SATURDAY, MARCH 14, 1953 THE MICHIGAW D AIT.V PAGE TMEE THE a1 V333AtJITIA V PA11TWU.WU s Caur. i "JMAVJJP ur Michigan Meets Minnesota in NCAA Hockey. Final RETURN TO ACTION: Cindermen Race Tonight In Milwaukee Invitational. * * Hat Trick by Martinson Paces Lopsided Triumph * * FRESHMEN, RESERVES HONORED: Varsity Letters Awarded To Swimmers, Gymnasts i h Looking for a comeback after st weekend, Wolverine cinder- en will compete in the invita- onal Milwaukee Journal Relays at' Milwaukee tonight. Coach Don Canhamn is 'taking several men to try for gold wrist- watches against top squads from Big Ten and Eastern schools. VAN BRUNER, second in the 75-yard high hurdles behind Joel McNulty, of Illinois in last week's Western Conference meet, will duel with McNulty again in both the 50-yard highs and lows. Bill Hickman will race against Illini Stacey Siders and Ted Wheeler of Iowa in the 1000- yard run. He is competing un- attached for the Wolverines, since his eligibility ran out last semester. Hickman ran the two- mile and was on the two-mile relay team last year. Michigan's crack mile relay team, composed of Dan Hickman, Bill Barton, Al Rankin and Jack Carroll, will match strides with teams from Pittsburgh and Iowa Any freshmen out for the track team, and any who are interested, please report to Yost Field House today at 2 p.m. -Fglmer Swanson in its heat. Michigan came in first in the Big Ten mile relay last weekend, while Iowa was second. ..George Lynch, John Ross, Roy Christiansen and John Moule of the two-mile relay team will also be trying for gold watches against squads from Illinois, Michigan State, Ohio State, In- diana and Purdue. To complete the roster of events, jack Carroll races in the 600 and Ron Wallingford, unattached, in the two-mile run. Wallingford is a freshman at the University, and will be up against such men as Hoosier Jack Wellman and Gene' Matthews of Purdue, second and third in the conference indoor meet, respectively. The classy mile field includes Don Gehrmann, one-time king of American Milers, Fred Wilt, Lt. Warren Druetzler, Len Truex and Lawton Lamp. A crowd of 10,000 is expected to HAVING TROUBLE WITH YOUR STUDIES? Try the UNIONI TUTORIL 'iSERVICE ! Student Offices in Union 't: watch the third annual games in the Milwaukee Arena. Gehrmann, said he will stake his entire foot racing future on his showing in the feature mile. "If I win, I'll keep on running, but I must win," said the former University of Wisconsin act. "If I'm beaten, I'm going to give it up.- Gehrmann, who ruled the mile on the indoor circuit last winter, has had an unhappy time this year. He has failed to win in six races. * * * RON MARTINSON . . . scores hat trick " I Outdoor Meet, Olympic Tryouts Remain Big Hurdles for Bruner (Continued from Page 1) Mullen netted his second tal- ly of the evening at 15:13 of the session and was quickly followed by a goal from the stick of Pat Cooney at 15:44. In the final three minutes of the game Mar- tinson scored two more goals, his last coming with three seconds remaining, McClellan notched his first goal of the long campaign, and Michigan broke the old scoring record of 13 goals. As the score indicates, the Wol- verine pucksters were in complete command from start to finish. Practically every Michigan goal was scored from a power play right in front of the Terrier goal. * * * THE BOSTON netminders had their hands full in keeping even more goals out of the net. In ad- dition to the 14 that got by, 30 other shots were turned away. In the Michigan nets, Ikola handled 21 saves in the two and a half periods he played, while Lucier turned back the rubber disk on three other occasions. The victory over Boston Uni- versity pits the Wolverines against the Gophers of Minne- sota, who defeated Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute 3-2 on Thursday night, in the final clash here at Broadmoor Ice Palace tonight. The Gophers, who finished in a first place tie with the Michigan sextet in the MCHL, have faced the Wolverines on four occasions this season. In three of the four meetings, came out score. By DIANE MOWREY Van Bruner, Wolverine hurdler, wants to help pilot Michigan to a Big Ten outdoor championship this year, and after that he has set his sights on snagging a berth on the '56 U.S. Olympic team. Last year the "leapfrog" ran fourth in the 110-meter high hur- dles in the NCAA meet, coming in behind Jack Davis, Val Joe Walker, and Bob Mathias. This qualified him for the Olympic tri- als, in which he ended up eighth. Bruner came to Michigan with a half-hearted hope of becoming a high jumper, but Coach Don Canham soon decided that he was cut out to be a high hurdler. The fleet-footed hurdler went on to establish freshman indoor rec- ords for the 65-yard high and low hurdles, :08.4 and :07.8, respec- tively. Heygives Canham and assistant track coach Elmer Swanson all the credit for bringing him down from a time of :16 flat in the 120- yard high hurdles to where he is now, around 14 seconds. Harrison Dillard's :13.5 stands as the world record for this race. Bruner started out his sophomo- more year at the University right behind Don Hoover, leading Mich- igan and Conference hurdler for 1951. He came in an unexpected third in the indoor conference high hur- dles run for that year. Then he caught pneumonia in the spring and was ruined for any outdoor work. That summer Bruner stayed in Ann Arbor to work. He also prac- ticed on 100-yard dashes on week- ELECTRIC DRY SHAVER. 4 shaving edges, 2 on each head. A high qual- ity precision instrument that does a fine shaving job for both men and women. Operates on 60 cycles, 110 volts, A.C. only. $5.95 postpaid. Ck, or M. O. No C.O.D.'s. R. L. Bunker, 2100 Prairie Ave. Downers Grove, 1ll. the Minnesota crew on the long end of the ends. Behind him was the driving force to make the Olympics, and when fall came along, so did the hurdler. He proceeded -to set up the American indoor record of :07.9 in the 65-yard high hurdles, and tie the American record for the 65-yard lows, :07.4. In the Milwaukee Journal Re- lays he set a record of :06.3 for the 50-yard high hurdles, later in the season became co-holder with Dillard for the Canadian Provin- cial record of :06.3 for the 50-yard highs. In the 1951-52 outdoor season, the 6, 2 inch hurdler tied the Mich- igan State AAU record in the 120- yard high hurdles at :14.5. One Down FIRST PERIOD: 1-Michi- gan, Chin (Philpott) 3:12; 2 - Michigan, Martinson, (Shave) 4:19. 3 - Michigan, Matchefts (unassisted) 4:42; 4-Michigan, Mascarin (Martinson) 7:51; 5- Michigan, Mullen (Chin, Coo- ney) 13.43. Penalties -Michigan: Mar- tinson (holding), Matchefts (playing with broken stick); BU: Rousseau (charging), Za- netti (high stick). SECOND PERIOD: 6-Mich- igan, Dunn (unassisted) 4:03; 7 - Michigan, Dunn (McClel- lan) 4:16; 8 -- Michigan, Chin (McClellan, Philpott) 11:00. Penalties - Michigan: Mc- Clellan (holding), Philpott (il- legal check); BU: Mills (inter- ference.) THIRD PERIOD: 9-- Mich- igan, Philpott (Matchefts) 2:32; 10 - BU, Rodenhiser (Den- ning) 9:01; 11 - BU, Zanetti (Whelan) 14:57; 12 - Michi- gan, Mullen (Cooney, Chin) 15:13; 13 - Michigan, Cooney (Chin, Mullen) 15:44; 14 - Michigan, Martinson (unassist- ed) 17:03; 15-Michigan, Mc- Clellan (Mullen) 19:36; 16 - Michigan, Martinson (unassist- ed) 19:57; Penalties -Michigan: Dunn, 2 illegal check, interference); BU: Kelly (interference). GEORGE CHIN . two early goals Wolverine Divers Look Ahead To NCAA Swimming Tourney By CORKY SMITH Sophomore Hurd is the num- Michigan's diving team, com- ber two diver on the team. He posed of Jim Walters, Bud Hurd, was discovered by Coach Matt and Andy White, is pointing for Mann who coached a team of the NCAA Swimming Champion- servicemen in Europe during the ships to be held at Columbus on war. One of the soldiers on March 27-28. Mann's squad was Hurd. Walters, who hails from Kenil- worth, Illinois, has earned six first In competition this year, Hur places and two second places in has to his credit one first and fou dual meets to pace the divers this seconds, even though Art Schoc year. He copped third in the three- classes make it necessar for hi meter diving event in the Big Ten to practice at night. Meet at Iowa City and came home * * * fifth in the one meter event. HE IS EQUALLY adept on botl * * * the high and low boards, winnin WHEN WALTERS went out for the Michigan AAU diving title or his high school team, things were the high board while still in hig: not looking so rosy. His high school school, and the Detroit low boar coach told him that he had no un- low board crown at the same time usual swimming talent, so Walters White, a junior in music promptly changed to diving, school,rounds out the diving He responded by perfecting three-some. His biggest accom- his diving well enough to win the plishment this season was a Illinois State Meet diving hon- third in the Minnesota meet be- ors on the low board in his Sun- hind Hurd. for and senior years, and the State AAU diving title on the In meets the one-meter lo' State bAr d vin ti e one board (a distance of three fee low board in his senior year. from the water), and the three In 1951 and 1952 he took first meter high board (11 feet from place in the Michigan State AAU the water) are used. meet for his high board feat. There are five standard dives * f one of which is picked by th ONE OF WALTERS' biggest judges to be the required dive fo achievements this season was out- that meet. The list includes th diving Ohio State's Morley Sha- front, back, half gainer, back jac piro to finish second behind OSU's knife and half twist dives. In ad Bob Clotworthy. In preparation dition, the diver executes si for the NCAA meet, Walters is now other dives of his own choice, practicing twice a day, two hours Each dive is rated don a 1 to 1 in the afternoon and two more in scoring basis. The execution of th the evenings.n t iffi t i Swimming Coach Matt Mann' yesterday announced the follow- ing letter winners: Thomas Benner, Thomas Case,' John Chase, Peter Dow, James Ford, Ed Furdak, Ron Gora, Don Hill, Milt Hurd, Wallace Jeffries,j Burwell Jones, Wayne Leengran, Glen Miller, John Riese, James* Walters and Barry Wayburn. * * * * MANN ALSO awarded John Bullock, Robert Marans, Don Pot- ter, and Gibson White reserve numerals. * * * - d r a m h g n ,h d e. w t e- m 's e or ze k S- x 0 e Freshman numerals went to Alex Babin, Thomas Bolter, John Calvin, John Delaney, Rob- ert Jones, Christian Keller, Rob- ert Knox, James Kruthers, John Lewy, James McCullough and Neil O'Keefe. The freshman list continues with John O'Reilly, Tom Palmer, Ronald Sharpe, Howard Siegal, Peter Solar, James Stewart, Law- rason Thomas, John Wardrop and Robert Wardrop. * * * GYMNASTICS Coach Newt Lo- ken named the following men to M' awards: Frank Adams, James Barbaro, Richard Bergman, John Eckel, Don Hurst, and Marvin Johnson. A reserve gymnastic award went to William Winkler, while Joseph Burke, Norman Niedermeier and Anthony San Antonio gained freshman numerals. All letter winners should re- port to the Equipment Room in Yost Field House to be measured for sweaters. -sHank Hatch U-- - ". GRAPEFRUIT GLEANINGS: Red Sox Youngsters Claw Tigers, 6-3 i .~ By The Associated Press i SARASOTA, Fla.-The Boston' Red Sox rolled up their third straight grapefruit league victory by whipping the Detroit Tigers, 6-3, before 2,304 fans yesterday. Although manager Lou Boudreau rested most of the Boston regu- lars, his youngsters slugged 11 hits and coasted behind the ade- quate pitching of Bill Henry, Ike DeLock and Bill Werle. AFTER getting off to a brave start with four exhibition victor- ies in a row, the Tigers now have dropped two straight games. The New York Yankees shut them out 5-0 Thursday.. Like the Yankees, the Red Sox made their hits count. The Red Sox got two runs off Dick Marlow and four more off Ted Kapuscinski. * * * WHITE SOX 11, INDIANS 4 TUCSON, Ariz. - Chicago's White Sox, getting tight pitching from veteran Tommy Byrne and rookie Bob Keegan, whaled the Cleveland Indians, 11-4, yesterday in an exhibition before 1,855. In all, Cleveland got four hits, and three were homers by Jim Lemon, Harry Simpson and Al Rosen. * * WASHINGTON 3, PHILS 2 ORLANDO, Fla.-Wayne Ter- williger's single with two out in the eighth inning scored Ken Wood from second base to give the Washington Senators a 3-2 vic- tory over the Philadelphia Phil- lies yesterday. The defeat was the seventh straight of the exhibition season for the winless Phillies. * * * CUBS 4, GIANTS 3 MESA, Arizona - The Chicago Cubs scored all their runs in one big third inning rally at the ex- pense of rookie right hander Mario Picone to defeat the. New York Giants, 4-3. Pinch - hitter Paul Schramka opened the third for the Cubs with a home run over the right field fence. Two singles and a walk filled the bases. Then with two out, Bill Serena doubled off the fence in right center to chase across the other three runs. LATE SCORES St. Louis 1, Cincinnati 0 Brooklyn 5, New York Yankees 4 for really GOOD food TRY ZIEGLER'S, Restaurant Dinners Served from 4:30 P.M. to 9:00 P.M. 120 West Liberty CLOSED MONDAYS Indiana, Notre Dame Quintets Score in NCAA Hoop. Playoffs wie Ia no ei ielnlcu y is con- sidered by the judge when he rates each dive, which has a difficulty rating ranging from 1.1 to 2.7. The judges' rating for each dive is multiplied by the rate of dif- ficulty and the total points for the seven dives makes the diver's total score. TODAY ! rer { j r 1fl1Th I riK nuous from 1 P.M. BULLETIN CHICAGO - P) - Big Ten champion Indiana, the nation's No. 1 team, outlasted De Paul 82-80 after Notre Dame spurted to whip Ivy League titlist Penn- sylvania 69-57 in the NCAA eastern basketball playoffs be- fore 15,984 at the Chicago sta- dium. * *; * CHICAGO- (P) -Notre Dame shook free in the final five minutes for a 69-57 victory over Ivy League champion Pennsylvania in last night's opening round of the NCAA eastern regional basketball tourney at the Chicago Stadium. Despite a heroic 25-point per- formance by Ernie Beck, Penn- sylvania's All-America center, Notre Dame made the game a run- away in the final five minutes. It was a sizzling game until Notre Dame's closing surge with the lead changing hands 13 times * * * NCAA REGIONAL BASKETBALL Holy Cross 79, Wake Forest 71 Oklahoma A&M 71, TCU 54 LSU 89, Lebanon Valley 76 Michigan Christian Fellowship invites you to the second of its Easter Series t i- THIS "THE HUMILITY OF CHRIST'S SUFFERINGS" Speaker: MR. /DAVID ADENEY IVCF Senior Staff Member SUNDAY LANE HALL 4:00 REFRESHMENTS A Chapter of Intervarsity Christian Fellowship Is HjRfO HCO kS ' I --m DECEIT... THIS ji F C' I I IS DANGER... 7 THIS elentesc med in bec by Bros. 11 IS A story of r suspense fill colorful Qu Warner I AI ""I I ~~ 11190 I 7 -. l-m.am in o to