I .1' PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, JANUARY 8, 1950 SUNDAY. JANUARY 8, 1950 Icemen Edge onreal, -3; atmen Scol oe Upset 14 O' Wolverine Triumph Gains Split in Two-Game Series Smith, Celley, Burford, Heathcott, Tally Goals in Registering Seventh 4 Brumm Victory 4: By BOB VOKAC The Wolverine hockey club jumped back into the win column by slapping down Montreal's Cara- bins, 5-3, at the Coliseum last night. After dropping the initial con- test Friday night, 4-3, in the two game series, Michigan's powerful attack swung into high gear to give the Maize and Blue a split with the classy Canadian club. FIVE WOLVERINES successful- ly blasted the Montreal defense to give Coach Vic Heyliger's charges their five counters. Aside from the Canadian shift in goalies from Friday night's Marcel Auger to George Beau- cage, both squads used their same units as in the previous encounter. After the Maize and Blue stav- ed off two concentrated Carabin drives that gave Wolverine goalie Jack McDonald a brisk workout early in the first period, Michi- gan's stellar defensive star Ross Smith took a flip from Al Bassey and drilled home a 30 foot shot to post the first marker of the game at 13:39. IT WAS A REPEAT perform- ance for Smith as he also broke the scoreless tie in the first period Friday night. The first period had by far the hottest offensive drives as McDonald made 15 saves and Beaucage stopped 10 shots. The Wolverines point margin was expanded early in the second period after Andre Charest was directed to the penalty box for in- terference. Standing directly in front of the rigging after taking a pass from Gil Burford, Neil Celley penetrated the Carabin crease for the second marker of the game. FROM HERE ON IN, the second frame was the scene of fancy Mon- treal stick handling and passing as the Canadians quickly closed the breach. Assisted by George Hotte, Dennis Lazure drilled home the first Carabin tally by snapping a 15 foot shot that wound up be- hindtMcDonald. When Smith stepped into the penalty box at 14:07, Montreal's slick offense rolled down the ice to tie up the game when Jean Giguere's 25 foot marker landed in the Wolverine net at 15:06. George Emblem handled the assist. Breaking the 2-2 tie in.the open- ing minutes of the third frame, Montreal's Ray Flynn blasted home a six foot marker on an assist from Andre Charest at 4:20. BUT THE WOLVERINE offen- sive unit was yet to be heard from as Burford flipped a backhanded 20 toot shot into the Mpntreal nets at 6:18 to tie up the game. Conference Alters Cage Regulation CHICAGO-(P)-The Big Ten Conference yesterday changed its two-minute rule in basketball to benefit a fouling team. Commissioner Kehneth L. (Tug) Wilson announced that henceforth a foul against a shoot- er in the last two minutes will re- sult in only one free throw if the basket is made. PREVIOUSLY, two free throws were awarded regardless of whether or not the basket was made. This made it possible for a fouled team to amass as many as five points, in one crack. Five points could be made if a fouled shooter made his basket, sank his first free throw and had his missed second gift shot tipped in for a basket. The Big Ten is playing a modi- fication of the controversial na- tional two-minute rule which en- ables a fouled team to keep pos- session after free throwing. The Big Ten keeps the ball in play, although two free throws are charged against all defensive fouls beyond the exception fixed today. KEN BIALKIN, Night Editor Hogan Third At Mid- Point f GolfMeet LOS ANGELES-(P-Ben Ho- gan fired a two under par 69 for a 36-hole total of 142 yesterday to signal a threat in the Los Angeles Open Golf Tournament in his ini- tial comeback try. Hogan, clipping a stroke off par with a spectacular 60-foot slant- ing putt on the fifteenth hole and another with an eight-foot putt on the seventeenth, improved on his 73 fired yesterday. JERRY BARBER of Pasadena shot his second successive sub-par round to lead the field at the half- way point of the tournament. He had rounds of 69-68-137. Two strokes back of Barber was another dark horse, Henry Ransom of St. Andrews, Ill. The former Texan, a veteran of more than a decade of tournament golf, fired the lowest round of the tournament to date--a 33- 34-67 for 139. Ransom was the only one stand- ing in the five stroke spread be- tween Barber and Hogan and Ells- worth Vines. Vines shot a 73 to tie Hogan at 142 blows. A stiff fight looms ahead in the 18 hole round today and tomorrow, but Hogan is still the focal point of interest. Gone today was the drama and tenseness of his return to compe- tition yesterday for the first time since he was badly injured in a carI crash 11 months ago.I '1' Wrestlers Surprise Crippled Purdue, 19-9 By CY CARLTON Michigan's wrestlers routed an injury-riddledPurdue(squad, 19-9, yesterday afternoon at Yost Field House. Purdue was forced to make the' trip without the services of four stars who guided the Boilermak- ers to last year's Big Ten crown. Arnold Plaza, Joe Patacsil, Char- les Farina and Waldemar VanCott, listed as doubtful starters, were sidelined with shoulder injuries. Larry Nelson, star 128 pound sophomore, turned in the standout performance for the Maize and Blue as he pinned Dan Greenberg of Purdue in 1:27 of the first period, with a cradle hold. It was Nelson's second pin victory in two meets. In the day's most thrilling bout, Michigan's Bill Stapp scored a takedown and two points in the final two seconds of the last per- iod of a 155-pound battle to de- feat Earl D'nAmico, 3-1. In a 121 pound match, Brad Stone scored two points in the' final period to edge Ken Ellis, 4-3' Stone trailed, 3-2, going into the final period. Michigan's Dave Space rallied in the last two periods of the 136 pound attraction to defeat Bobs Appleby, 12-9. Space wn the match by picking up eight points in the final two periods. The day's biggest upset occurred in the 145-pound bout when Pur- - due's Jack Moreno, a sophomore, beat Wolverine captain Jim Smith, 1' ~1 , ROSS SMITH ... Defensive Ace Wally Grant and Celley were also in on the play. After Lenny Brumm's shot ricocheted off Beaucage's stick, Bob Heathcott bumped in the fourth Michigan tally at 11:07. Brumm was more successful on his next shot as he connected at 18:49 by drilling home the final marker of the evening on an assist from Grant. -Daily-Ed Kozma UP AND IN-Leo VanderKuy (28) puts in a one handed jump shot over wiry Frank Calsbeek (11), star Iowa center. Looking on are Michigan's Jerry Skala (25) and Mack Suprunowicz (4). Bob Clifton (24), standout sophomore who tallied 25 points for the Hawkeyes, also watches. Wolverines Down Hawkeyes DespiteHeight Disadvantage -Daily-Ed Kozma UUGH.H.H.H.-Eric Yeager, (on top), Purdue heavyweight wes- tHer, attempts to gain a take- down over Michigan's Joe Planck. cM' Trackmen Race Through Time Trials in Practice Runs (Continued from Page 1) SOUTHERN HOSPITALITY: Tidwell Stars as Rebels Take Senior Bowl Game, 22-13 JACKSONVILLE, Fla., - (R') - Travis Tidwell spun a football web of passes that carried his Rebel all-stars to a 22-13 victory over the Yankees in the senior bowl game yesterday. Charlie Justice of North Caro- lina and Doak Walker of Southern Methodist lived up to their press notices, but Tidwell was even bet- ter. S* * * THE LITTLE Auburn quarter- back who was named most valu- able in the South Eastern Con- ference got the same honor in this classy field of All-America and All-Conference players from every section of the nation. Tidwell tossed 19 times to connect on 13 for an amazing gain of 246 yards. End Art Weiner of North Carolina teamed with Tidwell to make a great combination. He fielded eight of those throws for 139 yards. The losing Yankees also had a great passing team in Paul Camp- bell, Texas quarterback, and Jim Owens, Oklahoma end. Campbell threw 27 times, hit on 18 for 147 yards. TACKLE Wade Walker of Okla- homa and center Clayton Tonne- maker of Minnesota, both All- America, held the rushing. for only that was The mighty But it led a Yankee line that Rebels to 46 yards by The Yanks could run 63 against a Rebel line tough from end to end. pass defense looked weak in comparison. wasn't that nearly so Get it 011Your The next issue of Gargoyle will cast the withering beam of truth into every, but every, dark corner of University life. But, WE NEED YOUR HELP! There must be some group, organiza- tion, or activity that you ache to sound off about. The field's wide open: Frats, A.I.M., Faculty, Michi- fish, Thank God It's Friday, or any- thing else you can think of.j Humorists, here's your ticket toI fame!n much as the accuracy with which Tidwell, Campbell and Eddie Lebaron of College of the Pacific could drop that ball in the right spot. Key kick returns by Justice and Doak Walker added to the thrills. Walker started the Yanks off to their first score with a runback for 57 yards. JUSTICE opened the way to two Rebel touchdowns. He went 26 to begin the first drive and 29 to start the last. Before the Rebels got started, the Yankees had their scoring fling. Taking it from D. Walker's 57-yard runback, they moved 32 yards in a hurry. Lynn Chandnois, Michigan State rammed over from the four. Louis Weighs CharlesFight LOS ANGELES-(A)-Joe Louis said yesterday he may consider boxing Ezzard Charles for the heavyweight championship next summer after he returns from an exhibition tour in this country and South America. "I should know by then if I am in condition to box Charles," the retired champion was quot- ed by his press agent. "I will definitely decide after the tour." Louis was in good form Friday night in his exhibition with Wil- lie Bean. His next bout on the tour is with Jim Flood in Seattle Tuesday. His swing through the country ends Feb. 7 at Miami, where he meets Johnny Holman of Chicago. tieing up elusive Frank Calsbeek, center for the Iowa squad. He kept Calsbeek off balance most of the evening and the Hwkeiye scoring leader left the boards with only eight points to his credit. DON McINTOSH had a field day at center and forward and led the Michigan scorers with 21 points. He left the floor on fouls with three minutes and fifty sec- onds left in the game. As he did Bob Clifton ran over to shake his hand. The last foul gave Clifton a shot, which he made. Mack Suprunowicz tied with Hal Morrill in the runners-up slot with 11 points. But Supey's court play was outstanding. Time after time he threaded the ball through the Iowa defenses, feeding McIntosh, VandcrKuy, and Doyle under the basket. On one play Suprunowicz faked out an Iowa guard and drove in on the right. As he reached the free throw circle, he shot the ball in to Bill Doyle who pushed the ball off4 the board and in for two points. VANDERKUY SPUN for 10 points, but his best work was on defense. One favorite Iowa play was to lob the ball from shooting position at guard towards the bas- ket. But the purpose was not to shoot but to make a pass to Cals- AP Roundup COLUMBUS, O. - Ohio State won its Western Conference bas- ketball opener from defending champion Illinois last night. 83 to 62. Ohio State led 38-27 at half- time in notching its sixth win iri eight games. Illinois (7-4) now has lost both its Conference starts. * * * BLOOMINGTON, Ind.-Indi- ana's hustling Hoosiers last night ended Wisconsin's brief lead in Western Conference bas- ketball standings, 61-59. It was the tenth victory for I.U. * * * LAFAYETTE, Ind.-Northwest- ern's Wildcats 'nipped Purdue's Boilermakers last night in an overtime battle, 60-58, to open the Western Conference basketball season for both teams. The siz- zler was knotted 24-all at the half and 53-all at the end of regulation time. ** * EAST LANSING, Mich.-Notre Dame joined the growing list of teams to beat Michigan State in basketball by marking up an easy 76 to 65 victory here last night. beek who was to pick it up on thej run and lay it up. McIntosh and VanderKuy kept the shooting wild and the play worked only once all night. Michigan built up her halftime lead of 35-21 to a full 20 points, but it was mostly the reserves who did it. The regular five kept the 14 point lead intact, but the re- serves added six more. Statistics I IOWA (46) Vollers F Cochrane F Darling F-C Riecks F Calsbeek C Schultz G Clifton G Greene G TOTALS FG 1 1 0 0 3 2 8 0 FT PF TP 2 4 4 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 3 1 2 4 8 0 2 4 9 2 25 0 0 0 Yesterday was a busy day at Yost Field House. The doors were opened at 12:00 by Coach Don Canham's track men who found it necessary to hold their weekly time trials about three hours earlier than usual to clear the way for the Wolverine wrestling team-who in turn gave way to the opening Big Ten game of the 1950 Basketball season. PACING themselves through their respective specialties, the thinclads were somewhat handi- capped by the fact that they have been able to work out for only four days since returning from Christmas vacation. The outstanding race of the day was the half-mile, in which Shel Capp sliced the tape just one-tenth of a second ahead of Aaron Gordon to win, as George Jacobi finished third. Gordon led the field through- out the race, but Capp, who had been matching him stride-for- stride all the way, broke off the last turn with a blast of speed, caught him in the stretch and nosed him out at the tape. * * * JIM MITCHELL, letter-winner in the hurdles last year, displayed 15 16 17 46 his usual fine form in winning both timber events, with Wally Atchison and Don Hoover right behind him. In the lows, Bruno Boelster, sophomore runner who was city champ in Detroit, showed much improvement, but tripped on the last hurdle in his heat after leading all the way. The sprinters ran through a rugged workout/ with Art Henrie setting the pace in all events. Henrie was followed across the finish line by Pierre Miller and John Wilcox, who battled it out step-for-step in each race. AT THE CLOSE of the workout, five relay teams composed of four men each, competed in a mile race. The teams are picked ac- cording to each runner's specialty, with the half-milers on one squad, milers on another, etc. The indoor track season opens in Ann Arbor with the annual running of the Michigan AAU meet on Saturday, January 28. Opening meet of the Wolver- ines' Big Ten campaign will be on the Saturday of J-Hop weekend, February 11,- when the squad faces a powerful Wisconsin ag- gregation. MICH. (66) FG Suprunowicz F 5 McIntosh F 8 Scala F 0 Olson F 1 VanderKuy C-F 4 Wisniewski C 0 Morrill G 4 Murray G 2 Doyle G 1 Gutowski G 0 TOTALS 25 Halftime score: 35, Iowa 21. FT 1 5 0 0 2 0 J 3 2 0 16 PF' 1 5 1 0 4 0 2 3 1 0 17 TP 11 21 0 2 10 0 11 7 4 66 11-4. t Jack Powers, another Michigan conference champ won his 175-. pound match when his opponent, Jerry Dasso, was forced to retire in the first period with a knee in-i jury. At the time of the injury, Powers trailed in the scoring, 4-1. Purdue took the 165 and heavy- weight matches by close scores. Chuck Bryant defeated the Wol-, verines' Don O'Connell at 165, 5-4, and Eric Yaeger took Joe Plancl# in the heavyweight match, 4-3. The meet witnessed by a crowd of about 1,000 persons, was refer- reed by Iggy Conrad of Michigan State. Planck's and O'Connell's per- formances were especially credi- table as both men were wrestling out of their weight class and both lost by the narrow margin of a scant point. The summaries: 121 pounds-Bradford Stone, MICHIGAN, defeated Kenneth Ellis, Purdue, 6 to 3. 128 pounds - Larry Nelson, MICHIGAN, threw Dan Green- berg, Purdue, 1:27 of second period. 196 pounds - Dave Space, MICHIGAN, defeated Bob Ap- pleby, Purdue, 12 to 9. 145 pounds - Jack Moreno, Purdue, defeated Jim Smith, MICHIGAN, 11 to 4. 155 pounds -: Bill Stapp, MICHIGAN, defeated Earl D'Amico, Purdue, 3 to 1. 165 pounds-Charles Byrant, Purdue, defeated Don O'Connell, MICHIGAN, 5 to 4. 175 pounds - Jack Powers, MICHIGAN, defeated Jerome Dasso, Purdue, by default. Heavyweight -- Eric Yaeger, Purdue, defeated Joe Plank, MICHIGAN, 4 to 3. "KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR" Our aim is: workmanship - sanitation -, personnel - service. THE DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State -- Michigan Free throws missed: Iowa -Darling, Clifton 4. Michi- gan - Suprunowicz, Scala, VanderKuy 2, McIntosh, Murray. Basketball Results- NU 60, Purdue 58 (Overtime) Indiana 61, Wisconsin 59 OSU 83, Illinois 62 Minnesota 74, Marquette 38 Detroit 56, Wayne 43 Notre Dame 76, Mich. State 65 West. Mich. 94, Miami (Ohio) 66 Butler 50, DePauw 49 Ohio North. 63, Detroit Tech 50 Iowa State 50, Colorado 40 Princeton 77, Harvard 42 Columbia 51, Yale 43 Navy 76, VMI 26 Penn. 73, Lafayette 57 CCNY 61, Loyola (Chicago) 46 Army 51, Brown 43 Tulane 64, Georgia Tech 62 Bradley 72, -Drake 57 Georgia 70, Mississippi 52 Temple 55, Syracuse 52 Duke 58, North Carolina State 55 CCM" SKATES i MATCHED and BALANCED ,A w LADIES' WHITE FIGURE, $!J9 Up ;r - J II MEN 'S I WEDNESDAY, JAN. 25, 8:30 P.M. Hill Auditorium MRS. FRANKLIN D. ROOSEVELT HOCKEY