- SUNDAY, JAN. 24, -143 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG.MTT E Swimmers Overpower Buckeyes 0 in Thrill-Packed Meet vY Track Quartet to Compete in Millrose Meet I I Wolverines Capture Six tien Aiso Conquer Ohio State Even s, Winning 52-32 Captain John Patten, Harry Holliday Both Score Double Triumphs; Councilman Beats Skinner By ED ZALENSKI The name of Ross Hume, one of the Canonsburg, Pa., twins, was added to the list of four Michigan half- milers who will match strides with the East's topnotch relay quartets in the famous Millrose Games Saturday, Feb. 6 at New York's Madison Square Garden. A sophomore, Hume completes the quartet of Wolverine runners headed by Captain Dave Matthews, including "Hose Nose" Bob Ufer and JohnRox- borough. Hune Wins Easily Varsity Coach Ken Doherty had no trouble selecting the first three members of the Maize and Blue quar- tet. However, there were three hope- fuls who had visions of that coveted fourth spot-the Hume twins, Ross and Bob, and Johnny Ingersoll.' A special half-mile race was run off at the Field House yesterday af- ternoon to select the fourth man. The hundred fans who remained after Michigan's wrestling victory over Ohio State, saw Ross triumph easily in 1:58.7 with brother Bob taking In- gersoll on the back stretch of the last lap for second place. Third in 1943 In earlier trials Friday afternoon, Ufer, Michigan's greatest quarter- miler, unofficially broke the Field House and Varsity records in the 880-yard run when he blazed across the finish line in 1:54.8. The best time turned in previously at the Field House had been by Abe Rosenkrantz, Michigan Normal, who ran it in 1:55.1 in 1935. Dye Hegan, a former Wol- verine half-miler, holds the Varsity record for the distance at 1:55.3, set in 1940. From all indications the 1943 bearers of the Maize and Blue should show up well against the tough East- ern competition. Last year, the Wol- verine quartet of Ufer, Matthews, John Kautz and Will Ackerman placed third behind Fordham and Seton Hall in 7:51, which was five seconds better than the 1941 team had run. Doherty Will Go Michigan could have won that 1942 race. In the mad scrambleforplaces at the start, Kautz was boxed and Michigan was lost even though Ufer cut the lead down by 30 yards in the final lap. A fast lead-off man might have meant victory last year. Coach Doherty will accompany his four half-milers to New York. Both Ufer and Matthews are expected to compete in several special individual events. a Me pl St ye, pa3 ba sli p t a 5 U By JOE McHALE Showing the power and balance of true championship team, Matt ann's Wolverines last night com- etely submerged any claims of Ohio ate supremacy in.the water for this ar with a smashing total of 52 ints to the Buckeyes' 32. From the moment the opening gun rked Michigan never let the lead de into Ohio hands. When the job, staving off the attempt of Harry Sullivan of the Bucks to lessen the great gap between the trios. Patten Upsets Nakama In probably the biggest upset of the evening, Captain Johnny Patten of the Wolverines outdistanced the All- American Hawaiian, Keo Nakama, in the 224-yard freestyle. Johnny was out in front by nearly five yards at the 50-yard mark and maintained this margin almost to the very end, a fine closing sprint by Keo ending about two yards back of the Big Ten and Collegiate champ. Johnny's time was three full seconds faster than the Conference record. Wolverine Walt Stewart staged a thrilling duel with Big Ten 400-yard titlist Jack Ryan over the third spot, finally touching out the Buckeye. His time was a very good one, 2:15.8: Holiday proved his versatility when Matt inserted him into the 50-yard freestyle with Charlie Fries. The two yearlings finished just as they had started-together. They both were clocked in 23.9 seconds, four-tenths of a second better than the winning time at last week's Michigan AAU's. Jack Martin of the Bucks came in a close third. Patten Wins Again Not content with these efforts Harry skimmed effortlessly through the 150-yard backstroke to lead the field home in the time of 1:35.9, al- most a second faster than the Big Ten mark. Senior Ted Horlenko rose to one of the peaks of his career in powering to a second place over Buckeye Bill Ryan. Not a bit tired by his opening win in the 220, Patten continued on the victory road with a sparkling effort in the 100-yard freestyle. Behind teammate Lou Kivi at the halfway mark Johnny turned on his smooth power to beat Kivi by two yards in 52.7 seconds. Martin got his second third place of the evening. As a fitting ending for the meet Johnny almost flew through the anchor leg of the 400-yard relay in the phenomenal time of 50.9 seconds to end up 15 yards ahead of Bernard Hayes of Ohio. The relay team of Kivi; Church, Fries and Patten was timed in 3:31.7, which betters the Conference record of 3:32.4. Breaststroke Hotly Contested The heralded duel between AAU champ Jim Counsilman of State and Jim Skinner of the Mattmen, Big Ten and Intercollegiate title-holder, turn- ed out to be a good battle. Pat Hayes led at the 100-yards and Skinner at the 150. But Counsilman swam that last fifty just too fast, ending about four yards in front of a tired Skinner. The diving was, as expected, a Buckeye affair with Frank Dempsey and Miller Anderson closely bunched ahead of Wolverine Alex Canja. The score stood. Dempsey, 371.6, Anderson, 357.5, and Canja, 311.4. Nakama won the 440-yard race in 4:53.3 with Walt Stewart recording the fastest time of his life to finish just four strokes behind the little Ha- waiian fish. Jack Ryan picked up a third for the Bucks. DOING IT DOUBLE: Once .. . 300-Yard Medley Relay-Won by Michigan (Holiday, Rayes, and Cory). Time-2:54.3. 224-Yard Freestyle-Won by Pat- ten, Michigan; Nakama. Ohio State. second; Stewart, Michigan, third. Time-2:10.6. 50-Yard Freestyle--Tie for first be- tween Fries and Holiday, Michigan;1 Martin, Ohio State, third. Time-23.9. Diving-Won' by Demnsey.. Ohio State (371.6); Anderson. Ohio State, second, (357.5); Canja, Michigan,; third (311.4).' 100-Yard Freestyle-Won by Pat- ten, Michigan; Kivi, Michigan, sec- ond; Martin, Ohio State, third. Timej -52.7. 150-Yard Backstroke - Won by Holiday, Michigan; Horlenko, Michi- gan, second; Ryan, Ohio State, third.' Time-1:35.9. 200-Yard B1reaststroke-Won by Counsilman, Ohio State; Skinner, Michigan, second; Hayes, Michigan, third. Time-2:23.6. 440-Yard Freestyle--Won by Nak-j ama, Ohio State; Stewart, Michigan,' second; J. Ryan, Ohio State, third.. Time-4:53.3. 400-Yard Freestyle Relay-Won by Michigan (Kivi, Church, Fries, Pat- ten). Time 3:31.7. * * * And Twice . . 121-pounds - Defenbaugh, Ohio State, def. McDonald, Michigan. 128-pounds - Kopel, Michigan, def. Bates, Ohio State. 136-pounds - Jones, Ohio States def. Rudel, Michigan. 145-pounds - Johnson, Michigan, def. Wolf, Ohio State. 155-pounds-Speek, Michigan, def. Weil, Ohio State. 165-pounds-Allen, Michigan, def. Cotterman, Ohio State. 175-Pounds - Mueller, Michigan, pinned Kasmersky, Ohio State, time 8:58. LOOK MIGHTY GOOD: Johnny Greene, Tom Mueller Provide Highlights of 22-6 Win * _______ v By DES HOWARTH Michigan 22, Ohio State 6. And that just about tells the story of yesterday's wrestling match with the Buckeyes. The Wolverines, after getting off to a slow start, gradually built up a lead on decisions and climaxed the meet when Tom Mueller and Johnny Green gained falls inthe final two matches. But Coach Tony Montnero's boys gave the Varsity a scare during the first three bouts, winning two of the first three and jumping into a 6-3 lead. After this, however, the meet was all Michigan. Green Gets His Man By far the best match of the day, from the Maize and Blue standpoint was the Green-Warren MacDonald set-to in the heavyweight class. John- ny, who usually rides his opponents without being able to add the finish- ing touches took pains to see that to- day was going to be an exception. From the word "wrestle" Big John had things all his own way. Three times he gained near falls on Mac- Donald, and it looked as though he was still plagued by the usual trouble. But Johnny did get his man, nailing MacDonald's shoulders to the mat at 5:42. Then to make the victory secure Johnny ended the contest in the third period by again pinning his foe. Not to be overlooked was the show- ing by junior, Tom Mueller. Tom waged an uphill battle to score his victory. Chet Kasmersky, his oppon- ent, gained an early two point advan- tage, and regardless of what Tom did, he couldn't wipe out this margin. In the last minute he finally got Mr. Kasmersky in a pinning position and it was only a question as to whether Tom would beat the clock. He did, scoring his fall with two seconds re- maining. Johnson Wins Captain Manley Johnson, not yet fully recovered from his recent illness, played cautiously, and obviously was not out to pin Ohio State's ,:Keith Johnson emerged with a 16-8 de- cision. Although Dick Kopel was unable to pin Bates in the 126 pound class, Dick completely mastered the Buck- eye with a series of tricky maneuvers and scored an easy 15-5 win. Speek-Weil Battle a Honey Pete Speek, wrestling at 155 won a terrifically contested battle with Seymour Weil. Neither was able to gain a point in the regulation period. Then in overtime Pete quickly piled up seven points to win the event go- ing away. Bob Allen rode Vernon Cotterman throughout the 165 duel but couldn't' pin the wily Ohio Stater. The Buckeye's two victories were scored by Carl Defenbaugh at 121 and Captain Davey Jones at 136. Defen- baugh had little trouble with the Varsity's Bob McDonald. Jones, how- ever, was behind in his match with Harold Rudel, gaining his one point margin in the last thirty seconds of the match. Indiana Breaks Scoring Record IOWA CITY, Ia., Jan. 23--()-In- diana's undefeated Hoosiers added two points to the old Big Ten single- game scoring record tonight as they defeated Iowa's Hawkeyes, 71 to 55, before an uproarious crowd of 7,000 fans. Led by Ralph Hamilton, sharp- shooting forward who racked up 31 points, just three short of the Con- ference individual mark of 34, the Hoosiers gained the upper hand be- fore the game was more than three minutes old and at half time held a 37 to 27 lead. Stunning Iowa with a furious sec- ond period assault, Indiana swept into a 21rpoint advantage with only 10 minutes of play remaining. Al- though the Hawkeyes fought back stubbornly, they could whittle only five points off that margin, despite the fact the Hoosiers were using re- serves. The Hoosiers, running their vic- tory string to 11 straight, including four in the Conference for a first place tie with Illinois, cracked the Big Ten scoring mark made in 1937 when Purdue licked Indiana, 69 to 45, and tied last year by Northwestern in a 69 to 50 victory over Chicago. w CAPTAIN JACK PATTEN ... led his mates to victory last night with two terrific triumphs in he 100- and 220. Then he called it xday after churning an astounding 0.9 heat in the 400 yard relay. 'DANCE at the UNION Saturday, January 30 After-finals relaxation for those who can t go home Saturday, February 6 to top off Victory Ball week-end r" A SILVER LINING: Hockey Team ,t Has Hopes for improvement Still seeking their first victory of the year the Wolverine puckmen will open the second half of the season in a rematch with Point Edward at 8 o'clock Saturday, Feb. 6. Bringing back virtually the same team that took the measure of the Michigan sextet, 5-2, earlier this year, Sarnia will be looking for its eighth straight win over Eddie Lowrey's boys. By agreement, Coach Charlie Levan may limit the number of play- ers to ten, to give the undermanned Michigan team a break. Wolverines Gain Experience Although the names will be the same, it will be a different team that will skate out on the ice for the Maize and Blue. In the. first game the stickmen showed the effect of a Christmas vacation layoff, playing the game with only two days practice. The team has gained experience in its last three games with Port Dover and Minnesota. Outstanding improvement has been shown in the play of Ed Reichert, wingman, who got a goal and an as- sist in the Port Dover tie. Bob Kemp, who will be playing his last game for the team, has shown exceptional form and hopes to find his shooting eye in his swan song for the Wolver- ines. In the last three games he has missed goals by inches on -many oc- casions. Offense Needed The Michigan defense will also be tighter, an average of one goal a period being scored against it in the last three outings. But it will be up to the offense that the Wolver- ines can muster that will spell vic- tory or defeat for the home team. Up in Minneapolis it could not garner a single goal in six periods of play. i i water finally calmed down after the final relay, the 'Wolverines had grabbed six out of nine fSrst places and five second spots. Almost every race was a thriller and the times were nothing short of phenomenal. One American 'record was broken for the books and no less than five Big Ten records and one NCAA mark were bettered, unofficial- ly. Holiday Sets Record Swimming the opening leg of the 300-yard medley relay, the first event on the program, sophomore Harry Holiday erased Adolph Kiefer's Amer- ican mark of 57.8 seconds in the 100- yard backstroke as he clipped half a second off it. And, since the re- quired three watches were on him, Harry has a legitimate claim for hisj name to be entered officially in the record books, a claim which head timer Charles C. Fries was filling out soon thereafter. The relay team, given a huge lead by Holiday, went on to widen it and win in a time of 2:54.3, which betters both NCAA and Big Ten records, the latter being two and one-half seconds slower, Pat Hayes swam a fine breast- stroke leg and Ace Cory finished the' i 7"i % For Skiers For the finest skis (Northland Skis) come to MOE'S. We are sure to have just the pair to suit you. Now is the time to buy skis, while the season is still young. And while you are looking at our skis, ask to see our selection of ski suits. They are just the thing to make your skiing enjoyn'ent complete. Skae Tme Too! Sk teTo Ft tFor Skaters With all the cold weather we've had, the skating rinks are in fine shape. And s with a new pair of skates from Moe's, you will be able to take full advantage l i 3 a Ii? ~l III I I