 62-all to give the homne squad its third win of tile season against nine losses. The score was 63-62. By winning the contest, Iowa narrowly escaped winding up the sesnin thei Conference cellar alonP,' wi th Northwestern. IN SPITE OF the short man's winning marker, the big gun of the evening was a "sky-scraper." Frank Calsbeek, six foot six inch center, dropped in 11 shots from, the field and seven gift tosses for, 29 points and the evening's high point honors. Michigan's Mack Supruno-, wicz was high for the losers, with 18 points on seven floor sh~ots and four free throws. iBox ScoreI Michigan held a slim 32-31 lead at the end of the first half but was unable to hold the advantage as the Hawks roar'ed to a 59-53 lead at the 15 mninute mark of the secondl frame. IN THlE NEXT thr'ee minutes, the Wolverines pressed the Iowans and moved into the tic with only 58 seconds 1'emaiining in i, oa'con- test. Then came Mason's oppor01- tunity to bull a Frank .Mrmi- well. Pete Elliott fouled the h~awk forward as he worked the ball in and amidst wild cheers from the crowd, the diminutive Mason sunk his shot and put the game on ice. The Wolverines mtade a valiant stab at scoring but an intercept- ed pass and a short stall by Iowa was all the homne squad needed. THOUGH! IOWA moved into an early lead in the first few minutes of play, Michigan came back fast to grab a 20-18 margin late in the initial stanza. Then came the deluge. The Hawkeyes started it off and couldn't miss as they hoop- ed 11 markers while the Wol- verines were scoring four. 'Then with two minutes left before the half-time whistle, Michigan went to work. Dropping in five straight shots from the floor, Michigan was at its best and walked off the floor at the intermission with its slim, margin. .It was the fifth loss for the Wolverines against six wins and leaves them with one game on the 1948-49 docket - against Illinois here tomorrow night. THlE WOLVERINE'S other two qual ifier's from. Friday's prelimi- nairies, Phil Carlson andi Byron Lasky, were eliminated in the semi-finals. Carlson was whipped by ,Joe Garcia in the 145 pound attraction, 5-1. Lasky fell from the semi -finals by forfeiture caused by a bad car. Easily the top attraction of the evening, the 165 pound classic brought together Mich - igan's Powers who defeated Nick Stevens of Northwestern during time after'noon and Self' of Wis- consin who dlipped Purdue's Dasso dumring the semi-finals. Since no riding time is record(ed (iving th e conference matches, a ,' ef'e's decision fgave t he tie matchl to Powers. State snat'ed fourth place with 16 ALTH-OUGHI both Purdue and points, fifth place went to Illinois second place Minnesota garnered with 15 points, and Indiana took two weight champs each, Purdue si' xth place by amassing 14 points. rode a ct'est of minor tournament The last t hree, positions in the points to gain the victory. dpi; Nine gra1'pping; final stand- Michigan, Ohio State, Indiana ing-s went to low, ii 11)oints- and Iowa each took a weight Wisconsin, 5 points;t and North- crown to runtd out the eight western Itro-iig UP Ithe "et"*I gm'appling championships. with 3 points. Em .erging,, from the semi-finals Jack Pow',os copped individual yestet'da y aft iioon with three h onors foe the Wolverines by ' n., Jimn Smith, Bob Betzig and toppling the vauntedCaeneJalck Powe~rs, Miehiaan went into Self of Wisconsin for the 16 the finals neck-in-neck with Min- pound championship. Self wvas de-j nesota, both teams pacing the fending 165 c:hamp. Conferenice. the only returning conference champion that successfully de- fended his title. In the 175 pound attraction, Scarpello nipped Wal- demar VanCott of Purdue, 7-6. The semi-finals witnessed Scarpello pinning Fern Traster of Indiana in 4:58 as V'anCott won from. Michigan's Lasky through default. Throughout the entire running of the finals, there were no pins deciding first and second place positions, although several third and foum'th laco wins were by pins. The new conference champs for 1949 are: 121--Plaza, Purdue; 128--Patacil, Purdue; 136-Rice, Minnesota: 145 -- Puchany, In- diana ; 155-Keough, Ohio State; 165-- Powers. Michigan; 175 --- Scarpello, Iowa; heavyweight~- Gagne, Minnesota. Mtunniaries CHAMPION SHIP FINALS: 121 Pound--Plaz, Purdue, de- feated Lappin, Minn.. 6-1. 128 Pound-Patascil, Purdue, de - feated Brabender. Indiana, 9-2. 136 Pound--Rice, Minnesota, de- feated Smith, Michigan, 6-1. 145 Pound--Puchany, Indiana, defeated Garcia, Illinois, 7-2. 155 Pound--Keough, Ohio State, defeated Betzig, Michigan, 6-5. 165 Pound -- Powers, Michigan, defeated Self, Wisconsin, on ref- eree 's decision. 175 Pound--Scarpello, Iowa, de- feated Van Cot., Purdue, 7-6. Heavyweight -- Gagne, Minne- sota, defeated Miller, Ohio State, on r'eferee's decision, Consolation Round Results (fox third and fourth place) : 121 Pound-Picard, Illinois, de- feated Dewitte, Wisconsin, on ref- eree 's decision. 128 Pound-Nelson, Illinois, de- feated Steinhoff, Iowa, on default. 136 Pound-Ewart, Ohio State, pinned Brabender, Indiana, in 4:22. 145 Pound-Carlson, Michigan, defeated Klein, Ohio State, 6-3. 155 Pound -- Prizant, Indiana, defeated Thorpe, Iowa, 8-4. 165 Pound-Dasso, Purdue, de- feated Gaumer, Illinois, by ref- eree's decision. 175 Pound - Ragouzis, North- western, defeated Vohaska, Illi- nois, 3-1. Heavyweight-Geigel, Iowa, de- feated Gottfried, Illinois, 5-3. , BU.T FOR. A BADI C"OLD, Mich-I igan's dynamic captain, Bob Bet- zig, might have turned the deci- sion in the 155 pound attraction against Ohio State's Keought. As ii, was, Kecough took the championsip with a 6i-5 count in his favor. This match was Betzig's first loss of the season. Earlier in the semi-finals, Bet- zig toppled Andy Prizant of In- diana, 10-3. Keough knocked Bob Dwyer of Illinois out of the running in a 6-2 decision. KiEN MARLIN, the Illinois de- fending 155 champ, was unable to defend his crown at anytime dur- ing the meet because of previous injuries. Michigan's third finalist, Jim Smith, took second place in the 136 pound ,feature by losing a I6-1 decision to Minnesota's Alan Rice, last year's champion at 128 pounds. During the semi-finals, Smith decisioned Ewart of Ohio State, while Rice defeated Bill Brabender of Indiana, 5-2. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ________________________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________________________ 'I (Continued from Page 4) beginners and experts both invited. Ceramics. Thurs., Mar. 10, 8 p.m., Ceram- ics. Water-color. Copper class. Lectures University Lecture: "The Influ- ence of Church and State on Me- dieval Cartography." George H. T. Kimble, Professor of Geography, McGill University, Montreal; aus- pices of the Department of Geog- raphy. 4:15 p.m., Mon., March 7, Kellogg Auditorium. English Department Lecture: "Poetry in Spite of Ourselves." Dean Edward Davison, Washing- ton and Jefferson College. 4:30 p.m., Mon., March 7, Architecture Auditoriumi. Lecture slid nsored by the Uni- ted World Federalists. "Has the Church A Message? A Duty?" by Dr. Paul Arthur Schilpp, profes- sor of philo0soph1y, Northwestern University. 3 p.m.. Sun., March G, Architectu re Auditorium. The pub.- lie is invited. The lecture has been so arranged that those who intend to go to the University concert at Hill Auditomium at 4 :15 will have ample time to get to Hill after the lectunre. University Lecture : "The Poet in Any World," Dean Edward Day- son, Washington and Jefferson College; auspices of the Depart- ment of English Language and Literature. 4:15 p.m., Tues., March 8, Rackham Amphitheatre. Herbert Ag-ar, brilliant political and historical commentator, will be presented Thurs., 8:30 pm., Hill Auditorium, by the Oratorical Association Lecture Course. "Enig- land Today" will be the subject of Mi'. Agar's addi'ess. Tickets go on sale Wed., 10 am., in tlue audi- toriurn box office. (I1m (.Icei University of iMichigan Concert Band, William D. Reve li, Conduc- tor, will play a Pop Concert at 4:15 Sunday afternoon, Ma rch 6,1 in Hill Auditorium. TireC progm'ain will include composit ionls by Colby, Grofe, Clarke, Gcm'sluvin, Gould, rshuikowsky, andI foi'v marches by John Philip Sous<:t, in comn- memor,.tion of II ic :aeventIcent 11 anniversary of his de-' tli. 'h a program wihlt e open to IMew gn- eral 1public. Museum of' Art, lR'cent- Acces- sions, andl "Egypt," Life Photo- graphs, through Marchi 6: F'ive America-n Pa inter's, throughl Mar'ch 22: Alumni Memorial Bldl, daily 9-5: Sundays, 2 -5. 'Te 1)publ ic is invited. Early Indian Pipes, - Beads, andi Wampum from the Northeastern United States. Daily 8-5; Sun- days 2-5. D,scriptive leaflet for free distriibuition. March 7-1f), Fir'st Floor', Arch- tectur'e Building, Work of Fi'an- cesco Della Sala, architect, Naples, Italy. Mm'. Della Sala is agrad- uate stuident in the College of Architect ure and Design. E' vents Today Canterbury ("lmb: Supper an d meeting. 5:30 p.mn. Dr'. Joseph A. Sittier, prof ,sor, Chicago Luth- eran Seminary, will speak. Eve- ning Prayer Service at 8 p.m., St.j Andrcve'a Episcopal Church. C01- i fee iloti' at 18:45, Cant erbury Ii House. ('ongregyatiomial Disciples GCuild:I Slipperc pct 6 p.m., Mem-orial Chris--I ti l~m Church. Mt-s. Vera, Smith' Lovrie, one( of t he ouitstandin1ga lenders in t he Religion in Lifex Wet'k pmogrtani will open a seriesI tac 'Fi'on Friendship t~o Marriage' by :;j7caakitg on the ,subject : "Who Will 1 Marry My Mate 'o,?' Ev1;a gelical and Reformed So ((;Con! iiuE'U U1 PagrE 7 !1 IOWAG Mason f ..........2 lMaglussol f ......1 Voller's f.........5 Iliecks f ..........0 Caisbeek c,..... .11 Cuzowcski g..,5 Straatsmia g......0 TOTALS ......24 MICHIGAN G Supm'unowcicz f .. . .7 Mikulich f ........4 lXc'asiin f ....... 0 vilorrill 1f 0 Vr~ad,!Kumy c..4- Wisniewskic .....1. IHarrison g........1. Elliott .........4 D~oyleg...........2 TOTALS ...23 Score at hal-mic Iowa 31. FT FTP 2 3 6 0 3 2 3 4 13 0 0 0 7 4 29 2 4 12 1 0 1 15 18 63 :FT F TP 4 5 18 2 2 10 00 0 0 1 9 4 4 12 2 5,:4 2 3 4 2 2. 10 0 0 4 16 22 62 higan t132, JOE SCARPELLO of Iowa wasI 11. .1j 9 III VET'S WATCH REPAIR 1s your w zlch a - T rain Watch? - Always Slow Track Watch?-) - - Always Fast Trucker's Watch? ---- Always Dumpy Campus Drug -- Blue Front Withoms Drug -- West Lodge PX 5 Buying Days Left at $5.00 ENSIAN 2:00-5:00 P.M. Student Publication Bldg. TYPE WRITERS Office and Portable Models of all makes Sold, Bought, Repa ired, Rented G. I. Requisitions Accepted 0. D. MORIRILL 314 South State St. I iii 111 I " t L _..._ _ . ___ ._ _. ... ._ - --_- -__ __ .. _.._ ..W_ w_ . wm :___ _.._ _-- ----__---_ _. ._----- _w _____ _. , __ _ Barbering is an Art! Our Tonoiaul Atists are proving it everc y --.1---I u rn n of Dist inc - tio ii The DASCOLA BARBERS .Liberty off State.. University Museums, Rot Uid a: j 1 ummw, m Snapshiot 'fhne Jlihthe KODAK -7 VUA LE CAMERA WE AIM AT SERVICE in your friendly campus bookstore Take a tip from thousands of ROD,- BOOk's you want when hen you want 11101-11 Fre g\~it wriopping~ of b ooks. Books are exchangeable within live doys. F-ree Look delivery ooywhiere in U.S Give a book certificate. Telephone and mail orders taken. Magazine subscriptions. Greeting cards. Special order department. Sheaffer and Parker Fountain Pens and Pencils. Out-of-tis world! Tlits Ma:tll Yo1.-ll be)ingn' song as ya' roll along in these easy-action, casual Mansfield. Jogs. Reet for feet and hen to step.Grit- of-iphis-Nvorl1 Come in --- Look over the New 1949 Models I ;G Woods and Irons GOLF l '' N loop EPA- 9 I U U - - WV/ SPALDING WILSON McGREGOR KROYDON LOUISVILLE .. .WOW rte'S It's just load, aim and shoot far black-and-white or full- I I I II tillII