-A z S THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. MATUINt- 14-KI PAGE 311 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~TTh.TDAV MARt'uN 9 18Kg K7l1t7JLfM Lp IVIM M4 eR1 3, 1y07 a M' Cagers Edge Iowa; Natators Down Ohio State Burton, Tillotson Spark Wolverines As Michigan Overcomes 'Road Jinx' Wolverines Break OSU Swimming Domination Special to The Daily IOWA CITY - Michigan's bas- ketball team finally overcame its road trip depression, snapping out of the rut to edge past Iowa, 83-79, in a closely fought contest here last night. Not since Jan. 7, when the Wol- verines defeated now-league-lead- ing Michigan State at East Lans- ing, has Michigan been able to win away from Yost Fieldhouse. State now tops the Big Ten by virtue of an overwhelming vic- tory over Indiana. Below them come the Hoosiers and Ohio State in a tie for second, Minnesota in fourth place, and Michigan shares fifth with Illinois and Purdue Last night's contest was nip- and-tuck all the way, being de- cided by four foul shots in the last 24 seconds. With the score tied at 79-79, Ron Kramer was fouled, and flipped in the first of his one- and-one chances to provide the BOOK SALE OVERBECK BOOKSTORE 1216 S. University winning margin as Iowa was un- able to score after this. M. C. Burton's rebounding was the factor which kept the ball out of Iowa's basket in the re- maining seconds. After Kramer had taken another turn at the foul lane to make the score 81-79, Iowa brought the ball down deter- mined to score but shot inac- curately. Burton went up and dragged down the rebound, getting fouled in the process. He made both charity shots to sew up the con- test. Burton's and Pete Tillotson's An Awayv Win! IOWA G F P T Gunther f 4 1-2 4 9 Seaberg f 1 1-2 3 3 Williams f 0 0-0 0 0 Lewis a 2 1-5 5 5 Hegg c 0 1-2 3 1 Martel g 12 1-3 0 25 McConnell g 7 8-10 5 22 Wordlaw g 7 0-1 5 141 Totals 33 13-25 25 79 MICHIGAN G F P T Tillotson f 8 4-4 3 20 Lee f 3 3-6 4 9 Tarrier f 2 1-2 0 5 Kramer c 6 5-14 4 17 Burton g 7 6-7 2 20 Shearon g 5 0-0 4 10 Lewis g 1 0-2 3 2 Totals 32 19-35 20 83 IOWA 40 39-79 MICHIGAN 42;41-83 (Continued from Pa~ge 1)~ fc v. sharpshooting at the right times did a lot towards moving Michi- gan to victory. Midway in the sec- ond half Iowa's scrappy guard, Augie Martel got extremely hot dumping in several field goals in a row. Burton however traded him basket for basket. Late in the game Kramer left briefly with four fouls. Loss of Kramer in the past has usually meant a loss of the Wolverine driving force. Tillotson however, took up the reins and sank four straight set shots to keep Michi- gan strongly in the contest until Kramer's return. Fouling was Iowa's downfall. The Hawkeye's committed enough infractions for the Wolverines to take 37 free throws. Also three, key Iowa players fouled out in the late minutes, starters Jim McCon- nell and Americus John-Lewis, and substitute Clearence Word- law, who had contributed 14 points to the Iowa cause. FLYING ALONG - Wolverine swimmer Fritz Myers nears the end of the pool during a lap of butter- fly breaststroke in the 200-yd. individual medley. In this race each swimmer does two laps each of backstroke, butterfly breaststroke, orthodox breaststroke, and free style. Myers finished third, behind two of the top men in this event in the nation, Al Wiggins of Ohio State who was first, and Wolver- ine Cy Hopkins. IN BIG TEN BASKETBALL: MSU Tops Indiana Assuring Title Share ever, was the neck and neck bat- tle for third place between Fries and OSU's Joe Henry. Fries nosed him out at the wire. The 50-yard freestyle, supposed- ly Michigan's weakest event, was captured by Mehl. He won by a hair over Bob Connell of Ohio State. Perhaps the most surprising event was diving. Ohio State car- ried with them two Olympic div- ers. Don Harper was runnerup in the Games and Glen Whitten fin- ished fourth at Melbourne. Harp- er proved his superiority by fin- ishing far ahead of the field. But Dick Kimball and Michigan's cap- tain, John Narcy, performed bril- liantly to gain a second and third for the Maize and Blue, nosing out Whitten From this point on in the meet, it became more and more evident that Michigan was never to be headed. Only one bright spot appeared for OSU all afternoon. He was Al Wiggins, great Olympic perform- er who entered both the 200-yard individual medley and the 200- yard backstroke and captured first place in both of tl' m, setting a new pool record each time. Another surprise cameBin the 200-yard breaststroke. Big Ten champ, Van Leer Hoffman was pitted against the Wolverines' Hopkins. But Hopkins led all the way and Hoffman fell back con- tinuously and finished last. With the most desired victory of the season under its belt, Michi- gan now looks forward to the Big Tei Meet which figures to be a battle between OSU, MSU and the Wolverines, with Indiana rated a darkhorse. 'King' Is Dead 400-yd. MEDLEY RELAY - 1 - Michigan (Myers, Matin, Ada nski, Mowery); 2 - OSU; 3:58.1. 220-yd. FREESTYLE - 1 - Han- ley (M); 2 - McNamee (OSU); 3- Fries (M); 2:10 (new pool record) 50-yd. FREESTYLE - 1 - Mel (M); 2 - Connell (OSU); 3 - Dew- ey (OSU); 0:23.6. 200-yd. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY - 1 - Wiggins (OSU); 2 - Hopkins (M); 3 -- Myers (M); 2:07.6 (new pool record) DIVING - 1 - Harper (OSU); 2 -Kimball (M); 3 - Narcy (M); (279 points, 247 points, 232.45 points respectively) 200-yd. BUTTERFLY - 1 - Hop- kins (M); 2 - Mowery (M); 3 -- Gair (OSU); 2:23.5. 100-yd. FREESTYLE - 1 - Han- ley (M); 2 - Mehl (M); 3 - Dew- ey (OSU); 0:51.2. 200-yd. BACKSTROKE - 1 - Wiggins (OSU); 2 - Adamski (M), 3 - Reissing (M); 2:15.3 (new pool record) 440-yd. FREESTYLE - 1 - Mc- Namee (OSU); 2- Myers (M); 3-- Fries (M); 4:51.2. 200-yd. BREASTSTROKE - 1 - Hopkins (M); 2 Gair (OSU); 3 - Matin (M); 2:24.5. 400-yd. FREESTYLE RELAY - 1 -OSU (Connell, Dewey, Wiggins, Bechtel); 2 - Michigan; 3:33.7. Big Ten Standings W Michigan State 10 Ohio State 9 Indiana 9 4.9 Minnesota 8 MICHIGAN 7 Illinois 7 6.3 Purdue 7 Iowa 4 Northwestern 2 Wisconsin i11.3 L 3 4 4 5 6 6 6 8 xx xx Pct .769 .692 .538 538 .333 .154 EAST LANSING (A)-Michigan State whipped Indiana 76-61 here last night to continue the rocket- like climb of the surprising Spar- tans from the cellar to undisputed lead ingthe Big Ten basketball The 10-3 Spartan record -- 10 wins in a row after three early season defeats-assures Michigan' State a bid as a conference repre-' sentative in the NCAA tourney, and at least a tie for the confer- ence championship. A shot-throttling defense plus balanced scoring made the Spar- tans look like potential champions. High men for State included Jack Quiggle with 23 points, Larry Hed- den with 22, John Green with 13 and George Ferguson with 12. Archie Dees did some spectacu- lar scoring for Indiana with the evening's high of 28 points but couldn't pull the Hoosiers through alone. Hallie Bryant with 16 points iV WE WANT TO WISH YOU A FREE DINNER will be given on this occasion by ALLENEL RESTAURANTQ On Any Day " Featuring Excellent Food at Moderate Prices" QHOT"EL ALLENEL Phone NO 3-4241 126 East Huron NHL SCORES Montreal 5, Detroit 1 Chicago 4, Toronto 3 New York 3, Boston 2 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Iowa State 69, Kansas State 67 (overtime) Bradley 105, Detroit 95 South Carolina 113, Clemson 85 Pittsburgh 80, Penn. State 65 Navy 58, Army 47 Yale 75, Harvard 67 I The 2e4tauan t This Week in Sports Monday, March 4 BASKETBALL--Michigan State-Yost Field House-8 p.m. HOCKEY-North Dakota-Coliseum-8:35 p.m. Tuesday, March 5 HOCKEY-North Dakota-Coliseum--8 p.m. Wednesday, March 6 TRACK-Eastern Michigan-Ypsilanti Thursday, March 7 SWIMMING-Big Ten Meet-Minneapolis, Minnesota Friday, March 8 HOCKEY-Michigan Tech-Coliseum-8 p.m. GYMNASTICS-Big Ten Meet-Sports Building (Preliminaries: 1:30 and 7:30 p.m.) WRESTLING-Big Ten Meet-Columbus, Ohio SWIMMING-Big Ten Meet-Minneapolis, Minnesota Saturday, March 9 HOCKEY-Michigan Tech-Coliseum-8 p.m. GYMNASTICS-Big Ten Meet-Sports Building (Finals at 2 p.m.) WRESTLING-Big Ten Meet-Columbus, Ohio SWIMMING-Big Ten Meet-Minneapolis, Minnesota was the only other Indiana player in double figures. * * OSU 84, Northwestern 70 EVANSTON, Ill. (IP)-Ohio State kept alive its hopes for a share of the Big Ten basketball title by whipping Northwestern, 84-70, last night. The victory gave Ohio State a 9-4 record and hoisted the Buck- eyes into a second place tie with Indiana. Both trail Michigan State which has a 10-3 record following its 76-61 triumph over Indiana. All three play their finale Monday night. Minnesota 86, Illinois 75 CHAMPAIGN (A) - Minnesota, led by the rebounding and 28-point production of George Kline, over- whelmed Illinois 86-75 yesterday in a regionally televised Big Ten basketball game. In compilingan 8-5 conference record, the Gophers shot into a 40-27 halftime lead, mainly behind the seven field goals of Jed Dom- meyer and backboard control, and never allowed the Illini to come within nine points of closing the gap. When Dommeyer fell off in the second half, the slack was taken up by Kline. He whipped in 19 points after scoring 9 in the open- ing section. * * * Purdue 85, Wisconsin 66 LAFAYETTE, Ind. MP)-Purdue's Boilermakers, battling for a first division finish in the Big Ten basketball race, usedh15 men last night in a 85-66 victory over the last-place Wisconsin Badgers. I 1204 South University SPAGHETTI AND MEALS OUR SPECIALTY 10:30 to 7:30 P.M. Daily Except Saturday PETE TILLOTSON i 4 By DON DRESCHER Varsity athletes lead pretty busy lives at Michigan. Such is the case of Pete Tillot- son, who has turned in a fine job at the pivot and forward positions for the Wolverine cagers this sea- son. A good part of an athlete's time is spent in practice, and just like any other student, he has to spend time studying. Tillotson not only finds time to study, but also takes part in cam- pus activities. At the present time, he is petitioning for President of Business Administration School. Serious Student A junior, Tillotson is a serious student. He frankly admits that basketball has detracted from his studies to a certain extent; how- ever, he still manages to maintain a very respectable grade point average. After completion of his business curriculum, Tillotson hopes either to go on to law school or perhaps continue graduate work in busi- ness administration. When he can get time, Tillotson enjoys reading very much. He is also a music fan and enjoys both classical and jazz. Tillotson tries not to miss any concerts held on campus and he also likes to go to campus dances when he can. son piled up an impressive record. Tillotson takes a lot of ribbing because of his flair for clothes toward which most of the earn- ings from his job as a busboy go. Impressive Record In high school, the 6'6" Tillot.. He was named to the Michigan rrr . F-- POONSWOUNNOPM poor" 'I Oak. i n- m You've been contacted by many companies, all offering many and varied advantages. But you owe it to yourself to consider which of these will, in the long run, offer a future that will keep pace with your ability. At Martin you'll have a chance to measure your background against your chosen engineering field, whether it is aerodynamics, elec- tronics, nuclear, electrical, civil, chemical or mechanical. Your future will grow with an expanding com- pany, pioneering in tomorrow's sci- ences as well as projects a decade in advance-gravitational research and ion propulsion. MA -7 /M OTf E The TheFinest Imported n Lightweight Rcincoat SVan Boven's imported light- weight raincoat gives you. handsome perfection in protection. * FLY FRONT " RAGLAN SLEEVE * SLASH THROUGH POCKETS * PLAID LINING eJIGGER STRAP * ADJUSTABLE TABS ON SLEEVE AND COAT BOTTOM * BUTTONED VENT Even sizes only: 36-46 Regular; 36-42 Short; 38-46 Long $3QOO All-State cage squad in both 1953 and 1954 and the Ludington High team for which he was pivot man was state class "B" champions in '53 and runner-up in '54. He was a nine letter man in secondary school, picking up mon- ograms in football and track as well as basketball. Because , ~ the extended length of the basketball season, he is not able to get back home too often, usually only three times a year. However, after the season ends he plans to head home for a week- end to celebrate his 21st birth- day this month. Enjoys Tourist Season In the summertime, Tillotson likes to stay around home enjoy- ing the Ludington tourist season, relaxing, catching up on his read- ing, and playing golf, shooting somewhere in the middle-80s. Tillotson's father will view the game tomorrow night with mixed emotions. The senior Tillotson is a graduate of Michigan State Col- lege. where he played football and track and MSU will bring - with them the same trainer that worked with Mr. Tillotson when he was at State. Demaret Tops Golf Tourney BATON ROUGE, Fla. (M) - Jaunty Jimmy Demaret dropped a tricky 40-foot putt on the 18th hole today to jump into a two- stroke lead in the Baton Rouge Open golf tournament. He shot one-under-par 35 on both nines for a 70 and a 207 to- tal after 54 holes. The other second round leaders dropped back as Peter Thompson of Melbourne, Australia, shot into contention with a five under par 67 and 209 total. Bill Nary of Wayne, Mich., lead- er after the second round, sky- rocketed seven strokes over yes- terday's score to a 74, falling into a tree-way tie for third at 210. pj A 11 I 4 11 III 11 I