THE MICHIGAN DAILY 4J I: MM! Wolverines Sweep To Conference Hoytmen Annex Cinder Crown With 36 Points 1Mile Relay Team And Bill Watson Break Big Team Records In Victory Indiana Is Second i (Continued from Page 1) smashing the shot mark to pieces Mel Walker of Ohio State broke a 10-year record in the high jump by clearing the bar at 6 ft. 5 3/4 in. The old mark, set in 1927 by Chuck McGinnis of Wisconsin was 6 feet, 5. Hunn Comes Through In the pole vault, while Wiscon- sin was as expected, copping three places with Al Haller winning, Mich- igan's Dave Hunn broke into the scoring and captured second place Jim Kingsley, sophomore vaulter, who had been counted on for cer- tain points, was not able to compete because of a pulled tendon in his left leg. Capt. Bob Osgood of Michigan, fa- vored to win the hurdles was nosed out by Jack Robinson of Illinois, al- though even to take second, Osgood had to come from fourth in the last 30 yards. Ohio State swept three places in the 880 with Chuck Beetham again winning easily while Howdie David- son of Michigan was completely out of the money. Going into the relay Michigan had a point total of 30 with Wisconsin having 27 and the Hoosiers 24. The race was run in heats with Ohio State winning the first heat in 3:23. Great Race By Osgood Steve Mason led off for Michigan in the second heat and trailed by four yards at the end of his quarter. Ross Faulkner, running for the first time since the Michigan-State dual meet, dropped back another six yards on the second leg with Indiana lead- ing. Osgood, determined to make up for his defeat in the hurdles, then gave. one of the greatest running demonstrations of the meet when he overhauled the Hoosier in front of him on his second lap and led him tc the exchange by a good three yards. From there on in it was Michigan all the way with Stan Birleson lugging the baton. Illini Capture Wrestling Title With 24 Points (Continued from Page 1) Track Summaries One Mile Run: Won by Fenske' (Wis.); second, Lash (Ind.); third, Deckard (Ind.); fourth, Mehl (Wis.); fifth, Clayt Brelsford (Mich.). Time 4:12.9. 60-yard dash: Won by Grieve (I.) ; second, Sam Stoller Mich.); third, Alan Smith (Mich.) ; fourth, Collier (Ind.); fifth, Dooley (Iowa). Time, :6.2. 440-yard run: Won by Stan Birle- son (Mich.); second, Steve Mason (Mich.); third, Halcrow (Chi.); Teu- fel (Iowa); fifth, Keitel (N.U.). Time, :49.8. 70-yard hurdles: Won by Robin- son (Ill.); second, Bob Osgood (Mich.); third, Kellner (Wis.); fourth, Lamb (Iowa); fifth, Seitz (O.S.U.). Time, :8.7. Two mile run: Won by Lash (Ind.); second, Deckard (Ind.); third, Cook (Wis.); fourth, Smith (Ind.); fifth, Benner (O.S.U.). Time, 9:19.7. 880-yard run: Won by Beetham (O.S.U.); second, Graves Iowa) ; third, Trutt (Ind.) ; fourth, Sexton (O.S.U.); fifth, Blickle (O.S.U.). Time, 1:56.5. High jump: Won by Walker (O.S.U.); second, Albriton (O.S.U.); third, Diefenthaler (Ill.); fourth, Hubbard (Minn.); fifth, Weichmann (Wis.) height: 6 ft. 5 3/4 in. New Conference record. Old record 6 ft. 5 in. set by Walker (O.S.U.) 1936. Pole vault: Won by Haller (Wis.); second, Dave Hunn (Mich.); third, Sharf (Wis.); fourth, Padway (Wis.); fifth Williams (0.S.U.). Height, 13 ft. 3 in. Shot-put: Won by Watson (Mich.); second, Krezowski (Minn.); third Christianson (Wis.); fourth, Harris (Iowa); fifth, Wist, (Ind.). Distance, 50 ft. 4 3/4 in. (New Con- ference record. Old record 48 ft 9% in. set by Munn, Minn., 1932). J One mile relay: Won by Michigan (Steve Mason, Don Faulkner, Bob Osgood, Stan Birleson); second, In diana; third, Ohio State; fourth Iowa; fifth, Northwestern. Time 3:20.3. (New Conference record. Ol record 3:20.6. set by Mich. 1933). Tank Summaries 300-yard medley relay: Won by Michigan (Fred Cody, John Kasley, Bob Mowerson); second, O.S.U.; third, Northwestern; fourth, Iowa; fifth, Illinois. Time, :02. 220-yard free style: Won by Tom Haynie (Mich.);dsecond, Lewis (Ill.); third, Woodford (O.S.U.); fourth, Frank Barnard (Mich.); fifth, Wilson (Chi.). Time, 2:13.8 (New Conference record; old record 2:16 set by Lewis 1936). 50-yard free style: Won by Ed Ki- rar (Mich.); second, Hudson (Minn.); third, Walt Tomski (Mich.); fourth, Brown, ( Chi.) ; fifth, Bill Farnsworth (Mich.). Time, :23.4 (Tied Conference record set by Flackman, Ill.). Diving: Won by Patterson (O.S.U.) 139.02; second Stauffer (Chi.) 124.3; third, Grady (Mich.) 122.86; fourth, Klun (Minn.); fifth, Fiegal (Ind.). 100-yard free style: Won by Ed K i r a r (Mich.); second, Walters (Iowa); third Bob Mowerson (Mich.); fourth, Wolfson (N.U.); fifth, Walt Tomski (Mich.). Time 53.8. 150-yard back stroke: Won by Ne- unzig (O.S.U.); second, Westerfield (Iowa); third, Zehr (N.U.); fourth, Fred Cody (Mich.); fifth Brandt (Minn.). Time 1:38.9 (Ties Confer- ence record set by Zehr in prelim- inaries). 200-yard breast stroke: Won by Jack Kasley (Mich.); second, McKee (O.S.U.); third, Horfchke (N.U.); fourth, Allen (Iowa); fifth, Alcorn (Ill.). Time 2:26.4. ..440-yard free style: Won by Tom Haynie (Mich.); second, Woodford (O.S.U.); third Christian (Iowa); fourth, Lowe (Ill.); fifth, Wilson (Chi.). Time, 4:52.1 (New Conference record; old record, 4:56.2 set by Haynie preliminaries). n 400-yard free style relay: Won by b Michigan (Walt Tomski, Baker Bry. ant, Ed Kirar, Bob Mowerson); sec- h ond, Ohio; third, Iowa; fourth, Northwestern. Time, 3:35.6 (New d Conference record; old record, 3:36.2 set by Michigan in preliminaries). Swimmers Set New Big Ten S coring Mark Tom Haynie Breaks Two Records As Team Wins Easily With 65 Points *T Ohio State Is Second (Continued from Page 1) Co-Capt. Jack Kasley had little trouble in his favorite breast stroke event, winning from Al McKee of Ohio State by 15 yards in the fair time of 2:26.4. A mild upset occurred when Mich- igan's Ben Grady finished third in the diving behind Jimmy Patterson of Ohio State, defending champion, and Frank Stauffer of Chicago. The Wolverines proved their dom- inance in the sprints, taking three places in both the 50 and 100. Be- hind Kirar in the 50 was Tomski in third and Farnsworth in fifth place. Trailing the huge junior in the cen- tury were Mowerson in third and Tomski in fifth. Mowerson was bare- ly touched out by Ray Walters of Iowa, defending champion. The Michigan trio of Cody, Kas- ley and Mowerson won the 300 yard medley from Ohio State with inches to spare in a great free-style leg by Mowerson. Tonight's victory was the ninth Conference title in 11 years for Coach Matt Mann and his varsity. E at Summarie, i r 0 1 r 7 4 Hockey Team Finishes Season By Battling Chatham To 8-8 Tie / Thomas of Michigan, second in the Conference last year, won the 135-' pound crown and the plaudits of the crowd with an amazing brand of1 courage in his bout with Archie Deutschman, Illinois sophomore. McIvory Wins In the 145 pound class two former prep-school teammates, Mcllvoy of1 Illinois and Finwall of Chicago, met. The two boys have both. held the Big Ten championship in the class and the only other time they met this season they wrestled to a draw., Last night, however, Mcllvoy was much the better man although he was not able to pin his Midway op- ponent. He won on the time advan- tage, having a 7:10 margin. Michigan's Captain Bissell won the Wolverines second title at 155 pounds with a beautifully executed victory; over Jesse Chamberlain of Illinois. It was a typical Bissell victory, Frank going, to an early advantage, almost pinning his man on several occasions and mounting up an impressive ad- vantage of 6:53. Danner, whose wrestling in the meet left nothing to be desired, lost his first match of the year for Mich- igan in the 165-pound finale to an experienced veteran, John Ginay of Illinois, who won third in the Con- ference last year. Whittaker Defats Valorz Capt. John Whittaker, -voted by the contestants as the best grapler in the meet, captured the 175-pound crown beating Ed Valorz, Chicago sophomore, in a very even scrap. The bout went into overtime with the husky Gopher winning the referee's nod. Two giants of the mat. 210-pound Clifton Gustafson of Minnesota and 233 pound Bob Haak of Indiana tangled in the heavyweight bout, the Gopher emerging victorious in an upset over his mamouth opponent in the overtime period. By IRVIN LISAGOR In a thrilling anti-climax to its highly successful season, Michigan bowed out of the hockey scene last; night in the Coliseum by battling the powerful Chatham Maroons to an 8-8 tie. The game was terminated by1 agreement at the end of a ten-min' ute overtime period. George Cooke, sophomore wing on the second line, salvaged the match in the final four minutes of play, scor- ing twice within a space of ten sec- onds. James and Heyliger assisted the Windsor Flash on the two goals. Goalie Kept Busy Except for a mild first period, in which Lloyd Begin blasted home the only score on a solo dash through the Wolverine defense, the game was played with midseason fervor, both teams scrambling hard to register victory. After watching Chatham ,increase its lead to 3-0 in the second period, the Wolverines suddenly came to life. With Heath, defenseman, in the pen- alty box for tripping, Capt. Heyliger sparked a lone attack that netted Michigan two quick goals. Unassist- ed he slapped the disk past Tremaine twice in three seconds after eluding the Maroons defensemen on both oc- casions. James Scores Gib James followed Heyliger's bar- rage with another goal, as he skated in behind Vic and whizzed a sharp shot under Goalie Tremaine's arm. A minute had scarcely elapsed in the third period when James again counted, unassisted. 15 seconds later Johnny Fabello took a neat pass from Heyliger, rode dead in on the Maroon goalie and pushed the puck past him. Then, even Ed Chase, who hadn't scored all season, almost banged one into the nets. Hinnegan slipped a score in shortly afterwards in a mixup in front of the nets. Chatham quickly retaliated with two goals to send the fray into over-' time. Hleyliger Makes Exit After a minute, 33 seconds of over- time play Murrell took a wide pass from Begin and slapped it under Goalie Chase.nA few minutes later Murrell passed to Stevens who blazed away another score. The game marked the hockey exit of Capt. Vic Heyliger and Jack Mer- rill, only two seniors on the squad. Merrill, back in action after a hip injury, played a sterling game on the second line. Vic added five points to his scoring record, making his final total 113. Gib James established a new indi- vidual scoring mark for one year by garnering five points, giving him 45 for the season, one more than Hey- liger rang up last year for the old record. 118-pound class: Myers, Indiana defeated Blum, Illinois, 1:25.. Blum was second and Speicher, Michigan, was third. 126-pound class: Sapora, Illinois defeated Matlon, Minnesota, ; 2:44. Cameron, Michigan, was second and Malton was third. 135-pound class: Thomas, Michi- gan defeated Deutschman, Illinois, 1:22. Deutschman was second and Zabel, Minnesota was third. 145-pound class: McIlvoy, Illinois defeated Finwall, Chicago, 7:10. Fin- wall, was second and Nichols, Michi- gan was third. 155-pound class: Bissell, Michigan defeated Chamberlain, Illinois, 6:53. Cramer, Ohio State was second and Chamberlain was third. 165-pound class: Ginay, Illinois de- feated Danner, Michigan, 6:37. Dan- ner was second and Hanson, Minne- sota was third. 175-pound class: Whitaker, Minne- sota defeated Valorz, Chicago, over- time decision. Valorz was second and Mutter, Illinois was third. Unlimited class: Gustafson, Minne- sota defeated Haak, Indiana, over- time decsiion. Haak was second and Nead, Iowa was third. Total Points By Teams Illinois, 24; Michigan, 19; Minne- sota, 15; Indiana, 9; Chicago, 6; Ohio, 4; Iowa, 3. Northwestern did not score and Purdue and Wisconsin did not compete. ATTE d T R EET J EWELEIR WATCH & JEWELRY REPAIRING BALLROOM DANCING )t THE ODON c0 }a BALL, DENTAL SCHOOL FORMAL MICHIGAN UNION BALLROOM Friday, March 19th Nine till One MUSIC by }r CDE McCOY and His Famous Orchestra Learn correctly and quickly Private and Public Classes Class Wednesday Lesson Evening 7-8 ROY HOYER STUDIO 3 NICKELS ARCADE 1 11111 1 mmmmq h. i RADt":A1WJ 1WbIRAAV~ SI I I