SUNDAY, MARCH 6, 1955 THE MICMGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN MTNDAY MAIWW B. 19~5 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Records Fall as Ohio State Wins Swimmin eet Wiggins, Konno, Oyakawa, Jones Set Marks; Michigan Leads in First Places Rodriguez, Haney,Pearson, Kaul Win Wrestling Honors By DON LINDMAN Special to The Daily A scarlet and grey tidal wave hita the Big Ten swimming champion- ships, turning what was expected to be a tight contest into a last- minute OSU rout. The Buckeyes celebrated Coach Mike Peppe's 25th year as OSU mentor by running up a 123-point total to swamp the second-place Wolverines, who garnered 150%. Ohio State Inspired Typical of the inspired Buckeye performance was the effort of Van Leer Hoffman, Ohio State's breast- stroker, who finished a surprising second in the 200 yard orthodox breaststroke, despite being nearly bedridden with an attack of the flu. Yesterway was just not Michi- gan's day. The Wolverines, who entered the final competition only one point out of #rst place, fell be- hind from the start of the after- noon preliminaries when four maize and blue potential point- getters just missed qualifying. The Wolverine disaster contin- ued when Coach Bruce Harlan's diving corps nearly collapsed be- fore an inspired OSU aggregation, sparked by the nearly perfect per- formances by Jerry Harrison. Michig n's main consolation was the knowledge that the Maize and Blue squad captured the most in- dividual titles, gaining seven to OSU's six. This was the Buckeyes' seventh straight championship, unprecedented in Big Ten swim- ming history. Wiggens Wins The deciding race was the in- dividual medley in which Al Wig- gins, Ohio State's sophomore sen- sation established a new Ameri- can, Big Ten, NCAA, and pool rec- ord. In fashioning a time of 1:24.3, it marked the fourth time that the towering Buckeye has lowered the mark for that event this year. This race virtually assured OSU of the championship as the result left Michigan 8% points off the pace, needing an almost-impos- sible 5 point victory in the div- ing event. y rSchlundt Wins Scoring Title BLOOMINGTON (R) - Big Don straight season tonight and his Schlundt won the Big Ten season scoring record for the third straight season tonight and his Indiana team, the defending champs, escaped the league cellar by beating Ohio State, 84-66. Schlundt's 47 points, tying his own record, gave him the season title with 369. Dick Garmaker of Minnesota finished second with 348 and Northwestern's Frank Eh- mann third with 343. The huge center, All-America last year, set a new conference record of 25 free throws in to- night's game. Schlundt also set his old single game scoring record against Ohio State in Bloomington last year. He had held the Big Ten record of 17 free throws in one game and watched Michigan State's Al Fer- rari beat it with 21 last Monday night. BUMPY JONES ...new event, old champ 59 more than the winning score which teammate Morley Shapiro racked up last year. In what have become ordinary performances for them, Yoshi Oyakawa and Ford Konno each were repeat - winners, Oyakawa setting a record in the 100-yard backstroke event ,and Konno breaking the 440-yard freestyle mark. The 100-yard backstroke proved to be one of the top races o fthe evening. After the first 50 yards, War- drop and Wiggins were tied, with Oyakawa only six inches behind them. Wardrop pulled into the lead briefly but was caught by both of his opponents at the 75- yard mark. Oyakawa then put on a burst of a speed which neither of the other two was able to match. Wardrop and Wiggins were clocked in iden- tical times for second place but the judges awarded the position to the Michigan swimmer. Jones Wins Again Bumpy Jones, Michigan's versa- tile captain ,established a new rec- ord in a new event as he finished ahead of Ohio State's Hoffman in the 200 yard breaststroke in 2.27.3. Michigan picked up more points in the 100 yard freestyle as Ron Gora won and Bert Wardrop fin- ished fourth. Gora's time of 50.9 was outstanding. Michigan won the final event, the medley relay, with Bert War- drop, Mike Delaney, and Gora, but by then the Buckeyes had com- piled enough points to put the meet beyond reach. Wiggins opened up a five-foot lead on Michigan's Jack Wardrop in the second twenty-five yards of the breaststroke leg. He picked up more distance on the Scotsman in the freestyle and the backstroke and won by eight feet. Aside from Wiggins' outstanding performance the most exciting dis- play of talent of the evening was shown by Jerry Harrison, the Buckeye diver. Harrison was as near perfection a's a diver could hope to be on any one occasion. Michigan's Jim Walters finished third behind OSU's Morley Sha- piro. He continually picked up 9's and 10's with brilliant exhibitions as he amassed a total of 593.25 points, Photo Courtesy of Fritz Dawson GRAY WINS FOR MICHIGAN-Pete Gray scores a victory in the 1,000-yard run in yesterday's Big Ten Track Meet at East Lansing. The Michigan speedster later copped the 880 event to become a double winner. Murray Keatinge of Iowa finished sec- ond, and Wolverine Hobe Jones, in the background, took fourth. Trackmen Win Six First Places, Tie for Seventh{ (Continued from Page 1) Iowa had an excellent chance to win, as they had men in the final three events. Michigan had fin- ished its matches, and registered its total of 50 points. The Hawk- eyes needed three wins to overtake the Wolverines, or two wins and a pin to tie Michigan. However, Keen would not be denied his an- niversary gift, and the best that Iowa could do was capture the 177 lb. class title. Second Straight Crown Andy Kaul climaxed his Wol- verine career by copping his sec- ond straight Big Ten title. The popular senior from St. Mary's, Pa. also won the 137 lb. title in last year's event. Kaul garnered two points on a takedown, one on an escape, and the final one for riding time. Al- though the Maize and Blue cap- tain shut out his opponent, the match was very close, and was not decided till the final period. Don Haney continued his un- beaten streak by defeating Bud Weick of Purdue. Haney was awarded the victory over the de- fending conference champ on the votes of the three referees. The match ended in a 5-5 draw, and the officials gave the win in the' see-saw battle to the Maize and Blue grappler. Rodriguez Pins Foe Mike Rodriguez, former Michi- gan state high school wrestling champion pinned Jerry Seeber in 1:44 of the second stanka, to gain honors in the 157-1b. class. The Maize and Blue grappler had dominated the matchl, and piled up a considerable lead in points at the time of the pinning. Seeber, the Wisconsin ace, entered the match with a 9-0-1 record, but was no match for the fiery Rodriguez. Max Pearson completely over- whelmed John Ontiveron of Illi- nois, to win the 130 lb. class title. Pearson, who got off to a slow start, dominated the match and almost pinned his foe in the sec- ond period, but could not hold him down for the count. Track Statistics BROAD JUMP - 1. Edgar Brabham, Michigan State, 23 feet 8 inches; 2. Lee Williams, Ohio State, 23-41/; 3. Junior Stielstra, MICHIGAN, 23-3; 4. Tom Hendricks, MICHIGAN, 23-/; 5. Bill Garner, Minnesota, 22-11. SHOT PUT-1. Dave Owen, MICHIGAN, 53 feet 14 inch; 2. Charles Thomas, Wisconsin, 50-1; 3. Joe Savoldi, Michigan State, 49-%; 4. Clarence Lane, Indiana, 48-11%4; 5. Larry Staff, Illinois, 48-8%4. POLE VAULT-1. Dale Foster, Illinois, 14 feet I% inches; 2. Charles Coy- kendall, Michigan State, 13-8; 3. Brealon Donaldson, Indiana, 13-4; 4. Tie between George Best, Michigan State, and Bob Appleman, MICHI- GAN, 13. Betters old Jenison Field House record of 14-1 by Dick Cole- man, Illinois, in 1951. HIGH JUMP-1. Tie between Mark Booth. MICHIGAN, and Calvin Boyd, Indiana, 6 feet 5% inches; 3. Joe Savoldi, Michigan State, 6-4; 4. Tie between Howie Liverance, MICHIGAN, and Les Stevens, Iowa, 6-3. 60-YARD DASH-1. Edgar Brabhalin, Michigan State; 2. John Johnson, MICHIGAN; 3. Travis Buggs, Michigan State; 4. John Vallortigara, MICHIGAN; 5. Lee Williams, Ohio State. :06.2. Betters old Jenison Field House record of :06.3 by Art Pollard, Penn State, in 1955. ONE-MILE RUN-1. John Moule, MICHIGAN 2. Rich Ferguson, Iowa; 3. James Lambert, Indiana; 4. Len DePalma, Northwestern; 5. Guy Bere- tich, Ohio State. 4:21.3. 440-YARD RUN-1. Kevan Gosper, Michigan State; 2. Len Robinson, In- diana; 3. Jack Mansfield, Wisconsin; 4. Al Roberts, Ohio State; 5. Don Ward Indiana; :48.2. Betters old Jenison Field House record of :48.5 by Kevan Gosper, Michigan State, in 1955. 70-YARD HIGH HURDLES-1. Willard Thomson, Illinois; 2. Joe Savoldi, Michigan State; 3. Milt Campbell, Indiana; 4. Ken Toye, Northwestern; 5. Les Stevens, Iowa.':08.5. Betters old Jenison Field House record of :08.6 by Rod Perry, Penn State, and Joe Savoldi, Michigan State, in 1955. 1000-YARD RUN-1. Pete Gray, MICHIGAN; 2. Murray Keatinge, Iowa; 3. Eugene Sultze, Wisconsin; 4. Hobe Jones, MICHIGAN; 5. Bob Dintel- mann, Illinois. 2:18.7. 600-YARD RUN-1. Kevan Gosper, Michigan State; 2. Mike Cusick, Indi- ana; 3._ Grant Scruggs, MICHIGAN; 4. Bob Brennan, Wisconsin; 5. James Ely, Indiana. 1:11.3. Betters old Conference record of 1:11.4 by Leroy Ebert, Iowa, in 1954. 300-YARD DASH-1. Ralph Fessenden, Illinois; 2. Edgar Brabham, Michi- gan State; 3. Dick Flodin, MICHIGAN; 4. Joe Hoffman, Wisconsin; 5. Ed Hampton, Indiana. :30.8. Equals Conference record, set Friday night by Fessenden. 880-YARD RUN-1. Pete Gray, MICHIGAN; 2. John Moule, MICHIGAN; 3. Henry Cryer, Illinois; 4. Bob Anderson, Wisconsin; 5. Murray Keat- inge, Iowa. 1:54.7. 70-YARD LOW HURDLES-1. Jim Love, MICHIGAN; 2. Abe Woodson, Il- linois; 3. Lee Williams, Ohio State; 4. George Moyers, Northwestern; K, Tom Hendricks, MICHIGAN. :08.0. TWO-MILE RUN-i. Ron Wallngford,MICHIGAN; 2. Jon Dalton, Wiscon- sin; 3. James Lambert, Indiana; 4. Lloyd Bartel, Ohio State; 5. Tony Pentino, Indiana. 9:26.4. ONE-MILE RELAY-1. Indiana (Don Ward, Jim Ely, Mike Cusick, Len Robinson); 2. MICI4IGAN; 3. Michigan State; 4. Ohio State; 5. Wis- consin. 3:19.2. Betters Jenison Field House record of 3:19.5 by Penn State (John Morin, David Leatham, Robert Matz, Arthur Pollard) in 1955 ...- (Continued from Page 1) Cann and John Winder won titles. away with ease near the end. Wolverine shotputter Dave Owen broke up a close battle when he heaved the 16-pqund ball 53' %" to take this event. It was Owen's best toss of his career by almost two feet, and exceeded Fritz Nilsson's winning heave of last year, 52' 7%". Closest to Owen was Wisconsin's Charles Thomas, at 50' 1". Little Ron Wallingford finish- ed at the top of the two-mile heap with ease, whipping Badger Jon Dalton by over thirty yards in the time of 9:26.4. Although this was nowhere near his brilliant 9:18.3 clocking of last week, it was a sit- uation parallel to that in the mile run-no one present who felt like setting a fast pace. Jim Love pulled a major upset when he dethroned Illinois' Abe Woodson in the 70-yard low hurd- les. Mark Booth, favored in the high jump, ran into stiff competition from Cal Boyd, Indiana's star. Neither could clear the 6' 7" bar in three tries so the two had to be content with a deadlock in the event. The official measurement was 6' 5%". The Spartans pleased the home town fans with their second-place showing. They had even led after nine of the fifteen events had been completed, but avid State rooters didn't realize that their "strong" events were finished, while the middle-distance events, where Michigan was powerful, were just coming up. Enthusiasm by the MSC fans was caused by three "iron men," Joe Savoldi, Kevan Gosper and Edgar Brabham. Brabham won the broad jump and 60-yard dash and placed second to Illinois' Ralph Fessenden in the 300. Savoldi, who impressed every- one with his game spirit, placed second in the high hurdles and third in both the shot put and high jump. The versatile athlete, son of the famed Notre Dame football star and professional wrestler, is considered one of the country's better decathlon pros- pects for next year's Olympics. Gosper, an Australian product, won the 600 in 1:11.3 to set a new Big Ten record. He previously had copped the 440 in 48.2 to estab- lish a new Field House mark. Illinois had but three first- place winners and dropped out of the running because of its depth problem. Winning for Leo John- son's squad were talph Fessen- den, who set a Conference record with a :30.8 clocking in the 300, Dale Foster, who won the pole vault, and Willard Thomson, who repeated last year's victory in iie high hurdles CLIFF KEEN .. an anniversary gift In consolation matches. Michi- gan's Dan Deppe took fourth place in the 123 lb. match, losing to Vern Whilney of Purdue. Tom Krause also placed fourth, losing the 177 lb. consolation match to Ed Mathews of Wisconsin. After the meet, Coach Cliff Keen commented that this was a great team victory, and that he was very happy to win on his an- niversary. STATISTICS 123-Terry McCann (Iowa) defeated Dick Meeks (Ill.), 12-3 130-Max Pearson (Michigan) defeated John Ontiveros (Il.), 4-0 137-Andy Kaul (Michigan) defeated John Sinadinos (MSC), 4-0 147-Don Haney (Michigan) defeated Bud Weick (Purdue), 6-5 157-MikeeRodriguez (Michigan) pin- ned Jerry Seeber (Wisconsin) 4:44 167-Larry TenPas (Illinois) defeated Harlan Jenkinson (Iowa), 5-2 177-John Winder (Iowa) defeated Dick Anthony (Indiana), 4-3 Hearvyweight-Bob Konovsky (Wiscon- sin) defeated Ken Leuer (Iowa), 2-1. TEAM POINTS MICHIGAN ......................50 Iowa ...... .......................46 Illinois ............................37 Wisconsin ..........................33 Purdue .,.......................16 MSC .............................15 OSU ..........................14 Indiana ......................... 9 Minnesota .........................7 Northwestern.........4 Illinois Wins Conference Gym Crown Special to The Daily MINNEAPOLIS - Led by Bill Winkler who won fourth place on the trampoline, Michigan's youth- ful gym squad collected 38 points to wind up solidly in fifth place at the Big Ten gymnastics meet held at Minneapolis yesterday aft- ernoon. Finishing in front of Michigan were Illinois, Michigan State, Iowa and Minnesota in that order. In accumulating their 139.5 points, the Illini grabbed their sixth straight title in as many years for coach Charles Pond. The meet's outstanding individ- ual performer was MSC's Carle- ton Rintz. He accounted for the majority of the Spartan's 91.5 points by taking three firsts, a second, and a third. Going into the meet with three championships at stake, Brintz de- fended two successfully, lost one, but gained another. His phenomi- nal performance on both the side horse, and the flying rings plus a win in the all around gave him his three crowns. He notched a tremendous total in each event, taking 274 points on the side horse, 273 points on the flying rings, and he amassed 1,560 points in sweeping the five all-around events. The afternoon's two other vic- tors were Sam Baile of Iowa and Tom Gardner of Illinois. Baile be- came the new horizontal bar champ, taking 258 points, and Gardner successfully defended his parallel bars crown by topping the event with 266 points. Coach Newt Loken was also pleased with Nick Wiese and Frank Adams. Both Wiese and Adams had the disheartening ex- perience of finishing sixth, only one point away, from a fourth place decision. Adams finished sixth in tumbling and on the horizontal zar, and fifth on tram- poline. Wiese was sixth on the fly- ing rings. Tony San' Antonio was the only other Wolverine to place higher than sixth. His routine on the par- allel bars accounted for a fifty} - __I ENGINEERING GRADUATES 1* it CONVAIR NEEDS YOUR CREW NECK SWEATERS 7- \. \ English Weight Felt Hats These raw edge hats are made expressly for Van Boven by New TALENTS TO DEVELOP TOMORROW'S AIRCRAFT CONVAIR'S expanding interests in the fields of con- ventional, unconventional, and nuclear-powered air- craft offer exceptional opportunities for Engineering Graduates. MR. R. J. PATTON AND MR. K. R. VINCENT of $995 and X1295 England's most skilled hatmaker. Made from the finest of felt bodies, they represent the signal styling that characterizes Van -Boven's clothing and furnishing. Lamb's Wool Shetlands 7 Colors from, 12.50 C O N V Ali R I f -A i _ __