PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, MARCH 7,1964 Tankers Second; Gymnasts in Tie;Icers Win VCHA Hoosiers Hold Lead By BILL BULLARD Special To The Daily MINNEAPOLIS-Michigan took a firm but still not yet sure hold of second place in the Big Ten Swimming Meet at Cooke Exhibi- tion Pool last night as sophomore Rich Walls and junior Ed Bartsch barely missed winning conference championships. Walls did get a share of the championship by tying Indiana's Chuck Ogilby in the 200-yard free- style race, but his Big Ten record that he swam in the preliminary still stands. Bartsc's 200-yard backstroke race went right down to the wire before he was touched out by :00.3 second by Indiana sophomore Pete Hammer for first place. The Wolverines placed finalists in all five events last night as they trailed Indiana, 139% to 95. Ohio State maintained itself in third place with 773/4 points, while Minnesota moved past Michigan State into fourth place with 59% points. The Spartans are in fifth place with 46 points. Other Teams Other teams in the bottom half of the standings are: Wisconsin, 20; Northwestern, 15 ; Purdue, 11; Iowa, 10/; Illinois, 3. Walls set his Big Ten record of 1:47.0 as he led all qualifiers in the preliminaries. His mark broke the old one of 1:48.2, set by Indiana's Gary Verhoeven at the 1963 Big Ten Meet, and set a Cooke Pool record. Walls and Ogilby, the two fast- est qualifiers in the preliminaries, set the early pace and kept it up throughout the event. Bill Farley, who won the 500-yard freestyle in Big Ten record timerThursday night, started behind the two lead- ers and made his move at the 150- yard mark. He had almost caught up to the two leaders at the 175- yard mark, but he lost ground on the turn as Walls and Ogilby sprinted down the last 25 yards. Finally Caught Up Walls had been just a hair be- hind Ogilby after the first 100 yards and finally caught up on the last length. After the pair had touched the end of the pool, Walls' time was put down as 1:47.3 and Ogilby's time was recorded as 1:47.4, but three of four judges picked Ogilby first. Farley placed third with a 1:48.9 'time, :00.7 second behind Walls. However, he still holds the var- sity record of 1:46.49 that he es- tablished on February 8 against Michigan State. Wildest Race Bartsch was touched out of first place in the 200-yard backstroke by :00.3 second in the wildest race of the evening. Bartsch finished fifth in the preliminaries and thus had to settle for lane one in the finals. He led for most of the race but in the last 50 yards Hammer moved Into a tie. Junior Lanny Reppert broke the varsity record that he set as a sophomore in placing fifth in the 200-yard individual medley. He also placed fifth in the prelimin- aries and tied his record with a 2:05.7 clocking. In the finals, he broke his record with a 2:05.5 time. Indiana's Ted Stickles won the I-M in 2:00.4, edging teammate Ralph Kendrick by :00.6 second. His time 'was :00.3 second from the Big Ten record he set last sea- son. But it was a new pool record. Sophomore Dave Roadhouse made it into the finals of the 200- yard butterfly with a 2:02.0 time that edged out Captain Jeff Moore and sophomore Bill Spann. In the 200-yard breaststroke, Geza Bodolay took a fifth place. Hoping for Second 200-YD. BUTTERFLY-1. Schmidt (Ind); 2. Schulhof (Ind); 3. Rich- ardson (Minn); 4. Clark (OSU); 5. Ellis (Minn); 6. Roadhouse (M). Time-1:55.7 (Cooke Hall record.) 200-YD. BACKSTROKE-1. Ham- mer (Ind); 2. Bartsch (M); 3. Mi- chaels (OSU); 4. Stickles (Ind); 5. Stock (Ind); 6. Mathis (OSU). Time --1:59.8.P 200-YD. BREASTSTROKE-1. Lu- ken (Minn); 2. tie) Frost (Ind) and Blanchard (Wis); 4. Tretheway (Ind); 5. Bodolay (M); 6. Hunt (MSU). Time-2:15.0 (Cooke Hall record by Frost in preliminaries, 2:14.6). 200-YD. FREESTYLE - 1. (tie) Walls (M) and Ogilby (Ind); 3. Farley (M); 4. Donaldson (OSU); 5. MacMillan (MSU); 6. Allen (Minn). Time-1:47.3 (Big Ten, Cooke Hall record by Walls in preliminaries, 1:47.0), 200-YD. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY - I. Stickles (Ind); 2. Kendrick (Ind); 3. Mull (OSU); 4. Gretzinger (MSU); 5. Reppert (M); 6. Bergman (Minn). Tune-2:00.4 (Cooke Hall record). DORIE REID ... undefeated Thiuc lads, Wisconsin In TusslZe (Continued from Page 1) Al Montalbano, who sped to two victories in his heats with a best time of 1:11.0. The champions will be decided in all the rest of the field events plus all the running events today when the eventual team champion will be crowned. Wisconsin Hurting Wisconsin's hopes to match the Wolverines' strength were dealt a severe blowby its seemingly an- nual plague of injuries to key performers. The pre-meet favorite in the polevault, Brian Bergeman, whose 15'4" vault stands as the finest ever in the Big Ten, is hos- pitalized in Madison with the flu. In addition, Big Ten champion Larry Howard is out for the year with a football injury as is speedy halfback Louis Holland, also with a leg problem. Wisconsin's half miler, Bill Gill, didn't make the trip as he's laid up with mononuclesis. The final blow to the Badgers came just be fore their departure to Columbus when veteran quartermiler and mile-realy star Dave Russell pull- ed a muscle. Every Event The Wolverines qualified men in every event, as Dorie Reid in the 6 Oyards dash, Ted Kelly in the 880, and Cliff Nuttall in the 70 yard high hurdles all went through the preliminaries and the semifinals without ever being beaten. Reid's time of :06.2 in the 60 was not bettered by anyone last night including last year's cham- pion Bob Moreland of Michigan State. The finals begin today at 12:30 Looks Good BROAD JUMP (finals)-. Garrett (MSU), 24'7"; 2. Rowser (M), 23'- 11"; 3. Moore (P), 23'10"; 4. Ahren- holz (P), 23'5"; 5. Sweenye (M), 23'4". 70-YD. HIGH HURDLES (semi-fin- als)-1. Dakin (W), :08.6; 2. Nuttall (M), :08.6; 3. Beatty (W); 4. Grant (W); 5. Dix (W); 6. Woodston (M). 1000-YD. RUN (semi-finals)- 1. Martens (MSU), 2:12.2; 2. Thron- son (Minn), 2:15.2; 3. Gallo (Minn); 4. Peterson (W); 5. Fulcher (MSU); 6. Casto (M). 600-YD. RUN (semi-finals) - 1. Montalbano (W), 1:10.0; 2. Ber- nard (M), 1:11.8; 3. Uplinger (Minn); 4. Becker (Ill); 5. Walker (nd); 6. Heuer (W). 300-YD. DASH (semi-finals) - 1. Blanheim (III), :30.9; 2. Adams (P), :31.0; 3. Hunter (M); 4. Beverly (MSU); 5. Heffelfinger (); 6. Po- land (Ind). - 880-YD. RUN (semi-finals - 1. Miller (Minn), 1:54.0; 2..Kelly (M), 1:54.8; 3. Mather (MSU); 4. Norde (M); 5. Alexander (0); 6. Angotti (Ind). 440-YD. RUN (semi-finals) - 1. Higginbottom (W), :48.2; 2. Wash- ington (P), :48.9; 3. Parker (MSU); 4. Sellern (); 5. Romain (M); 6. Thomas (N). 60-YD. DASH (trial)-. Moreland (MSU), :06.2; 2. Reid (M), :06.2; 3. Jackson (Ill), :06.3; 4. Weddle (Ind); 5. Burnley (M); 6, Smith (); 7. Goldston (I); 8. B. S ith (W); 9. Mason (M); 10. Lewi (MSU); 11. Stevens (Minn); 12. R. Smith (W). 70-YD. LOW HURDLES (trial) -1. B. Smith (W), :07.9; 2. Smith (0), :08.0; 3. Dakin (W), :08.2; 4. Azikiwe (MSU);75. Lebowitz (N); 6. Collins (N); 7. Mason (M); 8. McKoy (MSU); 9. Anderson (Minn); 10. Randolf (I); 11. Beatty (W); 12. Nut- tail (M). Gymnasts Qualify 21 By LLOYD GRAFF Special To The Daily MADISON-Arno Lascari, Mike Henderson, and John Hamilton took firsts in the Big Ten gym- nastics perliminaries yesterday, as Michigan, Iowa, and Michigan State emerged as expected to as- sume favorite roles in the meet. The Wolverines, aiming for their fourth straight title, paced the first day with 21 qualifiers for today's final action. The Spartans and Hawkeyes are a close second with 16 apiece. Darkhorse Wiscon- sin is fourth with 13. Lascari, still showing the effects of his ailing elbow, scored 94.5 out of 100 on the parallel bars to fin- ish in a first place tie with Todd Gates of Michigan State. Consistently Trailed John Hamilton, who has con- sistenly trailed his compatriots on the trampoline, produced a bril- liant 96.5 in that event to lead the qualifiers. George Hery of Iowa jumped into second, as co-f av- orites Gary Erwin and Fred Sand- ers, defending Big Ten champ, took a close third and fourth re- spectively. The top three all have a shot at first place tomorrow. In tumbling Michigan took a first step toward a slam, sweep- ing the first three places. Mike Henderson led the way, Phil Bol- ton followed in second, with some- times tumbler Hamilton entrench- ed in third. Low Scores Because of stiff judging, low scores were the order of the day for all competitors. One notable exception occurred in the still rings, as Dale Cooper of Michigan State and Jim Hopper of Wiscon- sin each scored 97. Glenn Gailus of Iowa also had a superb per- formance, showing 96.5. Lascari also showed himself to be in the class of the conference as he scored an excellent 94 for fourth place. A major surprise in the meet is the fine showing of Alex Frecska in the all-around and particularly the side-horse. " Another surprise, this one a dis- appointment though, was Hender- son's low score in free exercise as he could only muster a 78 for fourth place in his specialty. M' Tops Qualifiers LONG HORSE-. Roethlisberger (Wis), 91.5; 2. Hery (Iowa); 3. Weintraub (Il); 4. Curzi (MSU); 5. Sanchez (11); 6. Gleason (Minn); 7. Price (MS); 8. Bauer (Wis); and Ei- brink (Minn); 10. Hurt (MSU). STILL RINGS-1. Cooper (MSU) and Hopper (Wis), 97.3; 3. Gailus (Iowa); 4. Lascari (M), 94.5; 5.GPearl (Iowa); 6. Sebben (Iowa); 7. Wag- ner (111); 8. Eibrink (Minn); 9. Keely (Iowa); 10. Gleason (Minn). PARALLEL BARS-. Lasari (M) and Gates (MSU), 94.5; 3. Roethlis- berger (Wis); 4. Zovne (Wis) and Curzi (MSU); 6. Price (MSU); 7. Arneson (Minn); 8. Duke (M) and Pearl (Iowa); 10. Frecska (M). TUMBLING-1. Henderson (M), 90.5; 2. Bolton (M); 3. Hamilton (M); 4. Hery (Iowa); 5. Brod (M) and Sayre (Iowa); 6. Spaulding (); 7. Porte (Wis); 8. Weintraub (111); 9. Blakstone (OSU). , FLOOR EXERCISE-1. Hery (Iowa) 85.2; Gailus (Iowa); 3. Sayre (Iowa); 4. Henderson (1); 5. Curzi (MSU); 6. Roethlisberger (Wis); 7. Wtipil (Wis); 8. Lascari (M); 9. Giliberto (MS U); 10. Reichert (Minn). TRAMPOLINE-. Hamilton (M), 96.5; 2. Hery (Iowa); 3. Erwin (M); 4. Sanders (M); 5. Lilly (Ind) and Bauer (Wis); 7. Iffland (Ill); 8. Knuckles (Ind) and Strobel (MSU). SIDE HORSE-. Galus (Iowa), 90.5; 2. Frecska (M); 3. Curzi (MSU); 4. Eliason (Ind); 5. Arneson (Minn); 6. Ensalaco (Ill); 7. Ruggles (Ind); 8. Lascari (M); 9. Sanchez (Ill); 10. Young (MSU). HIGH BAR-1. Curzi (MSU), 95.2; 2. Gailus (Iowa); 3. Price (MSU); 4. Cashman (M), Frecska (M) and Roethlisberger (Wis); 7. Lascari (M); 8. Gleason (Minn); 9. Hop- per (Wis); 10. Eibrink (Minn). ALL-AROUND - 1. Curzi (MSU), 516.75; 2. Gallus (Iowa); 3. Roethlis- berger (Wis); 4. Lascari (M); 5. Frecska (M); 6. Price (MSU); 7. El- brink (Minn); 8. Gleason (Minn); 9. Duke (M); 10. Zovne (Wis). TOTAL QUALIFIERS - Michigan, 21; Michigan State and Iowa, 16; Wisconsin, 13; Minnesota, 11; Illi- nois, 7; Indiana, 4; Ohio State, 1. (Purdue and Northwestern did not enter.) Albert Schweitzer College Churwaiden t Grsons, Switzerland Year Course on the problems of Western culture and society, motivated bythe ideals of Albert Schweitzer. Lectures in German and English on philosophy, psychology, history of religion, political science, mo- dern literature and art. Tutorials. Language courses. International community. Possible credit as Junior Year abroad. Icers Win WCHA Title By PERRY HOOD Special To The Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan's ice sextet dominated a hard fought contest to pile a nine four margin over Michigan State last night and take the Western Col- legiate Hockey Association crown. The Wolverines went from last to first in one in piling up their{ present 20-3 overall record and 11-2 conference mark. The win last night sets up a home stand in the conference playoffs next weekend against the fourth place team. Michigan and Michigan State play again tonight at the Coliseum at 8 p.m., Coach Al Renfrew was high in his praise for his team. "The kids played a helluva game. It's great to be in first place." Wilfred Martin opened up the contest quickly with his first goal at 2:18 of the first period with an assist from Alex Hood. Martin also tallied his second goal on the re- bound off Alex Terpay pads. MSU hit the scoring column on Mike Coppo's shot from 30 feet out. After he had gotten the puck from a pass out of the faceoff, Michigan's George Forrest upped the score to 3-1 almost imme- diately after Coppo's tally. The Wolverines and Spartans each scored one of the next two goals, both on power plays. Barry MacDonald pushed a long shot from the blur line in the nets, and State's Hardgraves dumped home the next marker. Spartan Doug Roberts tied a minute later on a rebound off of goalie Bill Bieber's pad. Michigan rai away with the game with its next three goals. Mel Wakabayashi took the puck from center ice and outskated three Spartan players to score his only goal of the evening. State got one more goal before the Wolverines put in their last two. The Blue defense tightened up in the third period to hold MSU scoreless. * *C * * * * M' Faces Iowa in Must Game '.4' By JIM LASOVAGE Michigan's nationally second- ranked cagers will take on the Big Ten's ninth place Iowa to- night on the Hawkeyes' home court at 8:30 (EST). This is a must game for the Wolverines, and unless Michigan State can upset first place Ohio State at St. Johns Arena today, O'Hara Sets Indoor Mile CHICAGO (P) - Tom O'Hara smashed him own indoor mile record last night with a time of 3:56.4 in the annual Chicago Daily News Relays before a screaming hometown throng of 18,307 in Chicago Stadium. The frail-looking 130-pound Lo- yola of Chicago senior knocked two-tenths of a second off his previous indoor mark set in the New York AC Games last month at Madison Square Garden. He was paced through a siz- zling 1:58.8 first half over the 11-lap oval board track by Jim Irons of the Toronto Olympic Club. Michigan will also have to defeat Purdue on Monday. Tonight's meeting will be the only one of the year between these two teams. The Hawkeyes, with a 3-9 conference mark, will be hustling to evade the Big Ten cel- lar. Michigan's 10-2 Big Ten rec- ord puts them just under Ohio State, which closes its season to- day. Should the Buckeyes lose to MSU, the Wolverines will need only one win, over either Iowa or Purdue, to tie for the Big Ten title and an NCAA berth in the Regionals at Minneapolis. Upset Minded Although Iowa will be upset minded in hopes of making the best of a disappointing 7-13 sea- son by frustrating Michigan, the Maize and Blue have going for them two All Big Ten stars in Bill Buntin and Cazzie Russell. Both have also been given All America berths Going into the game, Russell will have a 24.5 point per game average, while Buntin is close be- hind with 23.2. Buntin is also con- tending for the Big Ten rebound- ing leadership with Gary Bradds of OSU and Skip Thoren of Il- linois. Buntin led the conference in that department last year as' a sophomore. Michigan will be looking for its 20th win of the season against only three defeats. Each win in- creases Michigan's new season record for total games won, the old record having been broken with win number 19 last Saturday. Other Action In other conference action, last place Wisconsin fights for its life against an Illinois team which didn't reach its potential this sea- son. Minnesota, which is already looking forward to next season, takes on the Van Arsdale twins and company on the Hoosier's home court. The Gophers will have their en- tire starting team returning next year, discounting accidents be- tween then and now. The North- western Wildcats play host to the Boilermakers of Purdue in a con- test between the fifth and sixth place teams. Both possess 6-6 con- ference marks. WILFRED MARTIN ... tallies twice LEADING: Grapp lers Put Three In Finals (Continued from Page 1) clashes with Wisconsin's burly Roger Pillath for the heavyweight marbles. The Wolverines suffered their first big setback when sophomore 137-pounder Cal Jenkins dropped a 6-1 decision in the preliminary bout to Northwestern's Jerry Tor- ence. Jenkins had the score knot- ted at 1-1 midway through the final period but got nabbed off balance to lose the points. Jenkins came back with a pair of strong wins to gain a consola- tion final pairing today. Johannesen Decisioned Bill Johannesen got to the quar- ter finals before Indiana's unde- feated Bob Campbell beat him in a very close referee's decision af- ter regulation time and two over- time periods. Chris Stowell lost to Illinois' John Jeffrey in the quarter finals of the 167-pound bout, 4-1; he'll meet Elmir Beale of Wisconsin in the consolations. Bay hurt his shoulder while beating Purdue's Dale Smith, 5-2 in the quarter finals. After hos- pital examination and with his shoulder taped, Bay attempted tc meet Lee Gross of Minnesota in the semi-finals but was finally farced to forfeit midway through the match. TOMORROW MARCH 8th-5 to 8 P.M. SUNDAY BUFFET at the Fabulous INN AMERICA It's too good to miss: -Delicious BUFFET-All You Can Eat! (Roast beef, chicken and a host of other tempting dishes) -Come in casual attire (sweaters O.K.) Held in our beautiful Stratford Room! -Enjoy the relaxing music of: RICK PERRY and the BRUCE FISHER QUARTET 1 s 5 t i a J 9 )i I 1 I MICHI Butler Dechaij Wilkie Galipe Hende Bieber Clinch Crown GAN Pos. W R ine W C au Dl rson D Ja r ~G MSU Roberts Elliot Orme Lackey cobson Terpay FINAL PAIRINGS 123-pounds-Bahna (M) vs. Trail Pur). 130 - Parker (Ia) vs. Campbell (Ind). 137-Kennedoy (Minn) vs. Hor- rence (NU). 147 -- Risner (NU) vs. Deitrick (M). 157-Gross (Minn) vs. Donko (011). 167-Jeffrey (Ill) vs. Wieland (Ia). 177-Isel (Ind) vs. Johnson (Wis). Heavyweight-Spaly (M) vs. Rog- er Pillath (Wis). First Period Scoring: M - Martin (Hood and Forrest) 2:18, M-Mar- tin (Ferguson) 13:42, MSU-Coppo (Jacobson, Hargraves) 16:58, 1W - Forrest (MacDonald) 17:07. Penalt- ties: MSU-Lawrence (interference) 5:01, MSU-Jacobson (tripping) 6:26, M-Galipeau (holding) 8:26,;1W-Fer- guson (slashing) 14:49, M - Day (illegal check) 18:07, MSU - Lackey (holding) 18:32. Second Period Scaring: MW-Mac- Donald (Coristine, Butler) 2:04, MSU -Hargraves (Coppo, Jacobson) 3:16, MSU-Roberts (Orme, Elliott) 4:12, M-Wakabayashi (Ferguson) 11:19, MW-Hood (Martin) 12:43, 1W-Butler (Wilkie) 15:11, MSU-Elliott (Rob- erts, Lackey) 16:36, M-Dechaine (Wilkie) 18:59. Penalties: MSU-Jac- obson (elbowing) 1:18, MW-Galipean (holding) 2:39, M-MacDonald (el- bowing) 4:38, MSU-Orme (hooking) 4:57, MSU-Lackey (hooking) 6:27, MSU-Musat (interference) 8:04, M -Henderson (holding) 16:16. Third Period Scoring: MW-Coris- tine (Wakabayashl) 5:30. Penalties: M-Hood (holding) 2:28, M-De- chaine (hooking) 3:51, MSU-Rob- erts (highsticking) 8:11, M-Forrest (holding) 9:28, M - Hood (illegal check) 12:16, M-Galipeau (illegal check) 18:24. 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