THEa MICHIGAN DAILY at, Tank Teams Dropped into Runner-UpSlo zgerald, Blaker, Kellerman Retain Individual Titles; rden, Fink Earn Seconds; Corriere Places Third IU Coach Juggles Line-Ups To Increase Hoosier Score V (Continued from Page.1) arden. From then on to the final izzer, Jaklich held on to Barden, eking up a predicament point ong the way. Barden tried every- ing, but couldn't get out of Jak- h's grasp. , Jaklich had defeated Barden in dual meet this season by 7-3. That left it up to Fink, who eded to pin his man to salvage tie for the Wolverines. It was e asking him to knock the Eiffel )wer over, because Fink's oppon- t was the Northwestern giant, Dry Weber. Weber Escapes After a scoreless first period, eber quickly escaped from Fink the second period. Weber picked > another point by riding Fink r the entire third period to make .e final score 2-0. Jaklich and Weber scored 26 of orthwestern's 30 team points and ieir wins in the finals helped ichigan State to the title. The Spartans came close to los- g it as five of their nine finalists St their matches yesterday. In Idition, three of the four win- ers won their matches by one point and the points. other was by two Spartans Win Two Young, who put Michigan on the spot, just barely eked out his win on a riding point and a take down in the last 20 seconds. Okla Johnson,hat115-lbs., was the Spartans other champion. Kellerman used his speed to de- 'featPurdue's Dick Mc ory, 9-3. Three times Kellerman dove in to CHAMPIONSHIP 115-lbs.-Johnson (MSU) def. De- Ano (III.), 2-1 123-lbs. - Andrews (Minn.) def. Hobbs (MSU), 7-2 130-lbs.-Kellerman (M) def. Mc- Cory (P), 9-3 137-bs.-Young (MSU) def. Zbor- ay (Ind.), 5-4 147-lbs.-Blaker (M) def. Fatta (P), 5-3 157-lbs.-O'Laughlin (1l.) def. Gibson (P), 5-3 167-lbs.-MarshaU (P) def. Mul- lins (Ia.), 10-1 177-lbs.-Fitzgerald (M) def. Mc- Cray (MSU), 6-0 191-lbs.--Jaklich (N) def. Barden (M), 5-0 Hwt.-Weber (N) def. Fink (M), 2-0 grab McCory's leg and get take downs. All three of McCory's points came on escapes. It was Kellerman's second title in two years. Blaker successfully defended his 147-lb. title, but it took a quick maneuver in the final period to keep it. One point down, Purdue's Dominic Fatta made a sudden move for a take down and almost had it when Blaker turned him CONSOLATION 115-lbs.-Rittschoff (Wis.) del. Root (M), 7-3 123-lbs.-Letner (Wis.) del. Jur- inek (Ill.), 3-1 130-lbs.-T. Huff (Ia.) def. Hoke (MSU),' 7-2 137-tbs.-Gates (Ia.) def. Rose (P), 3-1 147-lbs.--Rossberg (Ia.) def. MU-, lican (N), 7-2 157-bs. - Combs (Ia.) pinned Wohlfert (MSU), 1:54 167-lbs. - Corriere (M) pinned Schuter (MSU), 3:41 177-bs.-Simi (Ill.) def. Maroni (Ind.), 6-1 - 191-lbs.-Prebel (MSU) def. Jen- kins (Ia.), 4-3 Hwt.--Senxig (MSU) def. Turner (OSU), 6-4' (Continued from Page 1) around and scored the two points himself for a 5-3 victory. Michigan had another repeat champion when Fitzgerald de- feated Michigan State's John Mc- Cray. McCray had reached the finals on a referee's decision and was no match for Fitzgerald. Fitz- gerald came very close to pinning him in the third period, but couldn't quite get McCray's other shoulder to the mat. Michigan's Don Corriere atoned somewhat for his defeat on Friday by pinning the Spartan's Bob Schluter, to take third place in the 167-lb. class. The day had started badly for the Wolverines when Willard Root lost his consolation match to Wis- consin's Fred Rittschoff, last year's 115-lb. champion. Root finished in fourth place. Other Champs The other individual champions were Ron Andrews of Minnesota, 123-lb.; Mike O'Laughlin of Illi- nois, 157-lb.; and Bob Marshall of Purdue, 167-lb. Marshall won his title by de- feating Iowa's Joe Mullins 10-1. It was Mullins who upset Corriere on Friday. Marshall showed why he is the nation's top wrestler at that weight by maintaining complete control of the match. Marshall was later selected by the coaches as the meet's most outstanding wrestler. It champion Pete Sintz out of hit 4u« American record-holding 440 med- ley relay team to avoid a repeti- ®_tion of Michigan's earlier 1500- ! meter second- to fifth-place sweep. Asexapcted, Somers won and Micign' BllDarnton was a close second, but Troy and Sintz finished third and fifth, respec- tvely, giving, Indiana 10 points, hich no one had expected. Win Pendleton (third), and Warren Uhler (sixth) both swam very well as did John Dumont, who placed seventh in the time trials. y ~New Records Somers' 4:22.5 breaks the listed NCAA record of 4:22.6 held by Murray Rose of Southern Cali- fornia. The next three finishers t. were all under Ford Konno's old Big Ten record of 4:28.4, with Darnton's 4:24.0 the fastest time. If Indiana had gone with its $ $ regular relay team and 440 swim- AP Wirephoto mers, the final score might have DING PERFORMER-Amid the tight team battle be- been reversed in Michigan's favor. tna and Michigan, a Minnesota sophomore swimmer- Gillanders became the first man man--emerged as one of the top swimmers in the Big to beat Troy in a major race since Jackman won the 50-yard free style Friday in record the 1959 Pan - American games when he beat the Hoosier ace in he 100-yard freestyle yesterday for another Big Ten the 200-meter butterfly His :53.0 sets new American, Big Ten and Yesterday's Swimming Summaries 9 OUTSTAND tween India Steve Jacke Ten meet.. time and t: record. JUST ARRIVED New ,Shipment of CAIDMON L.P. RECORDS* $5.98 regular Price ( Special Purchase ( $498 Featuring DYLAN THOMAS VINCENT PRICE ALBERT CAMUS E. E. CUMMINGS ROBERT FROST JAMES MASON BUY and SAVE at CARL SANDBURG BORIS KARLOFF- BASIL RATHBONE 100 BUTTERFLY-1. DAVE GIL- LANDERS, (Mich.), 2. Laberdle, (Ind.), 3. Troy, (Ind.), 4. Steuart, (MSU), 5. Wolfe, (OSU), 6. Bruneil, (Ind.), 7. Schaar, (MSU), 8. Carney, (Minn.), 9. Barton, (Ind.), 10. Klin- gie, (Ill.), 11. (tie) Somnmer, (Ili.) and THRASHER, (Mich.). Time- :53.0. (Record betters.mark of :53.1 set by Mike Troy of Ind. in 1960.) 100 FREESTYLE-1. Steve Jack- man, (Minn.), 2. Spreitzer, (Ill.), 3. McDevitt, (Wis.), 4. LEGACKI, (Mich.), S. Plain, (OSU), 6. Fitzgib- bon, (lad.), 7. Wood, (MSU), 8. Wood, (MSU), 9. Verth, (land),'10. (tie) Clarehout, (Ia.) and Nord- Fullmer Wins LAS VEGAS, Nev. (M)-Brawling Gene Fullmer, applying relentless pressure throughout a savage 15- round blood bath, retained his Middleweight boxing title last night by unanimously decisioning five-time champion Ray Robinson. strom, (OSU), 12. Jones, (MSU). Time-:40.3. (Record betters mark of :49.2 set by LEGACKI of Mich. in 1959.) 100 BREASTSTROKE -- 1. DICK NELSON, (Mich.), 2. Jastremski, (Ind.), 3. CLARK, (Mich.), 4. Single- ton, (MSU), 5. Nakasone, (Ind.), 6. Milota, (Minn.), 7. Kovacs, (OSU), 8. Quenette, (Minn.), 9. Stover, (OSU); 10. Ruppart, (MSU), 11. Sol- berg, (Minn.), 12. WARE, (Mich.). Time-1:01.8. (Record betters 1:02.1 by Jastremski in qualifier and 1:03.6 by CLARK of Mich, in 1960.) 100-BACKSTROKE-1. Frank Mc- Kinney, (Ind.), 2: Schaefer, (OSU), 3. GAXIOLA, (Mich.), 4. Roethke, (Iad.), 5. Mattson, (MSU), 6. WOLF, (Mich.), 7.. Beaver, (Ind.), 8. (tied), Cutler, (Ia.), Brunell, (Ind.) and Murray, (OSU), 11. Peterson, (Minn.), 12. REIS SING, (Mich. Time-:54.8. (Record betters own mark ;of :55.5 set in 1960.) 440-FREESTYLE - 1. Somers, (lad.), 2. DARNTON, (Mich.), 3. Troy, (Ind.), 4. PENDLETON, (Mich.), 5. Sintz, (Ind.), 6. UHLER, (Mich.), 7. DUMONT, (Mich.), 8. Rowe, (MSU), 9. Biazejewski, (MSU), 10. Brackett, (MSU), 11. Johnson, F@LLETTS RECORD DEPARTMENT State Street at North University (Minn.), 12. Wadingron, (Ia.). Time -4:22.5. (Record betters mark of 4:28.4 set by Ford Konno of OSU in 1955.) THREE-METER DIVE-1. Vitucci, (OSU), 2. WEBSTER, (Mich.), 3. Gompf, (OSU), 4. Botela, (OSU), 5. Vogel, (Pur.), 6. JACO, (Mich.), 7. Craddock, (Ind.), 8. Hayes, (OSU), 9. COX, (Mich.), 10. Williams, (MSU), 11. Huyler, (I11.), 12. Lov- stedt, (Ind.). Score-499.9. 400-YD. MEDLEY RELAY -1. MICHIGAN (GAXIOLA, NELSON, GILLANDERS, KLEINSCHMIDT), 2. Indiana, 3. Michigan State, 4. OSU, 5. Minnesota, 6. Illinois, 7. Wiscon- sin, S. Northwestern, 9. Purdue. Iowa disqualified in qualifier for illegal takeoff. Time-3 :4 1.0. (Rec- ord betters 3:43.4 by Indiana in 1960.) SCORES NBA Boston 113, New York 110 Philadelphia 116, Syracuse 115 St. Louis 104, Detroit 102 NHL Toronto 5, New York 4- Montreal 6, Detroit 4 .' COLLEGE.BASKETBALL Seton Hail 86, St. Francis (NY) 77 Kentucky 68, Tennessee 61 Brown 61, Cornell 60 Kansas State 75, Nebraska 56 Princeton 71, Harvard 59 Cincinnati 69, Marshall 57 St. Louis 80, Bradley 73 Duquesne 75, Fordham 66 St. Bonaventure 84, Canisius 72 Marquette 75, Detroit 69 DePaul 84, Dayton 83 HOCKEY Minnesota 4, North Dakota 3 .(ovt.) NCAA standards. The race was even until the 75-yard mark when Gillanders began to inch away. He won by about two feet, Second Day It was the second superb effort by Gilanders in two days. Friday, he pushed Troy to his limit and became the second man to break 2:00.0 for the 200-yd. butterfly with a 1:58.4. Nelson won the 100-yd. breast- stroke by an eyelash over Chet Jastremski of Indiana. The two matched stroke-for-stroke the en- tire distance. Ron Clark of Michi- gan, 200-yd. breaststroke cham- pion, took third. The breaststroke race ended the mass confusion over who owned which records. Swimming in the qualifying meet just before Jaw- tremski, Nelson lowered his own American record of 1:02.4 to 1:02.2, which also set new NCAA and Big Ten records. But before Nelson had toweled himself off, Jastremski had lowered the short- lived marks to 1:02.1. Nelson's 1:01.8 in the finals settled the mat- ter for the time being. Hoosiers Dominate Indiana placed four men in the top nine in the 100-yd. backstroke. McKinney won it in :54.6 as he pulled away from Ohio State sophomore and former American record holder L. B. Schaeffer in the last lap. His time sets a new Big Ten record. Alex Gaxiola and Fred Wolf, who both swam clutch :57.3's to gain the finals ahead of Indiana's Dick Over, finished third and sixth respectively. Vitucci- came from behind to edge Michigan's Bob Webster in the/three-meter finals. Ron Jaco took sixth and Pete Cox #inth. Keith Craddock (7th) and John Lovstedt (12th) 'gave Indiana 4 points in the event, equaling the final margin of victory for the Hoosiers. Jackman left a fast 100-yd. freestyle field behind as he churned, to a :48.3, only a tenth of. a second ahead of Jeff Farrell's American record. Defending cham- pion Frank Legacki swam a :49.5 for fourth place. Oddly enough, the ,third-place finisher, Ron M1+c- Devitt of Wisconsin, was caught in a slower time, :49.6. Friday Jackman broke every record in the books with a :21.4 in the 50-yd. freestyle. The relay was an anti-climax as only an Indiana disqualification could have given Michigan the final victory. Nevertheless, Gaxi- ola, Nelson, Gillanders, and Owen Kleinschmidt did a fine 3:41.0 to win. Under the new scoring system which awarded points to the sev- enth through twelfth place finish- ers on a time basis, Indiana gained 341/2 points and Michigan 351/z over the three-day meet. Michigan Coach Gus Stager was simultaneously pleased and dis- appointed. He had every reason to be proud of the fine over-all team performance and the courageous. individual races swam by Gil- landers and Nelson yesterday as well as the fantastic anchor leg by Legacki in the 400-yd. free- style relay on Friday. Yet when It was all over, Indiana had won by the barest of margins. 4 I'm telling you if you want the best sandwich in town, visit the CAFE PROMETHEAN for lunch. Announcing the first annual Development Council Concert KEEP AHEAD OF YOUR HAIR ! ! 9 NO WAITING " 11 HAIRSTYLISTS "Headquarters for Collegians" DASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theatre featuring I e 4 F i April 12th Hill Auditorium Tickets: 2.00, 1.75,,1.50 All proceeds go to the new Development Council Scholarships Sign up for block tickets with your Mail order for tickets can be sent to: RAY CHARLES CONCERT STUDENT OFFICES MICHIGAN UNION II I ::: :;: