___THE MICHIGAN DAILY dive 'M' Matmen Move Betzig Pins One, Takes Decision Over Another ) Semi-Finals 'NI' Cops Eighth Straight; Tramples Tech Six, 70i Cagers Battle 1tawkeves Tonight in Final Road Test Mason Loom% as Major Iowa Threat;- ' lowais Have Worst D(eense in. Big Nine (Special to The Daily) BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - After slogging through a dual meet sea- son with four Conference losses against two wins, Michigan's im- proved mat squad last night kept neck and neck with Indiana and Ohio State as five Wolverines placed for this afternoon's semi- finals. WOLVERINE AND defending champion at 136 pounds, Jim Smith, decisioned Bill Quinlan of Iowa, 11-4, while Captain Bob Betzig at 155 pinned his first opponent, Paul Peterson of Wis- consin, at 7:50 and went on to decision Jensen of Minnesota, 8-5. Last year's champion at 155, Ken Marlin of Illinois, did not enter the preliminaries and the main opposition for Betzig will probably come from Andy Pri- zant of Indiana and Bryce Keough of Ohio State. Betzig faces Prizant in this af- ternoon's bout while Smith will face one of his most formidable foes, Dave Ewart of Ohio State. WOLVERINE Jack Powers who worked down from the 175 to the 165-pound bracket for the meet decisioned Gil Gaumer of Illinois, 9-3, and he will face Nick Stev- ens of Northwestern in the semis. Compact Phil Carlson wres- tling at 145 for Michigan, squeezed by Holmes of Minne- sota in a 5-4 count, and his next hurdle will be Joe Garcia of Illinois in one of the toughest matches of the day. The Maize and Blue's By Las- .ky got a bye in the night's wres- tling but faces one of the tough- est men in the 175 bracket in Waldemar Van Cott of Purdue in the semi-finals. WOLVERINE Jack Keller at 128 pulled the first defeat of the year on Spicuzca of Wisconsin in a 7-4 decision, but he had to wrestle again tonight and he faced Weber of Ohio State. The pair battled through a long match with the score tied at 4-4. It toak a referee's deci- sion to give it to Weber and leave OSU and Michigan each with five men in the semis. SUMMARIES 121 POUND-Lappin, Minn., dec. Picard, 111., 9-4; Plaza, Pur., dec. Dewitt, Wis., 11-3. 128 POUND-Bob Brabender, Ind., dec. Nelson, Ill., 3-2; Steinhofs, Iowa, dec. Happer- stad, Minn., 7-0; Paticsel, Purd., dec. Halas, NU., 12-4. 136 POUND - Rice, Minn., pinned Mullendore, Wisc., 1:18. Bill Brabender, Ind., dec. Far- ina, Purd., 8-2. Bill Brabender, Ind., dec. Strange, Ill., 8-7. Ewart, OSU, dec. Fox, NU, 5-2. 145 POUND-Peterson, Wisc., dec. Dick, NU, 8-2. Puchany, Ind., dec. Appleby, Purd,, 6-2. Puchany, Ind., dec. Klein, OSU, 4-1.. Garcia, Ill., pinned Tesla, Iowa, 2:25. 155 POUND - Prizant, Ind., dec. Manning, NIU, 4-1. Keough, OSU, pinned Thorp, Iowa, 5:5. Ewyer, Ill., pinned Bryant, Pur- due, 6:52. 165 POUND-Stevens, NU, dec. Thomas, Iowa, 7-1; Self, Wise., dec. Fisher, Ind., 6-3; Dasso, Purd., dec. Pinz, Minn. 8-2. 175 POUND-Scarpello, Iowa, dec. Boahasha, Ill. 7-1. Traster, Ind., dec. Rath, OSU, 9-6; Van Cott, Purd., dec. Ragouis, NU, 9-6. HEAVYWEIGHT - Gottfried, Ill., dec. Hurley, Ind. 3-0. Miller, OSU, pinned Ford, NU, 7:52. By SY SONKIN Michigan's cagers close their road schedule tonight when they travel to Iowa City to meet Coach Lawrence "Pop" Harrison's Hawk- eye quintet. Iowa has to win tonight if the Hawks are to keep from ending up in a tie for the cellar with North- western. IN ELEVEN STARTS Harrison's boys have won only two games, but one of them was a 53-49 tri- umph over an Ohio State quin- tet which last Saturday handed Michigan a 69-44 beating, the sec-' ond highest numher of points' ever scored against a Maize and Blue court squad. The Hawkeyes have also I I Mitchell, Hoover, Holland Rate' In Hurdles; Barten Paces 880' scored a last-minute 61-60 vic- tory over Wisconsin and Don Rehfeldt, and almost scored the upset of the year when they led Minnesota for almost a whole game before the Gophers finally rallied to edge the Iowans, 54-49. Chief troublemaker will prob- ably be forward Charlie Mason. IE'S DROPPED in 39 field goals and as many free throws for a total of 117 points, which is high for the Iowa quintet, but is just slightly over the 10 points per game mark. The only other Ilawkeye who's done any scoring worth men- tioning is guard Tony Guzowski with 81 points to his credit. Despite having only two men who have done any consistent scoring. Iowa has still managed to maintain an offensive average of al"ot 50 points a game, three more than Michigan's mark. BUT THE IOWANS have con- tributed the worst defense in the Big Nwine. Opponents have averaged about 63 points a game against Harrison's boys, and this makes the Maize and Blue's mark of 48.5 look pretty good. To try upsetting the heavily- favored Wolverines, Harrison will start Mason and Floyd Magnusson at forwards, Frank Calsbeek at center, and Guzowski and Stan Straatsma at the guards. For Michigan, coach Ernie Mc- Coy will begin with Mack Supru- nowicz and Bill Mikulich at for- wards, Leo VanderKuy at center, and Pete Elliott and Bob Harrison at the guards. McDonald Shines in Each Score Trice T By BOB SANDELL With Goalie Jack McDonald turning in another spectacular, performance, Michigan's power- house puck team whipped a battling band of engineers from Houghton Tech last night, 7-1, forI thii-ih wi in row Nets as Gacek, Celley I.ace Michigan Attack Play roughened up considerably in the latter part of the period with Bob Fleming being tagged with a 2 minute roughing penalty. The initial stanza ended just as Renfrew was caught tripping. The victor, whi gave the THE WOLVERINES killed off Wolvies yamplechreveetforRenfrew's penalty to start the Wolverines ample revenge for ;second session, and Neil Celley heir only defeat ofthe stallied the first goal at 5:24 on a eras much closer than the score neat pass from Burford who had indicates. since the spirited Hus- neatpssro Bufdwhhd idiesusince them srite - carried the puck behind the Tech rides outshot the home sextet. goal. Wally Grant also received NEITHER TEAM wasted any an assist. time getting its first goal. At 2:39 Two quick goals by Hill and Wally Gacek connected on a 25- 1Celley hiked the score to a com- footer to begin the scoring pa- manding 6-1 count. The stellar rade for the Wolverines. Al Ren- defenseman counted on a scram- frew and Gordie McMillan got as- ble in front of the net with sists. McMillan assisting. (Continued from Page 1) { Rice, Minnesota fourth, Charles Feeney, Indiana. Time, :06.4. (Third heat): first, Charles Pe- ters, Indiana; second, Charles May, Purdue; third, Ed. Tunni- cliff, Northwestern; fourth, Wal- ker Reid, Wisconsin. 'ime, :06.3. Broad Jump: first, Jewell Daily, Purdue, 24 ft. 3% in.; second, Ed Tunnicliff, Northwestern, 23 ft. 91/ in.; third, Don Leuthold, Illi- nois, 23 ft. 7 3/8 in.; fourth, Jim Holland, Northwestern, 23 ft., 53/4 in. fifth, Don Laz, Illinois, 23 ft. 3 1/8 in.; sixth, Lloyd Lamois, Minnesota, 23 ft. 1 in. (Three heats, four qualify). 70-yard High Hurdles: first, .Dick Maxwell, Ohio State; sec- ond, Bob Hinkle, Illinois; third, Don Hoover, Michigan; fourth, Russell Merkel, Iowa. Time, :09. (Second heat): first, Lloyd Duff, Ohio State; seconl, James M'itchell, Michigan third, Fred Brash, Minnesota; fourth, Tom Briggs, Illinois. Time, :08.7. (Third heat): first, James Niel- sen, Minnesota; second, Robert Kickert, Northwestern; third, Robert Ruther, Illinois; fourth, James Gill, Wisconsin. Time, :08.9. (Three heats, qualify three) 880-yard: first, Don Gehirmann, Wisconsin; second, Keith Brown, Iowa; third, Don Shuman, Illinois. Time, 1:59.7. (Second heat): first, Don Washington, Ohio State; second, Frank Owens, Indiana; third, John Lindquist, Michigan. Time, 1:58.9. (Third heat) : first, Herb Bar- ten, Michigan; second, Bill Dow- ney, Illinois; third, Walt Klink, Purdue. Time, 1:58.8.I (Three heats, four qualify) 440-yard: first, Bob Mansfield, Wisconsin; second, Harry Cogs- well, Ohio State; third, Elliott, Indiana. Time. :50.5. Second heat) : first, Mal Whit- field, Ohio State: second. Eugene Whipple, Wisconsin; third, Rod Warren, Michigan. Time, :49.6. (Semi-finals-six qualify) 70 - yard Low Hurdles: first, Clay Holland, Michigan; second, Russ Merkel, Iowa; third, Don Hoover, Michigan. Time, :08.1. (Second heat) : 1st, Lloyd Duff, Ohio State; second, James Mit- chell, Michigan; third, James Nielsen, Minnesota. Time, :08.2. IHogan on a To ecovery 4fter, Surgrery EL PASO, Tex. -VtP) - Steady improvement was reported late today in the condition of Ben Ho- gan. That was the word from the El Paso hospital where the golf champion last night underwent a two-hour abdominal operation. The surgery was described as nec- essary to halt a bood seepage caus- ing formation of clots which threatened his life, "Ben is doing fine,"' said Royal H ogan, a brother. "le is still a bit hazy as a result of the operation, but his pain has cleared up. We are very well lelased 'vvhh his con- dition.", Blood clots troubling the links stai' were the after-effect of a Fob. 2 highway, collision near Van Horn, Tex., in wvhich Hogan's pel- viankle and collarbone were broken. He has been hospitalized here since. Dr. Alton Ocbsne', prof"'sso). o1, surige ry a''i~ Tiloane UIniv(,rsity, '.e o to El 1Pa s o fro'O New ( ) ii'ans ycs- terday to consull, with hlogan's other physicians. is decision to opei'ate came almost at once. The Huskies stormed back, and 12 seconds later defense- man Connie Adams whipped ina a 50-foot screen shot. The puck caromed off the post into the nets past McDonald who evi- dently did not see it coming. Owen McArdle and Lenny Brumm teamed up at 6:18 to give Michigan a 2-1 edge and what later proved to be enough to win. It was a pretty pass play with Brumm slipping the puck to Mc- Ardle right in front of the Tech net. CAPTAIN AU RENFREVW made it 3-1 at 10:25 on a pass out from Gacek from behind the Tech net. McMillan also was credited with an assist on the play. The game was held up for approximately 15 minutes short-I ly after the middle of the session when Goalie Jack McDonald re- ceived a gash over his left eye{ and had to have medical at- tention. Celley's goal was the "picture play" of the evening. He out- skated the defense beautifully and then fired an angle shot from about 25 feet high into the rigging past Tech Goalie Jocko Noblet. HILL GOT HIS second goal of the night at 2:15 of the final pe- riod and it ended the scoring for the contest. Gil Burford was on the assisting end of the final marker. Best Fountain Service Sandwiches... Good Food Sealtst Ice Cream Prescriptions STATE DRUG CO. State and Packard YOU'LL WANT TO HEAIR THE Pop CONCERT Pr e sen I e d by ih e University Concert Band . .f e a / r i n . T HL WORKS OF JOHN PHILIP SOUSA SUNDAY - MARCIt 6th 4: 15 ii.m HILL AUDITORIUM FREE.; 1)AMISSION WHAT IYour HURRY!! Do your BANKI NG at your leisure BANK BY MAIL with the Local Bank ANN 11111o31 BATK University Branch 330 S. State For breakfast, lunch, or dinner, The right cating spot for you - You'll always find a winner In RESTAURANTS on PAGE 2! Mann, Stager, Sohl, Moss Place in g.Nie Swim Meet (on ed Iifroi Page 1. performance of the evening as Akron's .Keith Carter raced to a ten yard victory in the 200-yard breaststroke in the record break- ing time of 2:16.4 seconds. CARTER'S TIME lowered the previous Big Nine record by ex- actly five seconds. Michigan's Bob Sohl, the former record holder was un- able to stave off a closing rush by Iowa's sophomore sensation, Bowen Stassforth, and finished third, slightly ahead of team- mate Charlie Moss. Iowa, the meet's dark horse, raced to a new Conference record in the 400-yard freestyle relay churning the distance in 3:29.2 to edge Michigan by a body length. OLYMPIC DIVING champion Bruce Harlan turned in a spar- kling performance on the low board to lead the Ohio contin-a gent which numbered Hobie Bill- ingsley, John Simpson and Jack Calhoun second, third and fourth in that order. Sophomore Murray Hubley of Purdue was the only 'foreigner' to break the Buckeye spell. Big Bill Smith churned to an easy victory in his specialty, the 220-yard free style turning in a 2:08.9. Wally Ris of Iowa edged Michigan's Matt Mann III for second place by a head while Bill Heusner was fourth. Ahead of Wolverine Gus Stager who has been swimming very well during the whole meet. The three day contest will wind up today with five events on tap: The 100 and 400-yard free style, the 150-yard medley relay, the high board diving, and the 300- yard medley relay. lil I NEW STYLES FIRST AT WILD'S '"F/OR SHORTS" TEA RR OW poinets to WILD'S 311 South State Nw U N on a N k. 4.xno N l) n~\ N Nr Na a *, U U N NR N Mt rN U w "N NW ,e ra N r N rr rU aN rN U 04N ra a . / ; oY U Nr N 'N (7 N Va / C r~" 'catter Sf~fl N N % p rN RR rf"1t 'G .I1 -citifwi lipd~w lr-c %"--6tv abox f A row!aN 1.I HEY GUYS!! HEY GALS! JAckets Jackets "ALL-KINDS" By Ed Laupon r,._, 4 twos soyin'-when pullin' oii o' 1h' W v Not Start <: ;, g; -,- \/ ' I , '., c ; } JACKETS Racks full of Jackets WOOL - SHEEPSKIN QUILT LINED 11 Ili' I $ V88 NAVY TYPE PCOATS Tooooo!.! 1I 111 III I