WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Cagers Set Markers New FROM GRIDIRON TO CINDERS: RecordHendricks To Fill Gap I left Vacant by Loss of Bruner . L Barron Nets 22 To Pace 100-62 Massacre (Continued from Page 1) Eckart but two straight three on two breaks netted the Wol- verines four more markers. Jor- genson was fouled on a shot and he made both and Barron con- nected with a short jump. John Rump cut Michigan's lead by two before Williams showed he can make all kinds of shots as he hooked in a basket from the pivot. Williams racked up 13 points in the initial period and was mainly responsible for the Wolverines' 33-19 margin at the quarter. THE LOSERS spurted briefly at the start of the next period as Don Wilbrandt scored from the foul line and Don Bielke tossed in two from the bucket. Bielke eventually tallied 13 and was the Crusaders' top point getter. Perigo's five came right back as Williams hit a dog shot af- ter taking a beautiful back- hand pass from Groffsky, and Don Eaddy finished off a quick break with a jumper. Eckart netted two as he dupli- cated Eaddy, but another spark- the Michigan dribblers would win by and whether or not they'd hit 100. 'With Barron and Eaddy hit- ting on jump shots and Williams and Groffsky scoring from in close, the local cagers ran away with the game. When Michigan had 90 points, Perigo threw in his reserves and with the noisy, enthusiastic crowd screaming at every basket, the victors made the double 00 light up on the scoreboard at the 9:40 mark in the last quarter. The Wolverines were successful with 39 percent of their field goal attempts while Valparaiso con- nected with 29 percent. JIM BARRON . .. leads 'M' quintet Walters, Star Michigan Diver, Out To End OS U's Domination W ol! MICHIGAN G F PF TP Pavichevicb-G ........1 0 1 2 Stern-G ...........0 0 1 0 Barrn-G...........7 S 2 22 Singer-G .............1 0 1 2 Williams-C ...........9 2 1 20 Vawter-C .............1 0 2 2 Groffsky-F ..........5 2 2 12 Alien-F ..........2 0 0 4 Jorgenson-F........4 9 4 16 Eaddy-G ..........1 1 3 15 Co4well-F ............1 0 2 2 Mead-F ...............0 3 2 3 TOTALS ..........38 24 21 100 VALPARAISO G F PF TP * Rump-F:...........5 0 4 10 Schmidt-F ...........1 1 2 3 Bielke--C. ..........5 3 1 13 CiCloda-C...........2 1 0 5 Sittrer-F..........0 3 0 3 Eckart-F ....... 0 56 Gesler-F..........1 1 0 3 Wilbrandt-G........0 '3 3 3 Meisberger-G ........3 6 2 12 Noak-G ..........0 1 3 1 Maack-G .. .......0 1 1 1 Howard-G ............0 2 2 2 TOTALS .........20 22 23 62 Michigan ........33 20 21 26-100 Valparaiso .......19 16 12 15- 62 ling pass by .Groffsky set up a Jorgenson hook shot and Michigan led 41-26. s . CHET Meisberger connected on a . three-point play before Barron and Jorgenson collaborated on a give and go play, the former get- ting the two points. ' From here to the end of the half, the teams traded points, Meisberger hitting a foul and Rump tallying three times from the floor for Valparaiso. A pair of fielders by Eaddy, John Cod- well's one-hander, and two fouls apiece by Barron and Milt Mead accounted for the Wolverines 53-35 lead at the intermission. In the second half it simply be- came a matter of how many points o C° o (. II t .. T IJrmported Velvet Evening Bags Q from India 0Q d At 'h Ij 9 t hz,1t f/'p 330 Maynard S tOG" CGf)G C)m rC)'Omo By DON LINDMAN Diver Jim Walters is due to play a big part in Wolverine swim- ming plans for the coming sea- son. Coach Matt Mann is hoping that Walters will be able to break the Western Conference diving mo- nopoly held for nearly twenty years by Ohio State. A victory for Walter would deal a serious blow to the Buckeye hopes for successfully defending the con- ference crown won by OSU .at Iowa City, Iowa, last March. * * * CHAMPIONSHIPS are nothing new for the Wolverine diving star. Senators Get Umphlett; A's Sell Michaels NEW YORK ()-The Washing- ton Senators yesterday traded out- fielder Jackie Jenson to Boston for lefthanded pitcher Maurie Mc- Derrmot and outfielder Tom1 Umphlett. In another deal yesterday the White Sox purchased Cass Mi- chaels from the Philadelphia Athletics. For the much traveled Michaels it will be homecoming. As the second baseman for the Chi- sox, the blond veteran was named to the American League All Star team in 1949. WITH THE acquisition of the long ball hitting Jenson the Red Sox will gain another right hand- ed marksman to shoot at the short Fenway park left field wall. Mc- Derrmott should provide manager Buckey Harris with a long sought after lefthander of major leage caliber. As a Rookie Umphlett estab- lished himself as one of the smoothest performing outfield- ers to appear on the Boston scene in many years. Umphlett, fleet Jim Busby and Gil Coan should combine their efforts to give the Senators one of the best defensive trios in any junior cir- cuit outfield. A handy man with the bat Umphlett flirted with the .300 mark all last season. By grabbing the capable Michaels off the mark- et Frank Lane has given new life to a rumor that second sacker Nel- lie Fox may be on the trading block. SPORTS HANLEY GURWIN Night Editor Walters has held at least one state title each year since he first cap- tured the Illinois prep diving championship as a junior at New Trier High School. The following year he successfully defended his prep crown and added the state AAU title to his list of laurels. As a Wolverine freshman, Walters annexed the Michigan AAU crown in 1951. He returned last year to successfully defend his title, and succeeded in de- feating all challengers last Sat- urday to win the crown for the third successive year. As a varsity diver Walters posted a fine record of six firsts and two seconds in eight dual meets last year. In the conference meet last spring, however, he proved to be' no match for Ohio State stars Bob Clotworthy and Gerald Harrison. Walters trailed the Buckeye aces in both the three-meter and one- meter events. MANN BELIEVES that Walters may be able to defeat the Ohio State diving crew this year. He claims that the engineering junior is "a different diver this year. Wal- ters has improved greatly over his performances of last season." The 20-year old Wolverine nata- tor is looking forward with quite a bit of enthusiasm to the dual meet with OSU late in February. While admitting that the Buckeye divers are "very good," Walters still rates the Ohio State swimming meet as one of his favorites. North- South Contest Gets Kress, Balog Wolverine Pair In Charity Clash Tackle Jim Balog and halfback Ted Kress have accepted bids to play on Purdue pilot Stu Hol- comb's North eleven in the annual Shriner's North-South football game at Miami, Christmas night, December 25. The contest marks the last ap- pearance of Seniors Balog and Kress in collegiate ranks. The rug- ged lineman and the triple-threat back both wound up noteworthy gridiron careers at Michigan this season. * *-* THE SELECTION of Balog makes it two accolades within a week for him. Last Friday the 6-3, 210 pounder was named on Michi- gan State's all-opponent team. During the State-Michigan tussle Balog was the fifth man in the Spartan backfield all afternoon and was instrumental in the fine showing of the Wolverines. Kress, a fl1 ashy, reliable ground gainer for three cam- paigns blossomed into a deadly safety for the Maize and Blue this past season. Probably Kress' finest showing occured in the 1952 season when he led the Wolverines in rushing, passing, scoring and total offense and finished among the Big Ten's in- dividual leaders in those cata- gories. Earlier' the Shriner's chose head coach Bennie Oosterbaan and guard Don Dugger as Michigan representatives to their East-West clash to be played January 2 at San Francisco's mammoth Kezar Stadium. Oosterbaan will act as assistant coach for the East be- hind Ray Eliot of Illinois. CAGE RESULTS Calvin 67, Adrian 61 Flint J.C. 58, Highland Park J.C. 50 Lawrence Tech 80, Ashland 47 Michigan Tech 57, Superior Wis- consin State 56 Ohio State 84, St. Louis U. 83 Purdue 77, Bradley 73 (overtime) Temple 73, Seton Hall 59 By AL EISENBERG The fortunes of this years track team will depend, to a large de- gree, on how well Thomas Hen- dricks Jr. performs on the cin- der path. Hendricks, though never having run the hurdles before last year, is being groomed by track coach Don Canham to replace star hurdler Van Bruner. This is a difficult and arduous task, for Bruner has fin- ished second three times and third once in Big Ten championship meets. LAST JUNE, Bruner finished third behind Joel McNulty and Billy Thompson, both of Illinois, In comparing Bruner to Hen- dricks Canham said, "Hendricks has performed in better times than Bruner did when Van was a sophomore. Hendricks is han- dicapped by not being as tall as Bruner, but he makes up for it by being much faster." He also pointed out that in this year's Michigan A.A.U. meet Hen- dricks came in second to Bruner in the lows but defeated John Cor-- belli and Han Gillis of Michigan State-men who were both good enough to garner points in the Big Ten meet at Champaign last June. * * * CANHAM concluded by saying that he considers Hendricks to be one of the top five sophomores on INTRAMURAL SCORES VOLLEYBALL Alpha Sigma Phi 4, Acacia 0 Chi Psi 4, Tau Delta Phi 2 Delta Sigma Phi 4, Tau Kappa Epsilon 1 Phi Kappa Psi 4, Kappa Sigma 1 Sigma Nu 4, Sigma Chi 3 Sigma Phi Epsilon 4, Phi Kappa Sigma 2 Sigma Phi 4, Theta Delta Chi 1 Sigma Phi 4, Phi Kappa Sigma 2 MCF 5, Standish-Evans 1 TELEVISION NIGHTLY j Stop Here for 1LUNCH Genuine Italian SPAGHETTI with f Salad, Rolls, and Coffee 75c 'Give your taste a treat' at LA CASAj Phone NO'8-8916 122 W. Washington ii ASuperb the squad. The others, he added. are high jumper Mark Booth. quarter-miler Pete Sutton, half- miler Pete Gray, and two-miler Ron Wallingford. Hendricks is a product of Northwestern High School in Detroit where he lettered in two sports-track and football. He was outstanding in track and made the Detroit Free Press' All-City tracks team in 1952. Hendricks competed in four events---the 100-yard dash, pole 11 vault, high jump, and broad jump. It is interesting to note that of all the events in which he par- ticipated he is only running in one, the broad jump, at Michigan. THE Detroit speedster's greatest weakness is inexperience. This is due to the fact that he has com- peted in only one meet-the 1953 Michigan A.A.U. Hendricks' great- est assets are his speed, the fact that he loves to run, is a terrific " FiFfH p.,5NUr // ,Of Original Designs In Colorful Genuine Vitreous Enamel! competitor and performs best un- der pressure. Bruner's replacement seems to have taken to the hurdles for it is now his favorite and best event. He holds the, freshman record in the 65-yard low hur- dles at 0:7.5. 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