TUESDAY,, EBRUARY 8, 1955 THE rilICAIGAN DAIL V PAGE NKVPN. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8.1955 'likE MICkki4iAi~ DAlI ~ a Agar. via, v C.i\ 91 Wolverines Lead at Half CLEAN SWEEP: Records Fall as M' Swimmers Tour !I r U 4,.--- (Continued from Page 1) n4 the second half. At this point the Illini began to move. Their shoot- ing improved and their defense tightened up. Michigan was not able to drive and was forced to shoot from the outside.' At 7:12 of the half, two fouls by diminutive guard, Bill Ridley, one of the top scorers in the Big Ten, tied the score at 61. Illinois continued to press and three min- utes later the visitors were ahead by six points. But Michigan would not give up. Three straight field goals, capped by a Paul Groffsky one-hand push shot again knotted the score, this time at 71. The Wolverines con- tinued to hustle and fight. One foul by Tom Jorgenson sand- wiched in between two field goals by Kramer' gave the Wolverines a 78-77 lead with two minutes to play. The two teams exchanged bas- kets and then Stout's tip-in decided matters. With 10 seconds left in the con- test Michigan regained possession of the ball. Don Eaddy, who had an "off" night, tried a jump shot from 30 feet out. The ball bounced off the backboard and was grabbed by Milt Lingle. Lingle moved to his right . . . then the buzzer sounded over the noise of the roaring crowd. Inability to convert charity ;osses continued to plague the Michigan basketball team. Nine foul attempts were missed by the Vlaize and Blue. A lack of reserves was also evi- dent. Only five men saw action in the first half. Seven Michigan men played in the second half, but Jim Shearon and Lingle played but a few minutes. In other Big Ten games, Minne- sota moved into first place as it whipped Ohio State, 82-56, and Indiana stopped Wisconsin, 65-58. EDITOR'S NOTE: Walters, Michi- gan's leading diver and fourth nation- ally last year consented to put his newspaper experience to use in cover- ing the swim team's trip for The Daily.) By JAMES WALTERS The Michigan swimming team returned to Ann Arbor Sunday after smashing a national and a world record during its nine day tour through the eastern and southern states. The tour included meets and ex- hibitions at the Indianapolis Ath- letic Club, Army, North Carolina State, North Carolina University, and Villanova. World Record A world record time of six min- utes, 22.5 seconds was established last Thursday at the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill by the Michigan 600 yard back- stroke relay team of Jim Kruth- ers, Bert and Jack Wardrop, and Bumpy Jones. The same team also shattered the 800 yard National AAU back- stroke record Saturday at Villa- nova. The time for that distance was eight minutes, 57.7 seconds. Michigan swimmers also ac- counted for 15 other pool rec- ords during the tour. Ten of the new marks were set by Jones and the Wardrop twins. The other five were established by Mike Delaney, and Jim T h u r 1 o w, Michigan breaststrokers, Ron Gora, free- style sprinter, and Fritz Myers, versatile sophomore individual medley artist. Young Speedster Perhaps the most startling com- petitor encountered by the Michi- STATISTICS ILLINOIS G F Brothers, f ......6 3 Altenberger, f ...4 2 Phil Judson, f ....2 0 Schmidt, f ......2 0 Stout, c .........3 0 BonSalle, c ......5 2 Ridley, g ........3 3 Paul Judson, g .. .7 7 Totals ......32 17 MICHIGAN G F Stern, f.........6 2 Groffsky, f ......7 3 Kramer, c .......9 9 Eaddy, g ........5 3 Jorgenson, g ....3 3 Shearon, g ......0 0 Lingle, g ....-0 0 Totals ........30 20 P 3 1 1 2 0 4 4 3 18 P 4 4 2 0 1 0 14 T 15 10 4 4 6 12 9 21 81 T 14 17 27 13 9 0 0 80 i t E i JERRY STERN ... at last gan team was 16 year old Frank McKinney, speedy Indianapolis high school swimmer. McKinney pushed Jones to a new pool rec- ord at the Indianapolis Athletic Club when he swam the 150 yard individual medley in 1.31.5. Jones' time was 1.29.6. Two other records were set by opposing swimmers. Dick Fadgen of North Carolina State swam to a new 200 yard orthodox breast- stroke record of two minutes, 26.5 seconds as he beat Michigan's Jim Thurlow and Joe Haselby. The University of North Caro- lina's 300 yard medley relay team bettered the existing National Col- legiate record by swimming the distance in two minutes, 45.9 sec- onds. Sight-Seeing Enroute Travelling by auto, the 14 Mich- igan swimmers and their two coaches Gus Stager and Bruce Harlan, took time off from the swimming schedule to stop in New York and Washington, D.C. Staying at the New York Athlet- ic Club, team members visited New York's famed Radio City and the Steve Allen television show. In nine days the Michigan swim- mers travelled more than 3000 miles and accumulated a six won, none loss record. In addition to the regular competition the team conducted swimming clinics and demonstrated old and new strokes for several hundred Michigan alumni and high school swimmers. Each meet was climaxed by a hi- larious comedy diving show per- formed by Michigan's diving coach Bruce Harlan and divers Charley Bates and Jim Walters. 'WILD RACE': Icers Split, Still in Running for First By PHIL DOUGLIS s WELCOME: Michigan Students!! 11 Hair Stylists Collegiate Styles Our Specialty r The Daseola Barbers near Michigan Theater I Ialftime: Michigan 48, Illi- nois 44. Free throws missed: Illinois -Brothers 2, Sout, Ridley, Paul Judson, BonSalle, Phil Judson. Michigan -- Stern, Groffsky 2, Kramer 4, Eaddy 2. Despite a mediocre two won, two lost between - semester record, Michigan's tiny but hustling hock- ey squad :.till barely remains; in the running for a coveted berth at the NCAA ice finals, due to the wildest and closest race the Western Hockey League has ever seen. During the mid-year break, Vic Heyliger's icers split even with two of the hottest teams in the league, Minnesota and Michigan Tech. The Wolverines divided with Min- nesota here, losing the opener 10- 4, and copping a brilliant 4-3 win the next night, Over this last weekend, Michi- gan and Michigan Tech divided their first series of the year, with 4-2, but dropping the second tilt, 4-1. All four games were one- pointers in the league standings. Gophers, Huskies Rampage Meanwhile, the onrushing Go- phers and Huskies tore up all other opposition, including each other, and the two Giants of the Northland roared up near the top of the WIHL ladder. The Golden Gophers picked up seven points, and the Huskies garnered six and a half during Michigan's semester break, to hustle past the Wolverines in the standings. Colorado College howver, has virtually sewed up the league title by adding four more points during the past month, but the second place berth is wide open, with four teams definitely in the running. Only three points separate the last place team from the second place outfit, and four teams are dead- locked within one and a half points of each other. Wolverines Must Win All Michigan, tied with MSC for fifth and sixth, must win nearly all its remaining games to gain sec- ond place, andrmust beat MSC, Minnesota, North Dakota, and Michigan Tech in that order. The I Spartan series is this weekend, with a Friday night game at East Lansing and a return engagement here-Saturday night. If the Heyligermen can success- fully brush 3ast the rapidly de- scending Spartans, the stage will be set for the deciding stretch run. The following three succes- sive weekends find Michigan tak- ing on the three other contenders for second nlace, with every game a showdown battle. MacFarland Nets Hat-Tricks In both Michigan victories, Bill MacFarland tallied three goals, the hat-trick, sparking his team- mates to upset victories. The opening loss to Minnesota was a tragic affair 'from the Michigan standpoint. With a huge crowd jamming the Coliseum, Michigan blew a 2-0 lead in the opening pe- riod, with the Gophers tying it up as defenseman Bob Schiller was injured, leaving a gap in the Wol- verine back wall. Minnesota's Johnny Mayasich leaped into the league scoring lead which he still holds at this mo- ment, by smashing Li four goals and assisting on four others, as the roof fell in on Michigan, to the tune of 10-4. The next night was a different story, as Michigan stormed back from a 3-1 deficit to whip the fa- vored Gophers, 5-3. Scoring three goals within four minutes late in the second period, Michigan avenged the previous night's loss. MacFarland's hat-trick paced the Wolverines, with one of the three goals scored on a rarely seen pen- alty shot. Houghton Holiday Up to Houghton the Wolverine caravan went, and again it was the red-hot stick of Bill MacFarland that led the way, this time to a 4-2 win over theyrampaging Hus- kies. Brilliant defensive work es- pecially by Bobby Schiller, helped Lorne Howes to. hold the lead against the high scoring Techmen. Disaster struck again last Sat- urday afternoon, as the two squads squared off in the feature attraction of Tech's famed Win- ter Carnival. In a game marked by a bloody brawl, and fearsome high sticking, Tech beat Michigan for the first time in 10 games, 4-1. Road Gets Tougher The road from here on gets to igher. Some relief is in store for Michigan's terribly shorthand- ed team with addition of Mike Bu- chanan to the squad, but he has yet to prove himself in Western League play. Colorado College.... Michigan Tech ..... Minnesota........ Denver .......,,.. MICHIGAN........ Michigan State .... North Dakota*,..... IV L 9 1 6 5 76 5 9 5 5 4 10 5 5 * Last night's late game not included. Point System-When teams play twice in a season, each game counts two points. When they play four times, eachsgame counts one point in a standings. Ties are split even in points. Each team plays games to- taling 24 points. Pts T Pts Lost 0 12 2 1 81/ 5112 1 7112 616 1 7112~ 131'2~ 0 6 81, 0 6 12 1 5 i 52 WILD'S WILD'S WILD'S IMPORTED SCOTTISH SHFETLA WILD'S ND ROEBUCK AND CO. for value... for qua lity.. Shop at Sears and Save!' Brighten Up your room or apartment*... Loop Pile Rugs .... 3.98 to 19.95 Large selection of Curtains and Draperies . . .. . . 79c to 7.98 COUNTRY LIFE JACKET $45 Tailored in Wild's Classic "University Model" Woven Bedspreads . . . . . 5.00 Sheets, Pillow Cases, Towels, Wash Cloths, Blankets, Rag I I R NATURAL SHOULDERS FLAP POCKETS Fabulous Jackets for college 9%0 Just arrived! Our new collection of sport jackets in rare Imported Shetland is absolutely out of this world. The wonderful softness and beauty of the fabrics, the fine natural tailoring by VAN BOVEN make them really exceptional. Priced from $47.50. .a .e ,. .00 THREE-BUTTON CENTER VENT No other sport coating gives you quite the warm pride you feel in a Scottish Shetland. Matching flannel trousers available from $14.95 to $32.50 A WL the wIUldeague race is to be- fl1r""Mi-'M come even more complicated, for State Street on the Campus North Dakota played a one point-:E er at Denver late last night, and.Jr- tonight Colorado College invades WILD'S WILD'S WILD'S WILDS Minnesota for one point tilt. EUROPE 1955 GOLDEN BEAR TOUR 72 days 11 countries June 24 and June 29 from N.Y. all incl. $905.00 E UROPEAN T HRIFTOUR 65 days 11 countries $925.00 June 24 from New York all incl.FAT FIN E A RTS TOU R 60 days 12 countries $1195*00 June 24 from New York - all incl. Also: BROWNELL, SITA, UNIVERSITY TRAVEL, OLSON and all other tours. 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