I THE MICHIGAN DAILY vriv AIUN < _: , A - - Thinclads, Matmen Keep Titles IIEDS Photograph ill Decide cnDash Victor (Continued from Page 1) Wrestlers Edge Iowa Squad by Four Points (Continued from Page 1) house mark of 14' 2". He actually won the event when he proved to be the only man capable of vault- ing 14', but was given a shot at the record and came through on his first attempt. Fails at 14' 6" He tried three times thereafter to do 14' 6", but failed, receiving a rousing ovation for his efforts. Michigan's other winner was perhaps its most impressive. Capt. Ron Wallingford, who disappoint- ed Michigan followers earlier by finishing an unimpressive fourth in the mile, overwhelmed the rest of the field in the two mile to re- capture the title in that event in 9:19.3. 'M' Makes Move Five events-four races and the broad jump-had been decided when the powerful Wolverines launched their surge to first place. Michigan stood third by about three points going into the 1000- yard run. Gray's stirring win, coupled with Robin Varian's third, then put the Maize and Blue out in front for keeps. Including both indoor and out- door titles, it was the third straight championship for the Wolverines and their 38th in history-an un- paralleled record. The only Conference record set was, as anticipated, in the broad jump. Indiana's great newcomer, Greg Bell, leaped 24' 11%" to es- tablish a new mark. This jump was executed in Friday's preliminaries, but was counted since he failed to better it yesterday. Michigan's Tom Hendricks plac- ed fourth in the event, also failing to improve on his Friday perform- ance of 23'. Hendricks proved a valuable point-getter, taking third in the fast low-hurdle finals. Other Wolverine Scorers Other Michigan scorers were Geert Keilstrup, third in the half- mile; Dick Flodin, fourth in the 440; Laird Sloan, third in the 660; and Bob Rudesill and Bob Brown, third and fifth, respectively, in k the 300. In the mile relay, which was judged in two heats on a time basis, Indiana's foursome repeated as champions, Iowa took second and the Wolverine quartet-Geo- rge Gluppe, Flodin, Varian and Rudesill-took third to end the Michigan scoring in this, the final event. Michigan failed to score in only one event-the high hurdles- which was won by Michigan State's Joe Sayoldi in :08.5, a new fieldhouse record. The Wolverines had no entry in the high hurdles. ines by beating Iowa's Gary Kur- delmeier, 5-2, in the 177 pound class. With the match tied, 2-2 near the finish and Kurdelmeier having the hold, Marchello scored a re-f versal and hung on to his bigger opponent to gain an extra point for riding time. Marchello, wrestling very care- fully, out-thought his opponent for the victory. Both men are sopho- mores, making their first appear- ances in the tourney. Jenkinson Edges McMahon In a match that was decided by' just two seconds of riding time,! Iowa's Harlan Jenkinson edged Michigan's John McMahon, 9-8, to take the 167 pound title. The score was tied at the finish but the judges decided that Jen- kinson had 61 seconds of riding time, one second more than the required minute, and awarded him the deciding point. Frank Hirt lost a close 2-0 deci- sion to Jim Sinadinos of MSU in another final match. The biggest -blow to Michigan's hopes earlier in the tourniamentj was Don Haney's ankle injury which kept him from repeating as 147 pound champion. Even with his weak ankle, Haney managed to garner a fourth place finish. Dan Deppe, wrestling at 123 pounds, pinned his opponent in the short time of 1:58 to take third place and Charley Anderson fin-- ished fourth in the 130 pound divi- sion., STATISTICS Final Matches 115-McCann(Ia) over Pihakis (Ind)j default 123-Stroud (MSU) decisioned An der- son (Mian), 2-2 (Referee's deci- sion) 130-Whitney (Pur) decisioned Ed- wards (Wise), 5-3 137-Sinadinos (MSU) decisioned HIRT (M), 2-0 147-Praed (Pur) decisioned DeFelice (OSU), 1-1 (Referee's decision) 157-RODRIGUEZ (M) pinned Ten- Pas (Ill), 4:36 167-Jenkinson (Ia) decisioned Mc- MAHON (M), 9-8 177-MARCHELLO (M) decisioned mneier (Ia), 5-z 191-Leuer (Ia) decisioned Anthony (Ind), 3-1 Heavyweight-Konovsky (Wise) deci-f sioned Herbold (Minn), 4-1 TEAM STANDINGS MICHIGAN........................63 Iowa .............................59 Purdue.........................40 Michigan State-...................40 Indiana...........................34 Minnesota........................33 Wisconsin ......................... 26 Illinois.........................2 Northwestern.....................10 Ohio State .......................10, MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .66 1.47 2.15 3 .77 1.95 3.23 4 .99 2,46 4.30 Figure 5 average words to a line. 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Car and phone necessary. For interviews, call NO "PURCHASE FROM PURCHASE" 2-9903 between 9 A.M. and 5 P.M. Argus C-3 Camera with case and flash- )82H used. $39.95. A 1' -Daily-John Hirtzel ALL ALONE is Michigan's great two-miler, Capt. Ron Wallingford. Wallingford is shown hitting the tape to retain the two-mile crown with a time of 9:19.3. wkeye Cagers Trapl Illinois Purchase Camera Shop 1116 S. University Phone: NO 8-6972 )141B FOR SALE-Small desk, coffee table, twin bed. Must sell. NO 3-6018. )129B FOR SALE: Collegiate Furnishings for Apartment-tables, drapes, beds, etc. NO 2-6983. JO ANNE. After 5. )128B ARMY, NAVY type oxfords-$6.88, sox 39c, shorts 69c, military supplies, Sam's Stbre, 122 E. Washington. , )123B BOARDERS BOARDERS WANTED PHONE NO 8-6641 and ASK FOR STEWARD )i11 BOARDERS WANTED .- Reasonable rates. Call NO 3-5806. House Manager. r) 14S BOARDERS WANTED. $10 per week. Good food. Call NO 8-8400. )13S WANTED TO RENT APARTMENT to sublet for 2 or 3 girls during summer. Call Irene after 5 P.M. 3004 Stockwell. )17L TRANSPORTATION RIDERS to California in June via Yel- lowstone, Grand Canyon, Las Vegas, NO 2-8444. )40G RIDE WANTED to Miami, Fla. - Spring Vacation. Will share driving and ex- pense. Call Joel, 212 Adams, NO 2- 4401. )39G WANTED-Cab drivers, full or part Apply 113 S. Ashley, Ann Arbor Y and Checker Cab Company. P NO 8-9382. THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGj HAS OPENINGS FOR SECRETARIES, STENOGRAPHE TYPISTS Medical Technologists in the fiel4 CHEMISTRY, BIO-OHEMISTRI BACTERIOLOGY Good vacation, sick leave pol Liberal fringe benefits, eace working conditions. Apply: University of Michigan Personnel Office 3012 Administration Bldg. Ann Arbor, Michigan FOR RENT SUITE FOR TWO OLDER BOYS-B ing. convenient to campus. 1328 des. PERSONAL ' time. ellow 'hone )70H AN RS ds of y icles. llent )71H oard- Ged- )C48 FOR A DATE OR A MATE-at the lowest rate-we're just great. Call Lovers, Inc., NO 2-7612. Dick Shapiro, Pres., H.B.D. -21. )102F Read Daily (Classifieds'. JI WE NEED USED CARS!T IOWA CITY, Iowa (iP)-Iowa ran' wild in the second half to topple Illinois 96-72 in a climactic Big Ten basketball game yesterday. The victory, in a nationally tele- vised contest, cinched a title tie for Iowa and moved the Hawkeyes within one game of the champion- ship. Recovering from an eight point deficit early in the first half, Iowa ended the opening period with a 37-35 margin and then turned on the steam to topple the team which was ranked No. 2 nationally. Iowa was No. 10. The Hawkeyes had a .449 field goal percentage for the game. Only Hoosiers Left Only a game with Indiana here. Monday night now stands between Iowa and the loop title. The title automatically provides entry to the NCAA regional basketball tourna- ment at Iowa City March 16-17. Iowa edged Indiana 86-83 in a game at Bloomingtonl~'eb. 20. In a great scoring duel between George BonSalle, the 6'8" Illini center, and Iowa's Bill Logan, 6'7", BonSalle came up with 32 points and Logan with 26. The tight Iowa defense held two of Illinois' usual high scorers, Bill Ridley and Paul Judson, to 11 and 8 points, -espec- tively. The overall Illinois field goal percentage was .361-far below its usual form. Iowa held a two point edge early in the game with both sides miss- ing frequently. After the lead changed hands twice, Illinois zoomed ahead to an 8-point, 17-9 lead. Iowa then recovered and made 10 straight points without a single Illinois counter to move to a 19-17 advantage midway at the half., After that point, Illinois tied the game up at 19-19, 29-29 and 31-31 but most of the time Iowa held a two-point margin the remainder of the period. Iowa's biggest lead in the first half was four points. Defensive work was furious with Illinois holding a first half, edge in rebounds. Illinois made 36.4 per cent of its attempts the first half to 35.4 by Iowa. At the beginning of the second half BonSalle tied it up 37-37 and Bill Ridley's free throw gave Illi- nois a one-point lead. That was the last time Iowa was headed. 1 No Doubt I record dance 9:00 -12:00 in the Union terrace room free TONIGHT to stock our new lot. We can give you top allowance on your present car ... any make or model! Come in and test drive the new, beautiful 1956 Mercury. Our low overhead enables us to give you the top notch deal on a new or used car in Washtenaw county. Fitz- gerald. Inc. Iincoln-Mercury, 3345 Washtenaw Rd. Phone NO 3-4197 - NO 2-3293. )116N ROOMS FOR RENT ROOMS FOR RENT. 2 Male Students. Cooking privileges. Half block from campus. 417 E. Liberty. )33D WILL RENT to Univ, male student. Attractive room in private home. Phone NO 8-6037. )32D ROOMS FOR MEN - Doubles $7.00, Dorm $5.00. Two blocks from Michi- gan Union. Phone NO 2-9311 (Meal Hours) or NO 2-6491 (Evenings), )31D YOUNG, good-natured landlord needs 2 men students for large double. $7 each per week. 1227 South State. NO 3-1650. )29D MEN STUDENTS-Single at 518 E. Wil- liam. Singles and doubles at 42e Ham- ilton Place. CAMPUS TOURISTS Phone NO 3-8454 )19D BUSINESS SERVICES RE-WEAVING-Burns, tears, moth holes rewoven. Let us save your clothes. Weave Bac Shop, 224 Nickels Arcade. )30J . DRAMATIC ARTS CENTEI presents A I ENRIK IBSEN SOLD OUT TONIGHT FINAL PERFORMANCES! Tonight & Tomorrow Tomorrow 2:30 P.M. & 8:15 P.M. Special Performance 8:15 P.M. Sunday DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER 327 S. Fourth Ave. (Masonic Temple) R I Admission $1.65 Students , 99e BOX OFFICE OPEN DAILY 10-5 Phone NO 2-5915' for reservations now I Track Summaries MILE RUN-1, Ted Wheeler, Iowa; 2, Selwyn Jones, Michigan State; 3, Robert Dintelmann, Illinois; 4, Ron Wallingford, MICHIGAN; 5, Henry Kennedy, Michigan State. 4:12.5. 70 YARD HIGH HURDLES-1, Joe Savoldi, Michigan State; 2, Jack Mat- hews, Iowa; 3, Abe Woodson, Illinois; 4, Tom Campbell, Illinois; 5, Ken Toye, Northwestern. :08.5 (ties field- house record by Willard Thompson, Illinois, in 1955.) 440"YARD RUN-1, Don Ward, In- diana; 2, Gastonia Finch, Iowa; 3, Dick Flodin, MICHIGAN; 4, Tom Ecker, Iowa; 5, Harold Gaffey, Indi- ana. :49.2. HIGH JUMP-1, Tie between Mark Booth, MICHIGAN, and Les Stevens, Iowa, 6 feet 6% inches; 3, tie be- tween Stan Menees, MICHIGAN; Sam Mylin, Wisconsin; Cal Boyd, Indiana; Brendan O'Reilly, MICHIGAN, and Don Hillmer, Michigan State, 6-3. SHOT PUT-1, Dave Owen, MICHI- GAN, 54 feet 7f inches; 2, Bob Henry, Minnesota, 53-0; 3, Clarence Lane, Indiana, 52-2; 4, tie between Byrl Thompson, Minnesota, and Tom Peters, Wisconsin, 51-5y. 1,000 YARD RUN-1, Pete Gray, MICHIGAN; 2, Murray Keatinge, Iowa; 3, Robin Varian, MICHIGAN; 4, Bob Lawson, Indiana; 5, Gaylord Denslow, Michigan State. 2.14.4. BROAD JUMP-1, Greg Bell, Indi- ana, 24 feet 11% inches; 2, Brealon Donaldson, Indiana, 23-2%; 3, Lee Williams, Ohio State, 23-1%; 4, Tom Hendricks, MICHIGAN, 23-0; 5, Phil Leahy, Iowa, 22-3. (Bell's 24-11% in preliminary broke former record of 24-7 by Jewell Daily, Purdue, in 1949.) 60 YARD DASH-1, Edgar Brabham, Michigan State; 2, Jim Pace, MICH- IGAN; 3, Charles Carroll, North- western; 4, Curtis Griswold, Illinois; 5,"Donald Hebein, MICHIGAN. :06.3. 600 YARD DASH-1, Caesar Smith, Iowa; 2, Edward- DeLong, Illinois; 3, Laird Sloan, MICHIGAN; 4, Len De- palma, Northwestern; 5, James Ely, Indiana. 1.14.0. 300 YARD DASH-1, Edgar Brab- ham, Michigan State; 2, Joe Hoff- man, Wisconsin; 3, Bob Rudesill, MICHIGAN; 4, Greg Bell, Indiana; 5, Bob Brown, MICHIGAN. :31.3. 880 YARD RUN-1, Ted Wheeler, Iowa; 2, John Miller, Indiana; 3, Geert Keilstrup, MICHIGAN; 4, Bob Dintelmann, Illinois; 5, Murray Keatinge, Iowa. 1:55.1. POLE VAULT-1, Eeles Landstrom, MICHIGAN, 14 feet 2 inches; 2, Brealon Donaldson, Indiana, 13-8; 3, tie between Jerry Stanners, Illinois; Nick Piper, Iowa; George Best, Mich- igan State; Billy Jones, Purdue, and James Weaver, Ohio State, 13-4. (Landstrom's height breaks field- house record of 14-1% by Dale Fos- ter, Illinois, in 1955.) TWO MILE RUN-1, Ron Walling- ford, MICHIGAN; 2, Selwyn Jones, Michigan State; 3, Henry Kennedy, Michigan State; 4, Gaylord Denslow, Michigan State; 5, Tom Linnemeier, Indiana. 9:19.3. 70 YARD LOW HURDLES-1, Abe Woodson, Illinois; 2, Jack Mathews, Iowa; 3, Tom Hendricks, MICHIGAN; 4, George Moyers, Northwestern; 5, Joe Savoldi, Michigan State. :07.9, (Ties fieldhouse record by Willie Williams, Illinois, in 1954 and Rod Perry, Penn State, in 1955.) ONE MILE RELAY -- 1, Indiana (Harold Caffey, John Miller, James Ely, Donald Ward); 2, Iowa; 3, MICH- IGAN; 4, Northwestern; 5, Ohio State. 3:19.9. I I IMPORTANT ON-CAMPUS INTERVIEWS FOR POSITIONS AT NORTH AME RICAN'S L .7w1 S wio/ 2Awi SATURDAY, MARCH 17 8 P.M. LI... ri a® COLUMBUS DIVISION North American Aviation, foremost in the design and production of military aircraft, has an established engineering team at its Columbus Division with prime responsibility for complete design and development of Navy aircraft. The New FJ-4-Navy's latest and fastest FURY JET-is the most recent achievement at Columbus. Other, even more advanced designs are now being developed from initial concept to actual flight...creating top opportunities for virtually all types of graduate engineers. 1I ,,