4 SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY 'AGE SE N SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 14. 1954 TUE MICHIGAN DAILY I .1 A iW JJ ouv 7il Aim Santee Runs Wild In MSC Relay Meet Michigan Cinder Squad Garners Laurels in One, Two Mile Relays IKOLA STARS IN WOLVERINE NETS: Mullen, Chin Lead Maize and Blue Hockey Victory By AL EISENBERG Special to The Daily EAST LANSING - Michigan's tracksters could cop only two first places yesterday as Kansas' fabu- lous Wes Santee stole the show in the 32nd annual Michigan State Y Relays. The Kansas distance ace spark- ed a pair of relay teams to new records, the highlight coming in the distance medley where San- tee sped the anchor mile in a sensational 4:02.6 to give his team a new American record. PUNCTUATING the two-day track extravaganza was the accu- sation last night by Wolverine coach Don Canham that Spartan mentor Karl Schlademan "went against his word" by not entering a strong team in the distance medley relay. Canham claimed that he and Schlademan had a "gentleman's agreement" to field strong teams against the Kansas powerhouse in the distance medley "for the good of track." The Michigan roach indicated that he felt it r was better to give the fans the best races possible rather than spread the. talent among the various events. As it was the Wolverines were left holding the bag as the San- tee-sparked Jayhawk outfit ran away from Michigan in the dis- tance medley, while Schlademan packed his top men into the two- mile and sprint relays with the excuse that his team should "look good" before the home folks. The tables were turned, how- ever, when a Wolverine team of George Lynch, Roy Christianson, John Moule, and Pete Gray won the two-mile event by 20 yards whlie other Illini winners were Wilie Williams in the 75 yard dash, Ralph Fessenden in the 300 yard run, and Willard Thomson who tied the mheet standard of :09.1 in the 75 yard high hurdles. One of the most exciting events of the night was the sprint med- ley relay in which Kansas, with Santee anchoring once again, came from behind to nip Michigan State at the wire and set a meet and fleldhouse record of 3:28.7. Michigan came in a poor fourth in the event. * * * MICHIGAN hopes received a blow when Canham announced that Ross McNab, a promisingI sophomore sprinter who had been counted on in the mile relay, would be out for an indefinite per- (Continued from Page 1) MULLEN, who assisted on all; three of Chin's goals as well as' on Pat Cooney's in the first per-: iod, was high scorer for the night with six points as he bagged a pair of goals himself. Bill MacFarland, leading goal scorer on the Wolverines to date, added his 23rd and 24th goals of the campaign as he continued his display of out- standing stick-handling. After retiring to the dressing. room shortly before the end of the second period with a shoulder injury, he returned to the ice for the third session and promptly notched his second goal at the :45 mark after a solo dash up the left boards. FIRST PERIOD 1-Michigan, MacFarland (Phil- pott) 8:30; 2-Michigan, Cooney (Mullen) 19:07. Penalties - Michigan. Buchanan (cross-checking); Mullen (cross- checking; Dunn (elbowing; Cooney (roughing); Colorado-Royal (rough,- ing); Silverberg (roughing). SECOND PERIOD 3-Colorado, Rompre (C. Smith) :25; 4-Colorado, Robson (C. Smith) 2:04; 5-Michigan, Chin (Mullen, Cooney) 8:12; 6-Michigan, Chin (Mullen, Haas) 11:30; 7-Michigan, Seventh Straight for leers Chin (Mullen, Haas) 12:40; 8-Mich- igan, Mullen (Cooney) 16:14. Penalties--Michigan, Hebert (in- terference); Cooney (tripping); Col- orado, major,bRobson (misconduct), minor, Silverberg (slashing); East- wood (tripping). THIRD PERIOD 9-Michigan, MacFarland (unas- sisted) :47; 1-Michigan, Philpott (MacFarland, Hebert) 5:33; 11- Michigan, Mullen (Philpott) 16:48. Penalties-Michigan, major, Mac- Farland (fighting); minor, MacFar- land (Illegal-checking); Colorado-- major, Silverberg (fighting). several more times in the wide- open game. Cooney s goal in the final min- ute of the opening period increas- ed the Michigan margin to 2-0 at the first intermission, but Cheddy' Thompson's Colorado sextet wast- ed little time in tieing it up. BOB ROMPRE tallied the first only :25 after the middle session opened as he banged home line- mate Clare Smith's direct pass- out from a face-off deep in the Wolverine end. Smith set up the second tally less than two min- utes later as he fed Ed Ribson a perfect goal mouth pass. From that point on it was all Michigan as Chin started the ball rolling for the Wolverines. The 9-2 win, combined with Friday night's 5-1 victory, gives Michigan a sweep of the series and seven victories in a row. Next week-end the Wolverines engage Michigan State's Spartans in a home-and-home series. Fri- day's game will be at East Lansing with Saturday's contest here at the Coliseum. B otonians Genuine Handsewn Moccasins Down-to-earth Bostonian comfort in the perfect slipper-fit and rich, mellow leath- Along with Michigan's abil- ity to take advantage of Colo- rado penalties was their ability to successfully defend Ikola when the Wolverines were short- handed. On several occasions the Mich- * * * igan rear guard of Jim Haas, Burt THE OTHER Michigan tally Dunn, and' Neil Buchanan was was scored by Doug Philpott early tested, but each time it effective- in the third period after taking ly kept the majority of shots from passes from MacFarland and Yves reaching the goal crease. Hebert, who played most of ..the * * evening on the second line. THE WOLVERINES started the scoring at the 8:30 mark of the opening period when MacFarland scored his first goal, after constant pressure by the Wolverine for- wards had kept Colorado Goalie Ken Kinsley hopping for about five minutes. Kinsley who virtually played the game without a defense, turned back 28 -shots during the contest, many in sensation- al style. Were it not for his excellent goaltending, the Wol- verines might easily have scored CAMPUS R00TERY 304 S. State the Coliseum. r in the slow time of 7:46.3. * , * IN THE distance medley Grant DON CANHAM Scruggs, Pete Gray, and John ... "double-crossed" Moule gave Michigan anchorman John Ross a 15 yard lead on San- iod, the reason being an appen- tee, bit the-Jayhawk spurted past dectomy operation performed late the Big Ten mile champ to win! Friday night. by half a lap and shatter the A couple of brighter spots in American record of 10:04.5 set by the Wolverine cinder picture Michigan at the same meet in were evident, though. 1952. One was the performance of The Kansas team turned in a Ron Wallingford, a sophomore time of 9:51.4 for the combined who after leading most of the 440, 880, % mile and mile dis- way lost the two mile in the tances. stretch to veteran Gene Mathews In the one mile relay the Maize of Purdue. and Blue team of Pete Sutton, * * Bob Brown, Jack Carroll, and THE OTHER bright spot was Grant Scruggs had little trouble the performance of Roger Maugh, in picking up Michigan's second who tfnished in a tie with two victory as the quartet won by 40 others for second place in the yards in the quick time of 3:20.3. pole vault with a leap of 13' 4". * * Michigan captain Fritz Nilsson ILLINOIS showed the power got off a heave of 53'1" in the Michigan will have to cope with shot put, yet was beaten for the in next week's dual meet and in second straight time by Miami's the approaching Big Ten Cham- Tom Jonse, who tossed the shot pionships as Illini won four indi- 53' 9". vidual events. John Vallortigara placed in a Gene Maynard set a new meet pair of events for the Wolverines, and fleldhouse record as he won taking second in the 300 and fifth the 1000 yard run in 2:13.9, in the 75 yard dash. Michigan State Relay Review Everybody who's anybody works on. the Ensian Staff' t Broad jump-1, John Bennett, Mar- quette, 24 feet 614 inches. 2, Alfred Pascen, Purdue, 23 4Y. 3, Junior Steilstra, Michigan, 23 2%. 4, Tom Hendricks, Michigan, 23 1. 300-yard run-1, Ralph Fessenden, Illinois. 2, John Vallorigari, Michi- gan. :31.2. 75-yard dash-i, Bill Williams, Illi- y nois; 2, Ira Murchison, Western Michigan; 3, Travis Buggs, Michi- gan state; 4, Edgar Brabham, Michi- gan State; 5, John Vallortigara, Mich- Igan. :07.8. Sprint medley relay-1, Kansas; 2, Michigan State; 3, Notre Dame; 4, Michigan; 5, Central Michigan. 3:28.7. 600-yard run-1, Ben Youtsey, Pur- due. 2, Al Roberts, Ohio State. 3, Jerry Rowe, Kansas State. 4, Tom Lehmkul, Marquette. 5, Bill Barton, Michigan. 1:14.1. High jump-1, Ron Mitchell, Illi- nois, 6 feet 6% inches. 2, five-way tie among Bernard Allard, Notre Dame; Mark Booth, Michigan; Dick Wham, Illinois; Bob Miller, Drake, and Don Hilimer, Michigan State, 6-4. Two mile relay-1, Michigan. 2, Michigan State. 7:46.3. Two mile run-1, Gene Matthews, Purdue. 2, Ron Wallingford, Michi- gan. 9:28.8. Pole Vault-1, Joe Springer, Notre Dame, 13 feet 8 inches. 2, Three-way time among Roger Maugh, Michigan; Ralph Cingo, Purdue, and Dale Fos- ter, Illinois, 13-4. 5, John Hilberry, Michigan, 13. University one-mile relay-1, Mich- igan. 2, Michigan State 3:20.3. ... so YOU be there, too, at one of the Michiganensian tryout meetings ... Don't miss the opportunity MICHIGAN COLLEGE TOUR TO EUROPE 64 DAYS TRAVEL ON THE CONTINENT IN AMERICAN FORD CARS HIGHLIGHTS: London, Heidelberg, Mu- nich, Innsbruck, Zurich, Lugano, Venice, Florence, Rome, Capri, Nice, Barcelona, Madrid, Majorca, Bordeaux, Paris. BY STEAMER $1147.00 BY AIR $1325.00 (all inclusive) LIMITED SPACE STILL AVAILABLE WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY 17 4:00 P.M. I 'i to gain experience on - The Business and Edit Staffs Of Your College Yearbook I r