,TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TAREE I,- 'UNBEATEN ILLINI NEXT: Ohio State Upends Hoosiers; CBge rs Bow to Darling Paces Iowa Attack; Mead, Skala Lead Michigan; s1 C , 'M'Matmen Dro 15-14 Meet to Pitt Michigan's grapplers sustained two losses over the recent holiday vacation, only one of which was reflected iU the record books. In losing to a good Pittsburgh team Saturday night 15-14, the Wolverines suffered an even more important loss when Miles Lee, sensational 157 pound sophomore, was forced to forfeit his match because of a dislocated elbow. LEE, WHO IS highly regarded by the Michigan coaching staff, was leading his opponent at the time of the injury. It is expected that he will be out of the lineup for a major part of the season. Larry Nelson, who is on the sick list with an injured knee, was also unable to appear in the Pittsburgh meet. * * * MICHIGAN points were earned in the match by Jack Gallon lt 137 pounds, Captain Bud Hol- combe at 167 pounds, Dick O'Shaugnessy at 177 pounds and Art Dunne in the heavyweight division, all of whom won, and also by Dave Space who earned stwo points with a tie. Wolverine Athletes Busy Over Christmas Holiday Michigan State, S4COLUMBUS .Ohio 5.4 6 Sate's lowly Buckeyes upset un- defeated Indiana, ranked fourth in the Associated Press poll, 73-72. last night. Indiana had won eight A PLstight games. The Buckeye vic- j tory was its third in nine starts. P oll Two field goals by reserve guard Dean Cook made the score 72-71. 13 S With three seconds to go Ohio y State reserve forward Tommy Hague got a free throw, but a sas Fissed. ick Dawe recovered the Sballin the scramble and put in the winning points. Illini Also Win EAST LANSING-/P)-Michi- gan State blasted its way into the win column of the Western Conference basketball race last night by throwing a barrage of baskets to overpower Nor'th- western 82-49 before a crowd of 8,184. CHAMPAIGN. Ill.-(.)-Unde- feated Illinois, trailing 30-20 in the second quarter, broke loose in the last half last night to trim Wisconsin 53-49 for its second successive Big Ten basketball vic- tory and its ninth of the season. a_ While most students were set- tling down to turkey with the trimmin's, the Wolverine basket- ball and hockey squads were car- rying on a stiff holiday competi- tive schedule. The cage squad put together some high scormg Yule season basketball to pull out three of its five encounters. * *4 * A SIX-POINT SPURT in the fourth period carried the Wolver- ines to their first victory of the season, a 58-55, triumph over Colorado. The quintet then made one of their finest efforts of the year in bowing to Penn State, 62-60, in the opening round of the Steel Bowl Round Robin Tour- ney, having given the top de- fensive five in the nation the scare of its life. In the consolation round of the tournament, the Maize and Blue recorded an easy 66-52 win over Virginia. * * * SCORING on 42 per cent of its shots, the Wolverine five started the New Year off right by crush- ing Princeton 62-44. - Indiana's unbeaten Hoosiers proved too much for Michigan in the Big Ten opener for both teams at Bloomington Saturday night. In scoring their eighth succes- sive triumph, Indiana had its hands full with captain Jim Skala and center Dick Williams who ac- counted for a total of 36 markers in the 58 to 46 loss. 4 4 ' . IN HOCKEY, the formerly bright picture for Vic Heyliger's Wolverines has clouded over as a result of two losses in the last four games, both of which were worth two points in the Midwestern Hockey League standings. The second night misery (all Wolverine losses this season came the second game of a series) plagued the Maize and Blue Saturday at North Dakota as the Nodaks downed the NCAA champs , 4-2, after Hey- liger's lads had triumphed by an identical 4-2 count the previous night. The victory was North Dakota's first over Michigan in four years and eleven contests, and also the Northmen's initial win in league play. AFTER SINKING Denver, 7-5, Thursday, December 21, the Wol- verines fell victim to the second night jinx and succumbed, 5-4, to the Westerners when a spirited rally fell just short of knotting the score in the third period. Coach Neil Celley's Denver out- fit, conquerors of Minnesota New Year's day, remains in a tie with Michigan for first place in the league standings. Both have six points, but Denver has a game in hand. (Continued from Page 1) THE LOCALS were consider- ably hampered by the limited play of lanky center Dick Williams who picked up three personal fouls in 44 * 44 last four minutes when the Hawk- eyes began freezing, the second half was better played all around. The Wolverines shook men loose for clear shots at the hoop on sev- eral occasions, and shot averages improved accordingly. Michigan's success at the foul line showed marked improve- ment over earlier appearances, 14 of 18 tries finding their way through the basket. The Iowans managed to net only 12 of 26 charity tosses. Still experimenting to find a winning five on his youthful squad, Coach Ernie McCoy tried several combinat*ns. He started with Entries for the All-Campus Badminton Singles Tournament are now being accepted at the I-M building. Entries will close Wednesday afternoon, January 9. --Vic Boukaert Skala, Ray Pavichevich, Williams, Lawrence and Don Eaddy. The second half opened with Skala, Eaddy, Bob Topp, Mead and Jewell in the Harness. In a preliminary game, the Michigan Jayvees lost a thriller to the University of Detroit re- serves, 58-53. * * * NEW YORK--UP)-For the sec- ond straight week. unbeaten Kan- sas tops the nation's college bas- ketball teams in the Associated Press poll of sports writers and sportscasters. Settling down to its regular schedule after winning the Big Seven Tournament, over the holi- days. Kansas thumped Oklahoma for its 11th consecutive victory. KANSAS drew 38 firsts on the 102 ballots that produced a shuf- fling but no upheaval in the first ten places. Illinois, racing past Minne- sota to make its record 8-0, clung to second place with 21 firsts. In point score, based on ten for first, nine for second and so on, Kansas led Illinois, 812 to 774. Six of the first 10 teams are un- beaten. They are Kansas (11-0), Illinois (8-0), Indiana (8-0), St. Bonaventure (7-0). Seton Hall 10-0) and Iowa (8-0), These records include games through Jan. 6. 4R. Every Garment We Make Is Individually ~1 Tailored To Measure " Summer Fabrics Included " Order NOW for Year-round Savings f Come In Today While Our Selec- tions Are Complete Everything Reduced F4or Instance -2-Piece Suits JIM SKALA captain nets ten * * * first four minutes and sat out game until late in third quar- the the ter. -- Both Mead and Jewell reliev- ed the errant pointgetter at center and succeeded in hold- ing Darling to only eight points in the first half. * *4 * WITH THE EXCEPTION of the Pre-I nventory Suit - - To pcoat -Overcoat S ALE!. (Including ZIP-Lined Topcoats) 49.50 ... NOW .. . $39 52.50... NOW . . . 42 55.00... NOW... 44 59. . . .NOW.. 47 65:00... NOW ... 52 69.00...NOW... 550 r WILDCATS NEXT: I' Natators Pace West In 25-11 Win over East IOWA Davis F Thompson' Jarnagin F Darling C Clifton G Greene G Stenger G Buckless G Totals............ MICHIGAN Skala F Pavichevich F Jewel F Williams C Mead C Lawrence G Eaddy G Topp G Brunsting G Totals ............ G 6 1 ( 20 G 4 I 1 1 4 0 16 F 3 4 1 0 0 14 F 2 2 0 4 1 2 0 14 PF 1 PF 4 1 4 24 TP 5 1 0 17 16 3 0 0 54 TP 10, 4 6 2 12 3 6 .3 46 1. 4.. 3. 5. 6. 9. yo. 10. 12. 13. 14. M 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. FIRST TEN Kansas (38) Illinois (21) Kentucky (12) Indiana (3) St. Louis (3) Washington (1) Kansas State St. "onaventure (4) Seton hall (5) Iowa (2) SECOND TEN West Virginia (9) St. John's New York U. Syracuse (1) Louisville (1) Duquesne Siena Oklahoma City Michigan State Dayton (1) s12 774 627 456 293 201 195 169 120 103 97 90) 87 59 50 41 37 $67.50 Wf'ere $89.50) Were $1 15.50 NOW- $5400 NOW- $71 60 NOW- X9240 ALL OTHER SUITINGS, SPORT COATINGS, TROUSERINGS, OVERCOATINGS SIMILARLY REDUCED I . - -* I .50 .00 .00 .60 .00 .61 (SHORT COATS NOW 20% OFF) Our garments are tailored by HYDE PARK - WINSTON and CLOTHCRAFT THE DOWNrOWN STORE FOR MICHIGAN MEN "We Serve to Serve again," 309 SOUTH MAIN STREET By HERB NEIL Scoring a man in every event the Michigan natators paced the West to a 25-11 victory over the East in the thirteenth annual East-West swimming meet at Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on December 30. The Wolverines, who open their Conference schedule against Northwestern in the Intramural Pool Saturday evening, participat- ed inthe East-West meet while spending the Christmas vacation in Florida. BUMPY JONES, Don Hill, Tom Benner, Stew Elliott, Ron Gora, Jim White, John Sampson, Rusty Carlisle, and John Chase placed in the winning cause for the West. Jones turned in winning per- formances in both the 400- meter free-style and the 150- meter individual medley. He also swam the backstroke leg on the 300-meter medley relay team which placed third in the meet. An Ohio State trio of Jack Tay- lor, Gerald Holan, and Frank Dooley won the medley with a time of 3:19.5.1 Hill and Gora swam on the win- ning 200-meter and 400-meter free-style relay teams. They teamed up with Ken Peterson of Northwestern and Bill Nicholson of Iowa in the 200-yard relay and swam with Nicholson and Dick Cleveland of Ohio State in an- nexing the longer race. Score by quarters: Iowa 15 11 20 8-54 Michigan 10 14 13 9-46 Free throws missed-Iowa-Davis 2, Thompson 3, Jarnagin 1, Darling 2, Clifton 1, Greene 2, Stengre 1. Michi- gan-Pavichevich 1, Jewel 1, ead 1, Lawrence I1. 4 I Ill! IT'S 1952! Try us for good * SERVICE e WORKMANSHIP r PERSONNEL The Dascola Barbers Liberty Near State I I I KAHN TAILVREV \VLVTHES 613 EAST WILLIAM STREET I , NK ER a I HILL ALSO SCORED a third for the West in one of the heats of the 50-meter free-style. Michigan had a winner in the second heat of the 50-meter free-style, however, as Benner crossed the finish line in front in the time of 26.7. He defeated Peterson and Nicholson in gain- ing the victory. Benner completed his scoring for the day by swimming on both of the Western teams which placed second in the 200 and 400- "Where Smart Style Meets Moderate Price" meter free-style relays. 61 JANUARY AFTER-INVENTORY 00 STORE-WIDE .REDUCTIONS SUITS - TOPCOATS - OVERCOATS - SPORTCOATS - SLACKS - JACKETS - RAIN COATS - HATS and FURNISHINGS 345 High Grade SUITS 20% off 205 Fine Fur Felt ., !' 176 High Grade TOPCOATS and OVERCOATS 20% off 48 Fine ROBES lfn, ,. ,k T 123 High Grade Sport Coats 20% off 430 Fine Sport Shirts _ _. If . . . ., P. 650 pr. 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