THE MICHIGAN DAILY .ark Sets Record as'M' Tankers Win Thomas Loses in High Jump; Boston Broad Jumps 26 Feet c*^,,i p By FRED SThINHARDT It remained for Ron Clark to steal the show in spite of Michi- gan's decisive 62-39 swimming vic- tory over dangerous Ohio State, diver Bob Webster's win over. arch-rival. Tom Gumpf, and new pool records by Bill Darnton and Frank Legacki in the 220 and 100-yd. freestyle races, respective- ly. The blond senior, cQmpeting in the last dual meet of his collegiate career, set a new American in- door record in a special 220-yd SOB WEBSTER '..,wins diving V breaststroke clocking with a 2:31.1 to thrill a crowd of 1056 who' cheered his every, stroke. The old record of 2:348 was held by Bill Mulliken of Ohio University, the gold medalist in the 200 meter breaststroke at the last Olympics. The record was the second su- perb effort in eight days for Clark who is finally moving into high gear after a comparatively slow start in the earlier meets. Against Indiana last week, he shattered his old NCAA record for the 200- yd. breaststroke (2:17.6) with a 2:15.9. Eight Firsts Michigan took eight first places to the Buckeyes' three. Besides Darnton, Legacki, and Webster, individual winners for Michigan were Jim Kerr, 50-yd. freestyle, Fred Wolf, 200-yd, individual med- Swim S1 40,-YD. MEDLEY RELAY -- 1. Michigan, 3:43.4 (Steve Thrasher, Ron Clark, Frank Legacki, Dave Heiser), 2. 'Ohio State. . 220-FREESTYLE-1. Bll Darnton (M), 2:02.9, 2. Owen Klienschmidt (M), 3. Orrin Nordstrom (OSU). (Winning time sets new pool rec- ord. Old pool record was 2:03.7, Roger Anderson, Yale.) 50-YD. FREESTYLE-1. Jim Kerr (M), :22.6, 2. Dennis Floden (M), 3. John Plain (OSU). 200-YD. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY - 1. Fred Wolf (M), 2:07.0, 2. Harry Huffaker (M), 3. Jack Shasserre (OSU). DIVING -- 1. Bob Webster (M), 324.2, 2. Tom Gompf (OSU), 308.45, 3. Juan Botella. (OSU), 283.45. 200-YD. BUTTERFLY -.1. Dave Gillanders (M), 2:06.2, 2. Artie Wolfe (OSU), 3. Mike Natelson (M). ley, Dave Gillanders, 200-yd. but- terfly, and Warren Uhler, 440-yd. freestyle. L. B. Schaffer won the 200-yd. backstroke and Tom Ko- vacs the 200-yd. breaststroke for Ohio State. Michigan won the 400-yd. medley relay and was dis-, qualified in the 400-yd. freestlye relay. i Darnton lead all the way as he chU rned to a 2:02.9 in the 220. Lowers Record Legack4 lowered his own pool record of :49.2 to :49.0 in the 100. The Wolverine captain did not swim in the 50 where junior Jim Kerr turned in a fast :22.6 to beat. teammate Dennis Floden. In the diving, the Buckeyes showed they will be tough to beat at their own pool next week in the Big Ten championships. Sopho- more Juan Botella outscored the Wolverine's Ron Jaco 283.45 to 261.8 to take third in the official meet competition. Diving in ex- hibition, Lou Vitucci accumulated 274.15 to 216.0 for' Pete Cox of Michigan. Webster had 324.2 and Gumpf 308.45. The Wolverines showed excel- lent strength in the 440-yd free- style. Uhler officially won in 4:35.1 and John Urbanscok finished se- cond in 4:41.9, but Win Pendleton did 4:43.1 in exhibition. Along with John Dumont and Darnton, Coach Gus Stager has five of the top eight 440 swimmers in the Big Ten. Disqualified In the 400 -yd. freestyle relay, , Steve Tharsher, Klienschmidt, Darnton, and Legacki of Michigan swam a 3:22.5 in the 400-yd. free- style relay only to be disqualified for a missed turn and an early jump from the block and the ex- hibition team of Dave Heizer, John McGuire, Kerr, and Harry Huffaker turned a 3:25.2. The of- ficial winning time however, 3:27.2, belongs to the Ohio State foursome of John Foster, Joel Creel, Orrin Nordstrom, and John Plain. 1In the backstroke, Schaffer, the smooth-stroking sophomore, won in the fast time of 2:05.0. His 'teammate Tom Murray nosed out Alex Gaxiola for second place. Kovacs swam a 2:19.0 to beat Michigan's Dick Nelson in the breaststroke in which Clark did not swim. unmmary 100-YD. FREESTYLE-. Legacki (M), :49.0, 2. Plain (OSU), 3. Thrasher (M). (Winning time sets new pool record. 0ld pool record was :49.2, heldr by Legacki.) 200-YD. BACKSTROKE--1. L. B. Schaffer (OSU), 2:05.2, 2. Tom Mur- ray (OSU), 3. Alex Gaxiola (M). 440-YD. FREESTYLE-1. Warren Uhlier (M), 4:35.1, 2. John Urbanscok (M), 3. John Westman (OSU). 200=YD. BREASTSTROKE -- ,1. Tom Kovacs (OSU), 2:19.0, 2. Dick Nelson (M), 3. Ken Ware (M). 400-YD. FREESTYLE RELAY-1. Ohio State, 3:27.2 (John Foster, Joel Creel, Nordstrom, Plain),. Michigan disqualified. SPECIAL 220-YD BREASTSTROKE -Clark (M) 2:31.1, sets new indoor American record. "Old record was 2:34.8 held by Bill Muliken, Ohio= University. 4 4 -Daily-James Warneka OFF AND RUNNING-Ron Clark leaves the starting block in his record setting 220-yd. breaststroke performance yesterday. His time of 2:31.1 shatters Bill Mulliken's old record of 2:34.8. In the Inset Clark is being congratulated by happy Coach Gus Stager. It was the second new record set by Clark in eight days. He set the 200-yd. NCAA mark against Indiana. 99 GAME STREAK SNAPPED: Bonnies Surprised at Home by Niagara; CcnenatiN.Carolina Win Big Games By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Valery Brumel, Russia's 18-year-old high jump whiz kid, defeated John Thomas for the second time in as many meetings tonight by winning the National AAU title with a 7-2 leap. A packed crowd of 16,243 was on hand in Madison Square Garden to watch the battle. Thomas went out after missing three times at 7-1. Last week, Brumel defeated Thomas in their first face-to-face meeting when he soared 7-3, while the best Thomas could do was 7-1. Ralph Boston of Tennessee State smashed his own indoor broad jump record tonight by sOar- ing 26 feet, 6% inches. Boston's leap came with all the drama he could muster. Until then, Igor Ter-Ovanesyan of Russia was leading with a leap of 26 feet even. The slim Olympic champion and holder of every world record sped down the runway while the crowd sat hushed. Up he went and when he landed a mighty roar went up., Without even measuring, everyone in Madison Square Garden knew he had beaten Ter-Ovanesyan., Ernie Cunliffe, the crew - cut Stanford post-grad, ran a front race all the way to take the 1,000- yard run in 2:08, just a tenth of a second off his pending indoor record. Eddie Southern, the old Olym- pian from the U.S. Air Force, got hemmed in at the start, but came' out of the pack to capture the 600 in 1:11.9. Kye Courtney of Man- hattan was second, about five yards back. NEW YORK-Bob Backus, a 3 year-old, 270-pound giant frc the New York Athletic Club, we his seventh National AAU 3 pound weight throw championshk with a toss of 66 feet, 6 inches. Backus, who towers 6-5, d throned Hal Connolly of the I Angeles Striders, the only musei man ever to throw the weig more than 70 feet. But this w not Connolly's day. His best effo was 65-10%. Last year, Connolly, like Ba kus a school teacher, won the tit with an all-time record throw 71-21. Until then, Backus h won the event six years' runnir Jim Beatty of Santa Clar Calif., snapped Istvan Rozsavw gyi's five-race streak by winnir the mile-strictly a jockeying ra --in 4:09.3. OLEAN, N.Y. WP)-Fired-up Ni- agara, in one of the biggest bas- ketball upsets of the season, end- ed a 13-year home St. Bonaven- ture winning streak of 99, with an 87-77 victory last night. Niagara knocked over the sec- ond-ranked Bonnies attheir own game-the lightning fast! break, They added their own dash of sensational accuracy-an amazing 73 per cent from the field. After giving away a 13-peint lead to a Bonaventure last-half rally that looked like it might save the day, Al Butler led a Niagara counter-rally. Butler hit four jump shots out of six Niagara baskets as the Pur- ple Eagles re-established a nine- point lead with 6:28 to go. Tom Stith sparked the Bonnies as they lashed the margin to six, but this was the best they could do. Niagara turned to possession ball with three minutes to go, and won it going away as Bona- venture tried to come back. Butler's tremendous, last-half effort gave him scoring honors for Niagara with 25. But he lost game honors to Stith, who dumped in 33 pOints. The loss was only the second in 22 "starts for the second-ranked Bonnies. CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (A) -- A back-handed goal by York Larese and a free throw by rookie Yogi Poteet in the closing seconds of overtime gave seventh-ranked North Carolina a 69-66 victory over Duke yesterday to win top place in the Atlantic Coast Con- ference regular season standings. The regulation game ended in a 63-63 tie after Larese missed on a long set shot with four seconds left. ''hen, with the score tied at 66-all in overtime, Larese back- handed the ball into the basket for a goal with 1:04 remaining. Forty seconds were left when Po- teet made good on his free throw. * * * Cincinnati 73, No. Texas State 43 DENTON, Tex. -- Cincinnati won its 16th straight game and a guaranteed tie for the Missouri Valley Conference title by whip- ping North Texas State 73-43 here yesterday afternoon. The Bearcats thus ended their Valley slate with a 10-2 record. Bradley, also with 2 losses, is the other Valley crown contender. The Eagles were tied with Cin- cinnati after eight minutes but then collapsed before an 18-point Bearcat scoring burst. The visitors played three men taller than 6- foot-8 and dominated the boards. They grabbed 63 rebounds to 37 for the North Texans and out- shot them from the field 40 per cent to 28 per cent. Cincinnati's Bob Wiesenhahn and Paul Hogue led scoring with 15 points apiece. Ardie Dixon had 14 for North Texas. For Your Browsing Pleasure All the Latest in POCKETBOOKS and PAPERBACKS on our MEZZANINE FLOOR F $ LLATT'S 322 S. State NO 3-3371 Harken not to the glorious claims of others - - .._.... a ,_ ,:. ...., f ... ' .. f (fir nail iscon .{he wadj... He will be at your placement office FEB. 27 and 28 with alluring promises of a paradise at The Cleveland Electric Illuminating Company WILT HITS 58:. Chamberlain, Philadelphia Beat Cincinnati Daily Classifieds Bring Results P. . Avoid the rush, the pushing and shoving of the mob. Sign up early for your appointment. r 1 By The Associated Press ST. LOUIS - The Boston Cel- tics clipped arch rival St. Louis 122-109 tonight but the rough wild game was almost overshadowed by two player fights, an injury to Hawk star Bob Pettit and an egg- throwing incident. Pettit, who led both clubs with 31 points, suffered a twisted an- kle in the late stages and the Hawks said he may not make the trip to. Cincinnati tomorrow. Bob Cousy scored 12 points as the Celtics took a 29-28 first period lead. But it was speedy Sam Jones, with a 14-point second period, who led Boston's defending national basketball association kings to a 63-54 halftime bulge. Cousy was top scorer for Bos- ton with 23 points. The Celtics now have a 6-3 season bulge over the Hawks with one game to go. St. Louis has lost only 5 of 31 home games-three to the Celtics. CINCINNATI-Wilt Chamber- lain poured in 58 points yesterday as the Philadelphia Warriors came from behind in the last quarter for a 129-120 National Basketball Association victory over the Cin- cinnati Royals. Philadelphia held a 63-61 half- time lead;. Oscar Robertson and Jack Twy- man again bore the heavy burden a of the Cincinnati offense. Robert- son finished with 39 points and Twyinan with 35. Chicago 1, Montreal 1 MONTREAL - The Chicago Blackhawks and the Montreal Ca- the Canadiens ahead 1-0 at 2:28 with his 40th goal of the season. Ab MacDonald, a Montreal cast- off, tied the count a little more than two minutes later with his 16th tally. * * * Toronto 3, Detroit 1 TORONTO-The Toronto Maple Leafs, with rookie goalie Cesare Maniago making a fine big league debut, defeated the Detroit Red Wings 3-1 last night to maintain their hold on first place in the National Hockey League. The victory, coupled with Mon- treal's 1-1 tie with Chicago, boost- ed the Leafs' lead to three points. r |"Do You Have Writer's Cramp?" RENT A "Neat Papers Lead to Good Grades" REGULAR SEMESTER RATES BOOM BOOM GOEFFRION ...scores for Habs nadiens, each getting spectacular goaltending, battled to a 1-1 Na- tional Hockey League tie last night. Both goals came in the early minutes of the third period. Ber- nie (Boom Boom) Geoffrion put' at MORRI IL'S 314 S. State NO 5-914 (Giving Morrill Support for 50 Years) I OFF THE BEATEN TRACK OPEN ROAD ,,P N-TO URS ; YOU DRIVE TRIPS EXPLORE FRANCE E~rLUK~BRITISH ISLES ALL EUROPE Please send me FREE Illustrated Folders 'dame adress. I I B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION Stages the 1961 Edition of its Purimshpiel i.e. the inimitable FACULTY DEBATE "The Relative Merits of the LATKE and HAMANTASH on The NEW FRONTIER in the SPACE AGE" Thurdav. Mne 2.8. .R P.M. "Hello, Come Right In ..." will be heard all over the campus as fraternity rush starts today. First come open houses, enabling each man to visit as many or as few of the 43 fraternities os he wishes, today, I