THE MICHIGAN DAILY FACE 11 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE ~I _. .._ inclads Trip Buckeyes; Ilini Top Cage s Fountain Pen: Greeting Cards Stationery Office Supplies Typewriters Ohl Paces Illinois Scoring; Michigan Skids into Ninth Big Ten Standings (Continued from Page 1) LONq STRIDING-Olympic champion Glenn Davis of Ohio State leads a pack of Michigan low hurdlers in notching one of his four first places. Pete Stanger, second from left, was second while Chuck Proudfit, far right, gained a third. Ron Trowbridge, far left, didn't place. Despite Davis' one- man show, Michigan won the meet, 72-69. Wolverines' Mile Relay Squad Clinches M .Track V ictory; Davis Stars for OU Ten has an inside curb," said Sny- der, "and only the Michigan boys aeused to this track." For Michigan, the win was a complete reversal of last week's match with Illinois, as the chances for a Wolverine one-point triumph were defeated when the second man of its favored relay team pulled up lame. -"Snyder also claimed Michigan thinclads had run inside the lanes in a couple of earlier events, and should have been disqualified. Fischer Disqualified Bruce Fischer, a Michigan soph- omore, lost a victory in the 600-yd. run when he was disqualified. However, his disqualification was for cutting-in on OSU's. eventual winner, Jack McClain. Davis, who is no relation to former Army football star Glen Davis, reaped most of the laurels, as expected. He took firsts in the broad jump, 60-yd. dash, 65-yd. high hurdles and 65-yd. low hur- dles, tyipg meet records in the lat- ter two. Ohio State bettered Michigan in first places, 8-7, but. Coach Don Canham's depth made the differ- ence. Two - miler Dick Schwartz, a sophomore, set up the relay to be the meet-clincher by taking a hard-earned first in the next-to- last contest. He trailed teammate Don Truex and OSU's experienced Jack Blackburn for 15 laps, then JONES PACES WIN:. Eastern Michigan Nips Hoosier Track Squad By FRED KATZ Special to The Daily YPSILANTrI--The blackboard in the locker room of Eastern Michi- gan College's Bowen Fieldhouse yesterday blared in triumphant letters: "EMC: Big 10 Champs!" And rightly so, too. The Hurons, a contingent of gutty and talented performers, and paced by the Pon- tiac bombshell, Hayes Jones, had just pblished off Indiana Univer- sity, the team considered the best bet to lead the field in the Big 10 Indoor Track Championships next week. The final score was 54-50. Trailing 50-49 going into the final event, the mile relay, Eastern appeared to have hardly a chance of ultimate victory. The Hoosiers had Regi. Laconi, Berry Williams and Harold Caffey each running a 440 leg in this event, and the three had swept the individual 440-yd. race earlier. For their anchor man Indiana had Mike Smith, the winner of the day's 880-yd. run. Smith Drops Baton Going into the third leg of the_ contest Smith possessed a slight lead over Eastern's Carl Krieger. Suddenly, Krieger put on a tre- mendous spurt and passed the sur- ) prised Smith who- unexplainedly dropped the baton 30 yards before he was to hand off to the anchor man. This was all Eastern's Levi Simpson needed. The speedy sprinter completed the race well out in front of Caffey, setting a new Fieldhouse record of 3:22.6. Enough for the unexpected. As for the anticipated, Jones didn't disappoint the Eastern student body, most of which seemed in at- tendance. The greatest trackster in the history of the school, Jones captured three firsts, tied for an- other, and was runnerup to Olym- pic Champion Greg Bell in the broad jump. Jones Performs Brilliantly Jones was fairly spectacular in both hurdle events, unofficially breaking one American Indoor record, and tying the other. His time in the 7g-yd. low hurdles was :07.6, snapping by one second the American mark set by Illinois' Bob Mitchell only two weeks ago. He skimmed over the 70 - yd. highs in :08.3, good for a share of the United States record. This was the first meet at Ypsilanti that the hurdles were run in 70 yards. This was done so that Jones would get a crack at the records, which he took advantage of. His time of :06.1 in the 60-yd. dash tied his own previous best, as well as the Eastern varsity and Fieldhouse standards. Other events in which he added to his 22 point total were high Jump and the broad Jump, deadlocking for first in the former at, 6'0", and taking a second in the latter. Bell's winning leap of 24'10%", although breaking his own Bowen Fieldhouse record, was still far short of his capabilities. The Hoosier senior is the only man in history to go further than 26 feet nine times. rocketed out fast on the gun lap to finish 20 yards in front at 9:35.4. Ermin Crownley, Brendan O'Reilly, Ernie Simms and Geert Keilstrup turned in important vic- tories while Cam Gray and Robin Varian shared a deadheat 880-yd. run at 1:57.0. Crownley hurled the shot put 50'1%"; a personal, best in com- petition. Simms upset teammate Earl Deardorff in the 1,000-yd. Tun at 2:19.5. Stan Lyons, OSU vaulter, set a meet record by leaping 14'33". Statistic SHOT PUT-1. Crownley (M); 2. Eubel (O); 3. Poppler (M). Dis- tance;: 50'1%". HIGH JUMP-l: O'Reilly (M); 2. Nourse (O); 3. Hiniker (M). Height: 6'51/2"" BROAD JUMP-1. Davis (0); 2. Wil- liams (M); 3. Watkins (M). Dis- tance: 23'3%"1.-. POLE VAULT-1. Lyons (O); 2. Gibson (M); 3. Weaver (O). Height: 14'33/".. ONE MILE RUN --- 1. Keilstrup (M); 2. McLain (O); 3. Dollwett (M). Time: 4:27.7. 440 YARD RUN-1. Storer (O); 2. Payne (0); 3. Matheson (M). Time: :50.8. 65 YARD HIGH HURDLES-1. Da- vis (0); 2. Stanger (M); 3. Hauck (O). Time: 0:8.0. 1000 YARD RUN-1. Simms (M); 2. Deardorff (M); 3. Peele (O). Time: 2:19.5. 60 YARD DASH-i. Davis (0); 2. Parker (M); 3. Waktns (M) Time: 0.6.4. 600 YARD RUN-1. McLain (O); 2. Jones (0); 3. Toumy (M). Time: 1:14.9. 300 YARD RUN-1. Storer,(O); 2.t Simpson (M); 3. Henson (O). Time: 0:32.4., 65 YARD LOW HURDLES-1. Da- vis (0); 2. Stanger (M); 3. Proud- fit (M). Time: 0:7.4. 2 MILE RUN-1. Schwartz (M); 2. Blackburn (O); 3. Truex (M). Time: 9:35.4. ONE MILE RELAY-1. Michigan (Simpson, Fischer, Simms, Mathe- son). Time: 3:24.2. TRACK RESULTS Michigan State 74, Iowa 49 Illinois 73, Purdue 60, Northwest- erh 25 (triangular meet) Minnesota 73%, Wisconsin 40% SWIMMING RESULTS Minnesota 62, Purdue 43 Illinois 57, Northwestern 44 Michigan State 62, Wisconsin 43 Indianas 54, Iowa 51 WRESTLING Minnesota 21, Michigan State 12 BIG TEN RESULTS Michigan State 83, Iowa 65 Ohio State 70, Minnesota 60 Nokthwestern 82, Wisconsin 65 Indiana 109, Purdue 95 Lewis, each scoring 19 points. For-] ward George Lee, with 12, was the only other Wolverine in doublea figures. After the two teams had played to a 38-38 halftime standoff, Illi- nois came out strong at the start, of the second half. With O, Paul, and Taylor hitting jump shots from the outside with consistent accuracy, the Illini built up a 54-; 44 lead after five minutes. Mlini Expand Lead Two minutes later, the Illinois lead had expanded to 62-46, and for the rest of the game the home team was content to match points with Michigan. The first half was characterized by loose and ragged play, with both teams blowing frequent chances to take a commanding lead. Traveling and foul -lane violations were numerous, and shooting percentages were medio- cre. Illinois' shooting accuracy pick- ed up vastly after the intermis- sion, however, enabling the Illini to take the lead for good. Illinois finished with a 47 per cent per- formance from the field, while the Wolverines hit 34 per cent. Also figuring in the Michigan Sammies, .Reeves Win I=M Rel"ays By JIM BENAGH Sigma Alpha Mu and Reeves House clinched I-M 880-yd. relay victories last night at Yost Field House. The relays were a special feature of the Michigan-Ohio State track meet. Reeves relied on the brilliant sprinting of anchorman Rich Rob- bins, a freshman basketball star, to overcome a solid Strauss House lead in the residence hall division. An all-state prep cager from Port Huron, Robbins shot out into the lead halfway through his 220- yd. lap to win by two yards. Others on the winning quartet were Fred Elbler, Constantine Sousamis and Larry Van Tuyl. Their winning time of 1:42.0 was slow due to much cutting-in and jostling during the race. Strauss was second, followed by Huber and Gomberg. Levy Gives SAM Win Alpha Tau Omeg 's Don Dahm put his quartet int a good lead in the fraternity division, but the Sammies' Larry Levy and Herb Kohn came on fast at the end to sew up the victory. Levy captured the lead from ATO with 30 yards left in the third lap and Kohn held it for a close 5-yard victory. Sharing the Sammies' victory were Harry Newman and Steve Wittenberg. The time was 1:41.6. Runner-up. ATO was followed over the finish line by Lambda Chi Alpha and Phi Delta Theta. defeat was the battle of the re- bounds, which Ilhinois won, 50-44. Mannie Jackson picked off 15 and Ohl 13 for the Illini. Lee, with 21 rebounds, accounted for nearly half the Michigan total. Tillotson Ineffective Wolverine center Pete Tillotson was ineffective last night, both in scoring and rebounding. He snared only two rebounds and hit only sparingly from tlje field, finishing with eight points. Outstanding for Michigan was Lewis, who hit well from the out- side. Lewis' performance was the best by a Wolverine guard in any gam'e during the current losing string. Burton, the most consistent player on the team, also performed well. Box Score Read Daily Classifieds j* k Eat Your Prayers Are Answered! at HiLLEL SUPPER CLUB "Tonight at 6-- Members 75c W. Michigan State ......... 9 Indiana.............:. 8 Purdue ................. Iowa...............,.. 7 Ohio State ............. 9 Northwestern .......... 7 Illinois ................ 5 Minnesota .............. 5 MICHIGAN ............. 4 Wisconsin............... 3 MICHIGAN G Burton, fI........... Lee, f........ ...5 Tillotson, c ........3 Miller, g ..........3 Lewde, g ........8 Wright, g .......0 Rodgers, c ..::......0 Tarrier, f..........3 Kingsbury, g ........1 Farrs, .............0 Gaultieri, f ......c 1.0 28. ILLINOIS G Jackson, I..........5 Paul, f .. .........8 Vaughn, a .......... 5 Ohl, g ..........12 Taylor, g........... 6 Perry, c ............0 Frandsen, g .........0 Gosnell, g ........0 Bunkenburg, f. 0 Landt, f.............0 36 F p 9-l 0 2-5 4 2-2 4 1-2 2 3-6 4 0-0 1 0-0 0 2-2 0 0-0 2 0-i 0 0-0 0 19-29 17 F P 0-i 2 2-4 3 1-3 4 4-4 3 7-9 5 0-0 2 0-0 1 0-0 0 2-2 0 0-0 0 16-23 20 T 19 12 8 7 19 0 0 8 2 0 0 75 T 10 18 11 28 19 0 0 0 2 0 88 Followed by Prof. William P., sopy dept.: "How People God." Alston, philo- Talk About JACK LEWIS ..hits for Michigan NO 8-9604 NO 8-9604 FREE DELIVERY Latkes? Pn'p tioe4.t 5577 Plymouth Rd. Home of good PIZZA - and PROP CHICK, a complete fried chicken dinner. 4 5 5 6 6 7 9 8 10 .667 .615 .583 .571 .538 .417 .357 .333 .231 L. Pct. 4 .692 ,I , NO 8-9004 FREE DELIVERY NO 8-9604 Michigan ................38 37--75 Illinois ..................38 50-88 The Republicans and Democrats Play Politics with the Unemployed Read the Weekly People for March 1 at the, Ann Arbor Pablic Library or the periodical room of the University Library. Also on sale at Marshall's Book Shop. Have you arranged to see our representative on MAR. 5, 1958 check with, the chemistry department office for details about the OLIN MATHIESON CHEMICAL CORPORATION - Make every p'career planning minute" count I There are plenty of good angles to a life insur- ance career. A few minutes with the head of Our college unit will tell you a lot about this absorbing busi- mess. And If you're interested in actual sales training you can start now-while you're still in school. 227 Municipal Court Building Ann Arbor, Michigan Phones: Normandy 3-4151---2 PROVIDENT MUTUAL Life Insurance Company of Philadelphia rr .rn r rw .... . .. Italian imported Antares Parva portable typewriters only $4950 Steel Desks, Chairs, Files MORRI LL'S FOLLETT1S State Street at North U. Your best buy is a giant twelve-inch I PIZZA $100 314 S. State St. Since 1908 Phone NO 3-24 0 0 I Quickie C/ickle 4 FREE DELIVERY NO 2-9944 I UNIVERSITY LECTURES IN JOURNALISM EDGAR SNO r Author of Red Star Over China, The Battle for Asia, People on Our Side, and others Distinguished Foreign Correspondent for more than 20 years for Chicago Daily News, New York Sun, New York Herald Tribune Public cordially invited to hear him speak on "China and Its Impact on the World"' . .. .. '."""4 COLLEGIATE HAIRSTYLING for all the family *11 BARBERS * AIR-CONDITIONED The Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theatre Subscribe to The Michigan Daily Monday, March b Rackham Amphitheatre 3 o'clock This advertisement paid fo6r by the press of Michigan through the University Press Club of Michigan V r, 1i,. ... _______ I look at it Logically! RECORD SALE RCA VICTOR LABELS 4.98 for 3.50 Other Labels $2.98 ALL VOCAL AND OBOE MUSIC Af ilL__ I You can't do a thing about the weather But you can be comfortable during the "March Monsoons with a RAIN- I COAT and UMBRELLA from Redwood and. Ross. I COMFORT AND CORRECTNESS distinguish our natural shout- deredfine combed long staple cotton raincoat. Smart stripped lining, ragan sleeves and slashed through pockets ......$22.50