SUNDAY, MARCH S,1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY s A n 10 ovwwmmr SUNDAY, MARCH 3,1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN 4 wrestling, Jrack Squads Fall; Gym 0 vw- Team Wins Wolverine Grapplers Drop Close Match to Minnesota Michigan Gymnasts Swamp Buckeyes; Gagnier, Hayslett Star in 72-40 Victory By HANK ROSENBAUM In a close, hard-fought battle in Yost Field House yesterday af- ternoon, Minnesota's wrestling team eked out a 16-14 victory over the Michigan matmen to maintain their unbeaten dual meet status. Though each team won four matches the difference turned out to be the two falls scored by the Gophers against one for the Wol- verines. Two former Big Ten champions, both service returnees, turned in excellent performances in crucial spots for Minnesota. Dick Mueller, wrestling at 123 pounds, pinned Dan Deppe in 5:42 { and heavyweight Willis Wood edged out a 2-0 victory over Steve Zervas in the final and deciding match. Wolverine Lead With the score 14-13 in the Wol- verines' favor, Zervas and Wood grappled the first period with neither man able to gain an ad- vantage. In the second period, with Wood having the advantage, Zer- vas was unable to escape and Wood rode him the whole period. In the third period Wood es- ---- caped for one point and that was the match and the meet. The final point was awarded to Wood for riding time. Max Pearson showed he has re- gained the form that won him a Conference title in 1954. Wrestling Minnesota's Bill Johnson at 130 pounds, Pearson registered two takedowns in the first period. Pearson Scores Pin With Johnson holding the ad- vantage in the second session, Pearson scored a reversal in just five seconds and pinned his oppon- ent at 3:37. At 157 pounds Mike Rodriguez played a game of cat and mouse with the Gophers' Ron Baker, piling up a 12-3 decision. Baker was penalized two points by the referee for stalling as he fought to avoid being pinned. With a little over ten seconds left in the match, Rodriguez put a pin hold on Baker and held it till the buzzer. Although many spectators thought that Rodriguez had gained a fall the referee ruled that it was only a near fall and awarded the Michigan captain an unneeded two points. MIKE RODRIGUEZ ... easy winner By AL JONES The Wolverine gymnastic squad advanced their new winning streak to three dual meets yesterday af- ternoon with a smashing defeat of Ohio State, 72-40, at the I-M Building. This was the same Michigan team that has lost three meets this season, but the 1,500 capacity crowd that saw yesterday's victory has good reason for wondering how they could ever lose. Wolverine Coach Newt Loken was rightly proud of his team's decisive triumph over a Buckeye squad that measured up to Michi- gan in every way before the meet started. They had identical records in Big Ten action and both were seeking their sixth victory against three defeats. Harper Wins However, there was no compari- son once the meet was underway. Don -Harper, the Buckeye's fabu- lous diver and trampolinist, grab- bed a first from Wolverine Ed Cole in the premier event by one point, but Frank Newman and Dick Kim- ball- were close behind to give Michigan the next three places. In the free exercise, the second Five 'il' Firsts TRAMPOLINE: 1. Don Harper - O, 276, 2. Cole - M, 275, 3. Newman -M, 270, 4. O'Brien - 0, 262, 5. Kimball-M, 244. FREE EXERCISE: 1. E. Gagnier- M and Harry Schoilenbarger-O, tie at 276, 3. Hayslett-M, 268, 4. Wiese -M, 253, 5. O'Brien-0, 239. SIDE HORSE: 1. Ed Gagnier-M, 278, 2. Schomer-0, 258, 3. Armstrong -M, 246, 4. Warren-M, 238, 5. Hartman--0, 203. HIGH BAR: 1. Jim Hayslett-M, 264, 2. Schollenbarger-0, 261, 3, Wiese-M, 256, 4. Sampsell-O, 231, 5. Gagnier-M, 185. PARALLEL BARS: 1. Ed Gagnier -M, 285, 2. Hayslett-M, 260, 3. Warren-M, 250, 4. Schollenbarger -0, 244, 5. CaldwelI--0, 235. FLYING RINGS: 1. Nick Wiese- M, 268, 2. Gagnier--M, 265, 3. Hays- lett-M, 251, 4. Caldwell-O, 250, 5. Sampsell - O, 236. TUMBLING: 1. Harry Schollen- barger-O, 277, 2. Gagnier-M, 263, 3. Harper-O, 258, 4. Wiese-M, 252, 5. Kimball-M, 251. JIM PACE DAVE OWENS ... sprint champ .. . below par, but wins Owen, Pace Capture Firsts, O'Reilly Second; Michigan Loses Track Title event, Ed Gagnier turned in a beautiful exhibition to tie Buck- eye Harry Schollenbarger for first place, and the Wolverines domi- nated the meet from then on until Schollenbarger broke the ice with another first in the final event. Loken feels that this meet was a fine buildup for the Big Ten Championships that will be held at the I-M Building next Friday and Saturday. "My men were ex- tremely good, they completed al- most all their routines, and looked fine in every case. "With four more days of hard work and hustle, we should be as ready as we will ever be for the Big Ten finals." Only One Miss All the Wolverines turned in top performances yesterday, with Ed Gagnier the only one to miss, when his high bar routine was cut short. Nevertheless, he made up for that with a terrific parallel bars series that brought him 285 points and one of his three first places. Be- sides that, he added two seconds and a fifth. BOOK SALE OVERBECK BOOKSTORE 1216 S. University (Continued from Page 1) Heading into the final lap of their heat and leading by two yards, a missed baton pass be- tween the Hoosiers' Harold Cas- 'M' Icers Face North Dakota In First of Crucial Series Here sey and anchor man Len Robin- son caused Indiana to finish last. The stage was then set for the wildest finish seen by this re- porter at any track meet. If the Buckeyes won their heat they would take the meet, if they placed second they would tie, however: Ohio State was then disquali- fied and the splendid running of anchor-man Glenn Davis, who amassed a total of 16%1 points to tie the old Western Conference mark, went by the board. The officials stated that State's lead-off man, Charles ek, had cut off Michigan's Matheson on the first turn. Besides crushing the Buckeyes' title chances, the foul also cost Michigan, which lost over one- half of a second because of it, third place. Another disqualification earlier in the meet proved equally costly to Michigan State. Dave Lean, who had earlier taken first place in the 440-yard run, was disqualified from first place in the 600-yard run because of jostling on a turn. Ohio Tur- Dan Big Seven Amends Bylaws On Recruiting, Athletic Aid 1 1- By BRUCE BENNETT The Sioux are on the warpath! But chances are they'll find the Wolverine a mighty tough hombre when the two meet in the first. game of a "showdown series" for second place in the Western In- tercollegiate Hockey League to- morrow night at the Coliseum. A sweep of the North Dakota Time Change- The Michigan-North Dakota hockey game tomorrow night will begin at 8:35 p.m., rather than the usual starting time of 8 p.m. This is to afford sports fans the opportunity of attendingI most of the Michigan-Michigan State basketball game before coming to the ice contest. The second game of the series, to be played Tuesday, will be at the customary 8 p.m. time. series is a virtual must for the Mi- chigan team if it is to retain any hope of defending its NCAA title later this month. Michigan is cur- rently lodged in fourth place in the WIHL, two points behind sec- ond place Michigan Tech and one and one-half behind the Nodaks. Each game in the series is worth two points, as these are the only meetings between the two schools this year. WIL Standings W L T Pts PL Colorado College 14 4 0 19 5 Michigan Tech 8 6 4 122 9 North Dakota 12 6 -0 12 6 MICHIGAN 9 4 1 102 72 Teams play for a total of 24 points. REMAINING GAMES: Colorado College: None Michigan Tech: two at MICHIGAN North Dakota: two at MICHI- GAN*, two at Michigan State. MICHIGAN: two with North Da- kota*, two with Michigan Tech. *Two point games. Tom Yurkovich will be in the nets. In 18 league games, he has posted a fine 3.2 goals against av- erage. This places him second in the league in this department to Michigan's improving sophomore, Ross Childs, among the regular goalies. Childs has allowed only 20 goals in seven outings for a 2.9 mark. Tickets for each game will go on sale the day of the game at the Athletic Administration Build- ing. The box office will be open from 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., with the Coliseum ticket office open- ing at 5:15 p.m. Students must show I.D. cards or Athletic Cards when purchas- ing tickets. An eight ticket limit has been placed on each purchase. IRS gI Wins WIHL Title HOUGHTON, Mich. ,h)-Col- orado College won the Western Intercollegiate Hockey Leaguel championship last night with a 5-4 victory over Michigan Tech on Bob McCusker's tie-breaking goal wtih less than four minutes to go. A few minutes before McCusk- er's goal, Michigan Tech's Jack McManus scored twice within 30 seconds to lift the Huskies to a 4-4 tie. Michigan Tech jumped to a 2-0 first period lead, then saw it fade in the second peliod as Cokraado pulled into a 2-2 tie. Colorado then surged to a 4-2 lead before McManus knotted the score again. Track Summaries MILE RUN -- 1. Charles (Deacon) Jones, Iowa; 2. Selwyn Jones, MSU; 3. Crawford Kennedy, MSU; 4. Hel- mar Dolwett, MICHIGAN; 5. Tom Luker, Illinois. 4:13.8. 440-YD. RUN - 1. David Lean, MSU; 2. Jesse Nixon, Wisconsin; 3. Ted Storer, Ohio State; 4. Laird Sloan, MICHIGAN; 5. Len Robin- son, Indiana. :49,4. 70-YD. HIGH HURDLES - 1. Willie May, Indiana; 2. Glenn Davis, Ohio State; 3. Jack Mathews, Iowa; 4. Tom Campbell, Indiana; 5. Kelly Thomson, MSU. :8.6. 60-YD. DASH - 1. Jim Pace, MICHIGAN; 2. Glenn Davis, Ohio State; 3. Charles Carroll, Northwest- ern; 4. John Magnuson, MICHIGAN; 5. Bob Mitchell, Illinois. :6.4. 1,000-YD. RUN - 1. Len DePalma, Northwestern; 2. Jack McClain, Ohio State; 3. John Miller, Indiana; 4. Ronald Risch, Wisconsin; 5. Vic- tor Blumenthall, Purdue. 2:15.7. 600-YD. RUN - 1. Tom Ecker, Iowa; 2. Cliff -Corzott, Northwestern; 3. Guy Osborn, Northwestern; 4. R. Mittlestadt, Minnesota; 5. Craig Toensing, Indiana. 1:13.7. (Race won by David Lean of Michigan State in 1:12.5, but Lean disquali- fied for cutting in on turn.) HIGH JUMP-1. Al Urbanckas, Illinois, 6 feet 678 inches; 2. Bren- don O'Reilly, MICHIGAN, 6 feet 6 inches; 3. Sam Mylin, Wisconsin, 6 feet 5 inches; 4. (Tied) Stan Lyons, Ohio State, and Wayne Milestone, Ohio State, 6 feet 2 inches. BROAD JUMP - 1. Greg Bell, In- diana, 25 feet 7 inches; 2. (Tied) Glenn Davis, Ohio State, and Breal- on Donaldson, Indiana, 23 feet, 134 inches; 4. Doug McFetters, MSU,=22 feet, 724 inches; 5. Bill Garner, Minnesota, 22 feet, 5 inches. (New record, betters own mark of 24 feet 11% inches set in 1956). 300-YD. RUN - 1. Ron Etherton, Purdue; 2. Wilmer Fowler, North- western; 3. Greg Bell, Indiana: 4. Dick Flodin, MICHIGAN; 5. Paul Hoenstine, Purdue, :31.2. 880-YD. RUN - 1. Austin Cotten, Wisconsin; 2. Robert Din telmann, Illinois; 3. Bruce Debes, Northwest- ern; 4. John Miller, Indiana; 5. Jack McClain, Ohio State. :1:55.3. POLE VAULT -- 1. (Tied) James Johnston, Purdue; Stan Lyons, Ohio State, and Brealon Donaldson, In- diana, 13 feet 8 inches; 4. (Tied) Jerry Stanners, Illinois; Gardner Van Dyke, Iowa; Mamon Gibson, MICHIGAN; Tom Lampel, MSU, and Blily Jones, Purdue, 13 feet 4 inches. 70-YD. LOW HURDLES - 1. - Glenn Davis, Ohio State; 2. Willie May, Indiana; Doug McFetters, MSU; 4. Gaylord Denslow, MSU; 5. Helmar Dollwett, MICHIGAN. Time -9:23.3. MILE RELAY - 1. Purdue (Hoen- stine, Donald Halliday, Ronald Eth- erton and Benjamin King); 2. Mich- igan State; 3. MICHIGAN; 4. North- western; 5. Iowa. Time - 3:20.4. TWO-MILE RUN - 1. Charles (Deacon) Jones, Iowa; 2. Bud Ede- len, Minnesota; 3. Selwyn Jones, MSU; 4. Gaylord Denslow, MSU; 5. Helmar Dollwet, MICHIGAN. 9:23.3. SHOT PUT - 1. Dave Owen, MICHIGAN, 56 feet 2A inch; 2. Bob Henry, Minnesota, 54 feet 10 inches; 3. Clarence Lane, Indiana, 54 feet 32 inches; 4. Bob Blakely, Minne- sota, 53 feet 824 inches; 5. Sam Eliowitz, MSU, 52 feet 3%4 inches. KANSAS CITY, Mo. (P)-The B i g S e v e n Conference today amended its bylaws in line with the NCAA's new regulations gov- erning financial aid and recruit- ing of student athletes. Reaves Peters, executive secre- tary, announced at the conclusion of a three-day meeting of the Big Seven faculty that the conference voted to comply fully with NCAA amendmentF adopted at its con- vention in St. Louis last January. On financial aid, the Big Seven will now include GI loans in the over-all athletic scholarship pro-. gram. If the GI is a scholarship athlete, the government loan will be included in and may not ex- ceed the regular scholarship lim- its of the conference. In event the GI does not have an athletic schol- arship, he is entitled to the full government compensation. The NCAA's recruiting amend- ment adopted by the Big Seven permits member institutions to fi- nance one visit of prospective ath- letes to the campus, and an indi- vidual alumnus of the school still will be permitted to bring a boy to \\\N~~$S4 A~AA.. 1 the campus for a visit. All the latest in POCKET BOOKS and PAPER BACKS Come in and Browse at BILL REICHART .paces WIHL scorers Coach Al Renfrew's North Da- kota squad will be attempting to shake a road jinx which has slowed them down in recent weeks. The schedule has the Sioux playing their final eight games on the road and they have not found this to their liking to date, having won only one out of four. Renfrew's brand of hockey is nothing new to Michigan fans, for it was he who coached the excit- ing Michigan Tech team that ap- peared here a year ago at this time. The Nodaks big man is All American Bill Reichart, the lea- gue's leading scorer with 21 goals and 16 assists for 37 points. Reichart centers the first line, and 16 assists for 37 points. Rei- chart centers the first line, flank- ed by Stan Paschke and Mike Castellano. The second line consists of Jim Ridley, the WIHL's second-rank- ing scorer with 34 points, Joe Arm- bruster and Joe Poole. " Engineers PHYSICISTS * MATHEMATICIANS Graduate to a -i rT '"''""""'''"""" FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO. 216 W. William Street Ann Arbor, Michigan Telephone NO 8-8014 ,ii "{ on COLUMBIA'S "Buy of the Month RECORDS l only $2.98 Y 11 We Have All Kinds of Glass-Mirrors and Furniture Tops We Have the Nationally Advertised Painfs You Can Park Right in Front of Our Store WE HAVE BEEN SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR 67 YEARS III CAREER with Step from school into the satisfying kind of lifework that only an expanding, nationwide organization like Sperry can offer. You'll be able to choose from a variety of fascinating fields. 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