M - sts 'rounced, 76-36, Icers Beat Tech, 4 eld Earns Four Firsts To Pace s Gymnasts to 76-46 Triumph OES aythe Michigan mentor exclaimed. events, when he might have fin- The Daily "Every tine we come into this ished much higher. The battle of the building we begin to make mis- "Jinx" Hits. Stall ymnastlcs teams takes." A t here last night Al Stall also fell victim to the d Michigan, 7 e Trampolinists Falter "jinx" as he slipped on the side e He was referring to the many horse and failed to place. In the inted the Wol- points lost through slips that hurt meantime, the Illini performances ointed tnhgedol-the Wolverines' performances or were devoid, of error, and all Mich- ent; and grabbed caused them to turn in incomplete igan mistakes were taken advan- aces and all but routines. The most striking ex- tage of. Is. u ample was in Michigan's strongest "We were forced to concede most been a much event, the trampoline. Even with- of the first plaes to Illinois' great Bd.c"Ighave no out Cole, Loken expected to take Abie Grossfeld," Loken siad. "This we could have the first three places. would not have been so if Gagnier inly could have However, the three "M" com- had been there." Grossfeld took petitors -Frank Newman, Chuck firsts in the free exercise, high bar, Clarkson and Jack Eckle all parallel bars and still rings. SMiss Meet faltered in their performances. Gagnier, who tied with him for cipal factors ex- Eckle finished third behind Illini the Big Ten All-Around title last whelming defeat Frank Hailand and Alan Harvey, year, could have broken intp this Michigan's two while Newman took fifth and monopoly. ons, 'all-around Clarkson did not place. Diamond, Hailand Help 1hlini ind trampolinist The stakes were evident in other The Illini were also bolstered tiffered a shoul- events, too, as the Wolverines lost by Bob Diamond, who took a first le is out with a a number of points that could have in the side horse, and .Hailand, been theirs. Jim Hayslett, usually who added the tumbling title to ing stars, Loken a calm competitor, faltered in his his first on the trampoline. Dia- lose Wolverines finish on the side horse and also mond is a transfer from California orm up to capa- slipped on the parallel bars. He whose all-around potential should )d Illinois jinx," took a point in both of these help Illinois Coach Charlie Pond replace Don Tondry. . Gilbert and Sullivan Society presents M.S. PINAFORE and DIAL NO 8-6416 FONCrES R T FUNNY MAN "arch 13, 14, 15--8:00 P.M. having a high ild time with MikItamOsr and haste toutret"o ia'Mendelssohn Theatre Box Office Monday -4. Vi..s. re to go after the show'?" DESIGNED TO PUT NCI b Caitd eli9t YOU IN STITCHES! * 'ON lGHT: 10 till 12 Continuous Showings Sat. and Sun. From 1 P.M. COMING EVERYONE WELCOME ALASTAIR SIM In, 'rith Hillel Foufndation - 1429 Hill "ESCAPADE" -- -- - - 7 Icers .Whip Huskies in Series Op MacIntosh, White, McDonald 'S FOUR FIRSTS -- Abe Grossfeld of Illinois single-handedly crushed Michigan's gymnasts last night by accounting for 30 of his team's 76 points on four firsts, a third, fourth and a fifth place in the seven events he entered. By SI COLEMAN Special to The Daily HOUGHTON - A blazing fin- ish to a rather sloppy game high- lighted a 3-1 victory for Michigan over Michigan Tech at Dee Sta- dium last night. These same two teams will meet in the last game of the season to- night at 8 p.m. In recent years, a Michigan- Michigan Tech game would deter- mine the final WIHL standings, but last night's contest was just a mere routine of finishing up the season. Only 1,334 fans, the lowest at- tendance of the year at Dee Sta- dium, showed up to watch the 80th meeting of the two teams. The game was sloppy and unin- teresting from the start, but ac- tion in the last five minutes of play more than made up for it. Tech Gets Opportunity With Michigan ahead, 2-0, four penalties against the Wolverines in six minutes gave Tech the op- portunity to score its one goal of the game in the third period. Cliff Wylie slapped a loose puck; in 'front of the Michigan cage past Ross Childs to narrow the margin, 2-1, and break Childs' shutout. Michigan only had three play- ers on the ice for most of the closing minutes of the game. Tech came within an inch several times of tying it up. Tech Pulls Goalie With exactly one minute re- maining, and both teams at full strength, Tech coach, John Mac- Inness pulled his goalie in an ef- fort to score the equalizer. Michigan; as the tension mount- ed, pressed the six Tech skaters looking for a breakthrough. It came at 19:49. Don MacIn- tosh, playing in his next-to-last game as a Wolverine, stole the puck, skated in unmolested on the open cage, and calaly tapped in the clincher. Michigan Gets Lead Michigan got off to a 1-0 lead early in the first period. Bob White, playing his first game since being injured two weeks ago, took a pass from MacIntosh deep in his own zone. The strong sophomore skated around the Tech defense and flipped the disk past Husky goalie, George Cuculick. Wolverines Dominate Play The Wolverines dominated play for the remainder of the period but could not score. Play became ragged throughout the, second period. The lack of bench strength on both teams be- gan to show, and it looked for a while as though White's goal would stand up for the remainder of the game. Neil MacDonald, who, w Switzer and Mac~intosh, is ing in his final collegiate series, put Michigan ahem in the third period. The Wolverine captain blasted rebound of a slap shot by Watt. With Michigan Tech, ample proof of having the est offense in the Leag looked as if the game we cure ,and that Childs woul his first shut-out of the i Wylie's goal put an end I FIRST PE -1-White Penalties:r (charging); (roughing) Cuculick (r -Rochen ( Gym Statistics FREE EXERCISE: 1. Grossfeld (I) 2. Hailand (I) 3. Hayslett (M) 4. Do- zauer (M) 5. Marion (M). SIDE HORSE: 1. Diamond (I) 2. Davis (I) 3. Grossfeld (I) 4. Hayslett (M) 5. Marion (M) TRAMPOLINE 1. Halland (I) 2. Har- vey (I) 3. Eckle (M) 4. Grossfeld ($) 3. Newman (M). HIGH BAR: 1. Grossfeld (1)- 2. Gombos (I) 3. Marion (M) 4. Stall (M) 5. Dozauer (M). PARALLEL .BARS: 1. Grossfeld (I) 2. Dozauer (M) 3. 'Diamond (I) 4. Hayslett (M) 5. Marion (M). STILL RINGS: 1. Grossfeld (I) 2. Bird (1) 3. Marion (M) 4. Dozauer (M) S. Gumbos (I). TUMBLING: 1. Halland (I) 2. Har- vey (I) 3. Haysiett (M) 4. Skinner. (M) 5. Grossfeld (I). Al RPFLIGHT TO ,EUROPE Byrne'Quits 'Baseball Pet ST. PETERSBURG OP)-Tommy Byrne, 38- year - old left handed pitcher of the New York Yankees, retired fromi baseball yesterday. Byrne, who lives in Wake Forest, N. C., has joined the staff of an oil company in Sanford, N. C. The veteran southpaw, who is vacationing here with his wife, was the last Yankee player still with the club who played during the World War II era. Byrne came up with the Bomb- ers in 1943, served two years as a naval officer, and then resumed his baseball career after the war. Traded to Browns He was traded away in 1951 and hurled for the St. Louis Browns, Chicago White Sox and Washing- ton Senators before dropping backc to the minors in 1953. He made a comeback in the Pacific Coast League, winning 20' games for Seattle in 1954, and was purchased by the Yanks in Sep- tember of that year. Byrne's lifetime record for 13 major league seasons was 85-69' with a 4.11 earned run average.. er (hooain (too many THIRD PI -2-McDon MichigaT land) 16:39; tosh (Hayt Igan (too Jr - Hayton ( igan - Whi igan -- Doz gan - Hayr VISITORS SEEK REVENGE. CagesHos tIowa in Season's J&AL 0 For Information Call the Union Student Offices By HAL APPLEBAUM Michigan's Wolverines will try' to salvage what they can in the Big Ten basketball race when they meet Iowa at Yost Fieldhouse to- night in the season's finale, start- ing at 8 p.m. The game carries no importance as far as the Conference cham- pionship goes. Michigan State clashes with Indiana at East Lansing for the championship and the right to represent the Big Ten in the NCAA championship tour- nament. other hand can gain a fourth-' place tie with Ohio State if they whip the Wolverines. Iowa will be trying to avenge an earlier loss to Michigan. The Wol- verines whipped the Hawkeyes 73- 65 at Iowa City in the opening game of the Big Ten season last January. Wordlaw Paces Hawkeyes The young Iowa squad started out slowly, but has' come to life in recent games. Leading the squad has been Clarence Wordlaw, 6'2" guard from Chicago. Wordlaw was benched due to his difficulties on defense, but when the Hawkeyes needed scoring punch half way' son Coach Bticky ed Wordlaw into has responded points per game games and Is I league in scoring Dave Gunther, ward is currently in the point pa per game avera NO 2-4431 3-5 Daily I:-: r" - Other starting 6'8" sop Gentry, and Bo U ii I S. U. Union Bowling Team Vs. '_I U. of M. Union Bowling Team Chtema quild TONIGHT at 7:00 and 9:00 Sunday at 8:00 FI V E ',FIN GE RS with James Mason, Danielle Darrieux, Richard Rennie, Walter Hampden ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM 50 cents Tuesday, Mar. 11, 8:30 P.M. in Hill Auditorium Currently in a tie for seventh place, Michigan cannot better its position. Fifth-place Iowa on the 1 Tilolso On the offensi will feature a s, tween M. C. g Tios.Tillot, scoring and Burl below, but Till friendly rival by George Lee presently battling and fifth in rel has 11 and Lee ally impossiblef 'in the standings, Seniors Tillots and Randy Tarrn last appearances forms tonight. Saturday, March 8, at 2:00 P.M. in the UNION BOWLING ALLEYS Big Ten~ SPECTATORS WELCOME . . ,. no admission charged im- sins ;;;! 1* I Indiana.......... Michigan State. P'urdue ........ Ohio State ... Iowa .. ........ Northwestern .... Illinois .......... MICHIGAN ...... Wisconsin....... TODAY'S G Indiana at Michig Illinois at Northw Iowa at Michigan 9 9 9 7 7 5 5 5 5 -6 B Q ON STAGE,... LAST NIGHT CURTAIN TIME 8 P.M. m c-MMM3L so "Utterly immoral, sex farce."-N.Y. . . . enjoyable light-minded French (type) Daily News UNIVERSAL MUSICAL SOCIETY BURTON TOWER Tickets: $3.50-= $3.00 - $2.50 - $2.00 - $1.50 "Best of all comedy notions."-N.Y. World Telegram "Consistently funny. A royal good time"'-N.Y. Times Recent Broadway Hit, I * Late Show TO LAST FEATURE 1 / d; y __r M _ lok* mad mill DIAL NO 2-2513 Ending TONIGHT WOW' Have you read Mr. Nahrgang's Daily review of this play? Here are I excerpts from veteran reviewer Mack Woodruff's column in the Ann I Arbor News: I "The Ann Arbor Civic Theater players opened their final production I of the current season lost night at Lydia Me delssohn Theater. The I announced intention of the group was to close the season on 'a I suitably light and impudent note.' They succeeded admirably. I . .;. the very good group of veteran amateur actors got more mileage I out of the play's nitwit characters and vacuous pingpong banter' l than Miss Green had any proper right to expect. The players attacked ... with ...concerted enthusiasm and whole- hearted, tongue-in-cheek good humor ...t . I Phyllis Wright (as Jessica, the heroine) is excellent. She manages I to make Jessica seem more sensitive than sick, and that is no mean I accomplishment. Robert Logan as the husband and Russell Aiuto I as the French teacher are both veterans enough to wring the full " a f. " " " f I .+rt r %,suit md roll at sea the Captain. y- but as the n prietor of an amusement pier,; he's the life of the party! M-G-M presents AL Gt N (t ^ i DIAL NO 2-3 -. Ends TONIGHT - DAVI Q KLZ K't". E IT'S NEW! ITS A' RIOT! Michigan Daily is only $3.25 ROCK RMSOM - JENNIMFRJWt#S *"ITTOIMOD CIfSrtsSUNDA at s " 141JI1ID OV 1 f ..f.. '~. "Ranks among the 4