I PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 8, 1953 Zp CT jT I J NEWS OSU .Romps to Easy 4 ict in Swim Meet r Buckeyes Total 102 Points; Michigan Captures Second EXHIBITION ROUNDUP: Tigers Take Opener From Phils in Tenth / C H A M P T E A C H E R - World featherweight champion Sandy Saddler helps Sgt. Bob Rickman of Brady, Tex., select box- ing gloves at Wuerzburg, Germany, where Saddler is GI's trainer. IN A .W O R L D OF HIS OWN -This youngster, after borrowing from a "Bookmobile" at Sabana Llana, P. R., loses no time in starting to read as he prods his horse for return journey to his hill home inaccessible to the traveling library. E G Y P T'S 'S T R O4N G M A N'-Gen. Mohamed Naguib, Egypt's Premier and military boss, tries out dumbbell of portly ex-King Farouk during visit to Cairo's Koubbeh Palace. C CLEANING UP FOR CHAR I T Y-. Worker brings up shovel full of coins as famous Trevi Fountain in Rome under- goes cleaning. Romans and tourists toss coins into fountain for "good luck" and money recovered is donated to charities. By DICK SEWELL Associate Sports Editor Special to The Daily IOWA CITY-Ohio State Uni- versity's power-packed swimming squad walked off with its fifth consecutive Western Conference title here yesterday afternoon without the services of ace free- styler Ford Konno. Scoring points in every event except the individual medley. The Bucks finished the three-day meet with a total of 102 points. Second place Michigan wound up with 68 markers. * * * OTHER TEAMS finished with the following totals: Michigan State 48, Iowa 35, Northwestern 30, Purdue 22, Wisconsin 18, Il- linois 10, Minnesota 6, and In- diana 5. Konno, who won the 1500S- meters battle Thursday night and placed second in the 220- yard free style Friday, picked up a case of the mumps and was placed in confinement in the University of Iowa hospital. The same malady sidelined Konno's roommate Dick Cleveland a week ago. Teammate Rocco Cirigliano took up some of the slack by placing second to MSC's Bert McClach- lan in the 440-yard free style. The scratched Konno was last year's. winner in this event. IN THE FIRST race of yester- day's final session, Ohio's Yoshi Oyakawa, who is in a class by himself in the back stroke events, coolly pulled his way to the 100- yard back stroke title in 57.8, a new Iowa pool record. In doing so he became the first double win- ner of the meet, having copped the 200-yard laurels Friday night. Picking up a yard every length, the fleet Hawaiian steamed into the finish better than four yards ahead of second place Fred Bautz of Purdue. John Chase of Michigan finish- ed sixth in the time of 1:02.9. Michigan State's John Du- deck pulled the biggest upset of the day in beating Buckeye Jer- ry Holan by a good two yards in the 100-yard breaststroke final. The winning time was 1.01.1, also a new Iowa pool record. The surprising Dudeck led the pack into the first turn, and slow- ly pulled further ahead in the last three lengths. Holan, the ex-Big Ten champion in this event, was forced to come from behind to take second place away from Illini Bob Clemons. Wolverine breast stroker Glen- wood Miller was eliminated in the morning preliminary heats. * * * STREAMLINED Keith Peterson of Northwestern. Friday's winner of the 50-yard free style, picked up his second gold medal in the 100-yard free style, beating Olym- pic swimmer Cleveland to the fin- ish by less than a yard. The Wildcat captain led from start to finish, and covered the distance in the comparatively slow time of 51.5 seconds. Ron Gora picked up a third for the Maize and Blue, and Don Hill added two points to the Wolver- ine total with his somewhat dis- appointing fifth. Fourth place fin- isher Frank Pisacreta of Indiana was clocked in 51.9, two tenths of a second better than Gora's 52.1, but the judges' decision gave the Michigander third. Hill's time was also given as 52.1. SPARTAN captain McLachlan won the 440-yard free style hands down, hitting the finish tape al- most half a length ahead of Cirig- liano of Ohio State and Dave An- derson of Minnesota who finish- ed second and third. Captain Wally Jeffries of Mich- igan placed for the third time in the meet, this time picking up a fifth. His scorching stretch drive carried him within a razor's edge of Iowa's Ross Lucas who finished fourth. Both were timed in 4:52.4. As usual, it was all Bumpy Jone in the 150-vard individual the Ob1o-dominated fancy diving monoply by placing third in yes- terday's three-meter board finals. Ohio's low-board winner Bob- by Clotworthy twisted and som- ersaulted his way to the three- meter championship despite a bad miss on his next-to-last dive. His total of 485 plus points was nearly fifteen better than com- panion Jerry Harrison of Ohio State who posted 470.55. The third member of the Buckeye diving triumvirate, Morley Sha- piro, finished a lowly sixth. The final event of the meet, the 300-yard medley relay, went to Ohio State. Swimming for Ohio were Oyakawa, Holan, and Nicky Silverio. Michigan's entry of Chase, Jones, and Tom Benner finished third behind Wisconsin. A last minute spurt by Benner narrowly missed beating the Badger anchor man. SUMMARIES 100-Yard Back Stroke: 1 Oyakawa, Ohio State. 2 Bautz, Purdue. 3 Weber, Iowa. 4 Hoaglund, Wisconsin. 5 Kiv- land, N.U. 6 Chase, Mich. Time :57.8. 100-Yard Breast Stroke: 1 Dudeck, Michigan State. 2 Ilolan, Ohio State. 3 Clenmons, Illinois. 4 Lougee, Wis- consin, 5 Hlynes, Michigan State. 6 Baldwin, Michigan State. Time 1:01.1. 100-YardFree Style: 1nPeterson, Northwestern. 2 Cleveland, Ohio State. 3 Gora, Michigan. 4 Pisacreta, Indiana. 5 Hill, Michigan. 6 Penning- ton, Iowa. Time :51.5. 440-Yard Freestyle: 1 McLachlan, Michigan State. 2 Cirgliano, Ohio State. 3 Anderson, Minnesota. 4 Lii- cas, Iowa. 5 Jeffries, Mich. 6 Lauter- bach. Purdue. Time 4:043.9. 150-Yard Individual Medley: 1 Jones, Michigan. 2 Reynolds, Michigan State 3 Johnson, Iowa. 4 Edwards, Purdue. 5 Kuhn, Northwestern. 6 No sixth place, Wallen, Northwestern disqualified. Time 1:31.4. (New pool record). Three-meter diving: 7 Clotworthy, Ohio State. 485.10. 2 Harrison, Ohio State 470.55. 3 Walters, Michigan 442.00. 4 Coyne, Michigan State 427.65. 5 Broeder, Iowa 420.60. 6 Shapiro, Ohio State 418.60. 300-Yard Medley Relay: 1 Ohio State, (Oyakawa, Holan, Silverio.) 2 Wisconsin. 3 Michigan. 4 Purdue. 5 Iowar 6 Illinois. Time 2:52.3. (New pool record) * * * FINAL TEAM STANDINGS Ohio State 102, Micighan 68, Michi- gan State 48, Iowa 35, Northwestern 30, Purdue 22, Wisconsin 18, Illinois 10. Minnesota 6, Indiana 5. FRED HUTCHINSON ... a brighter outlook Athletes Deny ilS C Charges University of Michigan athletes said yesterday there is no organi- zation on the Wolverine campus that compares with the Spartan Foundation, the cause of the dis- ciplinary action taken against Michigan State by the Big Ten. In a United Press story, the athletes, representing all types of sports, contradicted state- ments made earlier in the week by MSC athletes that "organiza- tions similar to the Spartan Foundation exist on every Big Ten campus." Among more than a score of athletes interviewed, only one said he received outright cash and it was from "alumni friends and the university knew nothing about it." Others said they received scholar-. ships but "they were not purely athletic and the jobs were not' soft touches." By The Associated Press CLEARWATERs Fla.-Manager Fred,,Hutchinson's rebuilt Detroit Tigers made their debut on the grapefruit exhibition circuit yes- terday with a 10-inning 6-5 vic- tory over the Philadelphia Phil- lies of the National League. Three home runs and four dou- ble plays did the trick for the Tigers,ywho have been training mightily to get ohit of the Ameri- can League cellar. Eddie Kazak's infield single scored Steve Souchock from third base in the ninth to pull the Tigers into a 5-5 tie. Hal Erickson held the Phils in the ninth and the game went into overtime with Jim Kon- stanty pitching for the National Leaguers against Paul Foytack, a recruit righthander. With the bases empty in the tenth, Owen Friend hit his second home run of the day to win for the Tigers. Bob Nieman also homered for the Bengals. Erickson was credited with the victory. Konstanty was the losing pitcher. * * * CARDS 6, YANKS 4 ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.-The New York Yankees' infield com- mitted five errors in the fifth inn- ing yesterday to hand the St.,Louis Cardinals five runs and 6-4 vic- tory before 6,920 fans in the grape- fruit league opener at Al Lang Field. Bob Weisler, a rookie left- hander who is on leave from the Air Force, was the victim of the messy inning. The Yanks held a 2-1 edge when the frame be- gan with errors by 'third base- man Kal Segrist and shortstop Andy Carey. Wiesler retired the next two bat- ters but then was tagged fdr suc- cessive doubles by Jack Faszholz, the winning pitcher, and second baseman Solly Hemus. Three more boots followed. ATHLETICS 6, SENATORS 2 WEST PALM BEACH, Fla.- Veteran Joe Coleman--striving to make a comeback in the majors- teamed up with rookies Charley Bishop and Marion Fricano yes- terday to turn in a one hitter as the Philadelphia Athletics downed Washington, 6-2, in a grapefruit league opener. The only Washington hit of 'the game-a line single by Jim Busby-came off Bishop in the first inning. The A's, rated by the experts as a team to consider in the Ameri- can League pennant race this year, put their six runs together on 11 hits off the offerings of Spec Shea. Bunky Stewart and Walt Masterson. Shea was charged with the loss while Bishop was the win- ner. 'I a 1 I xA Illini Depth Offsets Michigan's Five Firsts in Big Ten Victory (Continued from Page 1) his teammate Grant Scruggs took third in the same race. Scruggs placed running on little better that one foot, carrying through on sheer guts and determination. Last week he badly pulled a ten- don in his leg and it pained him greatly to walk, let alone run. The sophomore speedster was running dead last coming off the last turn, bul with a driving finish came up to take third. George Lynch, who captured the two mile, ran another fine race for the Maize and Blue. He content- ed himself with running third be- hind Gene Mathews of Purdue and Hoosier Jack Wellman who had alternated setting pace. On the gun lap he moved out and passed handily to win by ten yards. FRITZ NILSSON kept his sea- son long strong of victories in the shot alive by tossing the 16 pound ball 53 feet 11 inches, his longest heave of the season. Two breaks cut substantially into the Wolverine point total. In the semifinals of the 60-yard dash John Vallortigara pulled a muscle and was eliminated from the finals. He was an expected point winner. In the finals of the 70-yard low, hurdles Van Bruner stumbled while clearing the last hurdle, smashed into it, and went sprawl- ing to the cinders as he crossed the finish line. He barely took fourth, though he was even with title holder Williams coming into the last barrier. The top .point-scorer for the Wolverines was Ross, who, along with taking the mile, pressed rec- ord-breaker Siders to the hilt in the half mile, and came in second. Carroll ran another fine race in the relay when he received the baton slightly behind Ben Yout- sey of Purdue, but overtook him and won by five yards. N (ICE) G O I N G F O R " H O M E M A D E' CAR - John Barlass, University of Minnesota student, drives homemade sports car to victory at Lake Phalen ice race, St. Paul, Minn. The "special" with a 1932 Ford frame, 1947 Ford engine and 1936 Nash front end, cost $700 to build. R E T A I.NS TITLE- Maureen "Little Mo" Connolly, of San Diego, Cal., won national women's tennis singles at Forest Mills, N. Y., in September for the second straight year. DODGERS 8, BRAVES 4 MIAMI, FLA.-Stealing seven bases, five of them in the sixth inning as they scored six runs, the Brooklyn Dodgers opened their ex- hibition campaign by beating the Boston Braves, 8-4 before a crowd of 7,520 yesterday. Clem Labine and Ralph Branca, both crippled most of last season, pitched impressively for the Flock. Each allowed one run withbAabine giving up five hits in four inn- ings and Branca three in two. * * * REDS 10, RED SOX 4 SARASOTA, FLA.-Cincinnati's Roy McMillan banged out three hits as the Reds opened their grapefruit league campaign with, a 10-4 victory over a Boston Red Sox lineup heavily-spotted with rookies. The Reds got 11 of their 12 safeties off Rookie Tom Herrin and veteran National League lefthander Bill Werele. Jim Piersall got three of Bos- ton's nine hits off Ed Erautt and Clarence Podbielan. INDIANS 11, GIANTS 6 TUCSON, ARIZ.-The Cleve- land Indians pounded out 15 hits to come from behind and defeat the New York Giants, 11-6, in their opening cactus league game of the year yesterday before 6,100, a new record crowd for Hi Cor- bett Field. A three-run rally in the fifth inning, highlighted by a two-run single off the bat, of pitcher Dave Hoskins with the bases loaded, put the Tribe ahead to stay. In the seventh inning, outfielder Harry Simpson connected for a .,i s, Track ,Summaries ONE MILE RUN-1. Ross, Michigan; 2. Walter, Michigan State; 3. Jewsbury, Illinois; 4. Kepford, Michigan State; 5. Lambert, Indiana. 4:13.6. BROAD JUMP-1. Kurtz, Northwestern, 23 feet, 31 inches; 2. Floyd, U1li- nois, 22-11%; 3. Henard, Iowa, 22-5y; 4. Hiller, Illinois, 22-3%; 5.Jackson, Indiana, 22-1r1. 60-YARD DASH-1. Williams, Illinois; 2. Corley, Illinois; 3. Nash, Minnesota; 4. Watson, Indiana; 5. Coates, Michigan. :06.4. POLE VAULT-1-2. Welbourn, Ohio State, and Ehrhart, Northwestern; 13 feet, 4 inches (tie). 3-4. Foster, Illinois, and Cingo, Purdue, 13" feet (tie); 5. Clark, Indiana, Mulrooney, Wisconsin, Smith, Michigan State, Maugh, Michigan, Wilking, Wisconsin, and Wallbaum, Minnesota, (tie) 12-6. 440-YARD RUN-1. Carroll, Michigan; 2. Youtsey, Purdue; 3. Scruggs, Mich- igan; 4. Ebert, Iowa; 5. Burnett, Ohio State. :49.5. SHOT PUT-i. Nilsson, Michigan, 53 feet, 11 inches 2. Bauer, Illinois, 51-3%, 3. Bergmann, Indiana, 48-73 4. Peters, Wisconsin, 48%Js; 5. Hammond, :Y 4 :. .l'. s:::::! :: :.t J ,?.ylif,,Rwyci:l[/ :' :. ftt l ~ .. "::.".i: ::{ jv ,:? .. :. .,SV ,.... ..4'"ii' .>:>: 'y+i"':ii}i .rfi.XVk: }' .>:.:,.. r}.. V.Q':: f :'1 II