WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1955 I ME AllClH6A.N DAILI PAGE THREE WEDNESDAY, ~tB)~uAEr V. I~56 FAGS TIiREK Track Team Captures AAUMeet, Beats Kansas Freshman Sets Pole Vault Record; Love Wins Hurdles By CORKY SMITH Michigan's track. team distin- guished itself during the recent between-semester break by turn- ing in outstanding performances in the Michigan AAU and the Michigan-Kansas meets. The Wolverines dominated the AAU events and set some records while doing so. Eeles Lindstrom, freshman track great, pole vaulted to a new meet and field house rec- Entries are now being taken for the following Intramural sports: tennis (indoor singles), paddleball (singles), squash rackets, handball (singles), ta- ble tennis (singles), badminton, and codeball (singles and dou- bles). --Bob Welke ord with a vault of 14' 2". The pre- vious mark was 14' 1/", held by Rev. Bob Richards, U.S. Olympic participant in 1948. Bob Appleman took a third place. Junior Stielstra took the broad jump event with a leap of 22' 8%". Tom Hendricks, veteran Michigan trackman, placed third. Relay Team Wins The Wolverine 2-mile relay team raced to a victory in 7:53.8, a slow time compared with last year's 2- mile relay squad which ran the event in 7:35.0. The quarter in I" /Scores BASKETBALL Alpha Delta Phi 63, Trigon 6 Alpha Tau Omega 76, Acacia 12 Chi Phi 35, Psi Upsilon 10 Delta Sigma Phi 46, Tau Kappa Epsi- lon 14 Delta Tau Delta 31, Sigma Phi 27 Delta Upsilon 52, Phi Sigma Delta 36 Lambda Chi Alpha 46, Phi Gamma Delta 24 Phi Delta Theta 58, Phi Kappa Tau 33 Phi Kappa Psi 44, Alpha Epsilon Pi 32 Phi Kappa Sigma 39, Theta Chi 31 Pi Lambda Phi 54, Alpha Sigma Phi 27 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 46, Phi Sigma Kappa 20 Sigma Alpha Mu 26, Triangle 11 Sigma Chi 61, Delta Chi 16 Sigma Phi Epsilon defeated Theta Delta Chi (forfeit) Tau Delta Phi 23, Alpha Phi Alpha 16 FACULTY VOLLEYBALL Air Science 3, Naval Science 3 (tie) Willow Rus 5, Cooley Building "A" X the AAU meet was composed of Laird Sloan, Ross McNab, Dan Walter and Captain John Moule. The mile relay event, also went to Michigan. The team, including McNab, Sloan, Dave Hessler, and Grant Scruggs, sped the distance in 3:21.4. Hobart Jones placed sec- ond in the 1000-yard run, and Ron Wallingford finished third in the 2-mile run. Mark Booth tied with Doug Stewart in the high jump. Stew- art, an Australian attending Mich- igan State College, and Booth reached 6' 6". Coach Don Canham's cinder squad has been plagued with in- eligibilities.Canham has learned that Pete Sutton, Bob Rudisell, and sophomores Alonzo Harris and Jim Wheeling would not be able to run this spring because of scho- lastic deficiencies. John Hilberry, pole vaulter, was also declared in- eligible because of a transfer mix- up. 'M' Beats Kansas Michigan's cindermen; raced to an 80-/3-33% victory over Kansas last Saturday in Yost Fieldhouse. The Wolverines won nine of the 12 events outright and shared in another first place. The hard-run- ning trackmen took eight second places, indicating depth in many of the races. Several Wolverine performers starred for the Maize and Blue in snapping Kansas' 34-straight dual meet mark. Moule took a first in the mile while Pete Gray followed close behind in second place. Moule's time was 4:16.2. Hurdler Jim Love came in ahead of the pack in the 65-yard high hurdles, and Tom Hendricks, who amassed 11 of Michigan's 80%3 points, tied a fieldhouse record by taking the 65-yard low hurdle event in :07.4. Kansas Star Absent Absent from the Kansas team was Al Frame, NCAA cross coun- try champ and Big Seven 2-mile run title holder. He has been side- lined with a pinched leg nerve. Also, a lack of fieldhouse facilities back home provided the Jayhawk- ers with only a mediocre field events showing. Northwestern Names Saban As Grid Coach EVANSTON, Ill. P)--Northwest- ern University yesterday picked one of its own assistant coaches, 33-year-old Lou Saban, to become head football coach succeeding Bob Voigts. Voigts resigned suddenly last week after serving eight years. He said he quit because of alumni criticism. Saban, who becomes the young- est head football coach in the Big Ten, served one year under Voigts as defensive backfield mentor. His new contract is for one year at an undisclosed salary. Voigts report- edly received $14,000 annually. JIM LOVE ... hurdler triumphs in Kansas meet Michigan Splits Gym Meet With Minnesota, Wisconsin By BOB JONES Michigan's improved gymnastics squad downed Wisconsin but suc- cumbed to a powerful Minnesota team Saturday in a triangular meet at Madison. The Wolverines -toppled Wis- consin by a 58-38 score, only to find themselves on the other end as the Gophers beat them with an identical total. It was a ques- tion of depth all the way, but Doug Day of the Gophers admin- istered a coup-de-grace, taking two firsts and a third for Minne- sota. Frank Adams was the stand- out for Michigan on the 'M'-Wis- consin leg of the triangle. The re- liable veteran won both the high- bar and tumbling events, and took second on the trampoline. Sopho- mores Wayne Warren and Nickj Wiese shared the only other 'M' first place points. Warren tied with Jim Murphy of the Badgers on the parallel bars, and Wiese shared first with Bob Grollo of Wiscon- son in the flying rings event. Badgers Cop Tramp, Side-Horse Wisconsin won both the tram- poline and the side horse events in the persons of Paul Verwey and Murphy, respectively. Chico San Antonio and Bob Armstrong took second and third for Michigan on the side horse, while Adams and ,Jack Burchfield rounded out the placing on the tramp. The 'M'-Minnesota conflict was a different story, with the Goph- ers taking or sharing first place in all but two events. Minnesota showed its depth by taking the first three places in the side horse event. Wiese and Adams took the only firsts for the 'M' squad. The rap- idly improving sophomore topped the field in his specialty, the fly- ing rings, followed by Gophers George Olson and Bob Johnson. Adams took first in the tumbling ahead of Johnson and Don Frant- zich of Minnesota. On January 15, Michigan went down to defeat before a Michigan State squad which Coach Newt Loken rates as one of the toughest in the Big Ten. Loken is looking forward with interest to the Min- nesota-MSC dual meet to be held later this month. He feels that the ' winner of this encounter should be in good shape to take the conference meet March 4-5 at Minneapolis. "Michigan should also look very good in the Big Ten Meet," Loken said. "We're still a young team, but the boys areimproving rapidly." Motor Scooter Tour of Europe... Summer 1955 A new and exciting way to see Europe,.L We give you a Lambretta Motor scooter; Introduce you to a dozen spirited young people. and set you ORf on a memorable adventur. on the highways and byways of Italy. Austria. Switzerland and France. For further information; write Ceorge L. Stadler Union Tours, Inc., IS West M Street New York 18, N. Y. Name College Addresse BEST SEASON IN HISTORY: Four Marks Fall to Big Ten Tankers By DON LINDMAN Four national records have been erased as the Western Conference enters its last month of dual meet competition in what is turning out to be the strongest season in con- ference swimming history. Al Wiggins, Ohio State's sopho- more sensation, has accounted for three of the marks in an unprece- dented one-man attack on the tank record books. Providing the versatility which Coach Mike Peppe has long sought, the latest member of the Buckeye galaxy of swimming stars smashed the world record for the 100-yard but- terfly breaststroke by nearly three seconds, turning in a time of :54.6. Individual Medley Marks Wiggins' other record-breaking achievements were in the individ- ual medley. An excellent back- stroker, he set a national record of 1:07.7 for the 120-yard individual medley against Wisconsin, and added the 150-yard mark a week later with a time of 1:26.9. His time for the 150-yard event broke the standard set earlier this year by Michigan Captain Bump Jones, who covered the distance in 1:28.7. The fourth national 'mark was N1 ---- set by Michigan State's John Du- deck, who swam the orthodox breaststroke in 2:27.6. Dudeck's mark has since been broken by North Carolina State's Dick Fad- gen. The Big Ten appears to be es- pecially strong in backstroke and middle-distance freestyle events and is surprisingly weak in the freestyle sprints. Yoshi Oyakawa, the OSU ace who has led the na- Wan ted Anyone interested in becom- ing a baseball manager notify Merrill Kaufman at NOrmandy 2-4419.s, tion's backstrokers for three years, is still the man to beat in the Big Ten, but this year some definite challengers for his crown are appearing. Wardrops Challenge Oyakawa Michigan's Wardrop twins, Jack and Bert, are both capable of beat- ing Oyakawa unless the Buckeye ace is in top form. The Hawaiian star's own teammate, Wiggins, is a newcomer who can swim 200 yards in under 2:08. Purdue's Fred Bautz and Wis- consin's John Hoaglund, both of whom led Oyakawa until the final length in the 1954 Big Ten meet, have returned for their final year of competition. Another brilliant newcomer is Iowa's Lincoli Hur- ring, an Australian sophomore who swam the 200-yard event in 2:08.8 earlier in the season. Michigan's Jack Wardrop, the man who finally conquered the seemingly unbeatable Buckeye middle - distance freestyler, Ford Konno, in last year's NCAA meet, will again be challenging the OSU ace for conference and national honors. A new contender has ap- peared, however, in the person of Indiana's Bill Woolse:, who has beaten Konno several times in AAU meets and has swum 220- yards in 2:08.5 already this season. Few Sprinters In contrast to the sparkling per- formances already recorded in backstroke and distance freestyle events, the galaxy of freestyle sprint stars seen at last year's con- ference meet has disappeared. All six finalists in the 100-yard event and the top four men in the 50- yard sprint are not competing this season. news..... c I',nea Itsour if:.. I. I SALES OPPORTUNITIES BUTTON-DOWN ROUND-COLLAR SHIRT with The Dow Chemical Company The Dow Chemical Company is presently looking for sales trainees, men to represent Dow in the fast-growin chemical industry. These men may be graduates in any field of study who have one year or more of college chemistry. All those employed would be given six to nine months thorough training in Midland, Michigan, prior to placement in one of our many sales offices located in principal cities. The positions are most suited to those not subject to Selective Service, since they in no way provide exemption from military call. 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