TH MCMG.AN BAILY P THE 1~IICHIGAN DAILY P Wrestlers Topple Favored Iowa; Indiana Smashes Hoopsters, 97-73 Late Scores COLLEGE BASKETBALL Illinois 111, Ohio State 64 Iowa 70, Northwestern 65 Minnesota 77, Wisconsin 71 Dlayton 76, St. Francis (Pa.) 41 North Carolina 83, Virginia 72 N.C. State 95, South Carolina 68 Houston 67, St. Louis 66 Wayne 105, Case Tech 54 Kentucky 88, Mississippi 49 USC 85, Washington State 54 Wichita 86, Bradley 59 Iowa State 88, Missouri 85 Brown 82, Princeton 79 Pittsburgh 77, Army 67 Notre Dame 70, Navy 63 Georgia Tech 79, Tulane 77 Yale 72, Cornell 60 Kansas 80, Nebraska 56 NHL Boston 3, Detroit 2 Toronto 5, New York 0 WIHL Michigan Tech 2, Minnesota 0 ,Ineligibilities Ineligibility f or scholastic rea- sons of seven athletes was announced yesterday. Failing to make grades were sprinter John Johnson, hurdlers Dick Hill and Roger Severson, and milers Peter Stanger and Jack Green of the track team. Also ineligible were Jim Vuko- vich of the baseball squad and puekster' Morley Chin. 91,15 Win eps Title o es Alive By TOM BEIERLE chigan's wrestling team yes- y scored a tremendous 18-15 * victory over the top-ranked, ipion-studded and heavily- ed Iowa Hawkeyes. at Yost i House. e win followed upon the heels ,n 18-16 victory over Purdue a 14-12 edging of Michigan e, during the vacation period. hn McMahon, Mike Rodriguez, d Hamady,and Don Haney tined to make a clean sweep 11 the middle weight events, he Hawkeyes, who are labeled he Big Ten's finest this year ht hard enough in the low and y weight classes to keep the e fans on the edge of their1 r Ragged Play Marks Loss (continued from page 1) able to collect more than six points. This complete lack of scor- ing balance, in complete contrast to Indiana which had three men 'with more than 16 points, con- tributed just as much to the Michi- gan collapse as did their ball handling. i Soc IAL CHAIRMEN! ARE YOU PLANNING A PARTY? -Daily-Hal Leeds MICHIGAN'S ED SWITZER drives a hard shot past goalie Jeff Simus into the Colorado College goal during the Wolverines' 7-2 rout of the Tigers last Wednesday night. The victory was sweet re- venge for Colorado's 6-3 triumph of the previous evening. WIHL RACE TIGHTENS: Pressure Mounts on Michigan Icers t 4' MICH Stern, Tarries Lingle Tillots wiia Krani WrigA Sullivs Rtaisor Borger: Shear( Tota INDIA' Thom Ball, Choic Fisher Barley Dees, Neal, Bryan Phipp Gee,g Obren Hodso Tot Descending IGAN G F f .......... 0 2-3 r, f . ........ 2' 2-4 f........ 2 3-5 son, f....... 1 2-4 uns, f-c ..., 1 0-0 Ler, c-f ...9 6-12 t, g ........ 3 2-2 an, g ....... 1 0-0 r, g ... .... 2 0-1 nsen, g .... 3 6-8 ,on, g.. .....1 0-0 als ... ..... 25 23-29 NA G F pson, I .... 3 6-8 f ...........0 1-2y e, I......... 6 8-11 r, f ......... 0 2-2 Ysf....... 0 0-0 c ...... 9 7-7 C .......... 1 0-0 t, g ...... 6 5-6 s, g ......... 0 0-0 . -.......-.' . 1 0-0 uskey, g .... 3 3-4 n, g ........ 1 5-6 ;als ... ..... 30 37-46 McMahon Edges Champ Mahon defeated a reigning ren champion for the second this year as he narrowly out- ed Iowa's John Winder, 13-11, e fastest and most exciting h. of the day. Winder holds rear's conference crown in the ound class. spite a badly cut eye suffered in the match, Captain Rod- z came through in his usual ping fast attack and corn- ly dominated Gary Meyers, Loning him, 17-2. mady, making his third ap- lice for the Wolverines play- e hero role in getting Michi- lone pin of the meet by hold- down Hawkeye Ken Reed in ast time of 2:15. STATISTICS Anderson (M) tied Govig (I), 1-1 McCann (I) beat Hirt (M), 7-0 -iamady (M) pinned Reed (I), 2:15 *rney'(M) beat Roberts (I), 13-3 Rodrigues (M) beat Meyers (I), 17-2 -MMahon (M)beat Winder (I), 13-11 -Marchello (M) tied .Jenkinson (I), 1-1 Leuer (I) beat Zervas (M), 1-1 -Kurdelmeler (I) pinned O'Brien (Ii), :21 By BRUCE BENNETT Michigan is "behind the eight- ball" in the Western Intercollegiate Hockey League race according to its coach, Vic Heyliger. The Wolverines blew two valu- able points in losing to league- leading Colorado College at the Coliseum last Tuesday, 6-3, but escaped further damage by im- pressively whipping the invaders the next night, 7-2. A double win over the western- ers would have given Michigan a comfortable two point bulge in the League standings as the teams head down the home stretch. Instead Michigan is lodged in second place, on point back of Colorado College and tied with Michigan Tech, which Heyliger now rates as the team to beat. Since the two-game series with WIHL STANDINGS Team W L T Pts Pis Lost Colorado College .. .10 3 0 14 6 MICHIGAN.....,..9 2 1 13 5 Michigan Tech ....10 2 0 13 3 North Dakota ..... 7' 9 0 10 9 Denver ............. 4 7 2 8 13 Minnesota..........5 8 "1 6 10 Michigan State .... 1 13 0 2 17 When a team plays another four times, each game is worth one point. When teams meet only twice, each game is worth two points. Michigan State at the end of last semester, Michigan has been cut down in numbers. The 3-2 edging and 7-1 rout of State marked the absence of Mike Buchanan and Wally Maxwell from competition. Both have been declared ineli- gible officially for the present. Added to this, reserves Baden Cosby and Morley Chin are out for the rest of the season with injuries. P T 3 2 46 0 7 2 4 2 2 5 24 3 8 3 2 0 4 3 12 02 25 73 P T 2 12 21 2 20 4 2 1 0 2 25 1 2 2 17 1 0 1 2 3 9 2 7 23 97 35-73 49-97 I The BUD-MOR Agency offers these out-, * Ann Arbor Alley Cats * Don Young * Johnny Hlarberd * The Del Trio * Earle Pearson * Ray Louis * Hawaiian Beachcombers * Tom Gilmore standing musical groups for your dancing and listening pleasure: 7 ' d Michigan is not alone in player difficulties. Colorado will be with- out the services of high scorer Clare Smith, Bunt Hubchik, and Bob Hersack for the remainder of the season. These players have1 been declared scholastically ineli-j gible. Denver has also felt the bite, losing Joe Kilbey, Dave Broadbelt, Dave Rogers, Jim Swain, and Brian Sharp for violation of rules. * Bill Bottomley * Tedd Rae I During the first semester, it was our pleasure to serve the following groups in their social program: UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Michigan ...............38 Indiana................48 I -1 Acacia Alice Lloyd Hall Alpha Epsilon Pi Alpha Gamma Delta Alpha Rho Chi Alpha Tau Omega Betsy Barbour House Chi. Phi Delta Kappa Epsilon Nu Sigma Nu Delta Sigma Phi Delta Upsilon Gamma Phi Beta Hillel Kappa Alpha Theta Kappa Delta Kappa Kappa Gamma Phi Delta Theta Phi Gamma Delta Phi Kappa Psi Pi Lamda Phi Phi Rho Sigma. Sigma Alpha Mu Sigma Chi Sigma Phi Epsilon Tau Delta Phi Theta Chi Theta Delta Chi pay less for your Sigma Alpha Epsilon Zeta Beta Tau i I i, rr MICHIGAN STATE NORMAL COLLEGE Alpha Sigma Tau Alpha Xi Delta Arm of Honor Men's Union Phi Sigma Epsilon R.O.T.C. Sigma Sigma Sigma Tau Kappa Epsilon Sigma Tau Gamma Women's League Sophomor Class FULL SELECTION OF BOOKS play Team Sets Record; larks Michigan Showing ' Stop and Browse at the STUDENT BOOK EXCHANGE DON'T DELAY-PLAN YOUR PARTIES RIGHT AWAY WRITE -PHONE-WIRE THE BUD-MOB AGENCY 1323 South University -Ann Arbor, Michigan Phone NOrmandy 2-6362 24-HOUR ANSWERING SERVICE *Morrie Richman, "Your Social Chairman's Social Chairman" By JOHN HILLYER Speeial To The Daily EAST LANSING-Shattering a )rld record in the sprint medley. lay, Michigan's thinclads domi- ,ted the Michigan State Relays Jenison Field House here last ght. Captain Ron Wallingford's sen- tional individual showing in th the sprint medley relay and Shotput Record NEW YORK (AP) - Gigantic4 Parry O'Brien, from the U.S. kir Force, broke his own world ndoor shotput record with a nighty toss of 59 feet 9-inches h the New York Athletic Club Games in Madison Square Gar- den. e two mile event was the high- ht of the meet for the Wolver- es. Wallingford was the anchor an of the record-breaking four- ne. He followed Grant Scruggs, ek Fjodin, and Bob Rudesill for a time of 3:26.5, erasing the mark set in the same meet in 1954 by the Kansas team anchored by the famed Wes Santee. The Michigan captain came back later to breeze home first by a growing margin in the two mile race. Michigan athletes accounted for four first and two seconds to take most of the glory at the annual meet. Robin Varian won the 1000 yard run in 2:15.9, giving a final burst of speed to overtake Kansas State's Jesse Unruh just before the finish line. The Maize and Blue thundered home with the best time in the two-heat university mile relay. Rudesill, Varian, Flodin, and Scruggs established a new meet and field house mark of 3:17.4. Michigan's second places came in the shot put and the mile run. Dave Owen's 52'102" heave was topped only by Kansas' Bill Nieder who broke the meet record with a 57'6" toss. Chuck Morton of the Wolverines finished an unimpres- sive second to another Kansan, Bernie Gay, in the mile. in the NEW WING of the MICHIGAN UNION I ML ..,. f! I- The Choice of I Well-Dressed Men . . . I This Week m Sports Monday, February 13, 1956 BASKETBALI-at Illinois Wednesday, February 15, 1956 HOCKEY-Detroit Red Wings-Coliseum-8:00 p.m. Friday, February 17, 1956 HOCKEY-at Minnesota Saturday, February 18, 1956 BASKETBALL-Indiana here-Yost Field House-8:00 p.m. SWIMING-Indiana here-Sports Building-2:30 p.m. HOCKEY-at Minnesota GYMNASTICS-at Ohio State WRESTLING-at Northwestern TRACK-at Kansas The all-cotton cord needs no introduction to those who have enjoyed their smart cool appearance and all around utility. The Wash n' Wear .... a skillful blending of cotton and Dacron ... is similar to the cotton cord in pattern, but has the added advan- tage of being washable and requiring no ironing. Simply wash it out at night, hang it up, and it is ready to wear the next morning, Both available in our, natural shoulder model with lapped seams, hooked center vent, and narrow proportioned trousers,. Last year we were unable to obtain enough of these suits to satisfy the demand. At the present we have a complete selection, and strongly urge that you make your choice now. COTTON CORD SUITS '. $27.50 BLUE, TAN, GREY I: DACRON AND COTTON CORD SUITS *.. $59.75 available in seven different colors q .. -l (Bermuda shorts available in both materials for men and women) Final Performance Today 2:30 P.M. F U I s