SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TERES' i SWolverine Maize and Blue Suffer Fif Straight Conference Setha Ca ges Bow to Wiscorsin F0, 74-52 S. * * * * * * * * ii By DICK LEWIS Mediocre Wisconsin drove an- other stake into the Michigan bas- h ketball coffin last night, over- whelming the listless Wolverines by a 74-52-margin before a sparse gathering of die-hards at Yost Field House. Coach Bill Perigo's cagers fought off rigor mortis briefly in the first and second quarters, but thereaft- * er rolled over and played dead while absorbing their fifth straight league setback and eleventh loss in 13 Big Ten starts. * * * FOR THE invading Badgers it was their second win in seven days over the woeful Wolverines, the first being a 75-63 triumph on the Madison hardwood. Lanky Wisconsin pivot opera- tor Paul Morrow performed the role of chief executioner for the winners. He scored 27 pointers, 15 of them coming on free throws, and controlled both boards throughout the dull con- test. Things got off to a flying start in the opening three minutes with the red-hot Badgers racing to a 9-0 advantage while Michigan played footsie with the ball at mid- court and lost control numerous times on walking infractions. HUSTLING guard Don Eaddy, top point-getter for the losers with a 20-point harvest, finally broke the ice at the 6:20 mark, and a couple of minutes later the Maize and Blue began the first of its fruitless surges. Coacch Harold (Bud) Foster's Badger quintet had gone out in front, 11-4, when forward Milt . Mead dunked a one-hander,. Eaddy canned two charity tosses, to close the gap to 11-9. Morrow then responded with a scoring spree of his own as he hit on eight successive markers to- give the winners a 19-12 lead which was expanded to 21-16 at the quarter. * * * FOUR MORROW free throws (the 6-8 bespectacled center fun- nelled through 15 out of 24 on the evening) and a couple of fast- break conversions . swelled the count to 29-20 with' about five min- utes gone in-the second stanza. At tiis point Michigan ems barked on its second and last attempt at a concerted offense. Groffsky arched in a right- handed hook shot and followed with a perfect free throw, Mead counted with a foul toss of his own, and jumping, John Cod- well made it 29-26 with a pretty one-handed shot from the key- hole. That was it as far as the Maize and Blue was concerned. Wiscon- sin followed. with a seven-point spree that put the contest out of reach by a 38-28 tally at half- time. fat 54-39 edge at the three- quarter point. What little semblance Michigan had of height to cope with the sharp-shooting Morrow went by the boards after 15 seconds of the final period when Mead contracted his fifth personal foul and was waived out of the scrap. THREE MINUTES later, Groff- sky also left the ball game with excess personals and from then on the Wolverine reserves exchanged baskets in a comedy of errors with the Wisconsin red-shirts. Morrow stayed in the game long enough to mesh five more free throws and Badger guard Chuck Siefert collected four field goals during his brief stay in the final minutes. That gave Sie- fert a 17-point output to place him second behind Morrow in the visitors' scoring column. Hard-charging Cable, who net- ted 25 tallies up at Madison, was limited to only five field goals on the strength of a sterling defen- sive effort by Codwell. * * * ON THE OTHER HAND, Cable turned in an even better job of throttling Michigan captain Doug Lawrence. The diminutive Maize and Blue backcourt operator had counted 35 points in his last two starts, but was held scoreless by the leach-like Cable. By heaving through only 18 of 77 chances from the floor for a poor 23.4 percentage, Perigo's quintet achieved its second worst shooting performance of the sea- son. The previous low was 16 of 96 in the yawn-fest with Ohio State. Wisconsin's shot average was a none too spectacular, 29.5, or 25, of 88 attempts from the floor. The next test for the Maize and Blue five, which now sports a sea- son's slate of 5-12, is on tap Mon- day night at the Field House. Pro- viding the opposition will be lowly Northwestern, another squad which is lingering in the depths of the conference second division. Previously, Coach Waldo Fish- er's combine racked up a one- sided 84-57 triumph at Evanston. Chances are that 6-8 center Har- vey Williams might be available for the Wildcat showdown. Wil- liams has missed the last three games with a combination of death in the family and an attack of the flu. Matmen Win 26-5 Victory Over Purdue Special To The Daily Winning their sixth straight Big Ten meet, Michigan wrestlers loomed as definite Western Con- ference title contenders by defeat- ing the Boilermakers of Purdue, 26-5, yesterday afternoon at La- fayette. The Wolverines, after losing the 123-pound match, defeated their opponents in six other divisions before Dick O'Shaughnessy bat- tled to a 7-7 draw with Purdue Captain Walt Viellieu. In a surprise move, Coach. Claude Reeck dropped many of his men one weight division in order to 'ield a stronger team against the mighty Wolverines. This change did not prove effective however, as Joe Scandura pinned fourth place Big Ten Champion Tom Hankins, who usually wres- ties at 157-pounds, in the 147- pound match. Captain Snip Nalan defeated Joe Murphy, another man who had been dropped one division, by a decisive 8-3 score. 123-Harold Parson (P) defeated Joe Atkins (M) 5-0. 130-Snip Nalan (M) defeated Joe Murphy (P) 8-3. 137 - Andy Kaul (M). pinned Pat Amore (P) 7:30. 147-Joe Scandura (M) pinned Tom Hankins (P) 2:51. 157-Miles Lee (M) defeated Tony D'Amico (P) '9-3. 167-Bronson Rumsey (M) pinned Russell Addison (P) 6:10. 177-Harold Holt (M) defeated Lynn Whitaker (P) 12-6. Heavyweight - Dick O'Shaughnessy (M) tied Walt viellieu (P) 7-7. Michigan Sextet Buries Nodaks in Vital Contest (Continued from Page ) the end of the second frame with a 5-0 lead, and came back to make it 8-0 at the end of four minutes of the third period. * * * MATCHEFTS put another fan- cy skating exhibition on and out- maneuvered the Nodaks angling one in from the right boards un- assisted at 1:14. Less than two minutes later, Mullen got his sec- ond goal of the game, when he stumbled, kicked the puck and then backhanded it past Nodak goalie Al Finkelstein. At 4:09 Mullen sent a perfect cross-ice pass to Chin skating in from the right and the fleet wing from Lucknow, Ontario flashed the red light for Mich-, igan's eighth and final goals Bill Lucier, sophomore netmind- er then replaced Willard Ikola in the nets for the Wolverines, Ikola having held the Sioux scoreless for 50 minutes. North Dakota got into the scor- ing column' at 7:30, with Doug Mullen in the penalty box serving out a tripping penalty. Ben Cher- ski scored on a power play with -Daily-Betsy Smith MICHIGAN'S JOHN CODWELL SINKS A TWO -POINTER AS PAUL GROFFSKY STANDS BY. Natators Crush Iowa State, 6303'0; Face Minnesota Squad Tomorrow assists going to Elwood Shell and Swede Lund. Threeuminutes later, with Ron Martinson in the cooler for cross- checking Marcel Beaulieu scored a screen shot on aids from Cherski and Lund. The Sioux got their final goal out of a pile-up in front of the Michigan nets, with Ken Johann- son getting the goal. Johannson, who broke his nose in last night's game, wore a Michigan football helmet with a noseguard to pro- tect his tender proboscus. * * * FIRST PERIOD: 1-Michigan, Haas (Mullen, Cooney) 4:45; 2-Michigan, Matchefts (unassisted) 17:39. Penalties: Michigan - Dunn (rough- ing), McClellan (handling), Haas (roughing). North Dakota- Duns- worth (roughing), Cherski (rough- ing). SECOND PERIOD: 3-Michigan, Mul- len (Chin) 3:08; 4-Michigan, Coo- ney (Chin) 7:00; 5-Michigan, Coo- ney (Chin) 10:51. Penalties: Michigan-McClellan (2- High-sticking, roughing). North Da- kota-Lund (roughing). THIRD PERIOD: 6-Michigan, Mat- thefts (unassisted) 1:14; 7-Michi- gan, Mullen (Cooney) 2:40; 8-Mich- igan, Chin, (Mullen, Cooney) 4:09; 9-North Dakota, Cherski (Shell, Lund) 7:30; 10-North Dakota, Beaulieu (Lund, Cherski) 10:30; 1,1 -North Dakota, Johannson (No- vak, Cherski) 15:27. Penalties: Michigan -Martinson (2- high stickin, cross-checking), Mul- len (tripping). North Dakota- Beaulieu (high sticking) Shell (2- holding and misconduct) Stationery Michigan Seal 29c and up 72 plain sheets 40 envelopes-$1.00 We Have Good Values On Personalized Stationery Overbecks 1216 S. University Phone 3-4436 By PHIL DOUGLIS In total command all the way, Michigan's swimming team easily conquered Iowa State 63-30 at the I-M pool last night in a non- conference dual meet. In winning their sixth straight meet of the season, Matt Mann's swimmers were never pressed. Mann entered his sophomore sen- sations, Ron Gora and Bumpy Jones in only one event each, in an attempt to even out the laurels. MICHIGAN took eight out of ten firsts. Jones and Gora both won easily, Bumpy taking the 200 yard breaststroke, and Ron the 300-yard medley relay-1. Iowa State Anderson, LaMair, Johnson); 2. Michigan. Time-2:58.9. 220-yard freestyle-I. Gora (M); 2. Ries (M1); 3. Thomas (I.S.) Time- 2:09.4. 50-yard freestyle-1. Hill (M); 2. Ford (M); 3. Kruse (I.S.) Time-:23.1 150-yard individual medley-1. Best (I.S.); 2. Furdak (M); LaMair (I.S.). Time-i1:37.2. Fancy Diving-1. Walters (M) 271.2; 2. Hurd (M) 220.7; 3. Nichols (I.S.) 147.5. 100-yard freestlye-1. Benner (M); 2. Thomas (I.S.); 3. Ries (M). Time- .52.6. 200-yard backstroke-1. Chase (M); 2. Anderson (I.S.); 3. Patterson 200-yard breaststroke-1. Jones (M); 2. Best (I.S.); 3. Miller (M). Time -2:23.5. 440-yard freestyle-1. Jeffries (M); 2. Leengran (M); 3. Lucas (I.S.). Time -4:52.2. 400-yard freestyle relay-1. Michigan (Chase, Ford, Ries, Hill); 2. Iowa State (Johnson, Kruse, Anderson, Thomas). Time-3:34.5. 220 freestyle. Other Michigan winners included captain Wally Jeffries, who took the 440 yard freestyle; Jim Walters, who han- dily won diving; Don Hill, who won the 50 yard freestle; John Chase,hwho triumphed in the 200 yard backstroke; and Tom Ben-: ner, who took the 100 yard free style. The Wolverines also won the 440 yard freestyle relay, with Chase, John Ford, Pete Dow, and Hill comprising the team. A unique feature of this event, was the duel provided from the Michigan freshman relay team, which was competing in a tele- graphic meet against Iowa U. To save some time, Mann raced his yearlings at the same time as the Michigan-Iowa State race, thus providing the Wol- verines with real competition. Highlighting the freshman meet final results of which were un- available at press time, was the setting of a new freshman 300 yard medley relay record. The team of Bert and Jack Wardrup and Tom Boulter plowed the dis- tance 'in 2:54.4, breaking the old mark of 2:54.9. Michigan now - trains its sights on a weak Minnesota team, which meets the Wolverines in a dual meet tomorrow at 3:30 in the IM Building. The Gophers, ninth place finishers last season, bring only three lettermen. The meet will be feature'd by attempts to break various records. MCHL STANDINGS W L Minnesota.........14 4 North Dakota ......11 5 Denver.......,....10 6 MICHIGAN......... 9 4 Colorado College.... 4 10 Michigan Tech ..... 3 10 Michigan State.....2 13 Pts. 17 17 15 14 8 4 2 Fountain Pens School Supplies Typewrite Ta~pe & Wd Recorder Desks Files Choirs Since MORRILL'S P 1908 314 S. State 7 OPEN SATURDAYS UNTIL 5 P.M. ers re Phone 7177 I I . ... U i I STUDENTS . ...before you make any arrangements for a trip to 88 Days - $825 from N.Y. Including Salzburg and Edinburgh Music Festivals UOPEIN 1953 .. . investigate eration"ndergrad" Finest Student Tour of Europe ever offered . . . All-inclusive from New York. 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