PAGE SM THE MICHIGAN 4°DAILY TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 38, 1954 PAGE ~!X THE MICHIGAN DAILY NU Gagers DUMTIOWI luichivan, 34-73 Grant Sparks Fired-Up Wildcats with 21 Points 41,, SPIRITS LIFTED: Gymnasts Bounce Back After LosingTwo Meets *r -Daily-Chuck Kelsey MICHIGAN CENTER HARVEY WILLIAMS DUNKS ONE IN A LOSING CAUSE, AS NORTHWESTERN TRIUMPHS, 84-73 Wol veries' Big Ten Swim Hopes Rest on Team Depth By DON LINDMAN Michigan's chances of dethron- ing Ohio State as Big Ten swim- ming champion are a lot brighter, as a result of the showing. of the Wolverine natators against Michi- gan State last Saturday night, Matt Mann's men showed tre- mendous depth in overwhelming a' good Spartan squad, 69-24. Team depth will play a vital part in Michigan's fight against an OSU team boasting several super-stars but having little depth. * * * THE WOLVERINES possess a host of excellent sprint freestylers. Ron Gora, Tom Benner, Jack Wardrop,rand Don Hill combined KEEP A-HEAD OF YOUR HAIR Collegiate Cuts to please. 10 Barbers - No Waiting The Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theatre .. their talents in the freestyle relay to turn in the best time for the event in national college swimming history, 3:21.9. The depth of Mann's Wolver- ine swimming team is centered around Bumpy Jones and the Wardrop twins, Bert and Jack. The Wardrops took first and sec- ond places in the individual medley. in their initial race in college competition. Jones, who ordinarily swims the individual medley for Mann, uses his tal- ents to capture the 220 and 440, middle distance freestyle events. In addition, Bert Wardrop gave national breaststroke champion John Dudeck quite a bit of trouble in the 200-yard breaststroke, fin- ally finishing second to the Spar- tan star by about four feet. Bert also swam breaststroke on the winning medley relay team. . . *. JACK SHOWED his ability as a sprinter by winning the 100-yard freestyle and swimming on the rec- ord-breaking freestyle relay team. -- - - - - - -a1 By WARREN WERTHEIMER 1 Michigan ran into a red-hot Northwestern five last night at Yost Field House and suffered- its fourth straight Big Ten cage loss, 84-73. The .Wildcats, fresh from their sensational 10 point victory over Indiana Saturday night, connect- ed on 30 of their 63 floor shots, a terrific 47.6 percent. * * * DESPITE THIS display of marksmanship, the Wolverines were still in the contest late in the fourth period, trailing by six with possession of the ball. At this' point however Jim Barron, who played one of his poorest games of the season, lost the ball twice in a row and Northwestern turned these breaks into a pair of clinch- ing baskets. Northwestern's two big men (big horizontally and vertically) gave Michigan fits under the basket, especially in the first half. Harold "Bud" Grant, 6-6, and Frank Petrancik, 6-8, neither of whom was the least big shy about throwing his weight around, tal- lied 25 points between them in the initial half to help the Wildcats to a 48-43 edge at the intermission. * * * GRANT eventually finished up as the game's high scorer with 21 markers. When the pair of Northwest- ern centers slackened their scor- ing pace in the second half, Frank Ehmann started connect- ing, dropping 14 of his 20 tal- lies through the twines in the last two periods. Once the .Wildcats took the lead at 11-9 in the first quarter, Michi- Iowa Loses COLUMBUS - (P) - Iowa's Hawkeyes, up to tonight the co-leaders of the Big Ten bas- ketball race with Indiana, were upset here last night by the sur- prising Buckeyes of Ohio State, 79-66. Iowa's title chances are now virtually nill, unless it de- feats Indiana next Monday at Bloomington. gan was never able to catch up. Whenever the Maize and Blue would close the gap, the winners would come up with a key basket or two and pull away. DURING most of the encounter, Northwestern's lead stayed around six points, give or take a 'couple. When Michigan cut the margin to 65-62 early in the final stanza, the Wildcats applied the pressure and the next time the losers con- nected from the floor, they were trailing 72-63. Northwestern then coasted to its final 11-point mar- gin. igan's cause. The failure of Barron to play up to his usual standards plus the continued slump of Paulj Groffsky also hurt the local five. In the final analysis however, Northwestern's ability to score when it had to was the deciding factor. * * * BARRON, while the high point- getter for the Wolverines with' 19, played a sloppy floor game, los- ing possession of the ball and throwing away passes a number of times. Don Eaddy and Milt Mead both came up with one of their better games of the year and it was mainly through the effort of these two that Michigan stay- ed so close throughout the con- test. Eaddy, hitting consistently on his one-handed jump shot, scored 18 points and did a good defensive job on Ehmann when he was guarding the high scoring Wild- cat forward. Mead, while playing less than half of the encounter, dented the twines for 11 points and did a man-size job off the backboards. HARVEY Williams with 14 markers was the other Michigan dribbler in double figures. The 6-8 center displayed improved defen- sive play as he blocked a number of shots and showed to much bet- ter advantage than in recent con- tests. Michigan began last night's game playing a zone defense. However the zone failed to stop the Purple and White and Per- igo's five went into a man-to- man defense after four minutes had gone by. The teams traded 'baskets until Grant and Petrancik scored 11 consecutive Wildcat points for an 18-13 lead. The winners maintained this lead through the next period as Eaddy and Grant had a scoring duel. The 5-11 Michigan guard tallied eight markers while Grant connected for 10 points, eight of them in a row. * * * BOTH TEAMS slowed the pace after the halftime rest. At one time the Ann Arbor five cut the deficit to 55-52, but Ehmann's seven point splurge helped Northwestern pull away once again. * * * By DAVE BAAD Coach Newt Lokeh's spirit took a turn for the better this past Sat- urday, as his Michigan gymnastics team rolled to a smashing 651/- 39%/2 victory over Minnesota. Afterddropping two straight meets during the between semes- Jim Winkler, who has been consistently picking up first place in tramp competition, dropped to second behind Adams against the Gophers. Attempting a new maneuver, he tired him- self with too much preparatory jumping, and consequently was too fatigued to turn in his usual performance in the routines. The most consistent of Michi- gan gymnasts, Captain Mary John- son, copped a pair of firsts in the win over Minnesota, and Lee Krumbholz turned in his best per- formance of the season to win the side horse and give the Wolverines five wins for the evening. KRUMBHOLZ has been some- what of a disappointment all year, but Saturday he garnered 17 points and should be a factor in There will be an important meeting of the "M" Club to- night at 7:30 p.m. in the "M" room in Yost Field House. All members are urged to attend. --Bronse Rumsey Michigan's chances for next mon's Big Ten championships. There are three more Michigan home meets, one on each of the next three Saturdays. Ohio State will be here next Saturday fol- lowed by Northwestern and Mich- igan State. LATE HOCKEY SCORE Detroit 3, Chicago 2 i v~j '-"p F ,,vv nen: you pause ::ems ' C7 , .-' 1 4 ~ ,f r ' " ------ i FRANK ADAMS ... Newt's newest ter's vacation to Illinois and Iowa respectively, Loken had serious doubts about the Wolverine chances against the Gophers and the remainder of the season's op- position. * * * TO MAKE matters worse, Harry Luchs, a consistent point scorer1 in first semester competition was declared ineligible following the 46%-45% loss to Iowa. However, Frank Adams, com- peting for the first time this season, turned in one of the -best performances of his career while picking up two firsts and spark- ed the Wolverines to their first win since beating Wisconsin in mid-January. Adams, displaying tremendous confidence, demonstrated no ill ef- fects from his one semester var- sity layoff as he captured both the. trampoline and tumbling events. He took 252 points in the former and grabbed 262 in the finale. 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Bragiel, gg...........0 Stoeppelwerth, g .... .6 Totals ..........,..30 MICHIGAN G Groffsky, f ...........2 Codwell, f...........0 Jorgenson, f .......3 Williams, c..........6 Mead, ca ....,........3 Barron, g...........7 Eaddy, g............8 Northwestern ......22 F. 4 5 6 1 2 3 24 F 1 0 0 2 5 5 2 26 17 P 1 4 4 0 0 4 4 17 T 20 21 18 6 15 84 I .--S-- -- - - - - - - - --- - ---- - - P," IT.'SALLA many c are s ve tried so Z-et~ p ra n be8 th a' otnothin cke for the Ifsnk ,ATER FTASTE { The Wolverines, while not putting on one of their better performances of the season, still played, according to Coach Bill Perigo, "their best game since the between semester break." The Maize and Blue tallied 34 percent of its field goal attempts and after a poor start in the initial' quarter rebounded even ® with the Wildcat quintet. A couple of questionable calls late in the game did not aid Mich- P T 4 5 3 0 4 6 4 14 3 11 2 19 4 18 19-84 14-73 Michigan...........16 27 16 Free throwsmissed: Northwestern- Kurka 2, Grant 5, Ehmann 2, Bra- giel 2. Michigan-Eaddy 5, Barron 2, Jorgenson 2, Williams, Mead. FRATERNITY HANDBALL Sigma Phi Epsilon 2, Phi Delta Theta 0 When you come right down to it, you smoke for one simple reason ... enjoy- ment. And smoking enjoyment is all a matter of taste. Yes, taste is what counts in a cigarette. And Luckies taste better. Two facts explain why Luckies taste better. First, L.S./M.F.T.-Lucky Strike means fine tobacco ... light, mild, good- tasting tobacco. 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