THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRDA7 THE MICHIGAN DAILY FR1DA~ CT olverines Trailing Hoo Rounds Wins 1500-Meter Event; Michigan Leads in One-Meter Diving (Continued from Page 1) siers in Swim Meet, 22-16 Team Depth Might Win jiglgllgg Wrestling Crown for 'l' Sintz was timed in 18:22.4 while Pendleton and Darnton were clocked in 18:40.5 and 18:48.1 re- spectively. In the lone evening final Michi- gan's Wolf, a pre-meet favorite, had little trouble winning the 200- yard individual medley. However, the seven points earned by Wolf was surpassed by three as Indiana's Bill Barton, Dick Weaver ,and Frank Brunell finished second, third and sixth respectively. Wolf finished the first 50 yards, butterfly, in this four stroke race tied with Iowa's Jack Mitchell, but he pulled out to a three-foot lead in the backstroke, his specialty. He lengthened his lead in the fial two strokes, breaststroke and freestyle, and finished nearly three yards in front of Barton. Barton and Beaver, while never seriously challenging the leader, had to stave off a late rally by Minnesota's Chip Peterson and mitchell, who fell behind in the middle strokes to finish in the second and third spots. Wolf's mark of 2:06.6, the fast- est of his career, lowered his pool mark by one-tenth of a second, but failed by the same margin to tie he NCAA, American and Big Ten record held by Tony Tashnick. Wolverine hopes for earning FRED ROUNDS . 1500-meter ebamp R JOB OPPORTUNITIES! A General Motors representative will be on campus March14, 15, 16, 17, 18 Contact your college placement office to arrange an interview. L1 00 their third straight conference title were given a Doost in the ine-meter diving preliminaries, the last and only other event on the evening's program. With seven of eleven dives com- pleted, Michigan junior Joe Ger- lach has taken a nine-point lead over defending champion Sam Hall of Ohio State.. Wolverine Bob Webster, as ex- pected, is close to the pace-setting duo and trails Hall by less than eight points. Fifth through most the evening, he rallied in the last two dives to close in on the lead- ers. However, the big surprise for Michigan in the diving was pro- vided by Ernie Meissner and Ron Jaco, who currently hold down fourth and fifth place in the standings. Both performed above expecta- tions, earning hte accolades of the assembled coaches, divers, swim- mers and most important, the Judges. Ohio State's Tom Gompf, ex- pected to challenge the three lead= ers, proved to be the evening's major disappointment and barely qualified for the finals, finishing seventh. Performing unspectacularly on his first three dives, disaster struck when Gompf hit his feet on the end of the board as he entered the water on his fourh dive. He was uninjured, but fell from fifth to 11th as a result of this miscue, but diving in champion- ship manner he moved up to seventh on the final dives and qualified for the finals. The meet will move into high gear today with seven final events scheduled. Preliminaries will begin at 12:30 and finals at 8:00. Swim Statistics TEAM SCORES Indiana 22 Michigan 16 Iowa 4 Minnesota 2 1500-Meter Freestyle: 1-Rounds, Ind.; 2-sintz, Ind.; 3-PENDLE- TON, Mich.; 4-DARNTON, Mich.; 5-BECHTEL, Mich.; 6-Wadington, Iowa. Time: 18:19.1 20-Yard Individual Medley: 1- WOLF, Mich; 2-Barton, Ind.; 3-Beaver, Ind.; 4-Mitchell, Iowa; 5-Peterson, Minn.; 6--Brunell, Ind. Time: 2:06.6. One-Meter Divers (Prelminaries and Semi-Finals): 1-GERLACH, Mich. (293.25); 2 - Hall, OSU (234.0); 3 -- WERSTER, Mih. (276.15); 4 - MEISSNER, Mich. 273.05); 5-JACO, Mich. (266.30); 6-Vogel, Purdue (248.8); 7-Gompf, OSU (244.7); S-Hayes, OSU (241.74). Name Woolley, Smith Swim Team Captains Michigan swimmers elected sen- iors John Smith and Carl Woolley as acting co-captains for the re- mainder of the season to replace Tony Tashnick, who became aca- demically ineligible this past week. Smith, a backstroker from De- troit, and Woolley, a freestyler from Brockton, Mass., has placed in the Big Ten and NCAA cham- pionships in both their sophomore and junior years. Woolley also represented the United States in the 1955 Pan American Games held at Mexico City, while Smith was an alternate on the 1956 U.S. Olympic team. IN FORM-Ohio State's Sam Hal, defending champion in one- meter diving, goes through his paces in preliminaries of the Big Ten championship at Varsity Pool last night. Hall currently trails Michigan's Joe Gerlach by nine points. Mat Coaches Make Pairings For Today's Big' Ten Meet By DAVE LYO (Continued from Page 1) " two for the fourth-place finisher. None of these points will be awarded until tomorrow's final matches, of course. In addition, teams today will re- ceive one point for -each match. won by decision, and two for each victory by fall or default. Only these ."advancement" points will be awarded today, but a team that gets 12 to 15 points and places five or six of its men in tomorrow's matches will be in a strong posi- tion to win the team crown. Policy Change This year's meet will see a de-J parture from past Big Ten wres- tling meet policy in Olympic years. Two weights, 115 and 191 pounds, will be contested, but only as "ex- hibition" bouts. Competition in these two divi- sions will not count toward team totals, although medals will be given to the champions at these weights. In the past the Big Ten has in- eluded 115 and 191 competition in the ponference tournament in Olympic years, and counted points earned by grapplers in those classes toward team totals. The change in policy is necessitated by the general lack of 115 and 191- sized matmen this year. Root, Curtis To Compete Michigan's Coach Keen will have entries at 115 and 191 in the per- sons of Willard Root and Guy Curtis (who has shaken off 35 pounds recently). The other Wolverine entries (with season records in paren- theses) are: 123 pounds, Captain Mike Hoyles (8-1-1); 130, Ambi Wilbanks (5-4); 137, Fritz Keller- mann (6-3); 147 Jim Blaker (5-5); 157, Dick Fronczak (5-2-1); 167, Dennis Fitzgerald (9-0-0); 177, Karl Fink (9-0-2); and heavy- weight, Fred Olm (6-2-3). Fitzgerald Best Chance Fitzgerald, runnerup at 167 in last year's meet; is generally con- sidered Michigan's best bet for an individual title. Hoyles (another 1959 runnerup) and Fink will make strong bids for champion- ships, too, and all the other Wol- verines are capable of picking up points. Indeed, if Michigan wins the team crown it may well be due to the squad's overall balance. -It's a winning formula, too-Minne- sota relied on balance to squeak out its four-point victory at Iowa' City last year. Finishing behind Wally John= Michigan State and Michigan: Es- sentially, it looks like the same four schools will vie for team son's Gophers in 1959 were Iowa, honors in this weekend's meet. KARL FINK .. unbeaten in dual meets Getting beneath the surface of things *0 '1 Through a newly developed X-ray diffraction technique that examines stress-induced changes in the spacing between atoms, General Motors Research physicists are now able to deterrine residual stresses below the surface of hardened steel in 25% of the time previously required. BDAVE LYON Associate Sports Editor Big Ten wrestling coaches last night rated Michigan men among the four strongest in each of the weight classes in making their preferences for "seedings" in to- day's Big Ten meet. Thus, no Michigan grappler will face a rated opponent in this af- ternoon's preliminary bouts. The real test for the Wolverines comes tonight when they bump into k* .hly-rated opposition in the semi-fignals in the main gym- nasium of the I-M Building. If Michigan can produce a half- dozen semi-final victories, Coach Cliff Keen's matmen will be in an advantageous position to score heavily in tomorrow's final matches and thus win the team championship. Here's how each Michigan grap- pler fared in the coaches' ratings last night, and who they drew as first-round opponents: Mike Hoyles (123 pounds), beat- en only by George Hobbs of Michigan State, was rated second behind Hobbs, and will face Pur- due's Stan Henderson and (if he wins) Illinois' Ron Pineda this afternoon. Soph Ambl Wilbanks (130), seeded third behind MSU's Norm Young and Iowa's John Kelly, will face Ohio State's Don Green in his first Big Ten tournament metch. Fritz Kellerman (137), Michi- gan's other sophomore contestant, and unbeaten in Big Ten dual meets, opposes OSU's John Flet- cher in his initial bout today. Kellerman was also seeded third, behind Dominic Fatta of Purdue and Charles Coffee of Minnesota. Jim Blaker (147), seeded fourth behind Iowa's Del Rossberg, Min- nesota's Ron Wright, and Indi- ana's Russ Smith, goes against John Sampson of Northwestern in ,the preliminaries. Dick Fronczak (157) meets Indi- ana's John Grill in the prelims. Northwestern's Art Kraft, MSU's Bob Moser, and Purdue's Bob Marshall were rated ahead of Fronczak. Dennis Fitzgerald (167), con- querer of nine straight opponents in dual meets, gets his first tour- nament test this afternoon from MSU's Roger Tavenner. Seeded first, Fitzgerald will get competi- tion in this weight class from Iowa's Joe Mullins and Minne- sota's Bob Koehnen. Karl Fink (177), the only unde- feated Big Ten grappler at this weight, was seeded third behind one-beaten Bill Koehnen of Min- nesota and Gordon Trapp of Iowa. Fink and MSU's Mike Senzig will mix it up in the prelims. Fred Olm (heavyweight), seeded fourth, battles Minnesota's Don Mrochinski in first-round action today. Northwestern's Rory Weber is seeded first, then comes MSU's John Baum and Iowa's Sherwyn Thorson. Michigan ,the only team with a full complement of 10 men, will have Willard Root and Guy Curtis wrestling in the "exhibition" 115 a: 1 191-pound classifications. How will the Big Ten meet turn out? Here ar some eyebrow-raising predictions. TEAMS-Iowa, Michi- gan, Minnesota, Michigan State, Northwestern, Purdue, Indiana, Ohio State, Illinois, Wisconsin. INDIVIDUALS - Hoyles (123), Barnhill (130), Fatts (137), Ross- berg (147), Kraft (157), Fitzgerald (167), Koehnen (177), Thorson (heavyweight). 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