SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1952 PAGE THREE Fight Wolverine Firsts Beat Spartan Swimmers a Free-stylers Star in Dual Meet,_52-41 Jones, Hill Pace With Double Wins By HERB NEIL Michigan's undefeated swim- mers successfully hurdled one of their big obstacles of the season in downing Michigan State, 52-41, before a capacity crowd at the In- tramural Pool yesterday after- 1k noon. Don Hill and Bumpy Jones both' twice defeated the Spartans' two All-Americans, Clark Scholes and Bert McLachlan, in winning in four free-style events. THE VICTORY marked the Wolverines' fourth dual meet win this season, in addition to first in a triangular meet and an A.A.U. meet. Hill tied both his own pool records for the 50 and 100-yard y free-style races i n beating Scholes, the Big Ten champion for both events last year. The r Michigan star edged out his Spartan opponent by a footin the 50, and then came back to convincingly beat Scholes by a four-foot margin in the longer race. In winning both the 220 and 440-yard free-style events Jones T also defeated the Big Ten champ- ion for the two races last year. JONES PUT on a sudden burst in the last 20 yards of the 220 to beat Michigan by a yard after the two had swum neck and neck for the first 200. In the quarter mile, however, the versatile Jones built up a lead from the opening gun, gra- dually increasing it to ten yards at the finish. The visitors made their best < showing in the 200-yard back- stroke, as Harold Shoup and John Quigley finished one-two. This narrowed the Wolverine lead down to 34-29, after seven of the ten events had been run off. JOHN DAVIES and Stew Elli- ott restored the larger margin in the next event,, however, as the Michigan co-captains placed first' y and second, respectively, in the 200-yard breaststroke. As usual Davies swam away from his opponents in the last 50 yards, gaining most of his eight-yard victory over Elliott in the final quarter of the race. Michigan's medley relay team of backstroker John Chase, Davies, and free-styler Tom Benner got the Wolverines off to a good start 7 in the first event by defeating the Spartan trio. DAVIES BUILT up a yard lead over the Spartan breaststroker, Bob Hynes, on the second leg, and then Benner turned on the speed to win at the finish by five yards. Rusty Carlisle gave the Wol- verines their fourth consecutive winner of the meet, after Jones had taken the 220 and Hill the 50. Carlisle won the 150-yard individual medley with a strong finish on, the free-style leg of the race. Michigan State gained two other victories besides the backstroke, by winning the'diving and the fin- k al 400-yard free-style relay. * * * KENNETH COYNE edged out Michigan's Jim Walters, 312.9 to 312.4 to take the honors from the high board. ,The Spartans won the free-style' relay when Scholes had too much speed for Wally Jeffries on the final leg. Michigan Cindermen Sweep MSC Relays; Records Fall I Special to The Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan's distance medley team of Jack. Carroll, Don McEwen, George Ja- cobi and John Ross ran to an easy win and the world's indoor! record in the Michigan State Re- lays here last night. The Wolverine equartet lapped every team in the field but host Michigan State who it beat by more than half a lap. CARROLL sent the squad off to a fast quick start with a 48:9 quarter, and Jacobi continued the fast pace with a 1:58.6 half. Then Captain Don McEwen, running the three quarter instead of his usual mile, chipped in a 3:03.7 time. Ross, sensational sophomore miler, took the baton and turned in a 4:13.3 mile. The total of 10:04.5 was 4.4 seconds under the world's record time estab- lished by last year's Michigan team. The Maize and Blue two-mile quartet of John Moule, Aaron Gordon, McEwen and Ross con- tributed another record perform- ance. Its time of 7:42.0 was a new meet and field house record. Sen- sational times were again turned in by Ross and McEwen, who had 1:54.7 and 1:54.2 halves respec- tively. TAKE THAT-Gopher Jerry Mitchell hustles in to implant an elbow in the dental works of Wolverine center Milt Mead.. Mead lasted long enough to ring up 18 markers in a losing cause, however. * * , Go hers Trip Hawke yes, Ilinos Take '1W in Final Big Ten Victorie Easily IN THE 75 YARD high hurdles Michigan swept first and second. Reliable Van Bruner took top hon- ors with a time of 9.3. He was followed across the finish line by teammate Wally Atchison. Roland Nilsson made his de- but with the Wolverines a suc- cessful one by bringing home the bacon in the shot put event. His 53 feet, six and aW half effort, his top performance of the year, netted him an easy first. Pre- viously Nilsson had competed unattached. Northwestern's sensational sprint star, sophomore Jim Gol- liday, tied the world's indoor mark in the 75 yard dash with a 7.4 performance. Thane Baker of Kansas State set a meet and field house record in the 300 yard event. His time of 30.8 broke the previous mark set by Michigan's Bob Ufer in 1943 by .6. BROAD JUMP - 1, Neville Price, Oklahoma, 24 feet 3s inches; 2, Qu- ahnah Cox, Aklahoma; 3, Horace Coleman, Michigan; 4, Arthur Kurtz, Northwestern; 5, Veryl Switzer, Kan- sas State. 240 YARD SHUTTLE HURDLE RE- LAY-i, Michigan State (Bill Bren- del, Benjamin Harlan, Henry Glls, John Corbelli); 2, Michigan; 3, Mich- igan Normal. (No time as Notre Dame which placed first was dis- qualified because a runner jumped his mark.) 300 YARD RUN -1, Thane Baker, Kansas State; 2, Jim Ford, Drake; 3. Gene Cole, Ohio State:4, Charles Beckley, Ohio Wesleyan; 5, Bob Parks, Michigan Normal. :30.8. (Betters meet and fldhouse record of .:31.4 by Ufer, Michigan, in 1943.) 1,000 YARD RUN-1, Dewey John- son, Drake; 2, Ray McConnell, Drake; 3. Dudley Hallworth, Wheaton; 4, Maurice Maloney, Michigan State; 5, Ed Townsend, Michigan State. 2:18.4. MILE RUN-1, Frank Kuzma, Pitts- burgh; 2, Len Truex, Ohio State; 3, John Stayton, Purdue; 4, Jerry Lena- land, Western Michigan, 5, Ken Bar- ley, Michigan State 4:25.5. SPRING MEDLEY RELAY-I, Okla- homa (George McCormick, Quanah Cox, Neville Price, Don Crabtree); 2, Michigan State; 3, Kansas State; 4, Michigan; 5, Michigan Normal. 3:33.4. '75 YARD HIGH HURDLES-1, Van Bruner, Michigan; 2, Walter Atchi- son, Michigan; 3, John Corbelli, Michigan State; 4, Al Renick, West- ern Michigan; 5, Henry Gillis, Michi- gan State. :09.3. 600 YARD RUN-1, Jim Lavery, Drake; 2, Mead Burnett, Ohio State; 3, Dalmar Fisher, Northwestern; 4, Jim Craigie, Wheaton; 5, Bob Eng- lish, Notre Dame. 1:12.3 (Betters meet and feld house record of 1:13.1 by Charles Coleman, Oklahoma, 1950). TWO MILE RUN-1, Dewey John- son, Drake; 2, Jerry Zerbe, Michigan State; 3, Harry Snyder, Notre Dame; 4, Gene Matthews, Purdue; 5, John Yoder, Purdue. 9:37.8. SHOT PUT-1, Roland Nilsson, Michigan, 53 feet 6, inches, 2, Joe Morgan, Ohio State; 3, Tom Johnson, Michigan; 4, Don Shiesswohl, Michi- gan State; 4, John Koczman, Michi- gan Normal. UNIVERSITY ONE MILE RELAY-- I, Oklahoma (Jerome Meader, Chuck Coleman; Quanah Cox, Jim Mash- burn); 2, Drake; 3, Michigan; 4, Pitts- burgh; 5, Michigan State, 3:19.7 (Bet- ters meet and fieldhouse records of 3:21.1 by Michigan in 1948.) HIGH JUMP - 1, Arnold Betton, Drake, 6 feet 5 inches; 2, Dick Jones, Oklahoma; 3, Jim Vrooman, Michigan State; 4, Peron Dubard, Ohio State; 5, Howard Ficke, Miami of Ohio. Op tJ1 lJ L SLAFAYETTE, Ind. --(R)-- The' I Iowa Hawkeyes, front runners in} (Continued from Page 1) succeeded both in holding down the score and limiting the num- ber of personal fouls. Only 13 Michigan cagers dress- ed for the contest, and only seven saw service. The latest loss to the Wolverine squad is Carl Brun- sting, McCoy's first alternate at guard, who suffered a broken bone in his foot in Thursday's practice and wil be lost to the squad for the remainder of the season. In a battle to stay out of the Big Ten cellar, Wisconsin (2-6) will meet the Wolverines at Yost Field House tomorrow night. The openin jump is scheduled for 8 p.-1M. In the preliminary contest, J. T. White's Jayvees took it on the WOLVERINE GOALIE WILLARD IKOLA DIVES TO THWART COLORADO SCORING ATTEMPT # f * chin in a close Custer, 60-59. one, losing to Fort 0 MICHIGAN Skala, f Pavichevich, f Mead, c Lawrence, S Tierman, f Topp, g MINNESOTA Means, f Weiss, f Kalafat, c Mencol, t Mitchell, g Holmes, g Wallerius, c FG 2 r 3 6 2 0 16 FG 5 0 6 1 0 1 0 21 * FT 1 2 6 3 0 0 12 FT 2- 1 2 0 1 0 2 2 10 * PF 5 1 2 3 2 0 14 PF 2 1 5 0l 4 1' 1 2 17 TP 5 8 18 7 0 0 44 TP 12 1 is 12 3 0 4 2 52 the Big Ten basketball race,k ground down the cellar-bound Purdue Boilermakers last night, 90-67. Chuck Darling, top scorer in the conference, led the Hawks with 28 points. Iowa took the lead for keeps midway in the second quarter and pulled away fast after the half. Carl McNulty of Purdue, sec- ond-highest scorer in the confer- ence, had to settle for the third- best tally. Bob Clifton of Iowa made 19 points and McNulty 15. Purdue led 20-17 after the first quarter but Iowa went ahead at 26-25 in the second on a long shot by Skip Green. Purdue rallied after Iowa made it 30-25, cutting the Hawkeyes' advantage to 32-31. Then Dar- lying, Clifton, Deacon Davis and Green hit Iowa baskets. Iowa salted it down in the third quarter by outscoring Purdue, 25- 12. It was Purdue's ninth loss in 11 conference games and Iowa's eighth victory in nine. * * * ILLINOIS 80, OHIO STATE 53 CHAMPAIGN, Ill.-(P)-Clive Follmer pumped in 20 points last night to lead Illinois over Ohio State 80-53 and keep the Illini deadlocked with Iowa for the Big Ten basketball lead each with 8-1 records. Illinois, hitting 31 shots out of 85 attempts, jumped into a 16-13 first quarter lead and kept piling up the margin. At the half time the Illini were ahead 35-28, ballooning it to 52-37 after three quarters then spilling 28 points through the nets in the final period. Follmer, tallying the most points of his career at Illinois, scored 12 of his total in the first half. He made good on eight out of nine free throw tries. Red Kerr and Bob Peterson al- ternated at center and kept Ohio State's sophomore marksman, Paul Ebert, bottled up. Ebert'bag- ged only three baskets and five free tosses. TYPEWRITING HOOSIERS 96, NU 85 EVANSTON, Ill.--(P)-Indiana last night defeated Northwestern, 96 to 85, and the teams set a new Big Ten total scoring record of 181 points, while the Hoosiers scored 38 free throws for another conference record. The combined score of 181 topped the previous Big Ten mark set last year when North- western defeated Purdue 97-79 for a 176 point tally. The Hoosi- ers' 38 free throws eclipsed the team record of 31 set in 1949 by Illinois against Indiana. Indiana hit its 38 foul line shots out of 42 attempts which added up to a third conference record of .904 per cent. This erased the Michigan's .850 mark on 17 out of 20 free tosses against Wisconsin in 1946. Indiana was ahead 55-45 at halftime but Northwestern pulled up to 65-64 midway in the third period. Late in the third quarter, center Frank Petrancek of North- western fouled out and minutes later teammate Larry Dellefield followed. * * * MSC 57, BADGERS 55 MADISON, Wis. -(A)- Leif Carlson's field goal with two sec- onds to go gave Michigan State a 57-55 victory over Wisconsin last night in a Big Ten basketball game. With Wisconsin leading, 55- 53, Clarence Means, reserve Spartan guard, conected with a jump shot to tie the count at 55-all. Wisconsin's Ab Nicholas missed the first of two free throws and declined the second to take the ball out of bounds. In a scramble for the ball, Michigan State got possession anel Carlson hit a push shot from medium range and the horn sounded before the Badgers could take the ball out of bounds. LATE BASKETBALL RESULTS Bowling Green 89, Kent State 79 Cincinnati 63, Western Michigan 56 Dayton 97, Baldwin-Wallace 64 Detroit 72, Marquette 66 Detroit Tech 85, Defiance 64 Eastern Ill. 85, Michigan Normal 67 Hope 93, Albion 91 Iowa State 59, Creighton 58 John Carroll 57, Fenn 53 Icemen Slip ByColorado (Continued frorn Page 1) Tour minutes were left at the time but the Maize and Blue could not stave off the determined CC Tigers. With only a minute and 20 seconds to go, Ron Hartwell tallied to force the game into overtime, where the final story was told. Besides the pair of goals by both Chin and Martinson, McKennell, Mullen and Jim Haas tallied' for Michigan. Heathcott and Philpott also contributed three assists in the winning cause. - ** * FIRST PERIOD: 1 - COLORADO, Brandt (Hartwell), 4:42; 2-MICHI- GAN. McKennell (Philpott), 17:56. Penalties - MICHIGAN: Mullen, board-checking; COLORADO: Rob- son, tripping; Kennefic, slashing; Hartwell, board-checking; all 2 m- utes. - Major Penalties-MICHIGAN: Mc- Clellan, fighting; COLORADO: Di- viney, fighting. SECOND PERIOD: 3-MICHIGAN, Mullen (Haas, Heathcott), 1:01; 4- COLORADO, Brandt (Hartwell), 7:25; 5-MICHIGAN, Chin (Cooney, Keyes), 9:08; 6 -- COLORADO, Kennefic (Brandt), 13:33; .7-COLORADO, Soli- go (unassisted), 14:43; 8-MICHIGAN, Haas (May, Philpott), 18:50. Penalties -- MICHIGAN: Heathcott, tripping; COLORADO: Robson, hook- ing; 2 minutes each. THIRD PERIOD: 9 -- COLORADO, Brandt (unassisted), 6:26; 10-MICH- IGAN, Chin (McKennell, Philpott), 14:58; 11 - MICHIGAN: Martinson, (Heathcott, Mullen), 16:02;s12-COL- ORADO: Hartwell .(Robson, Brandt), 18:40. OVERTIME: 13-MICHIGAN, Mar- tinson (Mullen, Heathcott), 6:12. Michigan's gymnastics squad had little trouble in rolling over Wisconsin, 65/2-301/2, for its fourth straight conference victory before a large crowd in the In- tramural Building yesterday. The Wolverines dominated everything but the flying rings, picking up five firsts and five seconds in the six events and hav- ing three men place in every event. * * * MARV JOHNSON won the high bar with Harry Luchs and Frank Adams completing the sweep of the first three places. Adams also took second place on the tumbling mats in Michigan's sweep of that event. Duncan Erley, exhibiting NOW grow a MUSTACHE of distinction e, aanyy TACHIELD .fsafetye to form any razor can style you wish. be used Costs many years - mail$1.50 or C.O. D. !o F. SEAMOUR PRODUCTS S-;-7, .o "516 S,,4.W.,,d,4 A,.,.. beautiful form, captured first in the tumbling with a 273 point total and Don Hurst brought in the third place honors. First place on the side horse went to Lee Krumbholz, who was high point man for the day with seconds on the parallel bars and flying rings, giving him 13%/2 points. Behind Krumbholz on s i d e horse, Connie Ettl and "Sticks" Rowland took third and fifth. The Latest Collegiate Styles . Try one: 8 Tonsorial Artists-- The Daseola Barbers Liberty near State Read Daily Classifieds U.g "" ,e Gymnastics Squad Rolls Over Badgers, 65 /2-30 /. Begum eraySitels d ALL-COLLEGE TOUR 52 Days, 10 Countries Ireland, Scotland, England, Holland, Belgium, Germany, Switzerland, Gelle * Big Ten St( Iowa.................. Illinois ..: Minnesota.......... Indiana . ......... Michigan State ...... Ohio State........... Northwestern......... Wisconsin ...... Michigan............. Purdue ............... endings W L s 1 5 4 5 5 4 6 2 7 2 8 Pct. .888 .888 .727 .555 .500 .400 .363 .250 .222 .200 Matmen Romp over Wildcats With Impressive 21-3 Victory I Michigan's hustling grapplers came up with their fifth win in a row last night when they bom- barded an inept Northwestern ~squad, 21-3. Dock O'Shaugnessy lost the Wolverines only decision when Joe Sturgus, the Wildcat's lone veteran, gained three points via a referee's decision. * * * O'SHAUGNESSY was ahead 3-2 at the end of the 177 pound clash, but the referee awarded two points to Sturgus, making the fi- ' nal count 4-3. It was only O'Shaugnessy's second loss as against five wins in dual meet competition this year. All the rest of the Wolverines won, and most of them by very added six points to the Michi- gan cause with overwhelming 10-3 and 9-2 victories. At this point the score stood 15-0 in favor of Michigan. And most of the fans were expecting the Wolverines to complete the rout by sweeping the next three matches as easily as they had the first five. BUT BUD HOLCOMBE, who SHORTHAND ACCOUNTING OFFICE MACHINES A single subject or a complete course HAMILTON BUSINESS COLLEGE William at State Phone 7831 37th Year weighs in at 167 pounds, had his 3 o