T CHIGAN DAILY I . FRESHMAN NOTE: Gymnastic, Swim Teams SOPH SHOW petitioning has been extended until Wednesday, April 4. Cop Third in NCAA; Hyman Injured on Trampoline Turn in petitions at League Undergrad Office .r' l ... +. . r . ".3 r . srr,..., r E (Continued from Page 1) pionship with a narrow victory over Tom Osterland of Michigan 9.3 to 9.275. But an injury marred the other- wise outstanding performance. Osterland Loses After tying MSU's Johnson in the rebound tumbling preliminar- ies Michigan captain Tom Oster- land lost in the finals by .25 points out of a possible one hundred to the Spartan winner. Competing in his final meet Osterland grabbed a seventh place in the tumbling to'help the Wol- verine cause. Lascari Tops Arno Lascari finished second in the parallel bars and fifth on the high bar. His sixth place on the side horse made him the top Mich- igan point getter of the meet. Gil Larose managed only an eighth on the parallel bars after a fine start in the preliminaries. Despite his injury Hymna had earned enough points to end up in the ninth spot in the final rebound tumbling standings. Jim Hynds failed to earn points in the final standings. BULLETIN ALBUQUERQUE (;P)-Lewis Hyman, Michigan trampoline star, underwent brain surgery tonight for a severe brain in- jury suffered when he landed head first on the floor of the gymnasium. Hyman was a finalist in the trampoline event at the NCAA g y m n a s t i es championships when the accident happened. He was carried from the gymnasium unconscious after the fall. He was doing a back flip with a full twist when he fell on his head. He was being operated on at Presbyterian Hospital in Al- buquerque. His condition was described as critical. Hyman landed on his feet on the trampoline but lost his balance and fell head first on the floor. Dick Tiger Bombs Hank -Daily-Bruce Taylor GAINS SIXTH-Gil Larose, Michigan gymnastics standout, fin- ished eighth in parallel bars in the NCAA meet at Albuquerque to help the Wolverines to their third-place finish behind Southern California and Southern Illinois. I 11, I 11, St, .81k Bernard, 'M' Great, Dead at 50 Charles J. (Chuck) Bernard, the center for Michigan's 1931-33 championship football teams, died of a heart attack Friday. Bernard, 50, the last of Michi- gan's six all-America centers, col- lapsed in his office at the O'Brien Textile Company in Detroit and was dead on arrival at Highland Park General Hospital. NEW YORK (P)-Dick Tiger, the B r i t i s h Empire middleweight i IN NCAA: Nelson Retains Breaststroke Crown As Tankers Surge Past Michigan State (Continued from Page 1) champion from Nigeria, handed Wally Weber, his Bentor Harbor Henry Hank a terrific beating to- High School and college coach, re- night in winning a lopsided 10- members him as "one of the great- round decision over the Detroit est linemen who ever played for contender at Madison Square Gar- Benton Harbor and certainly one den. of the finest centers and lineback- It was the seventh straight vic- ers we ever had at Michigan." tory for the 32-year-old Nigerian "Those were some great years. who is the hottest of all the Chuck played in only one losing m id dl1e w ei g hts, including co- game in his entire career," Weber chmio eeFullsmerdongWes-reminisced. That setback was a champion Gene Fullmer of West 20-7 loss to Ohio State., Jordan, Utah, and Terry Downes An all-America in 1933, he fol- of England. lowed centers Bill Cunningham Tiger, who chopped down his 1898), Adolph (Germany) Schulz 27-year-old rival with blistering (1907), Henry Vick (1921), Jack combinations to the body and Blott (1923), and Maynard Morri- head, won almost as he pleased. son (1931) to that distinction. Southern California, with 46 points, held off surprising Minne- sota,-which towered into third place on the stron garms of sprint- er Steve Jackman. Behind Michigan, which scored 32 points, came Princeton (29). Michigan State (20), Cincinnati (19), and Yale (18). ( M Qualifies Two Michigan, the defending cham- pion, qualified only Nelson and Darnton in yesterday's prelimin- ary races and averted real disaster only with Nelson's successful de- fense of his breaststroke title. Hanging right on the tail of Princeton's Gardiner Green, the man he said he feared most, Nel- son started sprinting midway through the third lap, pulled even with Green on the last turn and spurted away from him in the fin- al 25 yards. Sets NCAA Mark Nelson's time, 1:01.7, broke his meet mark of 1:02.1 set last year and ord and eletel at Qality~ I ,enf /9ricei. I I - -! . M 11 I 9nPtn .Ouriapuod #tIn lit ilh juktit FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO. I I D IAMO N D INGS 216 W. William Street Ann Arbor, Michigan Telephone NO 5-9131 I ROBERT HAACK DIAMOND IMPORTERS GEMOLOGISTS & APPRAISERS We Have AllKinds of Glass-Mirrors and Furniture Tops We Have the Nationally Advertised Paints Also, we have complete glass service for foreign cars. Free Parking in Front of Our Store WE HAVE BEEN SERVING THE COMMUNITY FOR 77 YEARS ANN ARBOR MILWAUKEE MADISON MINNEAPOLIS CARACAS 201 SOUTH MAIN ST. 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