St NDAY, MARCH 10, 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Pm .. fis Nnewa SUNDAY, MARCH 10, 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY DAf~U? ~'VWSJ A £3~AZ4 ~Li V EW~ V.%r4x c, J is v i N I MSU lds oSU Swimming Reign in Final Race Icers Down Tech in Season Finale, 7-4; Dunnigan Cited as Team's'Most Valuable' PLAY YALE IN NCAA: Tarheels Claim Crown By JIM BAAD Memorial Trophy for this year's opened the scoringat 3:24 of the Led by some exceptionally fine" play by its second line, Michigan's most valuable player. hockey team rolled over Michigan Also by the end of the game, Tech, 7-4, in the home finale at although no official announcement the Coliseum last night. was made, goalie Ross Childs had DICK HANLEY DICK KIMBALL ... record-breaker ... second in diving Hopkins, Hanley Victorious; Kimball Second in Diving (Continued from Page 1) Which was almost - but not quite-the case. Some pleasant surprises kept the Wolverines in it Almost . * 100-yd. Butterfly: 1. Al Wiggins (OSU); 2. Tanabe (Ind.); 3. Dobler (MSU); 4. Harmon (MSU); 5. Hon- da (Ind.); 6. Mowery (M). :54.3. (Breaks World's short course record of 54.4 set by Wiggins in 1955)' . 100-yd. Freestyle: 1. Dick Hanley (M); 2. Morris (Iowa); 3. Patterson (MSU); 4. Parrish (MSU); 5. Kar- pinchik (Ill.); 6. Ellis (MSU). :49.8. 200-yd. Breast Stroke: 1. Cy Hop- kins (M); 2. Yap (Ind.); 3. Reinke (MSU); 4. Hunt (Ill.); 5. Hunsaker (Ill.); 6. Steinke (Wis.). 2:20.5. (Breaks conference record of 2:23.5 set in preliminaries by Reinke). 100-yd. Back Stroke: 1. Al Wiggins (OSU); 2. Pemberton (N); 3. Adam- ski (M); 4. Nichols (MSU); 5. Ivers- man (Purdue); 6. Steinmetz (Pur- due). :57.t. 440-yd. Freestyle: 1. Bill Woolsey (Ind.); 2. Hlanley (M); 3. McNamnee (OSU); 4. Kennedy (Ind.); and Schutt (NU) (tie); 6. Clemens (MSU). 4:30.9. 400-yd. Medley Relay: 1. MSU (Ni- chols, Reinke, Harmon, Parrish); 2. Ind.; 3. Mich.; 4. Wis.; 5. Ill.; 6. Purdue. 3-Meter Diving: 1, Harper. (OSU); 2. Kimball (M); 3. Whitten (OSU); 4. O'Brien (OSU); 5. Fraunfelter (OSU); 6. Mills (Iowa). 538.35. TEAM SCORES: 1. MSU (87); 2. Michigan (79); 3. OSU (71); 4. In- diana (56%); 5. Illinois (27); 6. Wisconsin (23); 7. Northwestern (21Y); S. Iowa (20); 9. Purdue (10); 10. Minnesota (0). right to the end. The first was Indiana's Barry Yap who nosed out MSU's Paul Reinke in the breastroke for sec- ond place. The second was Adam- ski's nosing out of State's Don Nichols in the backstroke for third place. Kimball Surprises The third-and it came in high diving, next to last event--was the job turned in by Dick Kimball of the Maize and Blue. Trailing the already-crowned low board champ, Ohio State's Glen Whitten, for second place go- ing into the last four dives, Kim- ball stole the show. His second dive brought a score of 68.9, high for the night for any single dive, and he brought gasps of admiration from the audience as he passed Whitten to take sec- ond. This left Michigan just two points behind State, and anything could have happened. Medley Clinches It But it didn't. As expected, the Spartans sailed home first in the climactic relay, with Indiana, an- chored by Bill Woolsey, second and Michigan, a commendable third. Woolsey easily defeated H~anley In the 440, as Hanley had already won the 100 while the brilliant Hoosier was well rested. NHL SCORES Boston 4, Detroit 2 Montreal 6, Chicago 4 New York 2, Toronto 1 The victory leaves the Wolver- ines with an overall season record of 17-4-2, a solid posiiton in sec- ond place in the WIHL with 13 wins, four losses and a tie, and a nine game winning streak. Along with the team victory, two players received individual honors last night. Between the second and third periods, Dr. Edward Kahn, the oldest former Michigan hockey Mopping Up FIRST PERIOD .Goals: Tech - 1 - Dockeray (J. McManus, Kennedy) 3:24; Michigan -1-McDonald (Switzer, Dunnigan) 11:29. Penalties: Tech - Wilson (hold- ing) 3:59; Michigan - Hanna (hold- ing) 4:30; Tech - Comi (hooking) 16:43. SECOND PERIOD Goals - Michigan - 2 - Switzer (McDonald, Dunnigan) 1:13; 3 - Maxwell (Starr, T. Rendall) 1:32; 4- Dunnigan (Switzer, McDonald) 9:25. Penalties: Michigan - J. Rendall (illegal check) 3:24; Schiller (el- bowing) 6:48; Tech - Wylie (hold- ing) 12:02; Michigan - Hayton (slashing) 13:04; Dunnigan (hold- ing) 15:35; Maxwell (charging) 18:21. THIRD PERIOD Goals - Michigan - 5 - Switzer (Dunnigan, McDonald) 2:49; 6 - Hayton (Switzer) 3:40; Tech - 2 - Holden (Wylie, R. Stenlund) 11:10; 3 - Aubry (Tattersall, Buchman) 17:11; 4 - Dockeray (J. McManus, Kennedy) 18:53; Michigan - 7 - Karpinka (J. Rendall, Hutton) 19:42. ..Penalties: Tech - Holden (slash- ing) 1:16; Wilson (unnecessary roughness) 5:07; Michigan-J. Ren- dali (unnecessary roughness) 5:07;{' T. Rendall (roughing and cross check) 12:27; Tech -- Dockeray (roughing) 12:27. BWe BRO WN JUG (ea taueaft t 1204 South University easily qualified for the league tro- phy for the best goals-against average. * rIt was the "little line" that made the offensive difference in a tremendously well-played hockey game that contained a little bit of everything in the line of excite- ment. After Tech's Jack Dockeray had captain present, presented Dick Dunnigan with the Hal Downs first period, this line went to work. Neil McDonald flipped in a re- bound shot, assisted by his wing mates Ed Switzer and Dunnigan. The combination hit twice in the second period, this time Switzer and then Dunnigan smashing home the puck for Michigan's second and fourth goal. Sandwiched in between was a deflection shot by Wally Maxwell just 19 seconds after Switzer had scored. This quick flurry more or less broke Tech's back, and al- though they scored three more times, the were actually never in the game again. By The Associated Press RALEIGH, N. C. - Unbeaten North Carolina, the nation's No. 1 college basketball team, chilled South Carolina's upset fever 95-75 last night to win the Atlantic Coast Conference Championship Tourna- ment. * * * West Virginia Wins RICHMOND, Va. - West Vir- ginia's bustling Mountaineers got their fast break working under the leadership of All-America Rod Hundley midway the second half last night and wore down Wash- ington and Lee, 67-52, in the championship finals of the South- ern Conference Basketball Tour- nament. SCIENTISTS ... -. . . ENGINEERS In the search for new materials of construction, new fuels and higher thrusts, Aerojet-General offers unequalled opportunity in America's most comprehensive rocket propulsion program, Iowa Falls IOWA CITY, Iowa - Wiscon- sin outlasted Iowa in the final sec- onds to win over the slightly fav- ored Hawkeyes 60-59 in the final Big Ten basketball game of the season. Final Big Ten Basketball Standings W L Pct. Michigan State .......10 4 .714 Indiana...............10 4 .714 Ohio State ............. R 5 .643 Minnesota.............9 5 .643 Michigan ........... 8 6 .571 Purdue................ 8 6 .571 Illinois ..... .....o. 7 7 .500 Iowa........."...«...4 10 .286 Wisconsin ............. 3 11 .214 Northwestern .........2 12 .143 DICK DUNNIGAN ... 'most valuable' " s " 4 " Mechanical Engineers Electronic Engineers Chemical Engineers Electrical Engineers Aeronautical Engineers Civil Engineers Chemists Physicists Mathematicians A Subsidiary of PLANTS AT AZOSA AND The General Tire & Rubber Company NEAR SACRAMENTO,CALIFORNIt' An Aerojet-General representative will be on campus on March 11. Contact your Placement Office for details. SPAGHETTI { MARRIAGE SERIES During the month of March the Newman Club is sponsoring a series of lectures on "The Christian Mar- riage." The lectures will.be given at the Father Richard Center and will be open to all interested students. The opening lecture, which will be held on Sunday, March 10th at 7:30 P.M., is entitled, "Marriage -- Human and Divine" and will be given by Rev. Robert Burroughs, S.T.L. The second lecture of the six lecture series will be given on Wednesday, March 13th at 8:00 P.M. and is entitled, "Preparation for Marriage" and "Problems of Mixed Marriages." The Choice of Haspe ords iict~~i Cods VOll-Dressej Men . .. THE ALL-COTTON CORD needs no introduction to those who have enjoyed their smart cool appearance and all around utility. The coWash n' Wear . . a skillful blending of cotton and Dacron . .. is similar to the cotton cord in pattern, but has the added advantage of being washable and requiring no ironing. Simply wash it out at i ": night, hang it u and it is ready to wear the next morning. Both available in our natural shoulder model with lapped seams, hooked center vent, and narrow proportioned trousers. 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