TWE IICHIAN DAILY urton Hits 30 Points hut Cagers Lose, 87-84 DA A ",*I- (Continued from Page 1) but Rucklik's lay-up nullified them. Tidwell ended the flurry on another two-pointer with another four seconds remaining to reach the final score. The game started out as a dual between Rucklik and Burton, buta before the fracas'was over, North- western's great balance proved the, determining factor. Rucklil led all scorers with 32 points, and had three teammates in double figures. Burton Bags 30 Burton hit for 30, while Lee and Tidwell scored 22 and 20 respec- tively. Burton's total raised him above Ron Johnson of Minnesota IA the Big Ten scoring fight. How- ever, the Wolverine threesome was forced to take up the slack caused by Miller's absence.. Lee moved to the guard slot with Tidwell, while sophomore Gary Kane started at forward. Miller's loss was felt primarily on defense, with the slowed-down Wolverine squad could not keep; pace with Northwestern's for- wards, who often outdid them for easy lay-up baskets. Playing with one leg heavily taped, Tidwell's speed was also cut, and the Mich- igan team was without any really fast man. Offensively, Michigan could not take advantage of the fast break, and had to slow down their at- tack on gaining possession of the ball. The 6'9" Rucklik took full advantage of Michigan's lack of a big man at the center position, scoring most of its points on soft hooks from around the free throw lane, and tip-ins. Burton, on the other hand, was accurate with his fadeaway jump and one-hand sets. all over the court. Tidwell and Lee added to the Wolverines' point total by driving through openings in the 'Cats' defense, hitting on lay-ups. A blazing 50 per cent from the field in the first half sent the Wildcats into the dressing room with a 47-38 lead. The first 20 minutes developed into a scoring duel between Burton and Ruck- lik, with the Michigan senior co- captain caging 20 points, and Rucklik one less. Campbell Begins Floyd Campbell gave the hosts the lead at the outset on a jump shot from the corner. Michigan -countered on a three-point play by Burton, which erased the NUV lead temporarily. But Rucklik's, two consecutive hooks put North- western ahead once more, and it remained there until Kane tied the count at 18-18 with 12:40 left. Burton gave the Wolverines the advantage for the second and last time in the struggle as he hit on a jump to make the count 20-18. Northwestern, receiving scor- ing punch from four different players, put on a scoring burst and captured ivhat proved to be the final lead. Mantis, Warren, Jones and Campbell hit for four consecutive buckets to'give the Wildcats a 6-point lead with about ten minutes left. The second half opened in tra- ditional Michigan style, with the Wolverines ice-cold at the outset. Lovell Farris was the only Wol- verine player to score, hitting for six points in the opening five minutes of play. Northwestern at this time increased its lead to 12' points and kept up a steady pace in the scoring, fending off a Wol- verine attempt to narrow the gap. The Michigan cagers had an- other bad break before they put; on their final burst, until they trailed by the 15-point margin. These offensive cold stretches turned out to be too much to over- come, and the game ended a min- ute too soon. M. C. BURTON r *. scores 30 Ilitnos Statistics MICHIGAN G F P T Burton 14 2-4 2 30 Farris 3 0-1 4 6 Kane 3 0-1 1 6 Tidwell 9 3-4 1 21, Lee 9 3-4 4 21' Rogers 0 0-0 2 0 Donley 0 0-0 0 0 TOTALS 38 8-14 14 84, Northwestern G F P T' Jones 2 1-2 2 5 Warren 6 3-3 0 15 Ruklick 12 8-9 3 32 Mantis 8 2-2 3 18. Campbell 5 1-3 3 11 Brandt 3 0-0 2 6 Snyder 0 0-0 0 0O TOTALS 36 15-1913 87 Halftime: Northwestern 47, Michigan 38 INDIANA NOSED OUT Spartan Cag Share of BI; By The Associated Press EAST LANSING -- Michigan State virtually wrapped up, the un- disputed Big Ten basketball cham- pionship last night by beating Pur- due 94-87 in a wild game. The MSU-Purdue game was closely contested and rough throughout. The score changed hands 20 times before the Spartans took their final lead 8:/2 minutes into the second half. Neither team could manage bet- ter than a six-pgint lead until Dave Fahs' basket with two sec- onds left. Captain Bob Anderegg led Mich- igan State to its ninth conference victory against two defeats with.29 points. John Green, controlling both backboards, chipped in 24. But it was unsung Tom Rand, who put the Spartans aheda to stay 60 to 59 with a 20-foot jump shot and then helped them stay there with four more long baskets. Michigan State, despite shoot- ing accuracy of only 28 per cent, had a 42-39 halftime lead after the advantage had been traded 12 times. Willie Merriweather led Purdue with 24 points. Illinois 100, Indiana 98 CHAMPAIGN, Ill. -- Capt. Ro- ger Taylor's basket in the closing seconds gave Illinois a 100-98 Big Ten basketball victory over In- diana yesterday and virtually, squelched the title hopes of thq defending champion Hoosiers. Indiana's total tied the Big Tenn record for a losing team score. 0 .: D' o- " r ers Cincb Ten Title Taylor's clinching fielder with 15 seconds left gaye him 26 points fou the game and a share of scor-, ing laurels with Indiana's 6-1 Walt Bellamy. The loss hung a 6-5 record on the Hoosiers, the same as now held by the Illini in the conference race. The score was tied at halftime, 49-49, and was deadlocked for the 16th time on Frank Radovich's Indiana basket which knotted it at 98-98 with 26 seconds left. Ilinois shot a hot 48.8 percent- age from the field and in the first half hit 52.5. Indiana wound up with 43.2. Indiana out-rebounded Illinois, 66 to 49.R Edges Out Track men (Continued from Page 1) 11picked up three yards oni the first turnalone, then pulled out to an easy eight-yard victory. Robinson dashed through the 60-yd, sprint in :06.2 to share individual honors with the other double winners, Kerr, teammate Pete Stanger; and Illinois' Ken Brown. Eight Inches Better C Bird celebrated his twenty-first birthday with a key win ove British Empire champion Joe Fore- man. Bird outdistanced his pre- vious best jump by almost eight inches while Foreman could reach only 24'4%4". Secondary to Bird's, victory in the broad jump was the fact that be wiped out the oldest record in the Michigan record book. His jump betteried a 35-year-old rec- ord of 247" held by DeHart Hub- bard. The meet was close most of the way for the huge crowd of 2,679 at the Illinois Armory track. The hosts jumped in front, 271/2-82, at the start since their strongpoints- the high jump, shotput, mile run and 440-were run off first. But Michigan pulled up to them quickly' when Eeles Landstrom, Mamon Gibson, and Bill Guinness swept 1-2-3 in the pole vault and Stanger and Ron Trowbridge fin- ished strong in the high hurdles. Stanger was first and Tiowbridge was deadlocked for second with Illinois' Armand LeCrone. Michigan Taks Lead The Wolverines went ahead for the first time when Stanger edged out teammate Dick Cephas in the 70-yd. low hurdles with a :07.9 clocking. Cephas had the lead un- til the final hurdle but the veteran put on a burst of speed to whip the sophomore for the first time this year. Illinois picked up eight points in the two-mile run to forge ahead by one point in the next-to-last event. This set up the relay as a winner-take-all affair. Johnson admitted that he was1 stunned at the relay time, although he too said a fast time would be needed to win it. NILE -- 1. K. Brown (); 2. Mar- tin (M); 3. Bowers (I). Time 4:5. 440 -- 1. Kerr (); 2. B. Gibson (M) 3. Dickerson (M). Time :49. 70-YD. HIGH HURDLES - I+ Stangel (M); 2. tie, La Crone (I) and, Trowbridge (M). Time :08.8. 60-YD. DASH - 1. Robinson (M); 2. Miller (1); 3. Coleman (1). Time :062. 880 -- 1. Kerr (); 2. Seth (M); 3. Montour (M). Time 1:52. TWO-MILE - 1. K. Browyi (I); 2. Herrin (1); 3. Schwartz (M). Time 9:23.4. - MILE RELAY - 1. Illinois; 2. Mich- igan. Time 3:15.7. POLE VAULT - . Landstrom (M); 2. M. Gibson (M); 3. Guinness (M). Height 144".' 300-YD. DASH - 1. Robinson (M); 2. Miller (I); 3. Adderley (1). Time :30.6. 70-YD. LOW HURDLES: 1. Stanger (M; 2. Cephas (M); 3. Coleman (1). Time :08.0. SHOT PUT - 1. B. Brown (1); 2. Stewart (I); 3. Boyden (M). Distance 52'4". HIGH JUMP - 1. Tie, Mitchell (I), Haisley (); 3. Tie, Cephas (M), La- Crone (1). Height 6'6". BROAD JUMP: 1. Bird (M); 2. Foreman (); 3. Williams (M). Dis- tance 24'9%". MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS FREE PICKUP and DELIVERY. Com- plete service on Phonographs and radios. Stereo conversions. Reasonable prices. Duraco, NO 3-6185. X6 Complete line of HiFi components including Kits; complete Service on radio, phonographs and HiFi equip- ments. HI Fl STUDIO 1317 South University 1 block east at Campus Theatre Phone NO 8-7942 )X2 PIANOS - ORGANS Best offer Keyboard Service WURLITZER SOHMER 0 KIMBALL Dealer ANN ARBOR PIANO CO. 213 E. Washington, NO 3-3109 )X3 NEW LP SPECIALS at the LIBERTY MUSIC SHOPS New! Bernstein and the N.Y. Philharmonic Tchaikovsky - Symphony No. 4 Regularly $4.98 - This Week $3.89 New! Sinatra Sings - "Love is a Kick" Regularly $3.98- This Week $2.89 THIS WEEK SAVE $1.09 THIS WEEK - CAMPUS - - DOWNTOWN - 211 S. State 205 E. Liberty St. NO 8-9013 NO 2-0675 LIBERTY MUSIC SHOPS X5 RARE Violins & String Instrument repairs, Pianos (Baldwin, Ivers & Pond, Estey) and Organs (Baldwin, Estey, Thomas) New and Used. Terms. MADDY MUSIC 508 E. William NO 3-3223 )Xi BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING-NO 5-3511, evenings or ma- terials accepted 12 noon at U High office. Gladys Smith. J4 INCOME TAX SERVICE. Notary Public. M. J. Thurber. Phone NO 2-3455. J37 INCOME TAX SERVICE In your home by appointment Call E. S. WEISS HU2-0572 SKIRTS - SKIRTS - SKIRTS All colors, sizes and fabrics at the lowest possible prices in our close- out group. Hurry while they last to the Elizabeth Dillon Campus Toggery 1111 S. University J39 GOOD MORNING! For this morning's breakfast we have lox, bagels, cream cheese, onion rolls and assorted danish pastry. And for later in the week-smoked whitefish, gefilte fish, kosher soups, pastrami and corn beef. RALPH'S MARKET (formerly Freeman's) 709 Packard NO 2-3175 "Just 2 doors from the Blue Front" J40 RITZ BEAUTY SALON Complete line of Beauty work 605 E. Williams Phone NO 8-7066 J5 PAPERS EDITED and Typed. Quick service. Spelling, punctuation need correction? NO 8-6276. J30 DISSERTATIONS multilithed, ques- tionnaires lithographed by Edwards Letter Shop, 711 N. University. Clean cut and economical. J25 Eddie's Paint Store White paint......... $1.98 per gal. Colors . ......... $2.48 per gal. 117 E. Ann NO 8-6966 )J15 LADIES BARBER SHOP 11081 S. University Only barber in town who is a trained and licensed Ladles' Hair Stylist. )J17 ONE-DAY SERVICE and COMPLETE SERVICE at SANFORDS . Shoe Repairing Hat Cleaning Tailoring Pressing Shoe Shining 119 East Ann Street (opposite court house) NO 8-6966 )J2 FOR RENT WANTED: roommate for new apart- ment at 1500 Pauline, to share with senior & soph. Contact Marty, NO 5- 7625. C60 NEAR CAMPUS: three nice clean single rooms, hot and cold water, linen ser- vice. $8 per week. NO 5-5157 or 1302 Washtenaw Terrace. C49 2 'ROOM furnished apt., all utilities except gas for cooking. Married couple -no children. NO 8-8900. C57 TWO Single Rooms for men on Forest Ave. NO 3-3093. C59 CLOSE TO CAMPUS-Newly remodeled four room and bath lower apartment. Fireplace in living room. Range, re- frigerator, heat and water furnished. Garage. Phone NO 8-7002. C58 FOR RENT: East William furnished 3-room apartment. New modern fur- nishings. Full bath. Close to campus & downtown. $115 per month, in- cluding heat. Available March 1st. Call NO 3-0819. C56 SINGLE or double for male student. One block from Law -school. Reason- able. 808 Oakland. Phone NO 2-2858. C55 ONE BLOCK FROM CAMPUS: House- keeping room. Also efficiency apart- ment-private bath. 514 S. Forest, NO 2-1443. C52 SORORITIES with not enough room that want to grow. Very large annex close to campus for long-term lease. Available Sept. 1, 59. May be seen by appointment. NO 2-6156. C54 SINGLE ROOM with fireplace. On For- est. $25 a month. NO 3-2800. C51 2 BLOCKS to campus suite of 2 rooms for one man-telephone extension. $10 pet week, linen service. NO 2-1807. C41 SINGLE ROOMS for men, attractive. Linens & cleaning. As low as $6 wk. NO 3-6039, call after 6 P.M. C31 SINGLES and doubles for men. One block to Union. 509 S. Division. 8-6757. )C25 LGE. APTS. for rent. Very reasonable. Call 3-4402. C36 STUDY UNDISTURBED. Large quiet rooms for men. Near campus. NO 3-4747. )C3 FURNISHED APTS. for rent for 3 or 4. Call NO 3-4402. )C12 BOYS' ROOMS available next semes- ter. 617 E. University. Contact Jim Booth, Rm. 10 or call 3-7159. )C15 MALE STUDENT to share furnished apartment with 3 others, swimming pool. 10 minutes from campus. NO 5-7602.. )C20 TWO furnished apartments. 3 rooms, bath with shower. Ideal for 2 or more boys, 5 minutes walk from campus. 316 E. Madison. NO 8-6574. C23 STUDENT ROOMS fqr rent, % block from campus, Several rooms and suites to select from. Reasonable rates. Phone NO 8-7942. 1218 Wash- tenaw. )C29 CAMPUS AREA - 3 clean convenient rooms, private bath, unfurnished, ex- cept stove, basement privileges. NO 8-6529. )C26 MISCELLANEOUS TYPING: Thesis, Term papers, reason- able rates. Prompt service. NO 8-7590. M4 GOOD MEALS: Frat. five minutes from Engineering Building. Reasonable. Any or all meals. Steward NO 3-2600. )Ml, FOX MOTEL Room Phones Free TV 2805 E. Michigan HU 2-2204 }M3 * * * Iowa 91, Ohio State 7P) IOWA CITY -- Tall Dave Gun- ther poured in 37 points last night as Iowa swept to a 91-79 victory over Ohio State in a Big Ten basketball game. The Iowa forward, in his top Big Ten performance, scored 15 straight points in 6Y2 minutes in the second half. He outpointed Ohio during that stretch by 3 points and made the score 78-67. Ohio, which dropped to a 4-6 conference mark, got away to a 17-9 lead but Iowa gradually gain- ed on the Buckeyes and went ahead 28-27 on Pete Schebler's field goal with 7 minutes remain- ing in the half. Iowa had a 34.9 shooting per- centage and Ohio a cool 29.9. Iowa out-rebounded the Buckeyes, 54- 53. * * * Minnesota 69, Wisconsin 50 MADISON, Wis. - Minnesota evened up its Big Ten conference basketball record at' 5-5 yesterday, with an easy 69-50 victory over last-place Wisconsin in a region- ally televised game. The Gophers, in holding Wis- consin to its lowest point total in ten conference games made the Badgers 1-9 for the season. The Badgers stayed close on the heels of the taller Gophers for the first 16 minutes. Then Minnesota with a 23-21 lead put in 12 straight points to give it a 35-23 margin at the half. The Gophers shot at 42 per cent from the field while Wisconsin hit o~n 29 per cent. BIG TEN STANDINGS TRANSPORTATION LARK by 1MERCEDES Studebaker MHE WORLD'S OLDEST AUTOMO~rLE MAKERS If you are planning a trip to Europe this summer and would like to purchase a Mercedes in Europe, you should place your order immediate- ly with ARCURE MOTOR SALES 617 Detroit Street Ann Arbor, Mich. TELEPHONE: NO 3-3309 )G2 PETS AND SUPPLIES MALE SIAMESE kitten for sale, also stud service. NO 2-9020. )T2 BARGAIN CORNER ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords - $7.25; socks 39c: shorts, 69c; military sup- plies. Sam's Store. 122 E. Washington. )W1 LOST AND FOUND FOUND: Dark horned rimmed glasses on Church St, near S. 1University. Call NO 3-9531. All LOST: Black and Silver Parker Pen in Aud. A-Angell or Mason Hall. Call NO 5-7711 Ext. 6420. A10 College Scores, WANTED TO BUY College Basketball Scores Georgia Tech 82, Georgia 62 Kentucky 75, Auburn 56 Tennessee 93, Alabama 68 Fordham 93, Detroit 73 Vanderbilt 77, Florida 66 Texas Tech 72, S. Methodist 64 Texas Christian 72, Texas 59 Morehead 117, Tampa 86 Houston 64, St. Louis 57. Bradley 58, Tulsa 57 Clemson 58, S. Carolina 56 (ovt.) Marquette 79, Xavier (Ohio) 70 Harvard 69, Penn 60; Syracuse 90, Penn State 73 Lehigh 38, Rutgers 36 - Lafayette 87, Gettysburg 68 Yale 72, Cornell 63 W.. Va. 89. Geovie Washdinffton86 USED LEATHER briefdase, under $5. NO 3-3478 after 6 p.m. KL Phone NO 2-4786 for Classified Advertising WASHING AND IRONING or ironing separately. Free pickup and delivery. NO 2-9020 Ma . . . 71 FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO. ;!1 11