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January 13, 1955 - Image 7

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1955-01-13

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13, 1955

AIMME MICIUGA N DAILY

PAGE SEVEN

13. 1955fIfE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN

Sophomore Dunnigan Bolsters Line;
Ds High in Future Hockey Plans

By DAVE RORABACI'ER
"The most improved player on
the squad."
Such is the label that Coach Vic
Heyliger has placed on Dick Dun-
nigan, one of the new sophomore
sensations on the Michigan hockey
scene. A fast, shifty player and
good competitor, according to
Heyliger, Dunnigan has yet to de-
velop a consistently effective
shot.
Consistent Scorer
As undeveloped as his shot may
be, he has nevertheless been a
fairly consistent- scorer with four
goals and ten assists for a total of
14 points to his credit during the
still young season. His biggest
scoring spree occurred last Fri-
day in the 7-0 rout of Michigan
State when he garnered a goal and
three assists to tie Captain Bill
MacFarland for scoring honors for
the evening.
Barely 5' 6" tall and weighing
only 130 pounds, Dunnigan rates
as the smallest player on the Wol-
verine squad and is quite likely
also the smallest in the Western
Intercollegiate Hockey League.
What he lacks in size, however, he
makes up for'in speed and scrap-
piness.
A fast, driving skater, he man-
ages to gt in on nearly every
play, skating around his less agile
counterparts on offense and plow-
ing into larger-statured opponents
on defensive plays.
Dunnigan hails from Edmonton,
Alberta where he played both high
school and juvenile league hockey.
During his senior year the Maple
Leaf Athletics, on1 which he play-
ed, won the Juvenile Hockey
League provincial championship.
Switched From Wing
Since coming to Michigan he
has been switched from his usual
position as a wing to a center in
an attempt to produce a stronger
line for the depleted Wolverine
team. At present Heyliger has him
playing between Jay Goold and
Jerry 'Karpinka.
Although Dunnigan has no
plans for hockey after graduation,
Heyliger has predicted a fine fu-
ture for him in his stay on the
Maize and Blue squad. In the next
two seasons the number '6' of "the
Tiger" may become a favorite of
Michigan fans.

Freeman and
Schlundt Lead
Scoring Race
CHICAGO (RP) -The long and
short of the Big Ten basketball
scoring race is that 6' - 10" Don
Schlundt of Indiana is breaking
records, but 5' - 9" Robin Free-
man of Ohio State is leading the
pack.
Conference statistics released
yesterday credit Freeman, also the
nation's top scorer, with a paceset-
ting league average of 37 points
in two games.
That's almost six points per
game better than Schlundt's 31.3
mark for three games, but the
towering Hoosier now in his fourth
season continues to swell his ca-
reer record.
Sets Record
For the past three conference
seasons, Schlundt had a 1,082-
point total. Now, it's expanded to
1,176, far ahead of the old record
of 1,027, set by Ohio State's Paul
Ebert in three seasons.
Despite Freeman's terrific pace,
his shooting accuracy is only 41.9
per cent on field goals, compared
with 56 per cent for Schlundt.

Cagers' Depth Hurt
By Loss of Barron

It's Bigger!

It's Better!

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By JOHN HILLYER
The recent injury sustained by
cage star Jim Barron is painful
not only to him but to Coach Bill
Perigo and the Michigan basket-
ball squad as well.
"Jim has been pretty much the
key to our attack," asserts Peri-
go. "There's no doubt that he's
hard to replace."
Averaged 17.1
It is logical that a coach is fac-
ed with a problem when he is
forced to replace a man who av-
eraged 17.1 points in Big Ten com-
petition during a-full season. The
six-foot Chicagoan, who last year
was named as guard on the sec-
ond-string All-Big Ten cage team
as a sophomore, is in for an even
greater season in his junior year,
if Coach Perigo's predictions hold
true.
"Jim had been "off" for quite a
while at the beginning of this
season, and had just hit his stride
in the Valparaiso game," explains
Perigo. "He would have had a
great night at Indiana. He's a
much stronger ball player than
in his sophomore year because of
his new ability to relax."
Barron, who was injured in the
early moments of the Indiana con-
test, received torn knee ligaments
and possibily some torn cartilage,
according to the University Hos-
pital, and will probably miss the
Michigan State battle. He has al-
ready sat out the Ohio State and
Wisconsin games.
Played at Fenwick High
Barron is a native Chicagoan,
having playea his high school ball
in Chicago's Catholic League at
Fenwick High, which has pro-
duced other outstanding athletes
for Michigan such as Jim Mad-
dock, Ed Shannon, and Fred Baer.

Among the honors received by
Barron while prepping at Fen-
wick were selections to the All-
Catholic and All-Chicago Area
quintets. Operating as a forward,
he averaged about 18 points a
game during his senior year.
He was sparkplug of the Fen-
wick five which finished second
in the Catholic League in '52, tak-
ing 16 straight for the longest
winning streak in the state that
year. The mark fell when Barron
was injured, although he will nev-
er admit to any relationship be-
tween these two facts.
Switched to Guard ,
Having played forward in high
school, Barron found the switch'
to guard in a fast-breaking of-
fense a bit trying. Although he
operated most effectively from the
corner position as a prep, he is
considered too short for a college
forward.
Barron's slow start can be atrib-
uted to the new Big Ten rule, put
into effect for the first time this
season, which states that no team
can hold an organized practice be-
fore December 1. Thus Barron's
specialty, the one-hand jump shot
from the outside, was somewhat
rusty.
Barron, a junior in Business Ad-
ministration School, intends to en-
ter the Air Force on graduation.
His plans for the distant future
are indefinite.
In addition to being named to
the All-Big Ten squad, Barron re-
ceived another honor last year
when his teammates selected him
as the Wolverines' most valuable
player, an unusual honor for a
sophomore. His 374 points ranked
him among the top ten scorers in
the Big Ten.

IF

NEW FACE on the Wolverine, hockey squad is soph center Dick
Dunnigan, whose improved play has aided strongly on offense,
netting four goals and gaining ten assists so far this season.

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1954 Football Regulations Changed;
Substitution Rule Made More Lenient

.4

NEW YORK (R) - The NCAA
Football Rules Committee yester-
day eased up a .trifie on the "anti-
platoon" substitution rule and
made some other changes in the
trules for 1955.
In addition it strongly urged
coaches and officials to observe
and enforce two rules now in the
bbok with an implied threat of
drastic action if "false start" vio-
lations aren't eliminated.
Accepting the recommendation
of the Football Coaches Assn., the
committee eliminated the contro-
versial four-minute segment at the
end of each half and ruled that
the players who start each quarter
of a game will be eligible to leave
and re-enter once during that
quarter. Those who don't partici-
pate in the opening down of a pe-
riod can't re-enter in the same pe-
riod.
The change also makes possible
limited use of some specialists.

For instance a player can come in
once to kick a conversion and the
player for whom he substituted
can return, but ithcan't happen
twice in one quarter.
The other changes passed in-
clude: '
1. A player who kneels to hold
the ball for a place kick now can
rise and run, pass or kick. This is
an exception to the rule which
makes the ball dead once the car-
rier touches the ground with any
part of his body but the hands or
feet.
2. The "tackle eligible" forward
pass play is legal only if no other
offensive player is stationed out-
side the end man when the ball
is snapped. A tackle, guard or cen-
ter becomes an eligible pass re-
ceiver if he is the end man on the

scrimmage line. The additional
provision eliminated borderline de-
ception when an end, stationed far
out, would drop: back a yard to
make the next man eligible.
3. The "hideout" play was out-
lawed by a provision that when
the ball is spotted and declared
ready for play, all offensive play-
ers must be within 15 yards of the
ball. Afterward they can go where
they please. The previous "no
hideout" rule applied only when
substitutes were coming in or out
Fair Catch Change
4. The fair catch signal was
changed to eliminate the wig-wag,
which the committee felt was too
difficult to perform while catch-
ing the ball. The signal now is
just raising one hand clearly
above the head.

L

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By BOB JONES
Michigan's gymnasts will face
perhaps the toughest competition
of the year this Saturday when
they travel to East Lansing for a 3
p.m. dual meet with Michigan
State,
The Spartans, led by Olympic
prospect Carl Rintz, are "an awful
big assignment" for the Wolver-
ines, says Coach Newt Loken. "On
paper, State should beat us."
But if Michigan can cut in on
Rintz, or pick up four o. five
points where Loken can't, on the
basis of this season's performance,
count on points, the Maize and
Blue would win.
Rintz Should Win Two
Loken figures Rintz and team-
mate Herman Junke for one-two
in the side-horse event for MSC.
The able NCAA champ should
also win the high-bar, says Lo-
ken.
Michigan's depth in the tram-
poline should give it 12 points on
first, second and fourth places. If
Captain Bill Winkler can improve

on his performance in last week-
end's Notre Dame meet, in which
he took third in the trampoline,
the Wolverines could possibly take
the first three places in that
event.
Loken is hoping thatshis three
sophomores, Nick Wiese, Wayne

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CLEVELAND (W) -- Rocky
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