SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE"TEREE SUNDAY, MARCH 1, 1953 PAGE THREE olverine T Trackmen TakeNine Events To Humble Penn State, OSU Bruner, Nilsson, Lynch, Spark Michigan To 81-35-22 Victory in Triangular Meet hinclads, Natators, Wrestlers Triumph * * * * * 9 * * By ED SMITH Showing surprising balance as well as expected strength, the Michigan cinder express rolled to an easy win over Penn State and Ohio State in a triangular meet before an estimated 2900 fans in Yost Fieldhouse yesterday after- noon. The Wolverines garnered 81 points to the Nitanny Lions' 35 and the hapless Buckeyes' 22. 4Michigan took nine firsts to Penn State's two and Ohio State's one. THE MEET'S only double win- ner was the Wolverines' reliable timber topper Van Bruner. He took the highs by more than five Any faculty member desiring to enter the faculty handball, paddleball, or badminton sin- gle's tournaments may phone their entry to the Intramural Building 8109. Tournaments will begin next week. -Ed Olds yards, just missing by a tenth of a second his own Fieldhouse rec- ord of 7.9. His time in the lows of 7.4 tied the Varsity and Field- house record of which he is a co- holder. Fritz Nilsson kept intact his season long string of victories in the shot put by tossing the metal ball over 53 feet to win by more than two feet. Running his best two miles of the year, George Lynch took the Constable Nets Redman Goals In IceVictory (Continued from Page 1) But Ikola stayed in the game, turning back the 'Redmen with consistency until he was forced to go to the sidelines to have his left leg pad repaired after it was torn in a mixup in the goal mouth. When he returned to the ice, four minutes short of his third shutout of the season, Pete Constable blasted a blue-line screen shot past Alex McClellan and it skimmed into the twines to knot the score at 1-1. LESS THAN two minutes later, at 18:26, Constable netted the second McGill goal when he swept in from left wing on a power play to convert Whitey Shutz' pass into the winning margin. Coach Vic Heyliger then pull- ed Ikola in the last minute of play but' the Wolverines were unable to dent the solid defense led by Captain Jim McGowan, the bespectacled Ron Robertson and rugged Len Shaw. Shutz Just missed a shot at the open nets about .fifteen seconds be- fore the end of the contest. The victory was sweet revenge for the fine Canadian sextet which was soundly beaten 6-0 and 3-1 in Ann Arbor last year. Oddly enough, this year the goal totals were exactly switched, nine for McGill and one for the Wolverines. Michigan returns to Midwest Hockey League competition Wed- nesday night when the Maize and Blue pucksters clash'with Mich- igan State at East Lansing. « * * STATISTICS FIRST PERIOD: no scoring. Penal. ties: Michigan - Haas (tripping), Martinson (cross-checking), Mat- chefts (tripping). McGill - Shaw (charging), Shutz (tripping). SECOND PERIOD: 1 - Michigan, Philpott (Matchefts), 8:39. Pen- alties: Michigan - Dunn (body checking), Cooney (tripping). Mc- Gill - McGowan (interference), Shaw (tripping). THIRD PERIOD: 2-McGill, Consta- ble (Shaw), 16:39; 3-McGill, Con- stable, (Shutt, McElheren), 18:26. Penalties: McGill - Robertson (slashing). measure of Bob Hollen of Penn State in the time of 9:24. Lynch, who had set the pace most of the way, had to relinquish the lead to Hollen with slightly more than a quarter to go, but as the gun sounded for the final lap, he found new energy and came from behind to win going away. THE FEATURE race of the meet, the quarter-mile, as ex- pected was a duel between Nitanny Lion Ollie Sax and Wolverine Jack Carroll . Sax took the lead from the start and was never headed, though Carroll, coming fast off the final turn, came within a yard of him at the tape. The IC4A' champ's time was a swift 49.6. * * * IN THE MILE Wolverine John Ross won going away from team-' mate John Moule in the fine time of 4:13.3. Moule's time of 4:14.9 in taking second was the fastest of his career. Bob Evans and Dave Heintz- man of the Wolverines definitely established themselves, as threats in next week's conference meet by tieing for first in the high jump. They both cleared the bar at 6 feet 3/ inches. TRACK SUMMARIES SHOT PUT: 1. Nilsson (M); 2. Grier (PS); 3. Dugger (OSU) ; 4. Ham- mond (M). Distance: 53' 1-". POLE VAULT: 1. Welborun (OSU); 2. Lorch (PS); 3. Mugh (M) 4. Is- sacson (OSU). Height: 13'14". HIGH JUMP: 1. Heintzman. Evans (M), tied; 3. Herb (PS); 4. Liver- ance (M). Height: 6' 3%". BROAD JUMP: 1. Michaels (M); ?. Jackson (OSU); 3. Stielstra (M) 4. Stinson (M). Distance: 22' 1". 60 YARD DASH: 1. Vallortigara (M); 2. Coates (M); 3. Goodhart (OSU); 4. Stinson (M). Time: :06.4. MILE RUN: 1. Ross (M); 2. Moule (M); 3. Coldren (OSU); 4. Gehi- man (PS). Time: 4:14.9. 440 YARD RUN: 1. Sax (PS); 2. Car- rol (M); 3. Scruggs (M); 4. Roberts (OSU). Time: :49.6. 65 YARD HIGH HURDLES: 1. Bru- nert(M); 2. Yonkers (PS); 3. Le- zotte (OSU); 4. Seybert (PS). Time: :08.0. TWO MILE RUN: 1. Lynch (M); 2. 'Hollen (PS); 3. Coldren (OSU); 4. Hall (M). Time: 9:24. 880 YARD RUN: 1. Austin (PS); 1. Christiansen (M); 3. Cutting (M); 4. Roessler (PS). Time: 1:56.3. 65 YARD LOW HURDLES: 1. Bru- ner (M); 2. Love (M); 3. Youkers (PS); 4. Seybert (PS). Time: :07.4. MILE RELAY: 1. MICHIGAN (Ran- kin, Barton, Hickman, Carroll); 2. Penn State; 3. Ohio State. Time: 3:21.x. -Daily-Chuck Kelsey MICHIGAN'S JOHN CODWELL SNARES REBOUND FROM GOPHER DOUG BOLSTORFF (35) * * * * * * * * * Gophers .Dump Cagers, 8-69 By DICK LEWIS Michigan plunged one step fur- ther into the familiar environs of the Big Ten basketball cellar last night as a red-hot Minnesota quintet waltzed to an easy 83-69 verdict on the Yost Field House hardwood. Coach Bill Perigo's hapless charges suffered their sixth con- secutive conference setback, but, believe it or not, still hold hopes for vacating the basement spot. EQUALLY hapless Purdue went down the drain against Michigan State and now sports a 2-12 slate while the Wolverine record stand at 2-13. The two squads meet here tomorrow night. For a change Michigan made a game out of it for at least a period, deadlocking the Goph- ers 17-17 at the ten-minute mark. After that the Wolverines folded up like an accordion and except for a few half-hearted scoring thrusts they rolled over and played dead for the second time this season against the sharp-shooting invad- ers, who hit on 34 of 78 shots. WITH THE SCORE reading 17-' 12 and less than two minutes left in the first quarter, the Maize and Blue five put together a five-point string to make things even for the only time in the contest. Captain Doug Lawrence found the range on a long set shot, one of five he collected on the evening, center Paul Groffsky canned a free throw and high- point man Don Eaddy funnelled through a one-hander just as the buzzer sounded to knot the count at 17-all. Minnesota responded with a seven-point string at the start of the next stanza, and with for- ward Bob Gelle and guard Chuck Mencel setting the pace maintain- ed a 38-32 bulge at the midway intermission. GELLE AND Mencel combined for 13 of Minnesota's 21 points in the second quarter, hitting from * * MINNESOTA FG Reed, F 2 Gelle, F 8 Johnson, F 3 Dommeyer, F 2 McNamara, F 0 Kalafat, C 4 Wallerius, C 1 Bennett, G 4 Mencel, G 8 Weiss, G 2 Bolstorif, G 0 Totals 34 FT 0 4 2 1 0 2 0 1 2 15 FT 2 5 0 4 0 4 0 15 PF, 2 I 1 1 1 4 2 0 16 PF 9 9 2 4 2 0 15 Pts. 4 20 8 5 0 -1 9 17 6 2 83 Pts. 12 9 2 14 10 22 0 69 all over the floor on a variety of shots. Michigan's second attempt to make a game of it came at the start of the second half, fol- lowing a free throw by Ski-U- Mah guard Earl Johnson. Forward John Codwell tipped in a rebound and notched a char- ity toss and Groffsky meshed one of the same to close the gap to 39-36. Cagey Minnesota coach Oz- zie Cowles, erstwhile Michigan mentor, immediately called a time- out, whereupon the Gophers came roaring back. * * * MENCEL registered three quick one-handed jump shots from way out and springy guard Buzz Ben- nett added a pair of driving lay- ups as the visitors ran their way to a 56-47 three quarter advan- tage.- A belated Maize and Blue bid brought the score to 61-54 in the next round, but thereafter Minnesota simply added to its hefty 43.6 field goal percentage and flooded the floor with re- serves in the waning minutes. Only the exceptional outside shouting of Eaddy kept the tally as close as it was in the final stanza. Eaddy collected nine of his 22 counters in the last ten min- utes to lead all Michigan scorers. He netted nine of 23 attempts from the floor. Groffsky, who turned in an ex- cellent job off the boards, was one of four other Michigan starters to hit double figures. Big Groff reg- istered 14, while Codwell rang up 11 and both Milt Mead and Law- rence hit for 10. Gelle and Mencel led the Min- nesota scoring parade, counting with 20 and 17 markers respec- tively. Swimmers End Season Undefeated (Continued from Page 1) Jones later captured his spe- cialty, the 150 yard individual medley, and amazed the crowd by finishing a close second in the 440 freestyle near the end of the meet. Konno, who won the race, lowered Jones' Michi- gan pool record of 4:41.8 by 2.2 seconds. The workhorse, point-getting performance of Jones is more ap- preciated in the light of a revela- tion after the meet that the Mich- igan star had slept only three hours Friday night. An auto acci- dent had involved both of his par- ents and forced him to renain awake most of the night. POTENT factors in Michigan's success were the performances of John Chase in the backstroke and Glen Miller in the breaststroke. Both were pitted against the best Swim Summaries 300 YARD MEDLEY RELAY: 1-Ohio State (Oyakawa, Holan, Ford), 2-' Michigan. Time: 2:52.2. 220 YARD FREESTYLE: 1 - Konno (0), 2 - Jones (M), 3 - Gora (M). Time: 2:07.3. 50 YARD FREESTYLE : 1-Hill (M), 2 - Benner (M), 3-Silvero (0). Time: 22.5. (New pool record. Old mark held by Hill-22.7). 150 Yard Individual Medley: I- Jopes (M), 2 - Oyakawa (0), 3 - Furdak (M). Time: 1:37.9. FANCY DIVING: I-Cletworthy (0), 2-Walters (M), 3-Shapiro (0). Points: 386.05. 100 YARD FREESTYLE: 1 - Hill (M), 2 - Gora (M), 3 - Silverio (0). Time: 50.5. 200 YARD BACKSTROKE: 1-Oyak- awa (0), 2 - Chase (M), 3 - Pot- ter (M). Time: 2:14.8. 200 YARD BREASTROKE: 1 - Ho- ian (0), 2-Miller (M), 3-Van Horn (0). Time: 2:16.2. 440 YARD FREESTYLE: 1-Konno (0), 2-Jones (M), 3-Cirigliano (0). Time: 4:39.6. (New pool rec- ord. Old mark held by Jones - 4:41.8). 400 YARD FREESTYLE RELAY: 1 - Michigan (Ries, Benner, Gora, Hill), 2-Ohio State. Time: 3:28.5. in the nation in Yoshi Oyakawa and Jerry Holan respectively, and both swam at maximum efficiency. Chase especially, forced the great Oyakawa to the limit be- fore yielding in the 200 yard backstroke. Miller is only a sophomore and swam his best race of the season in the face of veteran opposition. Forgotten in the flush of vic- tory was the sobering fact that Ohio's superb sprinter Dick Cleve- land was not among those present in the Michigan natatorium. The Buckeye star remained in Colum- bus, a victim of the mumps. The question of how Ohio would have fared with Cleveland in the line-up can never be answered, but it is only fair to point out that he would have had to beat his best to handle Don Hill yes- terday. By JOHN KOVAL The Wolverine wrestling squad ended its dual meet schedule in an impressive manner last night as it trounced the Ohio State Buckeyes, 25-9, in Yost Fielhouse. The victory was the seventh straight conference triumph for the Michigan matmen and left them with an overall season rec- ord of eight wins and one loss. * * * WITH THIS win over the Buck- eyes the Wolverines go into the conference finals next weekend undefeated in conference play, sporting decisions over every Big Ten team but Minnesota and Wisconsin, whom they haven't met. The Buckeyes jumped into an early 3-0 lead when Tom Knoll defeated Michigan's Joe Atkins at 123 pounds. However after that Captain Snip Nalon .start- ed the Michigan juggernaut rolling and the Wolverines were never threatened again. Nalon, defending conference champion at 130 pounds, out- classed Ohio State's Wayne Nich- ols in the night's most one-sided match. Starting from a crouch it was only a matter of several seconds before Nalon had his man on the mat, and only one minute and forty-one seconds later he had pinned him for good. THIS MATCH started a win- ning streak in which Michigan copped four straight matches, all by pinning their opponents to the mat. Andy Kaul, Joe Scandura, and Miles Tee followed Nalon's example in the 137, 147, and 157 pound weight divisions respec- tively. At this point the bewild- ered Buckeyes were already be- yond any chance of victory .as Michigan led 20-3. * * IN THE 167 and 177 divisions the Ohio Staters managed to eke out two decisions as Ted Kistner defeated Michigan's Bronson Rum- sey and Jack Mulligan rallied to squeeze out a triumph over Har- old "Pepper" Holt. Dick O'Shaughnessy, Michi- gan's heavyweight, completed the night's coup de grace as he pinned Ohio State's Roger Mor- itz in the finale. Although winning only five out of eight matches, the Wolverines showed their championship ambi- tions by winning all of these matches by pinning their competi- tors. This is especially indicative of the Wolverine potential when it is realized that a meet that fea- tures more than one or two pin- nings is a rarity. On the basis of their impressive record, the Michigan matmen have been installed as co-favorites with Michigan State for the Con- ference Crown. SUMMARIES 123 POUNDS - Knoll (0) 7, Atkins (M) 0 130 POUNDS - Nalon (M). pinned Wayne Nichols (0) at 1:41 137 POUNDS-Kaul (M) pinned Tony Stavole (0) at 6:59 147 POUNDS-Scandura (M) pinned Otto Smith (0) at 7:06 157 POUNDS - Lee (M) pinned Ed Karclezyk (0) at 4:00 167- POUNDS-Kistner (0) 8, Rumsey (M) 4 177 POUNDS-Milligan (0) 5, Holt (M) 4 HEAVYWEIGHT-O'Shaughnessy (M) pinned Moritz (0) at 4:49 I-M Results 'A' BASKETBALL Winchell 35, Wenley 20 Van Tyne 31, Michigan 23 Gomberg 40, Adams 31 Kelsey 31, Hayden 27 Anderson 32, Cooley 27 Hinsdale 61, Reevest 32 Chicago defeated Greene (forfeit) Lloyd defeated Scott (forfeit) Fletcher defeated Allen-Rumsey (for- feit) 'B' BASKETBALL Reeves 24, Allen-Rumsey 22 Huber 24, Chicago 19 Winchell 27, Hinsdale-25 Williams 24, Strauss 22 Wenley 24, Taylor 18 Greene 29, Adams 25 Lloyd 25, Anderson 18 Gomberg defeated Michigan (forfeit) RELAY FINALS RESIDENCE HALLS 1-Allen-Rumsey; 2-- Gomber; Mins- dale (disqualified); Cooley (disqual- ified) FRATERNITY 1-Sigma Chi; 2-Phi Delta Theta; 3- Pi Lambda Phi; 4-Sigma Phi Ep- silon SHORT HAIRSTYLES COLLEGIATE CUTS FOR SPRING!! 8 HAIRCUTTERS-NO WAITING The Daseola Barbers Near Michigan Theater Matmen Pin Five Buckeyes To Clinch Easy 25-9 Victory MICHIGAN Mead, F Codwell, F Kauffman, F Gr ffsky, C Lawrence, G Eaddy, G Pavichevich, G Totals Minnesota MICHIGAN FG 5 9 1 5 9 0 27 17 21 18 27-83 17 15 15 22-69 ONE BIG POINT: MSCGymnasts Edge ', 48 /2-47 / SENIOR AND RECENT GRADUATE Mechanical Engineers PERSONAL INTERVIEW concerning a Special To The Daily EAST LANSING-The Michigan gymnastic squad was handed a 'heart breaking defeat last night by the Michigan State Spartans, 4812-471/2, at East Lansing. The Wolverine gym-men didn't gain a first place as Spartan Carl Rintz paced the victors, picking up three firsts and a third, good for 21 of the Spartan total. He took his firsts in the side horse, high bar, and the flying rings. THE LEADING scorer for Mich- igan was veteran Mary Johnson, who gained three seconds, a third, and a fourth. He amassed a total of 17 points in the side horse, high bar, parallel bar, flying rings and the tumbling events. Michigan captain Don Hurst was edged by Spartan captain John Walker in the trampoline and tumbling events. Hurst fought valiantly, but his efforts were only good for two seconds. Newcomer Frank Adams placed third in three events, tying once with Joe Stacer in the trampoline event. Adams took his other plac- es in the high bar and tumbling contests. His efforts were good enough for nine points, which made him Michigan's seconsJ highest point-getter. * * * % OTHER bright spots in the Wol- verine picture included the per- formance of fast improving Jim Barbero. Barbero gained a third, a fourth and two fifths, good for seven points. Dick Bergman earn- ed five points, as he took a second Career In Pneumatic Engineering on the flying rings, and a fourth in the parallel bar events. The Loken charges have now won four dual meets as against three defeats. The mid-season loss of veterans Harry Luchs and Lee Krumbholz hurt the Michigan squad. Coach Loken was forced to revise his roster in an attempt to compensate for the loss. The Michigan contingent now looks forward to the Big Ten Championships to be held at East Lansing on March 6 and 7. Last year's titlist, Illinois, is expected to be a repeat winner. hell representatives will visit your school * as follows - BASKETBALL SCORES Michigan State 77, Purdue 72 Indiana 91, Illinois 79 Wisconsin 69, Ohio State 63 Iowa 93, Northwestern 78 Kansas State 88, Colorado 69 North Central 99, Hope 86 Northern Illinois 99, Michigan mal 88 A Training Program For DESIGN DEVELOPMENT RESEARCH TEST FIELD SALES FIELD SERVICE MANUFACITURING Company Representative Will Be On Your Campus March 3, 1953 Make An Appointment At Placement Office FOR FURTHER INFORMATION SEE BOOKLET "CAREERS OF OPPORTUNITY" Westinghouse Air Brake Co. AIR BRAKE DIVISION WILMERDING, PA. 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