WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 4, 190
T HE MICHIGAN DAILY
PAGE THREE
Pucksters
Win
Five, Dro
---- -
I.
Toronto Cut
Victory Stria
By BOB SANDELL
Michigan's hockey team had a
20 home game win streak snapped
during the holidays when the Wol-
verines split a pair of contests
with the powerful University of
Toronto Blues before rolling over
Brown and North Dakota in four
other vacation engagements.
Coupled with rout of McMaster
in the campaign opener, the Wol-
verines now have a season's mark
of six triumphs and only one de-
feat.
THE SERIES with Toronto on
December 16 and 17 was prob-
ably one of the best ever staged
in the Coliseum.,
The Wolverines had to come
from behind in the last five min-
utes to nip the Canadians, 2-1,
in the opener. Gil Burford tied
the score at 15:40 of the final
session and Al Bassey tallied the
clincher at 17:08. Toronto had
scored earlier in the period.
Saturday's contest was a dif-
ferent story as the Blue's fresh-
man goalie, Doug Orr, was simply
unbeatable, and the result was a
4-2 victory for the visitors. Wally
Al
p One
L
s MHome AB
U
g at Twenty C
R
H
Grant and Neil Celley tallied the
only markers for Michigan.
ALL-AMERICAN and Wolver-
ine Captain Wally Grant put on
a one-man scoring show in the
opener with Brown University on
December 21 at the Coliseum.
The Wolverines won 7-3, and
Grant chalked up three goals
for the "hat trick" and an as-
sist all in the third period. Ron
Roberts, Bob Heathcott, Celley,
and Burford racked up the other
goals for the home squad.
The series finale the following
night found the Wolverines on
the long end of a 7-5 score, with
Jack McDonald and Paul Mila-
nowski sharing the net tending
duties.
* * *
CELLEY paced the attack with
two goals and Lenny Brumm,
Ross Smith, GranthHeathcott,
and Roberts each pitched in with
single markers.
After Christmas the Wolver-
ines traveled out to Grant Forks
to play a highly regarded Uni-
versity of North Dakota sextet.
The Nodaks had a host of ex-
perienced veterans in their line-
up including Russell and Prince
Johnson, two brothers who play-
ed for the American Olympic
team last year.
But the Sioux fell before a spir-
ited Wolverine attack 8-4 in the
first night and 6-0 the following
evening with Goalie MacDonald
turning in his first shutout of
the year.
The crack Celley-Burford-Grant
combination sparked the winner's
onslaught. Burford garnered four
goals in the first contest for his
second "hat trick" of the young
season and two more in the finale.
Celley hit the nets for one in
the first encounter and two in
the second, while Grant had a
goal and assists on three others.
Sophomore Heathcott got one
in each game and Joe Marmo a
pair in the curtain raiser.
P HOCKEY ROUNDUP:
Lindsay PFaces NHL
THE LEADING
indsay, Detroit
Vbel, Detroit
entley, Chicago
ichard, Montreal
'eirson, Boston
onacher, Chicago
onty, Boston
Howe, Detroit
16
16
7
23
16
15
14
14
26
20
27
9
16
17
18
16
SCORERS:
42
36
34
32
32
32
32
STANDINGS
W L T Pts. GF
Detroit 22 8 4 48 116
New York .. 14 12 7 35 72
Montreal . 13 13 9 35 79
Boston .. 12 16 8 32 98
Toronto .. 12 18 6 30 83
Chicago .. 11 17 6 28 101
GA
75
78
73
111
106
106
64m
AFTER-INVENTORY
f
DURING 1950 -
We hope to continue bringing
you the best in barber science
- the idea is workmanship,
service personnel. Success to
you, too!!
The Dascola Barbers
Liberty near State
SWIVEL-HIPS-Right Halfback Ray Hamilton (10) of Ohio State University skirts around his own
right end against the Golden Bears of California in the Rose Bowl game at Pasadena, California.
He's eluding stalwart center Les Richter (on the ground) and heading for Paul Baldwin (34) who
hauled him down on the Bears' own 40 yard line. Hamilton played no small part as the Scarlets
won 17-14, making them the fourth straight Western Conference team to topple the Pacific Coast
champion in the Tournament of Roses.
CL]EARANCE
Values of merit that have always been the policy of this store plus a reason-
able reduction to make it more inviting to old customers and new alike.
Attend our AFTER-INVENTORY CLEARANCE. The savings are store-wide.
Read the tremendous savings and plan to attend early.
$35 SU ITS - TOPCOATS - OVERCOATS - NOW $28
$40 SU ITS-TOPCOATS OVE RCOATS - NOW $32
$45 SU I TS - TOPCOATS - OV E RCOATS - NOW $36
$50 SUITS - TOPCOATS - OVERCOATS - NOW $40
CH I PPEWA, All-Wool Shirts-Jacshirts-Jackets-Now 30% Off
ONE LOT SWEATERS, $7.95 and $8.95 values, now..............$4.95
ONE LOT SPORT SHIRTS, $5.95 to $9.95 values, now ...........$3.85
ONE LOT PAJAMAS, $4.95 to $8.95 values, now ................ $3.85
ONE LOT HATS, $5.00 and $7.50 values, now ..................$3.45
ONE LOT GABARDINE RAINCOATS, $15.95 values, now ........$8.95
ONE LOT DRESS SHIRTS, $2.95 to $4.95 values, now ............ $1.50
*Fair Trade Items Excepted
CLOTHIERS
{Mat men Gain
First Victory
Over Toledo
By CY CARLTON
Michigan's wrestlers opened
their season successfully Saturday,
December 31, as they defeated To-
ledo University, 25-9, at the Rock-
ets' home mats.
v,
* * *
BRAD STONE of Michigan and
Jack Shire of Toledo, battled to a
draw in the 121 pound matches,
the first of a well fought series.
Larry Nelson, sophomore 128
pounder, showed well in his first
varsity match for Michigan, as
he pinned Bill Schmidt, in the
early part of the second period.
In the 136 pound division, Dave
Space of Michigan pinned Bill
Gehring of Toledo in the first
minute of the second period .
IN THE 145 pound division, Jim
Smith, Wolverine captain, deci-
WIN THREE OUT OF FIVE:-
WolverTines Prepare
For BigTenCagers
By TED PAPES
Michigan's basketball team, in preparation for the coming Big
Ten championship race, undertook an ambitious holiday exhibition
program and emerged with a record of three victories in five games
played.
The Wolverines now have won six while losing three this season.
IT WAS A CASE of glory at the start and at the finish of the
two week Christmas recess with some unfortunate experiences sand-
wiched between for the barnstorming quintet.
On December 19th Michigan handed North Carolina State,
last season's Southern Conference titlist, its first 1949 defeat in
five contests by a score of 54-46. Balanced scoring by Wolverines
Don McIntosh, Leo VanderKuy, and Hal Morrill enabled their
team to overcome a 10 point halftime deficit and accomplish the
upset.
One night later it was an entirely different story, however, as
the Wolfpack bounced back to square accounts and smash Michigan,
63-52. By way of proving its worth, State went on to capture the
Dixie Holiday Tourney, defeating Penn State, 50-40 in the finals.
* * * *
AFTER AN ABBREVIATED Yule celebration at home, the Wol-
verines began play in the annual Big Seven Meet at Kansas City
as guest team of that conference.
MACK SUPRUNOWICZ
. . . paces scoring
* * *
119 S. Main St.
"Where the Good Clothes Come From"
PHONE 6924
pr
two charity tosses for a two point
lead that was maintained by a
Suprunowicz free throw in the
last 33 seconds, giving the Wol-
verines a 49-47 nod.
At the close of the meet an
all - tournament squad listed
Suprunowicz on the first five
and VanderKuy on the second.
Taking everything into consid-
eration the campaign was fairly
successful in that it proved Mich-
igan can hold a winning percent-
age in road games and that the
Wolverines are able to survive
close finishes. In the five games
Suprunowicz scored 65 points and
VanderKuy 63.
Another bright spot was the
prominence of Murray at guard,
who surprised the opposition with
a creditable total of 41 markers,
giving Michigan a solid scoring
balance.
4- !
t
ThisWeek
HOCKEY
Jan. 6-Univ. of Montreal at
Ann Arbor at 8:00 p.m.
Jan. 7-Univ. of Montreal at
Ann Arbor at 8:00 p.m.
BASKETBALL
Jan. 7-Univ. of Iowa at Ann
Arbor at 7:30 p.m.
Jan. 9-Indiana Univ. at Ann
Arbor at 7:30 p.m.
WRESTLING
Jan. 7-Purdue University at
Ann Arbor at 3:00 p.m.
Tickets for all remaining
home hockey games, including
the games this Friday and Sat-
urday nights with the Univer-
sity of Montreal, are on sale at
t h e Athletic Administration
Building. Students must fur-
nish ID cards to purchase the
tickets which are priced at $.60.
In the first round clash they
were bracketed with Missouri,
and a climactic field goal by a
Tiger sophomore in the final 26
seconds of play provided a 47-46
edge overthe visitors.
Again Michigan had the dub-
ious distinction of losing to a
good team as evidenced by the
fact that Missouri eventually won
the meet, dealing Colorado its first
loss in nine games, 62-51, in the
semi-finals, and turning back Ok-
lahoma in the windup.
AS A SIDE ISSUE, a :consola-
tion playoff was staged between
the four first round losers. The
Wolverines fashioned tvo story-
book finishes to salvage fifth place
in the tournament.
Chuck Murray's basket with
only 28 seconds remaining to
play subdued Nebraska, 67-65,
in a game which proved that
Michigan has some potential
offensive might.
Mack Suprunowicz riddled the
opposing defense to gather 22
points while his teammate Van-
derKuy was dropping in 19. The
latter notched 11 free throws to
tie the existing one game record
for the meet.
* * *
TWENTY-FOUR hours later it
was the same Murray who iced
another close Michigan victory.
With his team and Kansas dead-
locked, 46-46, he made good on'
II
Se mAnnual Clearance
This is our regular Semi-Annual Sale of fine Van Boven mer-
chandise. All items on sale are from our regular stock, and
represent a generous savings to you.
CLOTHING
All Sizes Available in the following Selected Groups .
Dick Button Voted Outstanding
U.S. Amateur Athlete of 1949
SU ITS
OVERCOATS-
TOPCOATS
NEW YORK - (A') - Nineteen-
year-old Richard T. (Dick) But-
ton, Harvard Sophomore who
holds all of the world's major fig-
ure skating titles for which he is
eligible, has been voted the coveted
James E. Sullixan Memorial Tro-
phy as the outstanding U.S. ama-
teur athlete of 1949.
The award is presented each
year by the Amateur Athletic Un-
ion of the U.S. to "the amateur
athlete, who by performance, ex-
ample and good influence did most
to advance the cause of good
sportsmanship during the year."
JOSEPH VERDEUR of Phila-
delphia, world's leading all-round
swimmer and 1948 olympic breast-
stroke champion, was second, with
745 points. Verdeur, from LaSalle
College, was third in the 1948 poll
which was won by Bob Mathias,
Tulare, Calif., boy who won the
olympic decathlon title that year.
Verdeur polled 91 first place votes.
$55.00 to $57.50,
$60.00 to $65.00;
$75.00 .........
. .. now $42.50
:... now $49.50
.... .now $59.50
$50.00
$60.00
$67.50
$85.00
to
to
to
to
$55.00.
$65.00.
$75.00.
$95.00.
...now'
...now.
...now
...now
$39.50
$49.50
$59.50
$69.50
sioned Vito Peragino, former New
Jersey state prep champion.
ID a n O'Connell, Wolverine
grappler battled Earl Courtright,
another former New Jersey prep
champ, to a draw at the 155
weight.
Bill Stapp and Joe Planck won
for Michigan in the 165 and 175
pound classes, Stapp pinning
Frank Baumgartner in the second
period and Planck decisioning
Floyd Gadt.
JOHN POWERS, Wolverine star
and conference champ at 165
pounds last year, moved up to the
heavyweight class and was pinned
by Harry Lanzi, Rocket star and
National A.A.U. junior and nation-
al Y.M.C.A. champ.
SPORT COATS
$35.00 .................. now $27.50
$42.50 ...................now $33.50
$55.00.................now $42.50
k. 1t
Now in Progress
STORE-WIDE
Come Early
STOCK -REDUCING SALE
Make Your Selection
Then Deduct
From Total Price
207,oD0SCO ilt
Every Item
In Stock C- Your
Unrestricted Choice
SELECTED GROUP OF REGULAR DRESS SHIRTS
A selection of. white also available.
$4.95 .............now $3.75 $7.50.............now $5.75
All sizes available.
Below are some items on which you'll find special sale tags that far exceed
the General 20% Reduction - Take
TOP COATS (Some with Zip-out
Linings)
$16.95 - $29.95 - $32.95 - $37.95
None Higher
Values to $50.00
advantage of this Great Sale -
SUITS (All Wool Worsted, Flannels,
Gabardines, Sharkskins)
$27.95 and $39.95
Values to $55.00 - None Higher
Your Unrestricted Choice
Special Group 75c
rra.s.
Many other items are substantially reduced to afford you con-
siderable savings. They include selected groups of hose, sweaters,
pajamas, robes, hand-tailored neckwear.
SOME ITEMS ARE REDUCED AS MUCH AS ONE-HALF.
SPORT COATS Entire Stock
(Reg. $25.00 Coats)
NO EXCHANGES
ALL SALES FINAL
, 1