r-II-E- MiHJTG-A N, DAILY. Swimmers Swamp Iowa, 63 To 21; Cagers __V Medley, Relay Team Crals Varsity Mark Natators Win Every Fist; Freshman 'Skinner Sets Pool Mark In Exhibition (Continued from Page 1) out in 1:03.5, increased his lead as the race progressed and finished all by himself in 5:01.1. Thaxter out- lasted Carl Ahlgren, the Hawkeye distance star, for second spot. Strother "T-Bone" Martin, in his first collegiate effort, put on an im- pressive performance to beat team- mate Jack Wolin in the diving. Mar- tin scored 409.1 points to 387.7 for Wolin while Leo Biedrzycki, the lone Iowa entry, was third with 315.4. The century free style test almost provided the upset of the evening for Gus Sharemet had to come from be- hind to overtake Wenstrom on the final lap. The Iowa sprinter, going out fast, took a two-foot lead at the halfway mark, but tired miserably in the stretch drive and wound up in third place behind Ed Hutchens. Sharemet, who never swims much better than he has to, finished in :53.8, while Hutchens was clocked at :54.7. The closing 400-yard free style added the final bit of irony to the massacre. With Williams, John Gil- lis, Holmes and Gus Sharemet, swim- ming in that order for the Wolver- ines, Matt Mann's squad coasted to a 25 yard win in 3:37.2. As an added attraction, Jim Skin- ner, Michigan's phenomenal fresh- man, cracked his own pool mark for the 100-yard breastroke when he butterflied the distance in 1:02, one and one-tenth of a second better than' the time he did at the Swim Gala last November to better Jack Kasley's former record. 300 yard medley relay: Won by Michigan (Beebe, J. Sharemet, J. Shaieniet); Time: 2:55.4.' 220 yard free style: Won by Welsh, 1ichigan; second, Williams, Michi- gn .hird, Ahlgren, Iowa. Time: 2:15.3. 50 yard free style: Won by Bark- 1ichigan Mew. Relax and Beautify ... with a new hair style, scalp treatment, or a facial. "Wally" Lenz is now on our staff. Dom. Das- cola says, "Try a new 'Crew Cut' in three different styles." Esquire Barbers Liberty off State Trackmen Set Two Records InIllinois Relays AXi Purdue Five Edges Out Illinois To Take Lead In Big Ten Race LAFAYETTE, Ind., Feb. 17.--(P)- with 14 points while Benson got 12 Purdue University's Boilermakers for Northwestern. took undisputed possession of the Big Ten Conference basketball lead MINNEAPOLIS, Feb. 17.-(R)- tonight, turning back Illinois, 33 to Minnesota squeezed out a 34 to 29 27, as Indiana University dropped a victory over Iowa in a Western Con- 40-to-36 decision to Northwestern. ference basketball game tonight be- The Boilermakers put on a fin fre basketban l exhibition of speed, snappy ball- fore 6,800 fans. handling and pressure defense for the The result left both Minnesota and 8,500 spectators who filled the big Iowa with a ranking of three victories field house. Purdue }led 19-9 at half- and four defeats in the Conference time. Forward Tierney of Purdue race. and forward Rapac of Illinois each Minnesota led throughout the game scored 10 points, although Iowa presented an almost sod ot.n L tl vAn, ItI. ti.,y # n EVANSTON, Ill., Feb. 17.---")- Northwestern University ran up a 25 to 12 halftime lead tonight and then withstood Indiana's comeback to hand the Hoosiers a surprise set- back, 40 to 36, and drop them from a first place tie with Purdue in the Big Ten basketball race. The Wildcats completely dominat- ed play in the first half in which Indiana was held without a field goal for a 10-minute stretch. However, the game was bitterly fought all the way and the second half was hardly underway before six men had been dismissed for too many personals. Clawson, Ilein and Shepard were the Northwestern players ousted. For Indiana it was Armstrong, Zimmer and Huffman. After the wholesale dismissal, Northwestern's defense sagged and Indiana began its rally. Northwes- tern hung -on, however, and used the stall in the final minutes to save their game. Schaefer paced Indiana scorers er, Michigan; second, Barcisa, Iowa; third, Holmes, Michigan. Time: 25.4. Diving: Won by, Martin, Michigan; second, Wolin, Miohigan; third, Bied- rzyski, Iowa; 409.1 points. 1044 yard free style: Won by G. Sharemet, Michigan; second, Hut- chins, Michigan; third, Wenstrom, Iowa. 'Time: 53;.. 160 yard back stroke: Won by Riedl, Michigan; second, Armstrong, Iowa; third, Bromer, Iowa. Time: 1:38.6. 200 yard breast stroke: Won by J. Sharemet, Michigan; second, Poules, Iowa; third, Haigh, Michigan. Time: 2:26.4. 440-yard free style: won by Welsh Michigan; second, Thaxter, Michi- gan; third, Ahlgren, Iowa. Time: 5:01.1. 400 yard free style relay: Won by Michigan (Williams, Gillis, Holmes, C. Sharemet). Time: 3:37.2. consuanc threau, particuiariy in "he final minutes when the Gophers lost their two stars, Don Carlson, forward, with an ankle injury, and Wi Warhol, center, on four perso fouls. Carlson topped the scor with 11 points. illie nal ing Grapplers Win At Penn State Jordan's Opponent Suffers Broken Leg In Match (Continued from Page 1) umph over Joe Scalzo in the 145 pound class. Scalzo was runner-up for the National Collegiate Cham- pionship last year. Jim Galles then tied the score with"a one sided deci-' sion victory over Chuck Rohrer. The Lion was undefeated this season un- til tonight. Wrestling summary: 121 pounds, Clair Hes, Penn State, defeated Tom Weidig, by decision. 128 pounds: Carl King, Penn State, defeated Dick French, by decision. 136 pounds: Frank Gleason, Penn State, threw Jack Sargent, with a figure four and half nelson. Time 8:03. .145 pounds: William Combs, Michigan, defeated Joe Scalzo, by decision. 155 pounds: Harlan' Danner, Michigan, threw Roy Gensler, with a bar and reverse chan- cery. Time 8:06. 165 pounds: James Galles, Michigan, defeated Charles Rohrer, by decision. 175 pounds: Capt. Ernie Bortz, Penn State, de- feated Don Nichols, by decision. Heavyweight: Capt. Forrest Jordan, Michigan, defeated'Warren Elliott,' by default. Referee, Ben Bishop, Lehigh. Undermined, Michigan Pos. Mich. Tech James G Meyers Ross D Alvord Stodden D Mars Goldsmith C Villeneuve' Lovett W Sihvonen Samuelson W Petaja' Michigan spares: Collins, Canfield, Carson, Heddle; Tech spares, Briden, MpPhail, Bourne, Baird, Fredrickson,: Karam, Johnson. Referee: Al Jacobson, Marquette. Canham Leaps{ To New Mark In High Jump Michigan Team Sets New Four Mile Relay Mark With Time Of 17:39.4' (Continued from Page 1) pion, Warren Breidenbach, disap- pointed by running only fourth in the special 300-yard dash finishing' behind Gene Littler of Nebraska. who tied the Relays and American Indoor record of 31.2 inwinning the event. The Wolverine two-mile team sur- prised itself by finishing second be- hind Indiana's crack quartet. Two sophomores, Bill Ackerman and Johnny Kautz, were on the team with Ed Barrett and Howie Egert. The medley relay team of Bob Barnard,; Dye Hogan, Tommy Jester and Ralph Schwarzkopf finished third behind Indiana. TRACK SUMMARIES 4-mile University relay: Won by Michigan (Wisner, Dobson, Barrett, Schwarzkopf); second vichigan State; third, Marquette; fourth, Wis- consin. Time: 17:39.4 (New meet record, old record 17:50.5 by Penn- sylvania in 1930). 300 yard dash: Won by Littler, Ne- braska; second, McCown, Illinois; third, Sulzman, Ohio State; fourth, Breidenbach, Michigan. Time-:31.2, (Equals meet record by Fred Alder- man, Michigan State, in 1926; also equals American indoor record by A. Woodring, Loren Murchinson, and Alderman). 2-mile University relay: Won by Indiana (Cochrane, Hoke, Hedges, Kane); second, Michigan; third, Wisconsin. Time: 7:48.8. 75-yard high hurdle: won by Smith, Wisconsin; second, Finch, Northwes- tern: third, Schwope, Marquette; fourth, Kelley, Mchiga. Tme- .09.2. 75 yard dash: Won by Piker, North- western; second, Smith, Michigan; third, Saggau Notre Dame; fourth, Franck, Minnesota. Time-:07.6. University medley relay: Won by Indiana (Hoke, Cochran, Hedges, Kane); second, Missouri; third, Michigan; fourth, Wisconsin. Time- 10:15. 75 yard low hurdles: Won by Ol-. sen, Illinois; second, Smith, Wiscon- sin; third, Shurilla, Marquette; fourth, Kelley, Michigan. Time - :08.1. High jump: Won by Canhaim, Mich- igan, 6 ft. 6% in. (New meet record, old record by Burg, Chicago, in 1927, 6 ft. 51 in) second, Schencke, Iowa State, 6 ft. 21/4 in.; third, Ray, Chi- cago, 6 ft. 1%/4 in.; fourth, Smith, Northwestern and Jones, Ohio State tied, 6 ft. 14 in. 1,000 yard run: Won by Eisenhart, Ohio State, second, Olbrys, Notre Dame; third, Powell, Chicago; fourth, Schnoeki, Wisconsin. Time-2:18.6. Broad jump: Won by Hodgeson, Minnesota, 23 ft. 10 in.; second, Lew- is, Illinois, 23 ft. 3% in.; third, Cul- Chuck Fenske Is Victorious In BaxterMle NEW YORK, Feb. 17.-(RP)-Chuck Fenske, the 1940 mile-running sen- sation, ran his winning streak to five straight tonight in capturing the 27th running of the New York A.C.'s Baxter Mile in 4 minutes 7.4 seconds before a crowd of 15,000 at Madison Square Garden. Putting on a killing sprint for the last three-quarters of a lap, the be- spectacled University of Wisconsin graduate student collared Lou Zam- perini in 40 yards of straightaway and then won by three yards. The time equalled the fastest ever recorded indoors for a competitive race turned in by Glenn Cunningham in the 1938 Knights of Columbus games and matched by Fenske two weeks ago in the Millrose Meet, when he beat Cunningham by three yards. Greg Rice, former Notre Dame cap- tain, evened his score with Don Lash for the season at 3-all by Winning the two-mile run in 9:04.2. Lash, fbr once, didn't even figure in the closing sprint, in which Rice opened up a 5-yard margin on Tommy Deckard. In third place came Wal- ter Mehl of Wisconsin with George DeGeorge of the New York A.C. fourth and Lash a bad fifth. Ferrell And Russell Reach Golf Finals TAMPA, Fla., Feb. 17.-('P)-Wes Ferrell, the defending champion, won his way into the finals of the National Baseball Golf Championship today when he sank a 20-foot putt on the 20th hole to beat Paul Derringer, Cincinnati pitching ace. Ferrell, a 'veteran twirler who is trying a comeback with the Brooklyn Dodgers; willimeet Jack Russell in the 36-hole final tomorrow. Russell, a former Chicago Cubs pitcher but now a free agent, elimin- ated medalist Joe Medwick, St. Louis Cardinals outfielder, in the semi- finals, 3 and 2. In the quarter finals earlier in the day, Ferrell, trying for his third cham- pionship, eliminated Jimmy Foxx, slugging first baseman of the Bos- ton Red Sox, 6 and 5. Russell beat Mervyn Shea, Detroit Tiger coach, 2 and 1 in the quarter finals. ver, Michigan, 23 ft. 3 in.; fourth, Tycocki, Purdue, 23 ft. 2% in.; fifth, Shurrila, Marquette, 23 ft. %/2 in. One mile University relay: Won by Illinois (Lewis, Bailey, Downs, Mc- Cown; second, Michigan; third, Notre Dame; fourth, Purdue. Time: 3:22.3. Pole vault: Stolberg, Marquette, Hunt, Nebraska, Decker, Michigan, tied for first, 13 ft. 6 in.; Stout, Il- linois, Defield, Minnesota, Higgins, Missouri, Linta, Ohio State, tied for fourth. 13 ft. '1 FOR CALL. ANN ARBOR AIR SERVICE; Phone 730F14 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. U I for a limited time we are offering- 400 SPRING STYLES of IMPORTED and DOMESTIC FABRICS, at$.50 BRITISH SHETLANDS FINE WORSTEDS FINE GABERDINES BRITISH TWEEDS Individually Tailored and Fitted for you in any style or design. You can't appreciate these Fine Suitings and Topcoats until you have seen them. ~Phty eidn ipp-e Spring is on its way again 'and you will want to be on the trail for a brisk morning ride. To make your horse- back riding more enjoyable and.your appearance more striking, we have purchased ' complete new line of rid- ing equipment. 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