TUESDAY. DECEMBER 16, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Mm Illinois owerhouse Swamps Michigan, 96 -66 4,' Kerr, Bemoras, Peterson, Follmer Pace Illini to Win (Continued from Page 1) the Wolverines held the fast- breaking Illini attack at a 24-24 stalemate. Combes threw his anxious re- serves into action in the final quarter, and the second string- ers responded with a point-hap- py attack that at one-time promised to hit the century rark. Alate Wolverine freeze prevent- I-lW BRIEFS ed this however, and Illinois had to be content with the third high- est tally ever racked up in Con- ference history. Its 96-point out- put just missed the Huff Gymnas- ium standard by two points and was seven counters off the Big Ten mark held by Iowa with 103. - * THE ILLINOIS victory meant first place in the league standings which the Illini now hold jointly with a 1-0 slate. Michigan is 'once again in its familiar basement position with two losses in as many starts. Perigo threw nine of his 11- man travelling squad into the contest in an attempt to stein the powerful Orange and Blue tide. Mead, the 6-7 forward from Bay City, registered 16 tallies to pace the losers' in the scoring column. GROFFSKY followed with 14, while Codwell chipped in with an even dozen. So frustrated was the Wolverine shooting, that Perigo's five could take only 60 shots from the floor. The Maize and Blue made 21 of the field goal attempts, but these were not nearly enough to outdo the 38 of 102 shots put in by the fighting Illini. * * * THE BOX SCORE MICHIGAN G F PF TP Codwell F 2 8 3 12 ::__- -x "4 w Ii Lions, Rams Tie for Top; Browns Win The Detroit Lions and the Los Angeles Rams fought to a final deadlock in the National Football Conference with weekend victor- ies, necessitating a "sudden death" playoff game. A 28-14 win over the Pittsburgh Steelers Sunday threw the Rams into a tie with the Lions, who trounced the Dallas Texans the day before by a 41-6 margin. Both teams have a 9-3 record. THE sudden death playoff slat- ed for Dec. 21 in Briggs Stadium had been agreed upon several weeks ago in case the stalemate materialized. Reliable Bobby Layne showed his usual brilliance as he spark- ed the Lions to a 14-0 lead and then retired from the game in favor of quarterback Jim Hardy. SNARING TD aerials of 77, 41, and 40 yards, Box set a new Lions' record for touchdown re- ceptions in one season with 15. Leading the National Football League in scoring at the end of Saturday's game, Box was edged out of the championship by Gordon Soltau of the 49ers, who kicked a field goal and three ex- tra points Sunday for a season total of 94 points, four more than Box. Los Angeles had trouble in downing the Steelers but Bob Waterfield, rounding out his pro The Wolverine hockey squad was both brilliant and sloppy in its'6-3 win over Toronto Saturday night. Alex Mc Clellan and Jim Haas, Michigan defensemen looked great both on offense and defense against the Blues, and goalies Willard Ikola and Bill Lucier did a fine job in the nets, stopping 26 shots. The third line, which had been an enigma from the start of the season when Ron Martinson was * * * Michigan Defense Draws Praise in Toronto Game Wolverine Sextet Displays Both Good, Bad Hockey; As First, Third Lines Carry Offense Michigan House, West Quad- rangle, slammed Hinsdale, East Quad, to a 4-3 defeat last night at the I.M. Building to take the I.M. residence hall volleyball . championship. After Hinsdale had tied up the games at 3-3, Michigan easily captured the final and winning game, 15-9. q HINSDALE won the first game 15-12, and Michigan came back' with a 15-8 game. The third game was an overtime, going to hins- dale 18-16. The Michigan team went ahead in the fourth and fifth games, winning 16-14 and 15-11. One more game went to the Hinsdale 15-11, then Michigan coasted through the final game. Adams defeated Wenley 4-3, to cop' the second place volleyball championship, while Cooley of East Quad beat out Williams 4-2 in the third place finals. Strauss House won over Huber of South Quad in the fourth place finals 4-1. * * * IN THE all-campus handball doubles Nonny Weinstock and Bill Riekels defeated last year's cham- pions, Frank Wolowitz and Dave Spaatz, in two straight games 21-16 and 21-7, to take this year's ,crown. Sigma Chi splashed its way to the fraternity dual swimming finals by defeating Phi Kappa Tau 37%-19:. Sigma Chi will meet .Sigma Nu, who won over Sigma Phi Epsilon tonight 29-28, tomorrow night at 7:30 in the I.M. pool. JOHNNY McKennell, left wing on the Matchefts-Earl Keyes- McKennell combo kept up his first game performance by tallying two goals and an assist against his home-town school. McKennel leads the team in goals scored, having caged the rubber four times, Keyes, whose mid-year grad- ation will be sorely felt, scored the first goakof the evening with scarcely three minutes gone and picked up an assist later to put his seasons total at four. Defenseman Haas and third-lin- er Mullen are the other skaters who have tallied four points ON THE SOUR side, the highly- touted second line with Doug Philpott at center and Pat Cooney and George Chin on the wings didn't look at all good. Their passing was off and their general play was lacklustre. The junior trio had better start to click before the Wol- verines pay their vacation vis- it to Colorado and Denver or Michigan won't have a chance to go anywhere in the Mid- west Hockey League. The second line isn't the only one that could use work on pass- ing, several scoring opportunities were wasted against Toronto be- cause one or another of the Wol- verines decided to try a solo dash instead of passing off. DON CANHAM « .. coach turned author Hill Readies. Trojans for Rose 13owl LOS ANGELES-A'P-Southern California's football team will pre- sent a few "innovations" in its attack against Wisconsin in the Rose Bowl, Coach Jess Hill prom- ised Monday. * * * "WE ARE going to work on a few innovations ourselves which I hope will improve our game," Hill declared. Hill scored pre-game odds which favor the Trojans by a touchdown. He said he believes Wisconsin probably is the best ground gain- By DIANE MOWREY Don CanhamE Michigan's track coach, became an author this fall with the publishing of two books, one on track, and the other on field techniques., Track Techniques Illustrated and Field Techniques Illustrated are two of a new series published byQ the Barnes Sports Library espe- cially for the beginner and inex- perienced coach. The books tell! "how" with the illustrations and coaching advice going% hand in hand. ** * CANHAM was asked by A. S. Barnes & Co. to write the freely illustrated books and will have a third one out on cross-country next spring. Going into his fifth season as Michigan's head track coach, Canham is well qualified to write books on the sport. A cham- pionship high jumper as an un- dergrad, he later- became assist- ant coach and received a thor- ough schooling in the develop- ment of track material before his appointment as the Wol- verines' head man. One of Michigan's greatest track athletes, Canham captained the 1941 team. He was four times Big Ten champion and also won the NCAA crown in the high jump in 1940. He still holds both Wolver- ine indoor and outdoor records. h __-__________________ Canham,'M' Track Mentor, Writes Two Coaching Books CANIAM became coach at.Kan kakee, Illinois, following his grad'- uation from Michigan. In 1942 he entered the Army Air Force as a privatenand was discharged with the rank of captain 42 months later. He- became assistant track .coach at Michigan almost immed- iately. Canham became a keen stu- dent of the coaching methods of the late E. C. (Billy) Hayes of Indiana, whom he believes was the finest coach of middle and long distance runners who ever lived. How well he fitted his study into his own plans is evidenced by the fact that his athletes have established Michigan, Big Ten, NCAA, Drake, Kansas and South- ern relay records. The 1952 and 1953 teams are the strongest to come out of Ann Arbor in many years. Canham was raised in the Mich- igah track tradition of balanced 'squads and he has the insight and the patience to develop strong re- serves, that seem to come from nowhere to pick up valuable points. COLLEGE BASKETBALL Wisconsin 75 Iowa 70 Loyola New. Orleans 52 Valparaiso 41 Sexton Hall 77 Louisville 66 Kansas State 81 San Francisco Uni- versity 60 I Mead F Kauffman F Groff sky C Schlict C Eaddy G Lawrence G Pavichevich G Topp G. Totals ILLINOIS Dutcher F Follmer F Hooper F Makovsky F Kerr C Peterson C-F Baumgardner C Bredar G Bemoras G Schuldt G Plew G Wright G Sterneck G Totals ILLINOIS MICHIGAN 4 8 1 2 5 4 1 0 '1 1 3 1 3 0 1 0 21' 14 G F 1 0 6 5 0 2 2 1 7 2 5 3 2 0 6 2 6 3 0 2 2 0 1 0 o00 38 20 24 25 24 18 10 24 4 16 4 14 1 2 3 3 1 7 1 6 0 2 21 66 PF TP 0 2 4 17 4 2 0 5 4 16 3 13 3 4 2 14 2 15 1 2 0 4 1 2 0 0 24 96 23-96 14-66 Freshman football numeral winners may call for their sweaters this morning at Yost Field House. --Henry Hatch career this season, retired in fa- vor of Norm Van Brocklin after one of his aerials was intercepted and run back for a Pitt tally. * * * VAN BROCKLIN tossed three scoring passes in leading the Rams to the win, filling the quarterback slot ably. With the yardage picked up against the Steelers Dan Towler succeeded the Giants' Eddie Price as the circuit's top ground gainer with 894 yards in 156 carries. In the American Conference the Cleveland Browns backed into the title as they were edged, 37-34, by the New York Giants. * * * Fre throws missed: Michigan-Cod- well 5, Mead, Kauffman, Groff sky 5, Schlict 4.' Illinois-Dutcher 3, Bemoras 2, Bredar, Peterson, Follmer. ALEX MC CLELLAN ... makes Blues blue * * * lost through injury looked strong -as did the first-string trio, but the flashy second line was medi- ocre. COACH Vic Heyliger had the third line combination of Doug Mullen, Telly Mascarin and Bert Dunn on the ice throughouta good part of the contest and they played fine hockey. Mullen, the fiery red-head junior center and Mascarin, sophomore wing-man each scored a goal and Dunn got an assist. Dunma and Mullen teamed for one of the evenings neatest neatest scores when the rangy transfer frdm the University of Montreal scintillated standing room only crowd on a spinning pass to Mullen who scored from close in. The potent and fancy skating first line again proved its class by tallying nine points against To- ronto. In the two games played so far this season, Captain Johnny Matchefts leads the team in scor- ing with six points on one goal and five assists. ri IM TORONTO, in the past the ing team the Trojans will have number one ice power in Canada played. He ridiculed the point that never seriously threatened to take UCLA defeated the Big Ten co- the James Thompson cup back champions, 20-7, pointing otit that across the border with them. one of their stars, Harland Carl, The impotent Blues will have was unable to appear in that to take a back seat this year to game, and that ,UCLA benefited the Montreal and McGill sextets- from a couple of game breaks. 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