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January 18, 1951 - Image 3

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1951-01-18

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.


THE MICHIGAN DAILY

'"

Faces

Tough

Minnesota

Sextet

PAGE THREE
Tom orrow

* *

Gopher Games First of Six
Slated Between Semesters

A rough Minnesota hockey out-
fit which gave Michigan a pair of
bruising battles earlier in the
month. comes to town this week-
end for a two game series at the
Coliseum.
Friday night's contest will com-
mence at the usual 8:00 p.m.
starting time while Saturday's
clash will proably begin at 8:30
p.m. because of the basketball
game.
* * *
CAPACITY CROWDS will be
the rule once again this weekend
as all the reserve seats have been
purchased by eager fans.
Although the Gopher record
of four wins and seven losses
doesn't seem too imposing at
first glance, optimistic Michigan
fans should remember that the
Wolverines barely edged the
northerners in previous season
Two Former
Cage Players
.AcceptBribes
NEW YORK - (P) -- A basketball
gambling scandal erupted yester-
day with disclosure of an attempt
to fix Tuesday night's Manhat-
tan-DePaul game and arrest of
two former Manhattan players
accused of throwing games last
season.
The players were Henry E.
Poppe, 24, and John A. Byrnes,
22, co-captains of last season's
team, charged with taking bribes
!in the Siena, Bradley and Santa
Clara games.
*Assistant District Attorney Ed-
win F. Breslin of the Bronx said
each received about $5,000 in
bribes. Byrnes played this season
for Bridgeport in the American
Basketball League.
The case was broken when
Junius Kellogg, 23, of Portsmouth,
Va., six foot, seven inch Manhat-
tan center, refused a $1,000 bribe
to help assure a DePaul victory.

encounters by counts of 5-4 and
6-4.
The Gophers are paced by their
first line composed of Gordie Wat-
ters, at center and Rube Bjorkman
and Cal Engelstad at the wings.
This trio has already accounted
for 29 goals in eleven games.
WATTERS, the only Canadian
on the squad, has been classed as
the" best Minnesota hockey player
since Johnny Mariucci, the for-
mer Chicago Blaekhawk bone-
crushing defenseman. The Wol-
verines know all about Watters
for he scored the hat trick in the
5-4 overtime tilt.
After Minnesota and exami-
nations the Wolverines make a
jaunt to Colorado for two game
series with both the University
of Denver and Colorado College.
Denver, which has split two con-
tests with Minnesota and Toronto,
provides the Maize and Blue op-
position on February 6 and 7. Af-
ter a day's rest the Wolverines
travel to Colorado Springs for two
tussles with the Colorado College
Bengals on Feruary 9 and 10.
THE BENGALS, last season's
NCAA titleholders, possess a rec-
ord of nine wins, three losses, and
one tie. The defeats have been in-
flicted by Toronto, Boston Uni-
versity, and Boston College.
On the player side of the pic-
ture, coach Vic Heyliger reports
that all his men are recovering
from their injuries suffered in the
Montreal tilts and will be ready
for action this weekend.

Mentors Air
Frosh Rule,
Draft Fears
Special to The Daily
DETROIT- Football and the
draft" was the main topic of dis-
cussion by sportswriters, coaches,
and athletic directors here last
night at the annual dinner meet-
ing of the Michigan Football
Writers Association.
In the absence of Michigan's
coach Bennie Oosterbaan, Biggie
Munn, head mentor at Michigan
State, was the featured speaker.
MUNN DECLARED that "We're
not going to be alarmists at Mich-
igan State. If the draft takes our
athletes, then we'll just adjust to
the situation."
Oosterbaan's absence was par-
ticularly noticed by Munn, since
he wished to congratulate his
Ann Arbor rival on Michigan's
great Rose Bowl triumph over
California.
Since Oosterbaan's plane from
Indianapolis was delayed, and
Fritz Crisler, Wolverine Athletic
Director, was in Galveston, Texas,
Les Etter, Publicity Director, rep-
resented the Maize and Blue.
* * *
MSC ATHLETIC Director Ralph
Young proposed that freshmen be,
made eligible for varsity compe-
tition in 1951 to offset inroads on
grid talent by Uncle Sam.
Munn also used the occasion
to squelch rumors that he might
be interested in a new coaching
job. "I am well satisfied withk
my job at Michigan State, and
I am looking forward to our
formal entry into Big Ten foot-
ball competition," said the for-
mer Michigan line coach.
However, Munn s calm com-
ments on the draft were not
echoed by fellow coaches also in
attendance. They expressed a
rather pessimistic attitude.
"We're near the end of the line
in football," said Detroit Tech's
Henry Johnson. "You can expect
an announcement possibly next
week."

I

COLLEGIATE SWIM SHORTS:
MSCMenaces OSU Tank Supremacy

Notes from the foreign natato-
ria-Michigan State's swimming
team, which had been a doormat
for Matt Mann and his boys for
26 consecutive dual meets, has de-
veloped so well of late that Satur-
day's decisive win by the Spar-
tans was far from a surprise.
Charley McCaffree's squad has
been acquiring balance during the
last two or three years. There is
a very good chance that they
might upset Ohio State. This sea-
son they have the big time swim-
mers-Clark Scholes and Bert
McLachlan.
* * *
WORD COMES from the Michi-
gan swimmers who went to Flori-
da that Jack Taylor, Ohio State's
fine backstroker and distance
champ, has added 30-40 pounds

of avoirdupois to his' once-slim
frame. .. Taylor, who swam only
backstroke in the southern exhibi-
tions, hasn't been noticeably slow-
ed down in that event, although
much of the weight added is in
his legs.
McLachlan's time in the 440,
incidentally, is a real threat to
the tottering crown Taylor now
holds at that distance in the Big
Ten.... McLachlan, with a pre-
vious 4:46 to his credit, and Sa-
turday's 4:42.5, has a head start
on Taylor, who's been going at
around 4:48 so far.
More news at the quarter-mile
distance comes from the East. At
Yale, Ray Moore, who's Eli's third
best in the distance events, co-
vered the long pull in 4:36 in a re-

cent dual meet. . .. John Mar-
shall and Jimmy McLane, Yale's
best, didn't compete in the meet.
The possibility of freshman eli-
gibility, pushed by the NCAA's
track and baseball coaches at the
Texas meetings, can affect Wol-
verine swimming fortunes. . . . If
freshmen are made eligible next
semester, Michigan's yearling
squad, strong particularly in the
sprints, would provide several im-
portant points in the important
meets. . . . Add to that .the
strengthened distance prospects,
with Detroit high school star Bur-
well Jones expecting to enroll at
Michigan next semester, and the
result would be a considerable
boost to the fortunes of Coach
Mann's team..

r

SPECIAL SALE!
Thursday - Friday - Saturday

I

TOP-FLIGHT CENTER-Gordie Watters, classed as the best Go-
pher hockey player since Johnny Mariucci, will put plenty of pres-
sure on Michigan's goal-tender, Hal Downes. Watters scored the
hat trick earlier in the season against the Maize and Blue sextet.
Eliot Plans Trip To Consider
Coaching Job at Southern Cal,

'goo?

C/

it

it

Late Scores

11

NATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE
Boston 3 New York 3
Detroit 4 Chicago 2
COLLEGE BASKETBALL
Oklahoma A&M 55 ' t. Louis 44
Niagara 72 St. Bonav iture 57
Army 60 Williams 55
Columbia 68 Pennsylv knia 50
South Carolina 56 WE ;t Virginia
53

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -(AP)- Foot-
ball coach Ray Eliot of Illinois
"definitely" is going to make an-
other trip west for final talks with
Southern California officials about
the coaching job there.
ELIOT HAS been rumored all
but signed for the USC job since
recent conferences with athletic

officials of the Los Angeles school.
LOS ANGELES -(R)- Official
comment was lacking but opinion
expressed on sports pages here
yesterday was almost unanimous
in the belief that football coach
Ray Eliot of Illinois is headed for
the same job at the University of
Southern California.

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week."

DAILY
OFFICIAL
BULLETIN
(continued from Page 2)
will become effective at the end
of this semester. All those who
have accepted positions or who'
are going into the services are re-
Success on
Examinations?
Let us keep you well groomed
during the examination period.
Plenty of barbers-no waiting.
The Dascola Barbers
Liberty near State

quested to give this :nformation
to the Bureau before they leave
campus.
For General Division Regis-
trants: Calls are received daily
and since there is no way of pub-
licizing these during final exams
students are invited to come into
the office at any time to look
through requests starting Mon.,
Jan. 22.
The United States Civil Service
Commission announces the fol-
lowing examinations: Geologist
GS 5 and GS 7, closing date Feb.
6; Meteorological, Aid GS 3, 4,
and 5, closing date Feb. 6; As-
tronomer GS 5 through GS 13, no
closing date.
The Carnegie Institute ofrTech-
nology announces an opportunity
for advanced study and research
through teaching assistantships,
graduate fellowships and research
assistantships for the academic
year 1951-1952 in the following
fields: chemical, civil, electrical,

mechanical and metallurgical en-
gineering, physics, chemistry, and
mathematics.
For further information con-
cerning the above announcements
call at the Bureau of Appoint-
ments, Room 3528, Administra-
tion Bldg.
The Department of Astronomy
has a full-time opening for next
semester in one of its research,
projects for a man with a M.S.
in Physics and a background in
spectroscopy.
For further details consult the
Personnel Office, Room 3012, Ad-
ministration Bldg.
The Bureau of Appointments
has on file requests for February
graduates for the following posi-
tions:
Men: Mechanical and electrical
engineers both in the Ann Arbor
area and other locations.
Civil engineer for surveying in
Ann Arbor area.
Electrical engineer for develop-
ment work in radio firm.
One accountant, one industrial
engineer, one electrical engineer
for rubber company.
Mechanical and electrical en-
gineer for plant department.
Research and Development La-
boratories, Philadelphia Quarter-
master Depot has positions for
undergraduates with background

in biology, also for those with BS
degree in chemistry.
Farmingdale, L o n g Island,
wants junior test engineers.
Experimental Towing Tank,
Hoboken needs engineers, mathe-
maticians, a n d mathematical
physicists (both men and wo-
men).
Hospital manager in hospital
in Grand Rapids (hospital ad-
ministration preferred).
Junior design engineer for
Kimberly-Clark, Neenah, Wiscon-
sin.
Three metallurgical engineers
.1

for steel company in Pennsylvan-
ia.

I

Mechanical engineers for farm
equipment manufacturer in Wis-
consin.
A department store in Milwau-
kee is interested in students for
their junior executive training
program.
(Continued on Page 4)

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