SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PA~4~ ~VV~T A C1 A., .,i% U1L t IGi I M' Cagers Swamped,8 Hockey Team Nips Gophers On Third Period Comeback -62; Icers Triumph, 4-3 El P -Daily--John Hirtzel HANDS OFF-M. C. Burton, Michigan forward, goes high to grab Sa rebound from Minnesota's Mack Nettleton in last night's 82-62 Gopher victory, played at packed Yost Field House. Michigan Cage Attack Stalls In Disastrous Second Half Special To The Daily MINNEAPOLIS, M i n n. - The Michigan hockey squad kept alive its flickering hopes of playing in the NCAA playoffs as it turned back a stubborn Minnesota sextet, 4-3, last night at Williams Arena. The Maize and Blue got the first goal as Wally Maxwell flick- ed the puck past goalie Don Vaia with only 1:40 gone in the first period. Gophers Roar Back Minnesota came roaring back with goals by Dick Burg and Terry Bartholeme to hold a 2-1 lead at the end of the period. Michigan dominated play in the second period but could not score as Vaia brilliantly blocked the Wolverine pucks. Vaia had a bril- liant evening as he made a total of 61 saves. Tom Rendall tied up the score early in the third period as he blasted the puck past Vaia at 1:59 from 15 feet out. Michigan's Dick Dunnigan belted a 15 footer beyond Vaia's reach at 3:15 of the final period to give the Wolverines a slim 3-2 lead. Mary Jorde converted a pass from Tom Riley into a goal at the 5:06 mark as Minnesota tied up the game at 3-3. Michigan, realizing that a tie wouldn't help them in their bid for a spot in the NCAA tourney, com- pletely dominated the play for the rest of the game. Finally, at 15:08, Ton Rendall rifled a shot past the tired Vaia second goal, and was shaken up slightly., Michigan must win the rest of its games and Michigan Tech and North Dakota must lose at least one apiece if Michigan is to end up the season in second place and receive an invitation to the NCAA tourney. Michigan Tech and: North Dakota both won their, WIHL games yesterday. Hockey Stats SCORING FIRST PERIOD: 1-Michigan, Max- well (Ilayton, Starr) 1:40; 1-Minn., Burg (Swanson, Aim) 9:18; 2- Msnn., Bartholome (Delmore) 15:43. Penalties-None. SECOND PERIOD-No Scoring. Penalties - Mich., - McDonald (roughing), Hayton (slashing); Minn.-Riley (roughing), J o r d e (tripping). THIRD PERIOD: Michigan-1 Ren- dell (Maxwell) 1:59, 2 Dunnigan (McDonald, Switzer) 3:15; Minne- sota- 1 Jorde (Riley) 5:06; 3 Mich- igan, Rendell (Stark) 15:08. Penalties - Mich. - Karpinka (roughing), Alm (cross checking). Stops: Vaia 61, Childs 28. TOM RENDALL ... tallies pair Sowell Sets New Indoor 880 Mark. NEW YORK (P)-Arnie Sowell of Pitt zipped to a new world in- door half-mile record of 1:50.3, Milt Campbell ran the magic 7 second 60-yd. high hurdlers and Ron Delany galloped to a 4:06.7 mile victory over Hungary's Laz- slo Tabori in the Millrose Games last night before a screaming throng of more than 15,000 in Madison Square Garden. The crowd was in a record mood after watching Sowell and Camp- bell set new standardsand were hoping that someone might push Delany to a new mark. But the turkey trotting Olympic 1500-meter champion ran his time worn race. He merely loped along in the pack until it was time to step to the fore. Last night, he de- cided to stop teasing his rivals about a lap and a half from home.- He passed Tabori, then was con- tent to permit the defected'Hun- garian, who has yet to win an in- door race in four starts try to catch him. BIG TEN STANDINGS WV. L. Pct. Pts. OP Indiana....................5 2 .714 532 499 Ohio State................6 3 .667 668 637 Purdue....................5 3 1625 574 558 MICHIGAN ...............4 3 .571 480 492 Illinois ....................4 3 .571 594 559 Minnesota .................4 3 .571 533 537 Michigan State ............4 3 .571 483 462 Iowa. ................3 4 .429 492 489 Northwestern..............2 7 .222 596 646 Wisconsin.................0 6 .000 358 441 Warren M~iller presents his new 2-hour color movie "Hlave Skis, W~ill Tra veF Spectacular Action Thrills in Scenic Alpine Splendor Sponsored by Ann Arbor Ski Club 8:00 P.M., Thursday, February 14 Ann Arbor High School Auditorium Across from U. of M. Stadium rl (Continued from Page 1) the bench with four fouls with 12 minutes left to play. Although Lewis contributed only three points to last night's cause, his abilities as a playmaker made Michigan click. If a column of assists was kept along with a col- umn of points, and these totaled, Lewis would no doubt lead the pack. When he went out, the smooth operations stopped. Michigan could only bring the ball down and shoot from outside. Many times the ball was lost without a shot. Kramier Slows Down Another thing which slowed down Michigan was Ron Kramer's slowing down. He had played won- derful basketball in the first half, but midway in the second the weary forward failed to keep up, which greatly hindered the de- fense. Three of the Gophers were es- pecially effective in taking ad- vantage of the Wolverine confus- ion. Big George Kline, who had played a major role in killing Michigan up at Minneapolis, col- lected 21 points for game honors. Twelve of these came in the last half. Hanson Gets Hot George Hanson became tremen- dously hot and connected for 121 Advance Reserved Area, Tickets now available at Bob Marshall's Book Shop in Ann Arbor, open Evenings until 10:00 P.M. Adm. $1.36 Fed. Tax .14 Total $1.50 of his 16 points late in the sec- ond half. Substitute Gerald Lind- sley outdid both his teammates, however, collecting 13 last-stanza markers. At the foul line Michigan was as good as it has been all year, hitting an even .700. Minnesota was terrible in the first half, hitting .333, but they hardly missed when it really counted and finished up at .667. Gopher Broke MINNESOTA G F P T Tucker, f . 4 0-1 1 8 Anderstrom, f ...... 1 1-2 1 3 Kline, f....... 8 5-8 2 21 Griffin, c 1 0-1 2 2 Dommeyer, c-f.......3 1-1 1 7 Jeppesen, c.........0 0-0 0 0 Nettleton, c......... 0 0-0 0 0 Johnson, g.......... 3 4-5 4 10 Lindsloy', g.......... 4 5-6 2 13 Hanson, g........... 8 0-1 3 16 Stoltman, g.......... 1 0-0 0 2 Totals ............33 16-25 15 82 MICHIGAN G F P T Burton, f............0 3-5 2 3 Dunlap, f ........... 0 0-0 0 0 Tillotson, f.......... 6 4-4 1 16 Prahst, f............ 0 0-0 0 0 Tarrier, f-e......... 0 0-0 0 0 ,Kramer, c............7 0-0 3 14 Lee g-f'............. 6 5-6 4 17 Wright, g............ 0 0-0 1 0 Lewis, g-f........... 1 1-3 4 3 Shearon, g........... 4 1-2 2 9 . Totals ............24 14-20 19 62 DICK UNNIGAN ... fires marker Monday night's basketball game between Michigan and Wisconsin at Madison will be broadcast over WUOM (91.7 megacycles) at 8:55 EST. to give Michigan a 4-3 lead which they held for the remainder of the game. There were only six penalties in the game with Michigan getting four of them. However the penal- ties did not prove to be important in the game's outcome as all the goals were scored with both teams at full strength. There were several injured in the game. Michigan defenseman Ed Switzer required 11 stitches for a cut lip afflicted in the third period. Tom Rendall slammed into the goal posts after scoring his JAYHAWKERS ROLL ON: Ohio State, Purdue Suffer Upsets BLOOMINGTON, Ind. - Indi- ana's Hurrying Hoosiers blasted' Ohio State's Buckeyes out of the Big Ten basketball lead last night, 69-59, and the Hoosiers jumped from a third-place tie into the top spot. Defeats of Purdue by Iowa and of Michigan by Minnesota left In- diana the only team in the league with less than three losses. The Hoosiers stand 5-2, Ohio State The Bucks built up a 17-11 lead early in the game but Indiana made the next six points. Ohio State led again briefly at 19-17 on a long shot by Frank Howard. Dick Neal hit a tip-in for Indiana, Hallie Bryant pumped in two bas- kets and the Hoosiers led the rest of the way. Indiana had a 35-29 margin at the half. It expanded the lead to 16 points at 45-29. Ohio State pulled up to trail by only three at 58-55 but four free throws gave the Hoosiers a working margin for the last three minutes. Archie Dees, Indiana center leading Big Ten scorers with a 23.5 average, was held to 17 but How- ard, running second with a 22.2 average, got only nine. Balance paid off for the Hoosiers, with Bryant scoring 16 points, Dick The Hawkeyes' second half shooting average was 51 per cent. Purdue hit 37 per cent for the game. Purdue ripped Iowa's defense midway in the opening half and held a 36-25 lead with 1:17 to play. Iowa Coach Bucky O'Connor re- placed four of his five starters and the Hawkeyes pulled to within six points at halftime. It LINCOLN, Neb. - Wilt "The Stilt" Chamberlain poured in 26 points and was a rebounding plague to Nebraska as Kansas took a 69-54 Big Seven conference bas- ketball win before a jammed Coli- seum crowd last night. The 7-foot Kansas sophomore, with top scoring assistance from Maurice King, shot the Jayhawks into a 24-8 lead after 13 minutes. I. NHL SCORES Detroit 3, Chicago 0 Montreal 2, Boston 2 New York 4, Toronto 4 Neal 15 and Pete Obremskey 12.1 Jim Laughlin was high for Ohio' State with 16 and Ken Sidle added 13. Indiana hit 25 of 69 shots from the field, Ohio State 24 of 61. The Buckeyes missed only two free throws but got only 13. Indiana sank 19 of 25. IOWA CITY, Ia. - Iowa pieced together a consistent scoring com- bination in the second half last night to jolt second place Purdue in the Big Ten basketball race, 74-67. Trailing by as much as 11 points in the first half and 38-32 at halftime, Iowa came back in the Rooms Employment Selling Used Cars Lost & Found Transportation Services Fast replies Reasonable rates Opportunities Money saved MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIEDS call NO 2-3241 ll// Afrank message to graduating electrical and mechanical ENGINEERS You know it ... we know it ... so let's be frank about it. The demand for engineers-experienced or graduate -far exceeds the supply/And, from now on in, you are going to be sought after more than a triple threat halfback for next yeafs varsity. You will be promised many things (including the moon with a fence/around it), and for a young man just getting started these things are pretty hard to resist. So, again, le s be frank. We at Farnsworth won' promise ythe moon. 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