THE MICHIGAln1' D IL1 '' SUNDAY, THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, r- bolf Stars in Swim Gala; Cagers Fall Colts Trounce Ram For Divsion Tistle LOS ANGELES A')2- The Bal-se tfnire olt laked p te Wst- A crowd of 65,528 saw the Rare timore Colts locked up thetWest r.,aA .,r +iin4 4.h 1.. 11. dins Three Butler Trounces Michigan; Miller Hurt in 85-63 Loss m, Events; So D"oes Leg;acki (Continued from Page 1) finals in the evening, but was timed in 1:05.5. Other winners were Michigan freshman John Dumont in the 440-yard freestyle, Ron Clark, 220- yard breaststroke, Bob Webster, springboard diving and Heinrich in the 220-yard freestyle. The day's most sensational swimming was recorded by Le- gacki. His times of :22.5 in the 50yard freestyle, :49.8 in the 00- yard freestyle and :54.9 nthe 10- ard butterfiy were called "sensa- tional for the beginning of the season" by Michigan Coach Gus Stager. rLegacki Wins Easily Legacki went to the lead im- mediately in all three events, dis- posed of most of the opposition before the respective events were half over and won handily in each Instance. Following Legacki's example, Wolf sprinted to the lead in both backstroke event and was ac- tually never threatened by his teammates and strongest chal- lengers Alex Gaxiola and John Smith. W Phile never threatening Wolf, Gaxiola and Smith had their own private battle for second and third with Gaxiola coming out on top in each instance, even though their times were identical in the 220 and only three - tenths seconds apart in the 100. Werner (Ou; Jrdan KO 'd By The Associated Press ASPEN, Colo.-Wallace (Buddy) Werner, 23 years old, top per- former on the United States ski team, fractured his right leg in slalom practice yesterday. This was a stunning blow to American hopes in the Winter Olympics at Squaw Valley, Calif., next February. A doctor said Wer- ner probably can't resume skiing for three months. * " s BUENOS AIRES - World Wel- terweight Champion Don Jordan of Los Angeles was, knocked out in the fourth round of a scheduled 10-round non-title fight last night by Argentine titleholder Federico Thompson. * s * MINNEAPOLIS - High scor- ing Jack Twyman and Win Wil- fong carried Cincinnati to a 107- 97 victory over Minneapolis last night in a nationally televised Na- tional Basketball Assn. game. * * * PHILADELpHIA-Boston's Bill Russell, keeping Philadelphia's seven-foot Wilt Chamberlain in check, helped the Celtics to a 126- 117. victory over the Warriors last ight and increased their lead in the National Basketball Associa- tion's Eastern Division. * * * CHICAGO - Dave Nlelson of Delaware is the hottest name in the rumor race fr the head foot- ball coaching job at Illinois. Detroit reports say the 39-year- old strategist and former Michi- gan baseball and football star will be :named tomorrow to succeed Ray Eliot, retiring after 18 years to become the Illini's Assistant Athletic Director. * a r CHICAGO - Big Ten athletes can participate in Olympic trials without jeopardiing their varsity eligibility, faculty representatives ruled yesterday in closing the an- nual conference business meet- __ { -Daily-Hal Applebaumn ON THE MARK - Six Michigan swimmers take their mark awaiting the gun to start the 100-yard individual medley in last night's Michigan Swim Gala. From left to right the swimmers are: Henry Huffaker, Steve Thrasher, Tony Tashnick, Fred Wolf, Brook Plummer and Frank Babcock. In the individual medley Wolf trailed Michigan Captain Tony Tashnick after the first two strokes, the butterfly and back- stroke but closed the narrow mar- gin in the breaststroke and went ahead eventually defeating Tash- nick by two feet.. Heinrich came from Cincinnati with instructions from his Coach Tom Hartlan to go all out in the 440-yard freestyle, and the chunky Californian using an unorthodox stroke did just that as he splashed to his record time. After scoring easily in the 440, Heinrich was forced to go all out in the 220-yard freestyle in order to defeat Indiana freshman John Roethke, who's late rush carried him past Michigan's Bill Darnton and Dick Hanley, but failed to reach Heinrich who triumphed by inches. Ron Clark, Big Ten 200-yard breaststroke champion, was fully extended to defeat another In- diana freshman, Chet Jastramski in the 220-yard breaststroke. Clark Edged Although able to handle the field in this event, Clark was beat- en by Nelson in the 100-yard breaststroke by two feet. In the spring board diving Wol-. verine junior Bob Webster, who suffered a serious head laceration in an exhibition in the evening, came from behind to defeat his classmate Joe Gerlach. Dumont swam a strong 440- yard freestyle in the Heinrich-less finals to defeat sophomore War- ren Uhler by two yards in the creditable time of 4:37.7. The results of the meet indicate continued success for Michigan swimmers. The Wolverines won nine of the ten events and none of these were taken by seniors. In a class break down the juniors led the way with five firsts, five seconds and four thirds. The sophs were next with three wins, a second and a third, followed by the freshmen with two firsts and two thirds. The seniors trailed with four seconds and three third place finishes. Summaries 440-yard freestyle (Mich. AAU)-- 2) John Dumont, Ann Arbor, 2) Warren Uhler, AA, 3) Tony Tash- nick, AA, 4) Bill Darnton, AA, 5) Owen Kleinschmidt, AA, 6) John Urbanscok, AA. 4:37.7 (Swimming In exhibition Gary Heinrich, Cin- cinnati, set pool record of 4:27.3). Coaches Add Track Ev ent Big Ten track coaches have added a new event to the outdoor track program, first major change in 20 years. Michigan Coach Don Canham, who attended the Conference meetings in Chicago, gave two reasoL for adding the 660 yard run: First, there are many good mid- dle-distance men in the Big Ten. Second, each team carries four quarter-milers for relays, and some of these men have been able to compete in no individual event. The Big Ten is the first group to initiate the 660 as a regular event. The change is the first since the javelin was dropped in 1940. 220-yard backstroke (Mich. AAU) 1) Fred Wolfe, AA, 2) Alex Gaxiola, AA, 3) John Smith, AA, 4) Tash- nick, AA, 5) Steve Thrasher, AA, 6) Richard Han, AA, 2:22.9. 220-yard breaststroke (Open) - i) RoanClark, AA, 2) Chet Jastrem- ski, Toledo, 3) Dick Nelson, AA, 4) Ken Ware, AA, 5) Tom Bechtal, AA, 6) Bob Clark, AA. 2:41. 100-yard. freestyle (Mich. AAU- 1) Frank Legacki, AA, 2) Carl Wool- ley, AA, 3) Andy Morrow, AA, 4) Brook Plummer, AA, 5) Frank Bab- cock, AA, 6) Dave Heiser, AA. :49.8 Springboard Diving (Mich: AAU) +-1) Bob Webster, AA, 2) Joe Ger- lach, AA, 3) Ernie Meisner, AA, 4) Ron Jaco, AA, 5) Tee Francis, AA, 6) Pete Cox, AA, 7) Jim Heiden- berger, Grand Rapids. 475.35 50-yard freestyle (Open) - 1) -Frank Legacki, AA, 2) Woolley, AA, 3) Brook Plummer, 4) John Roeth- ke, Bloomington, Ind., 5) Jastrem- ski, Toledo, 6) Dennis Svetzko, Western Ontario. :22.5. 100-yard individual medley (Uni- versity of Michigan swimmers only) -1) Wolf, 2) Tashnick, 3) Huffaker, 4) Thrasher, 5) Babcock, 6) Plum- mer. 100-yard backstroke (Open) - 1) Wolfe, AA, 2) (tie), Gaxiola and Smith, AA, 4) Thrasher, AA 5) Shortreed, AA, 6) McMahon, AA. :58.4. 100-yard breastroke - 1) Nelson, AA, 2) R. Clark, AA, 3) Ware, AA, 4) Bechtel, AA, 5) B. Clark, AA, 6) Cooper, AA. 1:05.5. 220-yard freestyle-1) Gary Hein- rich, Cincinnati, 2) Roethke, Bloom. ington, Ind., 3) Dick Hanley, AA, 4) Dumont, AA, 5) Darnton, AA, 6) Kleinschmidt, AA. 2:07.2. 100-yard butterfly - 1) Legacki, AA,; 2) Dave Gillanders, AA, 3) Tashnick, AA, 4) Jastremski, Tole- do, 5) Terry Slonaker, AA. :54.9. Special to The Daily INDIANAPOLIS - With in- jured captain Terry Miller watch- ing helplessly from the bench, Michigan's basketball team sagged badly in the second half and lost, 85-63, to Butler here last night. Miller, the team playmaker and a consistent performer on offense and defense, went out of the game after only two minutes when his right ankle was injured. He did not get back in. It was not immediately known how long Miller will be out of ac- tion. He had almost recovered completely from an operation on his right knee last spring. Defense Crumbles. Even with Miller sidelined early, Michigan stuck fairly close until about midway through the second half. At that point, the Wolverine defense crumbled and allowed the Bulldogs to score repeatedly on close-in shots. Also contributing to the Michi- gan collapse were numerous ball- handling errors in the second half. Michigan passed poorly and at other times let Butler guards Larry Ramey, Jim Barrack, and Jerry Petty steal the ball away for easy layups. Michigan center Lovell Farris fouled out with eight minutes left, and this also weakened the Wol- verines in the late stages. But before the Wolverine disin- tegration, it was anybody's ball Wisconsin 85, Loyola (Chicago) 67 Indiana 80, Ohio U 68 Minnesota 59, Oklahoma 57 Detroit 84, Purdue 63 Iowa 76, Texas Tech 66 Wayne St. 65, Wash. & Jefferson 60 Columbia 93, Colgate 67 Navy 57, Princeton 47 Duke 72, South Carolina 70 St. Louis 73, Kentucky 61 Texas 94, Tulane 71 Villanova 77, Clemson 64 Toledo 81, Dayton 71 Miami (Ohio) 78, Western Mich. 71 West Virginia 104, Penn State 74 NYU 87, Lafayette 59 Kansas $0, North Carolina State 58 St. Johns of Brooklyn 77, Williamn & Mary 65 Notre Dame 67, Air Force 52 North Carolina 68, Kansas State 5 Bradley 99, Bowling Green 72 Pittsburgh 75, Duquesne 44 SMU 86, Vanderbilt 67 Mississippi 78, Arkansas 63 Drake 78, TCU 61 Auburn 62, Florida State 58 Holy Cross 85, Yale 84 COLLEGE HOCKEY Denver 5, North Dakota 2 game. With Miller out, forward Scott Maentz, Farris, and guard John Tidwell took up the slack. Tidwell Scores 27 Maentz, rapidly becomring ac- climated to the hardwood after performing on the gridiron this fall, dumped in 14 points. Farris, playing a solid first half, scored 12 points before fouling out. Tidwell, whose mediocre shoot- ing contributed materially to Michigan's first two losses of the young season, made up for it last night by netting 10 field goals and seven out of seven free throws for 27 points, leading all scorers. Meanwhile, the Bulldogs, win- ning their third game against two losses,.offset Michigan's three- man scoring effort with balanced scoring of their owri. Leads Last-Half Surge Ramey, the ball-hawking guard, acumulated 19 points,- seven of them on free shots. Forward Or- ville Bose, held to four points in the first half, paced Butler's last- half surge with seven fielders for a total of 18 points. This produc- tion was matched by Butler's out- standing center Ken Pennington. Michigan, enjoying a slight height advantage, picked off slightly more rebounds than the Bulldogs. Besides the re-emergence of Tidwell as a scorer, Michigan's other bright spot was its accuracy from the free throw line. In the low-fouling contest, the Wolver- ines canned 13 of 14 foul shots, Dick Clark missing one of his two chances. Having lost their first three games, the Wolverine cagers will try to get on the winning track here against Tennessee on Satur- day afternoon. ern Conference title of the Na- tional Football League yesterday but it took a 21-point blast in the final quarter to stomp down the Los Angeles Rams, 45-26. The Rams played their finest if losing game of a sad season after coach Sid Gillman announced be- fore the game that he was quit- ting. The resignation was not un- expected but the dramatic timing did come as a surprise. The title-bound Colts, now headed for a game with the New York Giants for the NFL cham- pionship, could not be contained- in a weird final quarter. Gourley with 10 defeats and two victories. The game was nationally tele- vised. Whereas the crowd booed the Rams against Green Bay last Sun- day, they cheered them yesterday as the local idols went into the final period with a 26-24 lead. The lead didn't last long. Unitas Scored Quarterback Johnny U n i t a s passed for the third of his three scoring strikes to put the Colts in front. Then linebacker Dick Szyman- ski intercepted a Billy Wade pass deep in Ram territory and romped 15 yards for another touchdown. To wrap up their second divi- sion title, defensive back Carl Tas- eff, scooped pup a Ram field goal attempt that fell short, bobbled it, and then tooK off for 99 yards and a final touchdown. Taseff's run equalled an NFL record for such a play, estab- lished in 1951 by ex-Ram Jerry Williams against Green Bay. The runback was a letdown for the Rams' field goal kicker, Lou Mi- chaels. He had kept the club in conten- tion all this bright afternoon with four out of four field goal tries until this one fell short. The ball was held on the 39. etroit ges Mo antreal, 3- MONTREAL -- The Detroit Red Wings moved into second place in the National Hockey League last night with a 3-2 victory over the league-leading Montreal Cana- diens. The Red Wings pulled in front to stay in the second period on two goals that Montreal goalie Jacques Plante played poorly. Goalie Terry Sawchuk of the Wings was beaten once on a de- flected shot and late in the final period on a short rebound. * S* BOSTON - George (Red) Sul- livan's five-foot shot past the sprawled Boston goalie with less than two minutes remaining last night gave the New York Rangers a 4-3 National Hockey League vic- tory over the slipping Boston Bruins. * * * TORONTO - Tod Sloan came up with two of Chicago's three third period goals last night in leading the Chicago Black Hawks to a 4-2 National Hockey League victory over the Toronto Maple Leafs. ' MICHIGAN Donley, f Maentz, f Farris, e Tidwell, g Miller, g Clark, g Scheenherr Robins, g TOTALS BUTLER BOSe, f Haffner, f Pennington, Haslam, c Barrick, g Rainey, g Petty, g Blackwell, f TOTALS FG 0 7 5 10 0 1 0 2 25 FG 4 c 7 0 3 6 3 2 33 FT PF 0-0 2 0-0 4 2-2 5 7-7 0 1-1 0 1-2 4 0 1 2-2 5 13-14 21 FT PF 2-4 3 2-2 1 4-5 3 1-2 0 1-1 3 7-11 1 2-3 1 0-1 0 19-29 12 TP 0 14 12 27 AI 3 0 6 63 TP 18 10 18 1 7 19 8 4 85 37 Don Gourley, a forward on the Michigan hockey team last season, was killed in an auto- mobile accident Thursday night near Olds, Alberta., Gourley's car struck the rear of an oil tank truck which had stopped to let oncoming traffic pass before making a left turna. Gourley, 24 years old, was a resident of Edson, Alberta. Halftime: Butler, 38, Mich. 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