PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, DECEMBER'7, 1952 mosoft Sextet Trips St. Lawrence, 6-1; * * * * Brawls, Stellar Goalies Feature Hockey Opener 4> (4 (Continued from Page 1) ed in the head when he tried tot break up the brawl.t The fisticuffs were just whatt was needed to touch off a per- feet evening. Despite ragged passing and several fluffed scor- ing opportunities, the Wolver-, ines flashed enough brillianceI to convince the 3,500 in the crowd that they will duplicate last year's championship per-t formance.i Telly Mascarin, wing on the pucksters third line was the first to flash the red light for Michigan in the 1952 season. Mascarin cag- ed the rubber on passes from Doug Mullen and Reg Shave with 5:54 gone in the first period. THAT WAS ALL of the scoring in that frame, and the Heyliger- men returned to the ice for thec second period out in front by a narrow 1-0 margin. But that sit- uation didn't last very long. I At 2:39 of the second periodj flashy John McKennell caged the first of his two goals of the evening on passes from Earl Keyes and Johnny Matchefts. Then at 13:15 Doug Philpott slammed one from in close past Larrie goalie Bill Sloan. With St. Lawrence defenseman Wally Behan in the penalty box for tripping, Jim Haas slammed a 20-footer into the twines behind Sloan on a solo flight. Keyes clos- ed the second period scoring as he converted on brilliant passes from Matchefts and McClellan at 18:36. McKENNELL, smooth - skating Toronto senior, tallied Michigan's sixth goal in the third period as he picked up a loose puck in the Wolverines defensive zone and out- maneuvered a trio of Larries as he slipped the disc over the goal line. The redhead's antics brought the crowd to its feet as he coun- tered his second goal with both teams short two hands as a result of the brawl three minutes before. SLOAN TURNED away 46 Mich- igan shots, and it could be said in defense of the six goals that he allowed that he didn't get very much aid from the Larrie defend- ers. At the other end of the rink, Willard Ikola looked equally sharp, turning away St. Lawrence's scor- ing threats. Although aided immeasurably by fine defensive work of Shave, Haas, McClellan and Louie Pao- latto, the slick net-minder from Eveleth, Minnesota got credit for 35 saves-with a dozen on the sensational side. The Larries looked a little tired and logy last night-perhaps be- cause of their three games this week. Langill, the number one star of the Saints was additionally hampered by a fractured nose, suf- fered in Friday's game with Mich- igan State. FIRST PERIOD: 1-Michigan: Masca- rin (Mullen, shave) 5:54. Penalties: Michigan-Paolatto, (two; boarding, cross-checking); McClellan, (tripping); Matchefts, (slashing); all two minutes. St. Lawrence-Stefano- wicz, (slashing)-two minutes. SECOND PERIOD: 2-Michigan, Mc- Kennell (Keyes, Matchefts) 2:39, 3-Michigan, Philpott (Hass, Mullen) 13:16, 4-Michigan, Haas (unassisted) 16:34, 5-Michigan, Keyes (Matchefts, McClellen) 18:36. Penalties: Michigan-Cooney (two, tripping, misconduct)-two and ten minutes. St. Lawrence - Lospitalier (tripping), Behan (tripping)-both two minutes. THIRD PERIOD: 6-St. Lawrence, Ste- fanowicz (Langill) 2:03, 7-Michigan, McKennell (unassisted) 7:15. Penalties: Michigan-Mascarin, Mc- Clellen (fightingand match miscon- duct)-five minutes and banishment from game. St. Lawrence-Behan, Lund- berg (fighting and match misconduct) -five minutes and banishment from game. Late Sports Results BASKETBALL Florida State U. 68, Georgia Techers 63 Ohio Wesleyan 105, Wilmington 86 Michigan Normal 78, Hillsdale 52 Western Michigan 95, Northwestern 79 Butler 67, Purdue 61 Notre Dame 71, Indiana 70 Murray 92, Tennessee Tech 82 Iowa State 70, South Dakota 47 Vanderbilt 90, Virginia 83 West Virginia 89, Washington & Lee 83 Findlay 82, Morris Harvey 79 Quantico Marines 76, Villanova 74 NYU 80, Boston College 71 Minnesota 79, Bradley 63 Central Michigan 68, Milwaukee State 49 Ohio State 81, St. Louis 71 Wayne 103, Western Ontario 64 North Carolina 80, Richmond 64 Wake Forest 91, Duke 86 Michigan State 62, Marquette 51 Ursinus 82, Susquehanna 69 Washington College 59, Bridgewater 48 LaSalle 87, Niagara 76 Toledo U. 47, Adrian 26 Penn 70, Maryland 53 Fordham 71, Columbia 65 Cornell 75, Alfred 42 Georgia 57, Clemson 55 PROFESSIONAL HOCKEY SCORES Detroit 2, Chicago 0 Boston 2, Montreal 1 New York 2, Toronto 2 COLLEGE FOOTBALL U. of New Mexico 28, Utah State 0 Texas Tech 54, North Carolina State 7. Maryland State 10, North Carolina U. of Huston 20, Wyoming 0 Five Stos Pitt Flurry of Baskets in Final Period Wins Second Encounter of Season for Cagers (Continued from Page 1) verines' Ray Pavichevich and Paul Groffsky came right back with a lay-in and foul shot, respectively, to go within three points of the faltering Panthers. ** * ZERNICH followed with another charity toss, and then Codwell really got to work. The lanky forward split the nets with a jump shot, tied the battle up with a couple of foul shots, and then shot his team into the lead with a long one- hander. Panther center Don Virostek and Zernich knotted the score again with free throws, but Groff- sky brought the roaring crowd to its feet with a beautiful hook shot that put the home-town boys back into the lead for good, 68-66, with five minutes remaining. ART BOYD, Pitt forward nar- rowed the gap with another free throw, but from then on the Wol- verines pulled steadily away as Groffsky and Codwell, who both finished the night with 16 count- ers, added ten more points be- tween them. Perigo's lads began the non- conference tilt just as they end- ed it, rolling up a 21-14 bulge in the first quarter. Guard Pavichevich who hit for 17 points in the ragged, foul-mar- red encounter with Pitt's Zernich, paced the early surge with five field goals. * * * THE PANTHERS, led by guard Dick Deitrick and Zernich, who racked up 19 markers to share scoring honors with Michigan's Don Eaddy, meshed 9 straight points, though, to move into a 25-21 advantage. The Wolverines came right back with nine more counters to regain the lead at 30-25. Then Pittsburgh got hot again,, knotted the score at 30, and went on to hold a slim 39-37 margin at the half. * * * MICHIGAN again moved into a short-lived 43-41 advantage in the early minutes of the third period on a pair of long shots by Eaddy, but the visitors hurtled back into a lead they maintained until the final quarter Wolverine onslaught. Michigan needed 103 shots from the field to turn in its 85 pomnt total, hitting 33 of the attempts for a 32 per cent completion per- centage. Pitt sank 27 of 79 tries for an average of 35 per cent. The Wolverines were really off at the charity line, connecting on only 19 of 37 free throw attempts for a 53 per cent average. Pitts- burgh made good on 24 of 38 foul shots, a slightly better percentage of 61 per cent. PITTSBURGH Zernich F Deitrick F Ruschel F Virostek C Burch G Boyd G Palesco G Totals MICHIGAN Kauffman F Mead F Codwell F Groffsky C Schlicht C Eaddy G Pavichevich G Lawrence G Totals G 5 4 4 4 8 27 G 2 3 6 6 0 7 8 1 33 F 9 3 0 3 4 5 0 24 F 3 0 4 4 0 5 1 2 19 23 17 PF TP 4 19 4 11 o 0 3 7 4 12 2 13 4 16 21 78 PF TP 4 7 4 6 3 16 4 16 0 0 3 19 3 17 3 4 24 85 16-78 31--85 Pittsburgh MICHIGAN 14 21 25 16 Free throws missed: Pittsburgh- Zernich 3, Deitrick 2, Virostek 2, Burch 4, Boyd 3. MICHIGAN-Kauf- man 3, Mead 2,rCodwen 5, Groffsky 3, Eaddy 3, Lawrence. WILLARD IKOLA, HAWK-EYED WOLVERINE GOALTENDER *STAR CLEANERS'* 1213 S. University DRY CLEANING SPECIALS 3 2FOR THE PRICE OF Save $1.00 on Every $3 of Cleaning 2-HOUR CLEANING AT REGULAR PRICE TRADE INDS BLOWING? Waiver Vote Deadlocked, Frick To Rule ONE STOP at Packard Laundry takes care of all 31 and fast! PHOENIX, Ariz. - (P) - Both major leagues passed the execu-f tive council's new bonus rule and voted to retain the present high school rule yesterday but they tossed the controversial two-league waiver proposal into the lap of commissioner Ford Frick for de-t cision at today's joint meeting. Each league took the action sep- arately. As both agreed on the bo- nus and high school rules, their action at tomorrow's joint ses- sion will become merely a formal- ity. * * * THEY ARE SPLIT on the pro- posal to require waivers in both major leagues after July 15. The American turned thumbs down on the idea today after the nationali passed an amended version, withc a June 15, deadline, at yester- I day's session.2 The waiver rule was resigned to stop big money deals in late season such as the New York Yan- kees have been making with Na- tional league clubs. Johnny Mize, Johnny Sain, Johnny Hopp and Ewell Blackwell, among others, came to the yanks in $50,000 and $100,000 transactions after being waived out of the National al- June 15 trading deadline. With the owners up to their necks in legislation and legal double talk, there was little trade gossip in the hotel lobbies. The foot-sore baseball mob, working up a good set of bunions from a week of lobby standing, was worn out. Fred Haney, veteran Hollywood manager, remained the No. 1 choice for the vacant Pittsburgh managing job with no announce- ment yet. A Brooklyn-Boston deal by which Dodgers would get pitcher Warren Spahn and outfielder Sid Gordon for outfielders Andy Paf- ko, Carl Furillo and first baseman Gil Hodges was on the fire. The clubs were reported near agreement on the key men in the swap but undecided on the sec- ondary and farm players to be included on both sides. Defense Stands Out, as Bowl Bound Gators Down Wildcats. 0 LAUNDRY 1/2uour Service Using Maytag Automatic Washers .. . that wash clothes really clean! Serve yourself, WASH & DRY in less than 1 hour. No risk of damage to your daintiest washables. DRY CLEANING 10% Discount Cash and carry discount for expert, guar- anteed work by Michigan Dry Clean- ers Co. SHIRT SERVICE 48 Hour Service Fast, 48-hour service! Quality workman- ship by Varsity Laundry . . . sparkling clean and carefully finished. AXMAS CARDS SBooks for Adults Books for Children - G4erdot Scrapbooks Photo Albumss Address Books Stationery -IL 6\ ' VERBECK 1216 South University... Phone 3-4436 GAINESVILLE, Fla.-(P)-Rick Casares threw a surprise 29-yard pass to Papa Hall the first time Florida got the ball yesterday and it set the stage for a resounding 27-0 victory for the Gator-Bowl bound Gators over Kentucky. Charlie LaPradd, Florida's first All-American in a quarter century, was the heart of a defensive line that had a large part in the vic- tory, as it has in the other six the Gators won. * * * THE DEFENSE shook Kentucky loose from the ball for five fum- bles and one pass interception. The victory gave Florida sixth place in the Southeastern Con- ference standings and the Ga- tors' best winning record since 1929. They will carry a 7-3 mark into the Gator Bowl against Tul- sa. Principally off a great running crew of Casares, Hall and Buford Long, Florida went into the game a one-touchdown favorite. * * * THE DECISIVE victory over a Kentucky team that tieddTennes- see its last time out and hadn't lost since midseason was the re- sult of an unexpected passing at- tack featuring Casares, Doug Dickey and Fred Robinson in the throwing roles. Casares, Long and Sam Oos- terhoudt each scored a Florida touchdown on short runs and Robinson threw 17 yards to end Curtis King for the other. Ca- sares converted three times. S t e v e Meilinger, Kentucky's great all-around athlete, gave Flo- rida the most trouble as expected. He ran for 110 yards in 17 plays from quarterback and halfback, but the Wildcats missed him at his natural position-end-and com- pleted only one pass in 10 tries. That was a 12-yard toss by Larry Jones after Florida substitutes had taken over. KENTUCKY outdistanced Flor- ida's highly regarded runners, 258 yards to 137, but when the Wild- cats came anywhere near Florida's goal the defense stood like 11 rocks. The closest they got.was the Florida 22 on a fumble by Gator freshman Harry Wing in the first quarter. Four plays later Florida took ov- er on downs at the 26. - - --- Ptackapd SELF SERVICE /faundi4 Open 8 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. daily - Sat. 8 A.M. to 4:30 P.M. 715 Packard (near State St.) Phone 2-4241 PLENTY OF PARKING II Collegiate Cuts to please 8 BARBERS NO WAITING The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theater Deck the Halls with Montezuma GARGOYLE Out December 10 1 ^rr.+pr,."rr"a;s.;a;rrrs>,.a . .r rr{r{.,~,}r%!"'";r:'^Y':i 'S:kvarY. r::".; .: i ?.ve}}; rr. r} }. r. Pen and Pencil Sets Stationery Children's Books Games 111 5:=:y$ f