DAY, JANUARY 11, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE T 1 .,, ~, : , PAG I A.E Votators, Gymnasts Capture Decisive Victories aize and Blue Swimmers lash Northwestern, 62-31. Visiting Canadians Throttle' Michigan Hockey Team, 2-1 Guevremont Turns Tables on Wolverines; Goalie Blocks 38 Shots to Secure Revenge SPORTS SCORES f Special to The Daily ANSTON -The Michigan ming squad opened its 1953 n with an impressive 62-31 lest of Northwestern yester- fternoon in the Patten Gym- im pool. ,tt Mann's twenty - eighth 3 and Blue tank edition cap- nine of the ten events, ng only in the 220-yard free- to Buddy Wallen of the Wild- THOUGH THE Purple ab- d a sound drubbing, several .e races were hotly contested rs. Keith Peterson finished in id heat with Michigan's Don ai the 50-yard free style sprint, Wallen lost by an eyelash to erine captain Wally Jeffries e 440 freestyle. orwell "Bumpy" Jones came te in front in his specialty, 150-yard individual medley Barry Wayburn took third. return of Wayburn to the higan swimming lineup is happy epilogue to near trag- tory which began over a ago when the blond jun- rom Huntington Woods was Bally injured in an auto- lie accident. Y and months of careful con- Ing-have reversed their sol- * * * E ESTABLISHED Wolverine .- mers, Jeffries, Wayne Leen- Hill, John "Sugar" Chase, Benner and Jimmy Walters through in their accustomed ;o bulwark the Michigan suc- stellar performances of sev- As Expected ard Medley Relay: 1-Michigan ase, Jones, Benner); 2-North- Weru. Time: 3:02.3. ird Freestyle: 1-Wallen (N), 2- ries (M), 3-Leengran (M). Time .2. rd Freestyle: 1-Hill (M) and arson (N) tied, 3-Dow (M). .e: 23.1. trd Individual Medley: 1-Jones 2-Burdick (N), 3-Wayburn . Time: 1:34.7. (3 Meter): 1-Walters (M), 2- d (M), 3-Golden (N). Points: S. ard -Freestyle: 1-Hill (M); 2- ner (M), 3--Truett (N). Time: ard Breaststroke: 1-Chase (M), Kivland (N), 3-Burdick (N). e:2:15.9. hard Breastroke: 1-Miller (M), 3. Peterson (N), 3-Marans (M). te: 2:34.5. (ard Freestyle: 1-Jeffries (M), Wallen (N), 3-Leengran (M). ie: 4:56.2. . rard Freestyle Relay: 1-Michi- . (Dow, Jones, Benner, Hill), 2- thwestern. Time: 3:43.p. eral newcomers, however, must have pleased Mann greatly. Soph- omore Glen Miller won the breast- stroke, and while the young De- troiter has still a large pair of shoes to fill coming after the great John Davies, he is progressing ex- tremely well. For Michigan's Jim Walters it was a homecoming. Mann's star diver is an alumnus' of New Trier High School and resides in nearby Kenilworth. He showed the crowd, which had watched him capture state diving championships in years past, that he still has win- ning form by taking the three meter event for Michigan. DOUG PHILPOTT .. averts shutout Eaddy Tallies 17 Points As 'M' Loses to Wildcats. (Continued from Page 1) was well-rested and in excellent physical shape., * * * FROM A TEAM that had plaed dull, sloppy hockey the night be- fore, the Flying Frenchmen over- night changed into a sharp, alert, aggressive combination. Especially noteworthy was the change in goalie Cyrille Guevre- mont who Friday night imitated a sieve by letting eight goals slip by him in the first period. Last night he looked like a completely different person as he played spec- tacular if not remarkable hockey. GUEVREMONT was unbeatable. His reflexes were sharp and his spirit was undaunted as he kicked out 38 shots. Many of his saves verged on the impossible and un- til Philpott hammered in his goal towards the end of the game the Michigan skaters must certainly Big Ten Standings have considered him superhuman. Ikola also defended the Mich- igan nets in his usual sterling manner, although the Eveleth, Minn. lad only had to stop 21 shots. The non-league test was one of the roughest played in the Hill Street arena in several years. Al- together 15 penalties were called, 10 on the visiting Montrealers and five on the locals. * * * JACQUES DAY, Montreal sen- ior who played his last game in Ann Arbor last night, saw quite a bit of it from the sin bin as he drew three penalties, one for cross- checking and two for slashing. j Philpott drew the brunt of the punishment. Early in the first pe- riod he suffered a head injury that sent him reeling to the ice. A few minutes later he collided ac- cidentally with a Montreal puck- ster in mid-ice and once again fell iceward. This time he hurt his shoulder and had to be helped off the ice. BASKETBALL Army 64, Brown 56 Columbia 77, Navy 71 Fordham77. St. Peter's 75 Illinois 71, Wisconsin 61 Indiana 66, Minnesota 63 . Kansas 76, Iowa State 57 Kansas State 88, Marquette 72 Michigan State 68, Iowa 61 Ohio State 67, Purdue 65 Oklahoma 64, Missouri 61 Penn 63, Yale 61 Pitt 57, Penn State 56 St. John's 75, Loyola (Chi.) 56 Toledo 73, Kent State 68 Wayne 94, St. Francis (Pa.) 59 NHL HOCKEY Montreal 5, Chicago 2 Toronto 3, Boston 1 FOOTBALL National All-Stars 27, American All- Stars 7 College All-Stars 40, Hawaii All-Stars 28 SWIMMING Illinois 47, Minnesota 46 Michigan State 75, Bowling Green 18 Wisconsin 53, Iowa 40 WRESTLING Illinois 14, Purdue 12 Iowa 15, Wisconsin 11 Michigan State 19, Indiana 7 I * * * THE REST of the Indiana squadj immediately "caught the bug" and began to follow suit, with Frank Feigl and Herb Vogel slipping off the high bar, and Vogel getting his straps crossed on the flying rings. Feigl's fall off of the parallel bars resulted in an ankle injury which was enough to prevent him from competing in tumbl- ing. Taking the lead from the start of the meet, the Wolverines dom- inated all of the six events. The contest was even more one-sided Wolverines Topple Hoosiers In Gymnastics Meet, 68-25 By DICK BUCK than last year's 661/2-29%,2 victory The Michigan gymnasts pow- over the Hoosiers. ered to their first triumph of * the season yesterday afternoon, WOLVERINES Lee Krumbholz trouncing Indiana, 68-25. end Mary Johnson led all scorers Troubles developed for the Hoos-, with 13 point§ and right behind iers in the first event when Ron them were Harry Luchs, garner- Johnson bounced off the tram- ing 12 points. poline. Captain Don Hurst started the Wolverines on the victory trail with a win on the trampo- line, Frank Adams and new- comer Jack Eckle finishing right behind him. The only double winner of the day, Johnson, took both the high bar and parallel bars. Other first places went to Loichs in the flying rings and Adams in tumbling. Competing in his first Big Ten duel, Jim Barbero gave an im- pressive performance on the side horse to finish second behind Krumbholz. (Continued from Page 1) Ray Pavichevich also contributed nine points in this brief Wolverine rally. Sophomore Leo (Tiny) Schlicht made a third quarter appearance at center in the late minutes but could do little more than other Michigan scorers. He managed a point on one of two foul shots, however. * * * THE SHOOTING statistics tell the story. Making good on 20 of 83 shots from the field, the Wol- verines had a lowly 24 per cent average while NU sand 32 of 86 shots for 34 per cent. At the free throw line the Maize and Blue faired little bet- ter. They put through 17 points in 31 tries, a 48 per cent average, and again Northwestern topped them by a sizable amount, get- ting 59 per cent on 20 of 34 foul throws. Ralph Kaufmann was the only player to foul out in the game, Eaddy and Codwell and Paul Groffsky played the last minutes with four personals on them. The Wolverines fouled a total of 22 times compared to 19 times the Wildcats erred. Tomorrow night Michigan has a return bout with an Iowa quin- tet which put the Wolverines down to defeat, 85-77, earlier this sea- son. The Maize and Blue will have the advantage of home court play to cope with fast-breaking Hawk- eyes Herb Thompson, Deacon Da- vis, and Ken Buckles. The box score: MICHIGAN Mead I Kauffman f Codwell f Allen f Topp f Groffsky c Schlicht c Eaddy g Pavichevich g Lawrence g Totals NORTHWESTERN Dellefield f Blaha f Emann f Collier f Petrancek c Grant c Kurka g Biever g Bragiel g Totals G 1 0 4 0 0 3 0 8 4 0 20 F 4 1 5 0 1 2 1 1 2 0 17 G F' 7 7 3 1 5 1 0 1 0 0 9 1 7 4 1 4 0 1 32 20 12 24 18 22 PF TP 2 6 5 1 4 13 .1 0 1 1 4 8 0 1 4 17 2 10 0 0 23 57 PF TP 2 21 0 7 3 11 0 1 2 0 3 19 3 18 1 6 1 1 15 84 7-57 24-84 2 W L Indiana...........5 0 Illinois...........4 1 Minnesota ........3 2 Michigan State ....3 2 Ohio State ........3 2 Northwestern ......2 2 Iowa ..............2 3 Wisconsin .........2 4 MICHIGAN ........1 6 Pct. 1.000 .800 .600 .600 .600 .500 .400 .333 .143 MICHIGAN Northwestern 14 20 Relay Team, Lynch Cop Firsts At WashingtonTrack Festival Special to The Daily WASHINGTON - The Wolver- ines indoor track season got an excellent start last night as the two-mile relay team and George Lynch, entered in the 1000 yard run, scored decisive triumphs in the Washington Evening Star Games. The Maize and Blue relay team of John Moule, Geoffrey Dooley, Bill Hickman, and John Ross, pitted against top-notch competi- tion, was in front from the begin- ning. * * * MOULE, running the first leg 1:58, took the lead at the 220 mark and built up an advantage of 15 yards. This lead was first threat- ened on the final leg when John Curatta, Seton Hall's anchor man, began to close the gap on Ross. The Wolverine increased his pace and won going away. The time was a slow 7:53. This was due to the poor condition of the flat 220 board track. Finishing second, to the sur- prise of all spectators, was Seton Hall. George Lynch, the other Michigan representative, won the 1000-yard race by fifteen yards. He was clocked at 2:18. Lynch astayed right on the heelsI of the pace-setter, Bob Wayler of Villanova, for the first 660 yards. At this point, the talented sopho- more distance runner took the lead and was never caught. I ETCHER TOPS VAN TYNE: Chicago Downs Allen-Rumsey,34-25 U OR n-Rumsey's hope of repeat- s Residence Hall intramural basketball champion received e Jolt in the first round play ,day when Chicago defeated West Quadders in decisive n, 34-25. Chicagoans jumped into an lead and with Jules Hans- r's 12 points leading the way, omped to an easy victory. * * "B" ACTION, defending pion Fletcher successfully d its campaign with a 25-14 on over Van Tyne. Playing )nly four men, Fletcher over- an early deficit midway in irst half and coasted in to tn Kuchha paced the Flet- offensive efforts with 14 is equalling Van Tyne's lete team total. Kazawski dropped in 17 to pace Reeves to a 21-20 ph over Kelsey in the after- 5 most exciting Class B con- Celsey was in front most of ay, but in the final seconds vski dropped in his final two- r to give the verdict to the s men. KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR" The best in tonsorial artistry will be for you in 1953. e Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theater LLOYD WITH a special assist from the opposition, won its open- ing game over Adams, 47-45. The winning points came as a result of an Adams player shooting the ball into the wrong basket early in the second half. Eldon Martin netted 15 points to spark Lloyd to the "A" vic- tory. Don Peterson, ex-Michigan foot- ball star, scored 15 points to lead Gomberg's. "A" entry to a one- sided 56-23 triumph over Van Tyne. Scoring honors for the game, however, went to Jay Case- mier who racked up 19 in a los- ing cause. Casemier's 19 points-tied him with Ron Iingman of Huber for the afternoon's outstanding scor- ing effort. Dingman's total was primarily responsible for a hard fought 37-29 victory over Reeves. Other scores: A-LEAGUE Michigan 56, Scott 37 Williams 30, Strauss 22 Huber 37, Reeves 29 Taylor 45, Kelsey 29 Winchell 39, Fletcher 33 Wenley defeated Greene (forfeit) B-LEAGUE Wenley 21, Huber 14 Taylor 17, Adamst16 Anderson 58, Scott 29 Cooley 51, Hayden 19 Hinsdale 33, Strauss 24 Winchell 26, Michigan 19 Gomberg 38, Williams 8 Chicago defeated Greene (forfeit) SELL ALL YOUR TEXT BOOKS FOR CASH OR EXCHANGE AT - "GRAI BAR( { r E $ :i I. ODE )QUE" EUROPE This Summer? FOR INFORMATION ON Best of All Possible Tours Call STUDENT AGENT - Byron Lasky, 2-3016 ONE STOP at Packard Laundry takes care of all 3! and fast. $7 LAUNDRY I I 11/2-Hour Servie 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 MR Yd 1 l j l_ Ua I k STAR CLEANERS * 1213 S. 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