THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Team Wins Second VictoryOverWisconsin,_2 To Cornell College Wrestling Team Defeats Michigan Squ. I PLAY Rubin Scores Lone Fall For Wolverines In 126 Pound Division By BILL REED Taking four out of eight matches and drawing another, Cornell Col- lege wrestlers yesterday afternoon de- feated Coach Cliff Keen's Wolverine team in the Field House by a score of 15 1-2 to 12 1-2. But two falls were registered in the meet, one by each team. Seymour Ru- bin, substituting for the injured Joe Oakley in the 126-lb. division, was1 credited with the lone Wolverine fall when he pinned Mark Tilton in 4 minutes, 14 seconds. Tilton took the advantage after one minute but Ru- bin immediately broke it to take a half-nelson and scissors, slipping into a hook scissors or figure-four ride to pin his opponent. Hilt Ponto, wrestling Gordon Elli- son at 165 lbs. was the victim of the other fall as the Iowan, national A.A.U. heavyweight champion last year, worked his punishing head scissors and bar arm hold. Ellison wrestled in last year's national meet at slightly more than 175 lbs., and this year has been able to keep with- in the 165-lb. limit. Even with the superior experience against him Ponto put up a terrific battle, being finally put down at 8 minutes and 55 seconds. Ellison got his punishing head scissors hold which had been good for a two-min- mute fall on Friday night as the Cor- nell team downed Michigan State, 16- 14, on Ponto twice before the final downing, but both times Ponto was able to bridge and kip out of it. , The closest match of the meet was between Art Mosier, the Michigan captain and Laurel (Red) Morford, a brother of the Olympic champion and a title-holder in his own right, in the 155-lb. class. After two min- utes of wrestling neither had gained an advantage and Morford was given the advantage on the flip of a coin, which he held for the duration of the four-minute period. Mosier, too, held his advantage throughout the second four-minute period, just fail- ing to pin Morford with a hammer lock. In the overtime neither man was able to gain a time advantage and Fenley Collins, coach at Michigan State and the referee decided on a draw. Seymour Freedman at 135-lbs. piled up the biggest time advantage for the Wolverines as he defeated Wesley West with a 7 minutes, 35 second advantage. Jimmy Landrum failed to break a wrist lock which Tom Shaffer had put on him in the opening minutes of the match, and lost with a 2 min- utes, 45 second advantage. In the heavyweight class Bunch, the Iowan, spotted over forty pounds to John Spoden, but the big Wolve- rine just failed to pin his lighter opponent, and gained a decision with a 2:37 time advantage. SUMMARY 118-lbs., Shaffer (c) defeated Lan- drum (M). 2:45 advantage. 126-lbs., Rubin (M) pinned Tilton (C). Time 4:14. 135-lbs., Freedman (M) defeated West (C). 7:35 advantage. 145-lbs., Hill (C) defeated Harrod (M). 9:45 advantage. 155-lbs., Mosier (M) and Morford (C), draw. (Overtime). 165-lbs., Ellison (C) pinned Ponto (M). Time 8:55. 175-lbs., Osborn (C) defeated Nea- fus (M). 6:20 advantage. Heavyweight, Spoden (M) defeated Bunch (C). 2:37 advantage. The Grunt & Groan Exhibition THE CORNELL COLLEGE wrestling team beat out the Michigans in a match yesterday afternoon by a nose . . . a nose thoroughly massaged against the canvas to be exact. The Michigans lost by one bout, and no excuses given or received. Those corn-fed lads from Ioway were good grapplers. For instance, Hilton Ponto, who is considered a very very good mixer on the mat, had his snout rubbed into the vancas by Ellison, who is the Na- tional A.A.U. heavyweight titleholder. Such things as A.A.U. champions, it might be added, are very, very embarrassing things to have on a wrestling squad . . . at least to the opposition. Anyway it took Ellison more than eight minutes to dispose of Ponto. The outstanding Michigan performance of the afternoon was turned in by Rubin, substituting for Oakley, the lad who last Monday night wrestled half the match against his Ohio State opponent with a fractured arm . . . and won. Rubin pinned the Cornellian in four minutes and a quarter. It was a very business-like bout. OSSIBLY the most interesting of the contests were staged by Capt. Art Mosier and Morford of Cornell. Morford was a bit bigger than Mosier, and the two mixed it until they looked like a dish of Italian spaghetti. After mixing it, they hashed it, and the result was an exciting draw. This question of size was all Cornell's. Weight representatives in nearly all classes but the heavy were larger for the Cornells than for the Wolve- rines. And size is certainly some advantage in a rassle. The Field House, turned into an impromptu Castle of Horrors complete with ring for the occasion, held quite a crowd. It's a strange thing about wrestling crowds. They are predominantly male and certainly given to offering advice. The secret of that is that every self-respecting male thinks that he is an authority on the subject and a world's champion in disguise. RASSELING is a very natural sport and one that appeals to the masculine element right up until the time when the teeth begin to fall out. and the arteries take on the consistency of asphalt pavement. All this advice comes from the depths of experience gained in bouts with the roommate in which walls are kicked in, pictures knocked down, and landladies' dispositions changed from bad to worse. The climax of the afternoon came when Bunch, heavyweight wrestler for Cornell, clambered through the ropes, and with his back to a post and hands on the ropes, began to wriggle and writhe around the way wrestlers will before a bout. Bunch leaned far forward, and the rope came loose from the post. Bunch, with knees still stiff, kissed the canvas with a neat three- point landing. That brought down the house. Last Night's Results TRACK Wisconsin 55 1-2, Marquette 30 1-2. Chicago 51 2-3, Purdue 41 1-3. Illinois 79 2-3, Butler 1-3. SWIMMING Minnesota +63, Wisconsin 21. Ohio State 51, Michigan State 33. Indiana 45, Purdue 39. Iowa 54, Illinois 30. FENCING Chicago 10, Ohio State 7. BASKETBALL Michigan 26, Ohio State 20. Purdue 45, Iowa 33. Gopher Tracksters Must Refrain From Setting New Marks MINNEAPOLIEi Feb. 17-(P)-If University of Minnesota track candi- dates don's produce particularly bril- liant results during their workouts, it may be due to consideration for their convalescing coach, Sherman Finger. The Gopher tutor, recovering from a serious heart ailment, times the runners and gives instructions from a chair on the sidelines. The doctors say that's all right, but he musn't see anything "thrilling," for) that might upset his heart again. "I '!FIIENDLV"' ' AND "FORTUNE' *4-5-$ LINDENSCHMITT - APFEL & COMPANY 209 South Main - Since 1895 I m ii II