TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1958 Minsoa $i n Overwhelms Cagers, (Continued from Page 1) and pulled to a comfortable 45-30 lead at the half. The only thing that kept the Wolverines in the game in the last part of the first half was their phenomenal foul shooting as they sank 10 out of 11 attempts. The Wolverine's continued their frigid shooting in the early min- utes of the second half. Michi- gan's shots continually bounded off the rim or went in the basket and out again. Then with about 5 minutes of the second half gone, the Wolver- ines got hot for the only time in the game as they cut Minnesota's lead from 17 to 4 points, 59-55. Then as in the first half, Michi- gan's shooting cooled suddenly. The Gophers then scored 15 points to the Wolverines' three points to put the game on ice. Coach Bill Perigo substituted freely in the last few minutes as Michigan trailed by 15 points and had no chance to close the gap. Randy Tarrier who didn't play in the first half played an important part in the Wolverines' brief 80-69 comeback drive. He grabbed sev- eral rebounds and made some fine defensive plays. Michigan expected to have trouble under the boards against Minnesota but did fairly well. The Wolverines had 96 shots against the Gophers 70, but they did not make use of their shots. It was proved again last night that the only certain thing in the Big Ten is that the home team almost always wins. On last night's full schedule Indiana was the only team that managed to win on the opposition's court. The Hoosiers outscored Wisconsin, 93- 87, as their starting five scored 91 of their points. GEORGE KLINE ... Wolverine nemesis BIG TEN STANDINGS W L Pct. Michigan State 5 3 .625 Indiana 5 3 .625 MICHIGAN - 4 3 .571 Purdue 5 4 .556 Ohio State 5 5 .500 Iowa 4 4 .500 Northwestern 4 5 .444 Minnesota 4 5 .444 Illinois 3 5 .375 Wisconsin 3 5 .375 Yesterday's Scores 'Northwestern 78, Ohio State 76 Minnesota 80, MICHIGAN 69 Michigan State 90, Iowa 84 Illinois 99, Purdue 84 Indiana 93, Wisconsin 87 MICHIG Burton, Tillotso Lee, f Miller,; Lewis,p Wright Tarrier Farris, Rogers, TOTA MINNE Kline, Benson, Ron Jo R. Joh Miller,; Carlson Anders Jeppese Wright Rodberg Brachei Hamilt Griffin TOTA MICHIG Minnes de-Kline-d GAN G F P T f-g 6 4-5 2 16 n, c 5 5-5 4 15 1 0-0 5 2 g 5 2-2 1 12 g 8 3-4 4 19 g 0 0-0 1 0 , 2 l-2 1 5 f 0 0-0 0 0 c 0 0-0 0 0 ALS 27 15-20 19 69 SOTA G F P T f 10 8-11 2 28 k, f 5 2-4 212 hnson, c 7 4-4 2 18 nson, g 2 3-5 1 7 g 3 2-2 1 8 3, g 000-0 1 0 from, f 0 1-2 0 1 en, f j 20-0 1 0 g 000-0 1 0 , g 0 2-2 0 2 r, g 0 0-0 0 0 on, f 0 0-0 0 0 , G 0 0-0 1 0 ALS 29 22-30 12 80 GAN 30 39-69 ota 45 35-80 B'M' Pucksters Reaeh Peak, But Too Late, Says Renfrew Sophomore Tracksters Provide Encouragement By JIM BENAGH Usually pessimistic Coach Don Canham made a complete about face, and reviewed his squad's performance in Saturday's Michi- gan State Relays with optimism, despite the failure of Michigan to win a first place. The story at East Lansing was simple: talent and experience pre- vailed. The Big Eight Conference teams marched away with every relay trophy. In the individual events, honors were annexed by seasoned per- formers like Glenn Davis, Ohio State; Jesse Nixon, Wisconsin; Al Oerter and Ernie Shelby, Kansas; vaulter Ed Hoyle, Marquette; and Dee Givens, Oklahoma sprinter. "Some of our kids made mistakes that just aren't made by more experienced runners," Canham said. But when he reviewed the times of many of his sophomores, he pointed with pride to the re- sults of such relay-men as Earl Deardorff, Jim Simpson, Cam Gray, Bruce Fischer and John Twomey. Sophomore sprinters Pete Parker and Freeman Watkins also rated his mention. I-M:f Cooley Rips Miehigan, S'62-33 Three supposed "showdown" games last night between unde- feated I-M residence halls "A" f basketball teams turned intp routs. Cooley scored 45 points in the second half to overwhelm Michi- gan, 62-33. The first half was a brisk point-trading session which ended with Cooley in front, 17-15. But Cooley notched 10 in a row at the start of the second half and kept expanding its lead thereafter. Ed Wahtera scored 19 points for Cooley and Kim Greene 14. Reid Bushong notched 14 points as Van Tyne dumped Taylor, 48- 35, and Huber stopped Allen- Rumsey, 30-15. Rumsey led at the half, 8-2, but Huber started fast- breaking successfully in the last half. Lloyd scored eight straight points in overtime to nip Hinsdale, 51-43, in another "A" game. "B" dorm action was highlighted by fluber's 31-21 conquest of Hins- dale, in which Huber's Dick Syring threw a\ wayward pass for a 50- foot basket. Other scores: RESIDENCE "A" Reeves 27, Wenley 25 Greene 25, Hayden 19 Winchell 30, Scott 18 Adams 32, Gomberg 31 RESIDENCE "B" Hinsdale 36, Allen-Rumsey 14 Taylor 33, Anderson 32 Michigan 32, Cooley 23 Kelsey 33, Greene 31 Strauss 32, Williams 17 Lloyd 22, Wenley 20 Reeves 34, Winchell 25 Gomberg 29, Chicago 17 PROFESSIONAL FRATERNITY Parker, Watkins and Lou Wil- liams all fared well in the 75-yd. sprint with each taking a second in the preliminaries. Watkins and Parker both were clocked at :07.8 twice. Pete Stanger, a sophomore in elgibility, earned Canham's praise as "best hurdler I've had here (in ten years)." He took two thirds in exceptional competition and an- chored Michigan to its best relay finish-a second in the shuttle- hurdle relay. Ernie Simms, a Michigan junior, gave Willie Atterberry, Michigan State's reknown sophomore, stiff competition in the two-mile relay, and helped the Wolverines defeat the Spartans in 3:22.2 for fifth place in the mile relay. By AL SINAI "We're better now than at any other time this ,year, but it's too late," commented Michigan hockey coach Al Renfrew after his ice team split an away weekend series with Minnesota. Michigan's pucksters bowed to Minnesota Friday night, 4-2, as the Gophers took advantage of the Wolverines inability to get started, on twi goals in the first period, by Myron Grafstrom, and defense- men Herb Brooks. These. goals proved the margin of difference as each team tallied two goals in the final two periods. Goalgetters Michigan's goalgetters were Neil McDonald and Gary Unsworth, while Dick Burg and Brooks notch- ed the Gophers other two goals. Bob White paced Michigan to tie for fifth place with Michigan State by scoring three quick goals 'in the third period of Saturday's game which the Wolverines won, 4-2. Murray Williamson and Mike Pearson scored for Minnesota while Neil McDonald scored an insurance goal with only 20 sec- onds remaining in the game. Morale High Despite the fact the Wolverines have failed to make the hockey playoffs for the first time in 11 years; Renfrew describes the team morale as high. "The turning point of the season could very well have been the Denver series when McDonald was out with his injury," said Ren- frew. "If we could've won those games, we might have gone all the way." Friday, February 14 HOCKEY-Michigan State-There GYMNASTICS-Navy Pier-Here, 2 p.m. Saturday, February 15 BASKETBALL-Ohio State-There HOCKEY-Michigan State-Here, 8 p.m. SWIMMING--Indiana--Here, 2 p.m. WRESTLING-Iowa-Here, 3 p.m. GYMNASTICS--Chicago-Here, 4 p.m. Monday thru Friday 'til 9 - Saturday 'til 5 PN11E - CbN 118 East Huron -- Opposite County Bldg. -- Ph. NO 3-6236 Grapplers Improving Steadily Despite Two Weekend Losses By DAVE LYON Dual meet losses at Minnesota Friday and at Iowa State Saturday ordinarily would have implied a dismal weekend for the Michigan wrestling team. But, there were some encour- aging developments. One bright spot was the performance of Mich- igan sophomore 157 - pounder Wayne King. In the Iowa State defeat King emerged Michigan's only individual winner. At Minne- sota he held veteran Ron Baker,, losing only by a 6-4 count. Wolverine Larry Murray, 130- lbs., also performed well. He forced Minnesota's defending 123 - lbs. champion Dick Mueller to come from behind to earn a draw. At Iowa State Murray was edged, 2-0, on a takedown in the final seconds of the first period. Michigan's Mike Hoyles, wres- tling at 123-lbs., won at Minnesota and drew at Iowa State. Veteran 167-pounder Jack Marchello com- piled a similar record dluring the weekend. Max Pearson, whom Coach Cliff Keen describes as a "natural 130- pounder," wrestled at 137 and 147 in the weekend meets. This, plus the fact Pearson's training has suffered under a heavy academic load, explains his 9-2 and 8-3 losses at Minnesota and Iowa State. Your Doctors' Prescriptions Filled I " .. .:: :: ... 1. J . .......... SE >r; ". . , "IN T'ED FROM TN j r E N Wt HA VENT AYE, B LYE, -p- C? 0 :.::.rlSEEN A J AND THERE'S TASK p(VC1 .ro t " ' :..:. :. :..:.:.:.: OF MUTINY, Y G .................... .:::... PC d o t e 1 o .. 4V.Q s1 A2? NNW . m J Ail'%_ :;:: THE LOOKOUT 15 TH E NS ONLY ONE WHO HASN FLIPPED HIS LID! AHOY,THERE- WHAT KEEPS GOt l?. YOU 50 H APPY? ".:. 1 I