THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THRE Icers Win 11' Rallies or Victory; [owes Star (continued from page 1) WIHL STANDINGS Team W L T Pts Pts Lost MICHIGAN ..... 11 2 1 15 5 Michigan Tech .. 11 2 0 15 3 Colorado College 10 4 0 14 6 North Dakota ... 7 11 0 10 12 Minnesota ........ 7 10 1 9 12 Denver........... 4 8 2 8 16 Michigan State .. 1 15 0 2 19 ONE-POINT GAMES LEFT TO PLAY Michigan Tech-6 MICHIGAN-4 Colorado College-4 " - DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES START FEPRUARY 20 mYPNG OPTONAL Over 400 Schools in U.S. will assist you in review or placement. ENROLL TODAY IN NEXT CLASS. HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE Founded in 1915 Phone NO 8-7831 State and William Sts. L 'BEST DUAL MEET EVER': Track Squad Nips Kansas, 58-56 Special to The Daily. much depth 'for the Jayhawks, LAWRENCE, Kan.-A talented who had 18 of 24 letterwinners array of Wolverines swung the axe back from the group that finished and crushed a powerful Kansas third in the NCAA outdoor finale Jayhawk cinder team here last last spring. night for a 58-56 win in a dual Canham, usually pessimistic in natch that attracted the attention viewing his own team, joyfully of devoted track fans throughout analyzed the victory by stating, the nation. "Balance did it for us. Our 'big Michigan mentor Don Canham, shots' came through with firsts who has been head coach since and the rest gave the support." 1948, labled the thriller "the best Of 12 events on the meet schedule dual meet we have had yet, in- at the new Kansas field house, cluding outdoor .meets." each team took six firsts. Ron The Michigan crew had just too Wallingford, captain of the Wol- DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER presents HENRIK IBSEN l A ErDD WED.-SAT. N 1118:15 P.M. DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER 327 S. Fourth Ave. (Masonic Temple) Admission $1.65 Students 99c BOX OFFICE OPEN'DAILY 10-5 Phone NO 2-5915 for reservations now! verines, gained the distinction of being the lone double winner in the close contest. The little Canadian (he's 5'8" and 147 pounds) romped home in the grueling one-mile and two- mile runs. Wallingford broke the tape at 4:14.6 in the mile and then de- feated Al Frame, 1954 NCAA cross country champion, in the two mile with a 9:21.7 clocking. Eight of a possible 10 Michigan- Kansas dual meet marks fell, with but one running event having tor- rid times. The two hurdle races are 60 yards this year instead of 65 as in the past, so those records will also go into the archives. Other first-place winners for Michigan were pole-vaulter Eeles Lanstrom, hurdler Tom Hendricks, quarter-miler Bob Rudesill, and 880-man Pete Gray. Brendan O'Reilly, known for his high-Jumping, turned in two third- place finishes in the hurdles to help spell the difference. He has practiced only two weeks over the sticks. Another late-comer, Jim Pace racked up a creditable second place in the 60 yard dash, behind Kansan ,Dick Blair, who tied his school record with a :06.2 timing. Landstrom vaulted 14'3%", al- most a foot better than the second- placers. Ron Varian gave team- mate Gray a run in the 880,rolling at a, 1:55.9 pace, compared to the winner's 1:55.5. Two Big Ten champs, Dave Owen and Mark Booth, met super- ior opposition. Owen's fine shot put went over 54 feet, but NCAA winner Bill Nieder did 58'%", his personal best. Booth fell one inch short of Bob Cannon's 6'6/a" high jump. Indiana, which had a 48-39 defi- cit at half, began to find the range early in the second half, and fought its way to a 54-54 deadlock, only to see the hosts pull away to another fair-sized lead. B r a n c h McCracken's quintet kept putting on the pressure, and knotted the count at 71-all on guard Charlie Hodson's push shot with six minutes remaining. Things still seemed to be in Michigan's favor, as the visitors were playing without high-scoring Wally Choice, who had fouled out a minute be- fore. Needless to say, it didn't work out that way. After both tegms had messed up scoring chances, Indiana center Archie Dees found an opening and sent his team into the lead, 73-71. Seconds later Kramer scored from under the boards to score his 29th and 30th points, re-tying the score. Dees and Wolverine Captain Tom Jorgensen traded baskets, but sub Dick Neal put the Hoosiers ahead for keeps by scoring with 2:30 left in the game. Michigan resumed the offensive but saw a golden opportunity slip out of its fingers when Pete Til- lotson blew two free throws. In- diana lost possession of the ball, and the 5,500 spectators sensed that this might be Michigan's night. They saw Kramer free under the basket, but groaned in unison, Wow! 61' 5-1/4" NEW YORK (P) -- Parry O'Brien shattered every world shotput record - indoors and outdoors-when he got off a tremendous heave of 61'52/" in the national AAU champion. ships here last night. O'Brien now owns every shot- put record in the book, holding the outdoor mark of 60'10". Bob Backus of the N.Y.A.C. smashed the world indoor 35- pound weight throw record with a flip of 63'101/". it seemed, when he blew his easy chance. Indiana, putting on the deep. freeze, added three more foul throws before the final horn. sounded. The Wolverines got off to a fast" start and pulled away to an early 16-11 lead. The visitors managed to move into an 18-18 tie, but nev- er saw the lead again in the first half. STATISTICS r TT!T!!=!TM he didn't see the puck till it was past him. The big senior from Toronto, Ont., then made the night com- plete for himself and his team- mates, as he put the game out of the Gophers' reach at the 11:39 mark after Bob Schiller had dug the puck out of the corner to begin the play. Schiller added insult to injury at 19:44, scoring the Wolver- STATISTICS FIRST PERIOD: 1-Michigan, McDon- ald (Switzer, Hanna) 7:41; 1-Min- nesota, Yackel (Jetty) 18:30; 2- Minnesota, Yackel (Jetty) 19:03. Penalties: Michigan, Schiller (high- sticking) 10:21. SECOND PERIOD: 2-Michigan, Mac- Farland (Rendal, McIntosh) 0.40; 3-Michigan, MacFarland (Schiller) 6:32; 4-Michigan, MacFarland (Mc- Intosh) 11:39; 5-Michigan, Schiller (Dunnigan, McDonald) 19:44. Penalties: Michigan, Hanna (inter- ference) 5:15; Rendall (charging) 13:30. THIRD PERIOD: 6-Michigan, Mc- Donald (Pitts) 2:33. Penalties: 'Michigan, McIntosh (handling puck) 5:39; Rendall (ille- gal check) 17:44; MacFarland (mis- conduct) 18:28. Minnesota, Schmidt (tripping) 3:15; Newkirk (charging) 8:28; Yackel (misconduct) 18:28. ines' fourth goal of the period. The husky defenseman slapped a bouncing shot from the right boards near the blue line that hopped over McCarten's stick. Michigan goalie Lorne Howes was spectacular in the nets during the period as Minnesota tried des- perately to keep themselves in contention. Michigan got off to a slow start in the opening period. After Neil MacDonald countered at 7:41, the Wolverines saw their slim lead dis- appear into mid-air late in the stanza, as Ken Yackel beat Howes twice within 33 seconds. On the second goal, Howes made a brilliant stop, but they alert Gopher pounced on the re- bound and slipped it into the net. The third period was a rough- and-tumble affair, as tempers flared on both sides. All in all, there were six penalties meted out, three to each team. Tech plays at Michigan State this coming weekend and Colorado hosts Minnesota, while the Wolv- erines will play Montreal Uni- versity. LI' I: aI *, INDIANA G F P T Choice, f ......,... 9 9-11 5 27 Thompson, f ........ 1 1-1 1 3 Neal, f..............,1 0-1 2 2 Barley, f ............ 0 0-1 3 0 Dees, c..............6 2-2 4 14 Obremskey, g ....... 1 0-0 1 2 Hodson, g .......... 5 11-11 1 21 Bryant, g............5 1-3 0 11 Totals ............ 28 24-30 17 80 TORONTO SYMPHONY 1 Sir Ernest MacMillan Conductor WED. 8:30 FEB. 22nd CHORAL UNION SERIES I 'I HILL AUDITORIUM Tickets $1.50-$2.00-$2.50 $3.00-$3.50 at BURTON TOWER RUBINSTEIN -Mar. 1 STITCH-RANDALL -Mar. 9 Representatives from all three divisions of Convair will conduct personal interviews at UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN FEBRUARY 27 Accept this chance to get the full story new! I I of CKELS ARCADE 330 S. 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