ANUARY 15 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wolverine cGg rs omp Michigan's Shearon, Burton Pace Attack on Badger Five (Continued from Page 1) Seconds later, Lee drove in from absorbed his fourth foul of the the side for a layup to make it evening at the end of the first 4-0. After Litzow's lonely bucket, half, little Jim Shearon was sent it was Michigan, Michigan, Michi- in for him. gan, Kramer, and Burton doing Shearon possesses a jump shot most of the tallying in the early from the outside which at times surge. BIG GUN-Jim Shearon attempts to fake out Wisconsin's Brian Kulas. After warming the bench for the Wolverines for the last few games, Shearon stepped in for George Lee in last night's game with Wisconsin, and paced the Wolverine attack with 16 points. 'M' Faces Spartans Here In Hockey Battle TOn it is quite deadly, as it proved to be} last night. He made good on six of them in the final period, add- ing four free throws to tie M. C. Burton for Wolverine scoring honors with 16 points. The losers' Glen Borland got 17 to pace both squads. Aside from the rapid pull-away of the victors and Shearon's showing, the outstanding feature from Michigan's standpoint was the proficient foul-shooting job. Foul Shooting Deadly The white-uniformed Wolver- ines sank 10 out of 10 in the first half, ending up with 19 out of 22 for the night for a mark of .864. Wisconsin made 12 of 17 tries. From the floor, the winners made 26 of 65 shots altogether for an even .400. Statistics continue to reveal the dfiference, showing a 46-31 Mich- igan advantage in rebounds. No Chance The Badgers never seemed to have a chance. They won the opening tip shot and missed, then with a little over two minutes gone, Burton clicked on a jump shot from the line. Almost. instantly, Kramer stole the ball, but Michigan failed to score. However, when Wisconsin took the ball down court again, its center was in the three-second area too long. Fast Break Clicks With the Blue's fast break work- ing well, the lead reached its first- half peak - 23-6 - with 7:12 to play. It was 36-22 at the inter- mission. Wisconsin was inept on defense throughout. When Shearon went in, his speed offset the Badgers' shifting man-to-man, and their all-court press in the later stages proved to be a wasted effort. Three in Row WISCONSIN G F P T Borland f 7 3-4 2 17 Litzow f 7 1-2 4 15 Smith f 0 0-0 0 0 Farber f 0 0-0 0 0 Grossc 01-20 1 Radke c 3 2-3 1 8 Kulas g 5 5-5 2 15 Rogneby g 3 0-1 3 6 Holt g 0 0-0 1 0 Anderson g 0 0-0 2 0 Totals 2512-1715 62 MICHIGAN G F P T Tillotson f 4 5-7 2 13 Burton f 6 4-4 1 16 Tarrier f-c 0 2-2 0 2 Dunlap f 0 0-0 1 0 qualtieri f 0 0-0 0 0 Kramer c 4 1-2 3 9 Lee g-f 2 2-2 5 6 Lewis g 4 1-1 1 9 Shearon g 6 4-4 1 16 Wright g 0 0-0 0 0 Totals 26 19-2214 71 Halftime Score: Michigan 36, Wis- consin 22. By SI COLEMAN One week ago tonight the Mich- igan hockey team traveled to East Lansing to face'the Spartans of Michigan State. It returned home with a 4-3 vic- tory. Tonight these -same two teams meet once again at 8 p.m. in the Coliseum. Tickets can be pur- chased from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. at the Athletic Administration Building and at the door preced- ing the game. Recognized for a long time is the intense rivalry that exists be- Cage Tour Ron Kramer yesterday denied reports that he would pass up a sure chance to become a nine- letter winner by turning profes- sional in a post-season basket- ball tour against , the Harlem Globetrotters. Kramer admitted, "The thought has entered my mind," but he has / made no definite decision as yet. Basketball coach Bill Perigo had said, "Kramer has filled out the * forms for joining the All Stars. He has a few more questions to ask of the promoters." If he were to tour with the All Stars beginning March 31 in New York, Kramer could earn $1,000 or more According to Perigo, Kra- mer wants to get married and needs the money. By accepting the basketball deal, Kramer would be in a posi- tion ,o accept professional foot- ball offers in April. If he were to participate in track competition, he would have to wpit until June to negot hte with the Green Bay Packers, who hold his draft rights. tween the two schools. This rival- ry has caused both teams to go all out in the past for victory and tonight should prove no exception. Icers Gain Ground The Wolverines moved into third place over the weekend, and now trail Denver by only two and- a-half points. Denver split a home-and-home series with the League pace setter - Colorado College. Up to tonight's game Michigan State has p ted a mediocre rec- ord of one win, six losses and no ties. It is interesting to note that State has been able to score only 11 goals in seven league games thus far this season. The leading scorer for the Spar- tans is letterman Ross Parks. He ha, garnered two of his team's 11 goals. Parke rates as one of the top centers in the league and he is expected to prove troublesome tonight. Spartan Goalie Tough The Spartan's goalie is Joe Se- linger, who has allowed 4.1 goals per league game this year. He is only a sophomore, but was picked as a pre-season "star" in WIHL circles, and is living up to these predictions. Michigan returned home Sun- day morning from Houghton aft- er. winning and tying with the Michigan Tech Huskies over the weekend. Each game takes on added importance as the season progresses and the teams battle to represent the League in Color- ado in March. SUITS, DRESSES Cleaned and Pressed . . . $1.10 TROUSERS. 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