TUESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1951 THE MICHIGAN DAILY WAGE THY >2V Cage rs Edge wo lverines, 67 -64 Matmen Top Pitt * * Wolverine Five Downs Penn, Purdue But Drops Pai By JOHN JENKS While the football squad bask- ed in the holiday limelight out in Pasadena, the Wolverine cag- ers spent the Christmas vacation quietly preparing for the Big Ten title scramble by halving four games, two of which counted in the race. The quintet, playing steady if not inspiring ball, dropped tiffs to Stanford and Wisconsin and took the measure of both Penn- sylvania and Purdue. The split kept Michigan one game below the .500 mark, its record as it entered the Northwestern tilt last night being four wins and five losses. ir to Wisconsin, Stanford SOrlmann Stars For Collegians In Hula _owl Michigan's Chuck Ortmann and California's Jim Monachino, rivals in the Rose Bowl a week ago, teamed up with a= group of col- lege all-stars and passed their way to a 30-21 triumph over an Ha- waiian eleven in the annual char- ity Hula Bowl at Honolulu Sun- day. The Hawaiians, who were aided by such professional stars as Sam- my Baugh and Leon Hart, were unable to cope with the colle- gians' high-powered squad featur- ing Michigan's Al Wahl, Sonny Grandelius, Leroy Ka-Ne of Day- ton, Bill Weeks of Iowa State, and Northwestern's Don Stonesifer, in addition to Ortmann and Monac- hino. Ortmann, who scored one touch- down and kicked an extra point, brought the crowd to its feet when he passed 24 yards to Ka-Ne, who broke into the clear and streaked 55 yards for a touchdown, the play covering 79 yards in all. Monachino also tallied one touchdown in addition to booting a 16-yard field goal and an extra point. THE REVITALIZED play of forwards Tom Tiernan and Bob Olson, plus the consistency of Jim Skala and Charlie Murray high- lighted Michigan's efforts in the four games. Although leading 32-31 at the half, the Wolverines couldn't stop forward Litheed Tucker and cen- ter Jim Ramstead, who scored 23 and 22 points respectively, and the boys from Polo Alto pulled away to a comfortable lead in the final stanza. BREAKING A tight game wide open in the second half, the Mich- igan team notched its first win of the Christmas season when it de- feated Pennsylvania, 58-51. After the score was tied nine times in the first half, the hoop- sters jumped to a 39-28 spread in the first four minutes of the second half and were never threatened thereafter. Jim Ska- la paced the attack with 13 points. Michigan started its venture in- to the Big Ten race on the right foot when it slipped by Purdue in a wild and woolly affair, 61- This Week BASKETBALL Jan. 13-University of Illi- nois at Champaign-Urbana. HOCKEY Jan. 12-Montreal Univer- sity at Ann Arbor at 8:00 p.m Jan. 13-Montreal Univer- sity at Ann Arbor at 8:00 p.m. SWIMMING Jan. 13 - Michigan State University at East Lansing. WRESTLING Jan. 13-Indiana University at Ann Arbor at 7:00 p.m. 60. Charlie Murray dropped in the last of his ten free throws in the final seconds to provide the win- ning margin. Wisconsin dropped Michigan out of its temporary hold on first place in the Big Ten standings when the Badgers scored a 61-52 victory. Although the Wolverines momentarily tied the game at 32- all in the second half, the Bad- gers generally held a fairly com- fortable lead throughout the con- test. Trent Grid Man of Year Football's 'man of the year.' is 'Lt. John Trent, captain of Army's 1949 gridiron squad, who died a hero's death on the battlefields of Korea last No- vember 15. Trent was selected by the Football Writers' Association of America. The trophy will go to West Point for a year, and a plaque will be sent to his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Trent of Memphis, Tennessee, Trent was killed on a Kor- ean hillside while crawling from foxhole to foxhole to alert his weary men. Wildcats Hand 'M' Second Straight LeagueSet-Back By GEORGE FLINT gan could only solve the North- Michigan ran out of gas after western man-to-man sporadical- overtaking Northwestern in the ly, and depended chiefly on foul second half, and the Wildcats shots to keep within striking dis- wrapped up a closely-contested tance. Captain, Chuck Murray 67-64 victory last night at Yost paraded to the charity line for 10 Fieldhouse in the Wolverines' free shots in the half, and made third conference cage encounter. 9 of them. With the Maize and Blue ahead, 62-61, with less than two minutes MICHIGAN BROKE fast in the to go, the Wildcats broke up the second half, as Tiernan electri- Michigan attempt to freeze the fled the sparse (2,850) crowd with ball and forged in front on Ray three straight dump shots from Ragelis' tip-in from the foul around 15 feet to put the Wolver-3 lane. inP- qnhes_ 5-4R_ with 1f)nli,,+ By CY CARLTON Michigan's grapplers paced by their team captain, Bill Stapp,3 downed a surprisingly strong Pitts- burghdmat aggregation, 16-11, Saturday, in their only vacationj activity.j The Wolverine victory was in the nature of a New Years gift to Coach Cliff Keen who returned late Saturday after a Rose Bowl jaunt. Pittsburgh, in their second year of college mat competi- tion, was in contention right up till the last match when Heavyweight Art Dunne reg- istered his first Wolverine grap- pling win in two seasons as he edged out Pitt heavy, John Masarik, 2-1. SCANDURA showed well in his1 first mat test losing to Frank Skir- n.n 4-3in he 47 _-nnl ta..r IM' Swimmers Warm Up InAnnual Florida Meet U Holt was dropped by Tony Raz- zano, 5-1 in a 167 pound match. Stapp yegistered an import- ant pin and five of the 16 Wol- verine match points when he forced Jim Conklin to practi- cally "pin himself" in 8:02 of the 157 pound entry. Stapp was always in command throughout the course of the match. Larry Nelson and Jack Gallon won their matches in the 130 and 137-pound divisions, each regis- tering decisive wins. Nelson took John George of the Panthers, 8-3 and Gallon decisioned Harold Mil- ler, 5-3. In the 123 pound match, Miclii- gan's Joe Kosik was shut out by Pittsburgh's Ray Capelli, 3-0. At 177, Pittsburgh's Joe Kane stalled his way to a draw with Joe Planck despite the obvious superiority of the Michigan grappler. Michigan swimmers saw warm- up action over the holidays hat the annual Men's Intercollegiate, Swimming Forum at Fort Lauder- dale, Florida. The Wolverines competed on the side of the West as that team won the Christmas day meet for the fourteenth consecutive time, 37-18. THE AGENDA for the meet comprised mostly relays, and Michigan's breaststroke duo of John Davies and Stew Elliott was an important factor in winning the 200-meter and 400-meter races for teie West. Teaming with Bob Dunlop of Purdue and Jose Balmores of Ohio State, the Mich- igan tank veterans swam good legs as the quartet was clocked in 2:10.2. In the 400-meter breaststroke relay Don Fisher of Wisconsin took Balmores' place and the Wolverine-paced foursome won in 4:46.3. Dick Spero, Michigan freshman, was on the West's second team, which swam third in the race. * * * BERNIE KAHN of Michigan al- so found himself on a winning team, as he anchored the quartet COLLEGE BASKETBALL Wisconsin 53, Michigan State 52 Illinois 72, Iowa C1 Minnesota 77, Ohi. State 64 Kentucky 63, DePaul 55 Kansas 61, Missouri 46 Conxfell 63, Yale 36 Syracuse 66, Creighton 46 Fordham 80, St. Peters 54 IL 1'U 2 I DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN The Daily Official Bulletin is an official publication of the University of Michigan for which the Michigan Daily assumes no editorial responsi- bility. Publication in it is construc- tive notice to all members of the Uni- versity. Notices should be sent in TYPEWRITTEN form to Room 2552 Administration Building, by 3 p.m. on the day preceding publication (11 a.- m. Saturdays). VOL. LXI, No. 76 TUESDAY, Jan. 9, 1950 Notices Veterans: The final date for the procurement of books, supplies, and equipment using veteran re- quisitions has been established as Fri., Jan. 19. No requisitions will be honored by the vendors subse- quent to this date. Christmas mail which could not be forwarded is being held for students by Miss Leonard in the I Office of Students Affairs, Room 1020, Administration Bldg. Phi Chi Fraternity: The Com- mittee on Student Discipline finds that the Phi Chi fraternity held an unauthorized, unchaperoned par- ty at the Pine Lodge Ranch Sat- urday evening, Dec. 16, at which liquor was consumed. After hear- ing statements from the presi- dent, the secretary, and four fra- ternity members, the Committee orders that -the Phi Chi frater- nity pay a fine of $750 to the Cashier of the University and that it be placed on social probation for the remainder of the academic year 1950-51. Notice to teacher candidates: Dr. George H. Baker, Director of Personnel of the Detroit Board of Education, will hold a discussion meeting for teacher candidates interested in teaching in the De- troit City School System at 4 p.m. Wed., Jan. 10, Room 2003, Angell Hall. Interviews: Mr. W. H. Nance, representative of North American Aviation, Inc., will interview Feb- ruary graduates with degrees in Aeronautical, Mechanical, Civil, and Electrical Engineering on Jan. 10 in Room 1521, E. Engineering Bldg. Application blanks available TYPEWRITERS in the Aero Office (1079 E.E.) and should be completed and returned to that office prior to the inter- view date. Employment: The Eastern Air Lines are in- terested in employing February graduates for positions as ste- (Continued on Page 4) 'BRA INPOW#ER Known the world over for its ability to design and manu- facture fine aircraft, Douglas also pioneers in other fields. An example is the Analog Digital Converter shown below. 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