TUESDAY, JANUARY 17, 1950 THE MiIGAi6N DAILY PAGE THREE Schi1ttker F OSU Onslaught Buries Wolverines In Last Half 'aces Buck Victory VAULTER STRICKEN: Ulvestad, Appendix Out for Season ** * (*b 0 1 (Continued from Page 1) scorer for the night a 28-point total. Schnittker's running mate at forward, Bob Donham, was next in line with a 14-point entry while Bob Brown tallied 13 and was effective on his drive-in shots. Ernie McCoy's Wolverines, forced to shoot from outside, clicked on 21 of 72 field goal attempts and made 16 of 29 charity tosses. LEO VANDERKUY and Captain Mack Suprunowicz bore the brunt of the Wolverines' offensive bur- den with VanderKuy carrying off high point honors witlh 16 points. Suprunowicz, most effective in the u second half, was next in line with 13 points. VanderKuy's tip-in shots kept This Week HOCKEY January 21-Windsor Spit- fires at Ann Arbor. BASKETBALL January 21 - Minnesota at Ann Arbor. SWIMMING January 21 - Minnesota at Minneapolis.G WRkiSTLING January 20 - Illinois at, -Champaign. Illini Trip NU CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -(/P)- With Bill Erickson scoring 22 points, Illinois led all the way last night in trouncing Northwestern 76-50 .in a Big Ten basketball game. Hoosiers Win, , BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - (P) - Indiana's Hoosiers, beaten by a total margin of three points in their last two Western Conference starts, stepped outside the league to belt Butler's Bulldogs last night, 57-49. Purdue Belts Iowa LAFAYETI'E, Ind. -(P)-Pur- due's. Boilermakers ended a three- game drought in Western Confer- etice basketball by u p s e t t i n g Iowa's Hawkeyes last night, 64-55. Badgers Triumph MADISON, Wis.-(A)-The Uni- versity of Wisconsin basketball team twice overcame 10-point defi- cits last night to defeat Minne- sota, 57-54. DO YOU KNOW ... that when Army's coach, Red Blaik, was at Dartmouth, he never lost a game to a Harvard team coached by Dick Harlow over a seven year span of time? the Wolverines in the game in the first half, and the blond pivotman drew 11 foul shots but could convert only four. The Wolverines played a switch- ing man to man defense while Ohio State worked a double-pivot offense with a very effective screen play setting up short shots. * * * HAL "LEFTY" MORRILL, as- signed the unenviable task of guarding Schnittker, two-time All- Conference performer, fouled out with only five minutes gone in the lffic4luu E :4allg SPORTS BOB VOKAC, Night Editor second half. The job of hawking Schnittker was assigned Vander- Kuy without any more success. Michigan returns to the more friendly confines of Yost Field House Saturday night to play Minnesota in the final game of the first semester. O-Mi--hio Mann's Men Lower Dash, Relay Times Sprinters Upset Touted Thomas By GEORGE FLINT Michigan's lopsided victory over Purdue in Saturday's initial dual swimming meet of the season went almost according to form, but the few deviations from the expected provided tank fans with the an- swers to two important questions. The speculation as to how strong the Wolverines would be in the sprint events was in some measure answered by the encouraging per- formances of Dick Martin, Dave Neisch, and Tom Coates. MOREOVER, the Michigan 300- yard medley relay combo of Bernie Kahn, Charlie Moss, and Dave Tittle turned in an excellent early- season time of 2: 53.3 in that event. The conference record is 2:51. The highly - touted Purdue dashman, Charlie Thomas, fail- ed to live up to the rave notices as he wilted badly in the 100 yard free style and lost a close one to Michigan's Martin in the 50. Gus Stager came up with one of his best days to be the Maize and Blue's only double winner. Stager turned in a creditable 2:11.8 in the 220, besting teammate and captain Matt Mann III, and cruis- ing to an easy 4:54.3 win in the 440. Stager, who also defeated Mann in the East-West meet in Florida, looked to be the most improved swimmer on the Wol- verine squad. * * * * GEORGE EYSTER, who won the diving event for the Wolver- ines, startled the crowd with a smooth performance of the most difficult of dives, the forward double twisting one and one-half, pike position. Easily Eyster's best dive, it earned the most points and plaudits for the Michigan contortionist. The always-reliable Charlie Moss established himself as a conference contender in the 150 yard individual medley, posting a rapid 1:33.5. The only event in which the Wolverines seemed noticieably weak, the 200 yard breast stroke, should improve, since Stew Elliott tied up and swam far from his best race. And it will be further strengthened when Aussie ace John Davis enters competition next semester. DO YOU KNOW. . . that during the three-year period, 1938-40, that Tom Harmon played for Michigan, the Wolverines could never beat the Golden Gophers of Minne- sota? 'M' Sextet Melts Eastern Collegiate Ice Opponents By JIM PARKER Vic Heyliger's hockey team is back on partisan soil again after leaving Eastern college ice fans with a favorable opinion of Maize and Blue athletic teams and of Michigan-style play. Despite being short-handed on eleven occasions when Wolverines were in the cooler, the Michigan sextet dominated the play most of the Princeton game. THE CLOSE CALLING of the misdemeanors cramped the Maize and Blue noticeably . . . it was reminiscent of the officiating at Soplis Spark c M' Matmen In WinSkein Three Sophomores are current- ly setting the pace for Michigan's undefeated wrestling squad. Larry Nelson, Dave Space and Bill Stapp are undefeated this season. Each man has recorded three straight wins. ALL THREE won their matches in Saturday's route of Northwest- ern, 21-9. Nelson wrestling at 128, came from behind in the third period to defeat NU's George Halas, 9-6. The Soph star had regis- tered two pins in his first two matches. Space took his third match of the young season when he shut- out Eddie Fox, 7-0, in a 136 pound attraction. * * * STAPP, a 155 pounder from Sausalito, California, won his third victory Saturday night, via the pin route, his second of the season. Right behind the Soph lead- ers, is veteran Michigan star, Jim Smith, who came back from his defeat in the Purdue meet to score his first fall of the sea- son against the Wildcat's, Bob Ehlers. Smith flashed some of his old time form, as he completely dom- inated the match before ending it with the pin in 2:44 of the last period. The dual meet standings of the wrestlers: the NCAA playoffs Colorado Springs . time Michigan came last year at . only this out on top. OHIO STATE G Schnittker F .. 9 Donham F .... 6 Jacobs F-G .... 3 Remington F .. 0 Taylor C....... 0 Armstrong C .. 1 Brown G ...... 6 Burkholder G .. 3 Karaffa G .... 0 TOTALS ....28 MICHIGAN G Suprunowicz F 4 OlsonF.......0 McIntosh F .... 4 VanaderKuy C 6 SkalaC.......0 Morrill G. 3 Murray G ... 2 Doyle G ...... 1 Gutowski G ... 1 TOTALS ....21 Halftime -score: 43, Michigan 23. F PF TP 10 3 28 2 4 14 0 2 6 1" 1 1 2 4 2 1 5 3 1 1 13 1 4 7 0 0 0 18 2474 F PF TP 5 2 13 0 2 0 1 2 9 4 4 16 0 0 0 1 5 7 4 3 8 0 1 2 1 1 3 16 20 58 Ohio Stale Gil Burford warmed up for the Princeton game by amazing his teammates with phenomenal shots in a series of pool match- es in the afternoon . . . that night he substituted his hockey stick for his cue and bombarded the Orange and Black's nets for his four-goal hat trick. During the Tiger contest the sports announcer for the Prince- ton radio station was praising Ross Smith's fine defensive play . . seconds later a flying puck from the ice caused a spirited scramble in the radio box . . . the disc came accidently from the stick of none other than defenseman Smith. * * * A LARGE DELEGATION of alumni from Philadelphia and suburban New Jersey came up for the game . . . they provided a warm reception for the traveling Wolverines . . . also a formidable Michigan cheering section at the Tiger's rink. At New Haven the next night the Bulldogs of Yale University gave the Maize and Blue a tougher time. Michigan's vaunted first line' didn't combine to crash the Yale nets until the third period . . . on' a beautifully executed play the' puck went from Burford to Neil Celley to the Eli goal.. . the night before the Burford-Celley-Grant trio had racked up seven of Michi- gan's eight tallies. * * * PAUL PELOW was all smiles af- ter getting his first (and second) goal of the season . . . defenseman Graham Cragg also broke into the scoring limelight for the first time this year . . . he assisted Pelow on his second goal. Jack McDonald's 21 saves for the night underrates his out- standing work in the Michigan nets . . . the colorful goalie came through with several great saves to help throttle the Yale offense ... Bob Fleming, Smith and Cragg took care of the rest. Yale defenseman Frank Kitt- redge took the honors for the longest shot of the game . .. the puck soared off into space and bounded around in the steel roof supports before coming down again . . . then it almost hit one of his teammates on the head ... Al Bassey got a near miss when he kicked a loose puck into the Bull- dog goal . . . but the rules don't allow it. The Wolverines played before Yale's first sellout crowd this year ... they were turning them away at the door . .. at Princeton Mich- igan proved a big drawing card but just missed packing the house. A Well-Groomed Appearance is our Aim - to please you!! " WORKMANSHIP * SANITATION * SERVICE The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State ED ULVESTAD ...felled by operation Relay Team Close Fourth While their team mate, Ed Ul- vestad, was being rushed to the hospital for an emergency appen- dectomy last Saturday night, Coach Don Canham's two mile relay team was running into stiff competition in The Washington Star Relays. The thinclads finished fourth in a race that was a thriller all the way with only nine-tenths of a second between them and the winners. * * * THE WOLVERINE half-milers had the lead at some point on each of the four legs of the race, but Captain Jus Williams, running a beautiful anchor leg, was shaded at the tape by three men. The times for the evening were virtually meaningless, since the track was measured wrong. By BILL CONNOLLY For the second time in as many years Michigan track squads have lost a varsity record holder be- cause of a sudden operation. Last Saturday night, Ed Ulves- tad, the best pole vaulter in Wol- verine track history, underwent an emergency operation for appendi- citis. * * * ACCORDING TO Coach Don Canham, Ulvestad will definitely be lost for the entire indoor cam- paign, and "probably" for the outdoor season. Said Michigan's track coach yesterday, "We'll miss him as much as we missed Fonville last year." He was referring to former world's record holder Charlie Fon- ville, who stepped off the sidelines this season after having spent a, year there subsequent to an oper- ation in the fall of 1948. * * * BUT THE FIVE points that Charlie will add to the team's point total in Canham's 1950 cam- paign will only serve to offset the deficit brought about by the loss of an expected five points from Ulvestad. The blond - haired jumper earned the title of "Michigan's best" when he cleared the bar at an official height of 13 feet, ten and three-fourths inches last season against Ohio State. He cleared fourteen feet the following week in the Chicago Re- lays, but this height was not offi- cially recognized since it was not TUXEDO RENTALS Regulars - Longs - Shorts We carry a complete line of accessories Shirts - Hose - Ties - Hdkf. Sutds - Links - Suspenders "The Downtown' Store For Michigan Men" 3t9eb & tP- 309 So. Main St. Ph. 2-2015 the winning jump, and therefore not measured. *"''" * * ULVESTAD TWICE vaulted to victory in the Penn Relays to win the coveted first-place. Ulvestad twice earned the co- veted first-place slot in the clas- sic Penn Relays, vaulting to vic- tory in 1948 and 1949. In addition to being an excellent athlete, Ed is a fine student. Last year at the close of the season he won an award that is presented annually to the Wolverine track- man who has attained the highest scholastic average for the pre- ceeding two semesters. His average is well above a three-point. * * * THIS SEASON would have given Ulvestad his fourth year as a var- sity track man. His competition began in his freshman year, 1947, when the frosh rule was still in suspension. He earned a letter that year, and had he been available this season, he would have been one of the few remaining Michigan atheletes with four letters in one sport. Free throws missed: Ohio State-Remington 2, Burkhold- er 2, Schnittker, Jacobs, Brown, Donham. Michigan: VanderKuy 7, Gu- towski 3, Suprunowicz 2, Mc- Intosh. LATE BASKETBALL SCORES Kentucky 61, Georgia Tech 47 Lafayette 64, Temple 41 Kansas State 99, Iowa State 57 N. Carolina 54, Wake Forest 50 Upsala 78, Pratt 50 Bowling Green 74, Ohio U. 54 W L Nelson . .......3 0 Stapp........3 0 Space ........3 0 Smith........2 1 Holcombe.....1 0 Planck.......1 1 Stone........1 1 O'Connell.....0 1 Powers.......1 2 Dunne........0 1 Ties 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 0 0 Pins 2 2 1 1 1 0 0 0 1 0 .. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) terested contact the Bureau of Ap- hointments, Ext. 371. A representative from Travelers Insurance Company will be at the Bureau o f Appointments o n THE OFFICIAL MICHIGAN RING IMMEDIATE DELIVERY COMPLIMENTARY ENGRAVING L. G. BALFOUR CO. t 1319 S. University Phone 3-1733 Thurs., Jan. 19, to interview men for sales promotion and supervis- ory training, insurance experience not needed. Men must be between 27 and 30, and will work as assist- ant to agency manager. Positions will be open in various areas in Michigan. A representative from The Louis Allis Company of Milwaukee, Wis- consin, will be at the Bureau of Appointments Thurs., Jan. 19, to interviewElectrical Engineering graduates interested in sales work. After a 9 to 12 month training program, the trainee will probably be sent to district sales offices in the East or Midwest. A representative from the Muel- ler Brass Company, Port Huron, Michigan, will be at the Bureau of Appointments on Fri., Jan. 20, to interview February graduates in- terested in the field of mechanical engineering, sales, personnel ad- ministration, and production plan- ning and scheduling. The Syvania Electric Products, Inc., of Ottawa, Ohio, will have a representative at the Bureau of Appointments on Fri., Jan. 20, to interview February, 1950 gradu- ates. The company is interested in engineers who have specialized in electronics, chemistry, and me- chanics. A representative (S a g i n a w Branch) of The Standard Oil Company (Indiana) will be at the Bureau of Appointments on Wed., Jan. 18, to interview Mechanical, Chemical and Industrial Engineers with an interest in sales engineer- ing as a career. The position re- quires a fundamental knowledge of gasoline and Diesel operated ve- hicles. It also requires that the employee reside in Saginaw and travel through the Northeastern section of the state. Training is offered thosc selected. For iu ther information cn above notices please call at the Bureau of Appointments, 3528 Ad- ministration Bldg. Lectures University Lecture: "Education- al Foundations of the World Com- munity." Dr. Harold Benjamin, Professor of Comparative Educa- tion, University of Maryland; aus- pices of the School of Education (Continued on Page 4) Pep Retains Title ST. LOUIS-(IP)-Willie Pep de- fended his Featherweight title against Charley Riley, Negro chal- lenger of St. Louis, in a scheduled 15-round bout at Kiel Auditorium last night before a crowd of about 10,000. E m "A Save on our STUDENT BUNDLE!1 4 LBS. MINIMUM ......50c Each Additional Pound... 12c All clothing laundered, fluff dried, and neatly folded. The following articles are finished at low extra charges as follows- ANCE GRAMS <4p ROACH PRINTNr. Se vice s Too Small SHIRTS, additional HANDKERCH I EFS . . . . 15c . . . . . .2c SOX, pair . . . . . . . . . . . . . .2c Dress shirnts and silk or wool sport shirts slightly higher. PICK-UP and DELIVERY SERVICE I WITH SMOKE! ai'l RS WHO KNOW ...IT'S ovr co,04_/I s /* At Your Service . . . Rentals Phn 2312 i Ii I