FMAY, FMRUAR.Y 19, 1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY VALE THREE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 19, 1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Hoosiers Lead Big Ten Hoop Race Despite Loss Newman Drubs Roger William~s Bohine Scores 37 Points in 121-15 Victory; Winners lead 48-6 at Half Eastern College Hockey Led by Boston Pucksters ANN ARBOR'S MOST LISTENED-TO ORCHESTRA Dancing Tues., Fri., and Sat. By LaVERNE LANE After a weekend characterized by overtime periods, upsets, and ties for first and third places, In- diana's fiery five continued to lead the way in the race for the Big Ten basketball crown. Despite the loss of their first conference game to Northwestern in one of the biggest upsets of the season, the determined Hoosiers bounced back Monday night to overwhelm Purdue, 86-50. The vic- tory over Purdue pulled the 1952- 53 NCAA champs out of a tie with Iowa for the top spot. THE HAWKEYES, who had made a brilliant comeback last Saturday night against the Minne- sota Gophers, saw their hopes fade as Ohio State trounced the ob- viously fatigued Iowans, 77-69, for the second big upset of the week- end. In the Iowa-Minnesota game, the Gophers were ahead all the way except in the last five sec- onds of the regulation game. Al- though they virtually threw the game away through a series of errors, they were doubly handi- capped when first stringer's Glen Reed and Dick Garmaker, highscorer of the game, fouled out at the beginning of the over- time and Iowa went on to win . The Illinois win over Wisconsin Saturday night in a hectic see- saw overtime affair pushed the fighting Illini up into competition with the Gophers for third place. The regulation game between the Illini five and the Badgers ended in a 59-59 deadlock. * * * THROUGHOUT the entire game there was seldom more than a two point advantage enjoyed by either team. Wisconsin's defense failed in the extra period and Illinois sailed on to a 70-64 victory. Minnesota's subsequent win over the Wisconsin hoop squad edged the Gophers out of the third place! tie. This put Illinois and Wiscon- sin in fourth and fifth positions, respectively. Michigan State dropped from sixth to eighth spot in the con- ference contest, while Northwest- ern and Ohio State both netting two wins over the weekend moved u pa notch. BIG TEN BASKETBALL W L Indiana..............9 Iowa...................8 Minnesota ............7 Illinois.................6 Wisconsin ............4 Northwestern.........4 Ohio State...........4 Michigan State.......3 MICHIGAN ....... Purdue ............... 1 2 3 3 5 6 6 7 9 Pet. .900 .800 .700 .667 .444 .400 .364 .333 .222 .181 By CORKY SMITH Delta Theta Phi got off to a 'quick lead in a basketball game with the Maroons and rolled up a lop-sided score of 42-4 at the IM building last night. Bill Richardson of the Delt five taxlied 12 points while teammate John VonLackin put in 11. Also for the winners Larry King scored 'nine markers and Jim McQuillan shot six points through the hoops. * * * IN AN INDEPENDENT basket- ball game, shades of Bevo Francis were evident as Newman Club walloped Roger Williams by the phenomonal score of 121-15. Stan Bohine of Newman Club led his team with 37 points, as Jim Schwertzer and Harvey Dean each racked up 26. Trailing Schwertzer and Dean were Maurice Ruddy with 20 markers and Larry West- flaumper with 10. Bob Prentice of Roger Williams scored seven points for the losers. Michigan Co-op smothered Nelson International House, 70- 18. Dan Liverson collected 23 points for the winners. Maurice Binkow and Art Stein also of Michigan Co-op, tallied 18 and 12 markers respectively. Other scorers for the victors were Dave Shiler with 11, and Gerry Dangl with 8 tallies. Alexander Burr dropped in three baskets for Nelson House. Phi Sigma Delta edged Delta Chi, 34-33, in a class 'A' game. Warren Singer scored 13 markers for the Delta Sigs, while Dave Sperling put in four. For the los- ers, Dave Torrance led Delta Chi with 12 points, followed by Joe DeMarrias with 10 and Bill Cort- wright with 8. * * * PSI OMEGA defeated Alpha Omega in another close contest, 29-27. Bill Madden scored nine tallies while teammate Larry Kin- stle plunked in 10. Jim Green was high scorer for Alpha Omega with 13 points. PhiDelta Phi humbled Phi Rho Sigma, 48-12, in another profes- sional fraternity basketball game. Irv Stenn dropped in 13 points for the Phids and Jim Patrick fol- lowed with 8. Foresters breezed by Standish- Evans, 31-21, in independent game last night. Karl Bruder was high point man for the Foresters with 13 markers, while Larry Gray was second, dropping in 8 points. May- nard Nieboer scored 6 points for the losers. In the preliminaries of the in- tramural indoor relays, Phi Delta Theta took the social fraternity 880 yard relay event in the time of 1:43.7. Gomberg House placed first in residence hall division with a 1:43.2 time. Standish- Evans, clocked at 1:48.6, was first in the independent class. Other scores are: BASKETBALL Law Club 48, Alpha Chi Sigma 22 Nu Sigma Nu 42, Alpha Kappa Kappa 19 Delta Sigma Delta 56, Phi Delta Epsi- lon 16 Fletcher Hall 50, Air Force Cadets 2 Lawyers 43, Philippine-Michigan 26 PADDLEBALL Theta Chii 3, ATO 0 Phi Delta Theta 3, SAE 0 Sigma Phi Epsilon 3, Beta Theta 0) Phi Kappa Sigma 2, Alpha Delta Phi 1 Pi Lambda Phi defeated DKE (for- feit) 11 ANNARORCLOTHING 113 South Main Home of RICHMAN BROS. CLOTHING (Suits - Sportcoats - Topcoats) FREEMAN SHOES ADAM HATS JOCKEY UNDERWEAR WEMBLEY & BEAU BRUMMEL NECKWEAR MASTERBUILT SLACKS also - THE FINEST IN WORK CLOTHES ! LEE * DICKIES * BIG YANK 9 LEVIS By PHIL DOUGLIS Though the attentions of most Wolverine hockey fans are cur- rently focused on Western Hockey League play, it should be remem- bered that this league is only half of the national collegiate hockey scene. Eastern hockey is also in full swing, and twelve teams are bat- tling it out to represent the east in the NCAA tourney at Colorado Springs next month. EASTERN hockey is played in King Sparks Rugged MSC Hockey Squad (Continued from Page 1) The rest of Bessone's aggrega- tion is almost the same close checking crew which continually threw Michigan's fast skating for- wards off stride in their earlier meetings. Senior Gordon King, moved up to wing to replace high scor- ing John Mayes, who was declar- ed ineligible at the beginning of the winter semester, has been the big offensive gun for the Spartans in recent games. King, who scored two goals againts the Wolverines last month, teams with Jimmy Ward and John Gipp on State's number one of- fensive unit. * * * HEYLIGER will continue to uti- lize his ten iron men tonight, switching them around to meet the various situations. The first line of Doug Mullen, George Chin and Pat Cooney, which Heyliger calls the equal of any in Michigan history, will see its usual heavy duty. The trio has been averaging over forty minutes a game on the ice since the mid-season Minnesota series, Doug Mullen, the team's leading scorer with 46 points, has played over three-quarters of some contests. * * * THIS IS DUE to the fact that he is used extensively to kill off penalties and on power plays. Chin, in the second game of the Gopher set, pulled the fatiguing stunt of skating in eight straight minutes of action. Center Bill MacFarland, with 24 goals and Doug Philpott will team with either Yves Hebert or Jay Goold on the second line. Jim Haas, Neil Buchanan and Burt Dunn from the defensive combo and Willard Ikola, much improved as of late, will tend the nets. LATE BASKETBALL SCORES COLLEGE Wayne 60, Michigan Normal 54 Manhattan 87, St. John's 79 (two over- times) Georgia Tech 58 South Carolina 53 Furman 93, Mercer 49 Kentucky 90, Tennessee 63 NBA Syracuse 91, Fort Wayne 77 New York 69, Philadelphia 60 NHL HOCKEY Montreal 4, Detroit 2 Try U. of M. Special Haircuts The cut of tomorrow today. Six BARBERS 715 N. University two leagues, and the two teams that go to the Colorado finale are selected by the ballots of eastern sports writers. Several indepen- dent teams are also under con- sideration for the title bid, As of last week, three teams led the east. Leading the field on the sportswriters ballots were the Eagles of Boston College. who have roled up 13 wins against two losses. The St. Lawrence Larriesswere second in the poll, boasting a 9-1 record. Despite a better record, the Engineers of Rensselaer! Polytechnic Institute were in the third spot. The Engineers were 10-0 as of last week. However, these records are against eastern foes only. Rens- selaer dropped three games on a western swing two weeks ago, a factor which lowered their rating considerably. Denver whipped the Engineers twice, 8-3 and 3-2, while Colorado College routed them, 8-3. THE ENGINEERS represented the east last year at the NCAA, along with Boston University. This year, Boston University appears completely out of the running, sporting a 3-9-1 mark. Arch-rival Boston College appears to have stolen their thunder. Mediocrity is the keynote once the remaining eastern teams are examined. Brown, Clarkson, and Yale have win- ning records, but not by much. The rest of the teams are all on hte losing side of the ledger. Such squads as Harvard, Prince- ton, Boston University, Middle- bury, and Northeastern are elim- inated from any NCAA bid. Summing up the entire situa- tion, it appears as if the east is in for a rough time out at the Broadmoor Ice Palace this March. WESTERN HOCKEY LEAGUE STANDINGS W L T Pct MICHIGAN.........9 3 0 15 Minnesota .........12 1 1 14!. North Dakota ......8 3 1 12 Denver.............6 5 0 10 Colorado College . ...4 7 0 7 Michigan State.1 9 0 2 Michigan Tech ......0 12 0 0 Save Up TO $389 onEUROPETrip! A new low-cost travel plan offers you big savings on group travel. With this new plan over one-half of all college students can now afford to go to Europe! American Youth Abroad special- izes only in high, quality, low- cost s/udent travel. It's the largest low-cost student travel service in Central United States. Write now for FREE facts on the fun, excitement and educa- tion you'll enjoy on an AYA trip to Europe. Opportunity to save an extra $40 by replying today! 3 to 9-week all-expense trips $295 t $1045 SPACE LIMITED! 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