TAE lt' IICRIGAN II II.Y rarurti x ci" Y a.rrr x; TIlE MICII~AN ibIILY a V flb A r - - '. i1IJf1X, JA I?1fl Jymnastic, Hockey, Swimming Teams riump ynl Team Displays Balance in Whipping ilini Chicago Branch in Season Opener By CLIFF MARKS In tumbling, the last event of the high bar, taking second, while Michigan's gymnastics team put the evening, Jim Brown put on a Ken Sakamoto filled in for Mont- i an amazing show of balance clutch performance to defeat Cap- petit in the still rings, capturing st night in rolling over the Uni- tain Bill Skinner with a 95.5 per- the fifth spot. rsity of Illinois (Chicago formance. The runner-up had a Montpetit was out of the still anch) 71.5-40.5 before a huge score of 93. . rings due to stretching an elbow anding room only crowd in the T. Francis stayed one jump tendon in the high bar when he 'M gym. ahead of Tom Osterland on the fell off. Coach Newt Loken hoped The Wolverines won every event trampoline (actually on-half of a that the injury to "one of his t one in'their dual meet opener point) by whipping his "Tramp stars" wouldn't be serious, and th Rich Montpetit leading the Twin" 91-90.5, in a virtually even said, "We'll just see how it feels ay by scoring two firsts and a performance. tomorrow." tal of 15 points. Close behind In the parallel bars, Roy Sch- Last night's tremendous crowd, m were Al 'Stall and Wolfgang meissing accounted for the visitors at times three deep, was probably ozauer who chalked up 14 points lone win by edging Dozauer, 88-87. partly due to the fine, but brief >iece. The latter won the still rings, free exercise exhibition given by The excellent balance occurred however, edging Stall by a half Carolyn Osborne, Michigan's fe- five events, while the other two, point. male gym attraction. mbling and rebound tumbling, Feinberg Takes Second Despite the impressive win, he w two personal duels continued Barry Feinberg came through added that "the men still have a a winning way for the hosts. with a good spot performance in great deal of work to do to get ready for Minnesota next Satur- day. They (the Gophers) are a top dual meet team, although we beat them in the Midwest Open." REBOUND TUMBLING-L. Fran- cis (M), 91; 2. Osteriand (M); 3. Stall (M); 4. Glomb (UIC); 5. Grace (UIC). - ' FREE EXERCISE --I. Montpetit ;:n = -(M), 90.5; 2. Dozauer (M); 3. Grace (UIC); 4. Brown (M); 5. Schmeis- sing (UIC). SIDE HORSE-1. Montpetit (M); ^' :":':;- .:.: " : 88.5; 2. B erg st ro m {UIC); 3. Sch eissing (UIC); 4. Rago (UIC); 5. Stall (M). HIGH BAR - 1. Stall (M), 89.5; 2. Feinberg (M); 3. Schmeissing {UIC); 4. Wike (UIC); 5. Dornseif - .' :(UIC}. PARALLEL BARS -- 2. Schmeis- sing (UIC), 88; 2. Dozauer (M); 3. Montpetit (M}; 4. Holworth (UIC); ,., 5. Dornself, (UIC). ,.- STILL RINGS - 1. Dozauer (M), 86; 2. (tie) Stall (M) and Rago (UIC); 4. Wikp (UIC); 5. Saka- TUMBLING -1. Brown (M), 95.5; 2. Skinner (M); 3. Glonb (UIC); 4. Osterland (M); 5. Cason (UIC). Smith Signs Former Wolverine Willie smith -Daily-David Cantrel signed with. Denver of the Ameri- LEADS GYMNASTS--Rich Montpetit flashes his form on the can Footbal2League yesterday. parallel bars in last night's gym meet won by Michigan 70.5-40.5 Little Rock, Ark., last played for over Navy Pier (U. of Ill. at Chicago). the Wolverines in 1958. Swimmers Swamp Weak Western Ontario,_75-2 6 Dy HAL APPLEBAUM- - -,Daily-David Giltrow LOTS OF HELP-That was the key to Michigan goal keeper Jim Coyle's (1) success in the nets last: night as the Wolverines posted a 5-1 win over Michigan Tech. Coach Al Renfrew said after the game, "It helps when the forwards come back and give the goalie a hand." And that's exactly what Jerry Kolb (center) and Bill Kelly (right) are doing early in the second period. Defense Leads Ieers to 5-1 Conquest Of Michigan Tech for Second League Win Michigan roled to its 28th con- secutive dual swim meet victory by defeating Western Ontario, 75- 26, in Varsity Exhibition Pool last night. The only record of the evening was set by the Wolverines in win- ning the 400-yard medley relay. The Michigan quartet of John Smith, backstroke, Ron Clark, breaststroke, Dave Gillanders, butterfly and Dick Hanley covered the distance in 3:46.3, eclipsing the pool record by three-tenths of a second and the Michigan record by one-tenth of a second. , Using his regulars sparingly, Michigan Coach Gus' Stager used a total of 28 swimmers including 12 sophomores, who received their first taste of varsity competition in this the first dual meet of the 1959-60 season. Today the Wolverines travel to East Lansing. to meet a strong field in the Big Ten;Relays. 'The Wolverines' svaunted depth,. which has brought them three consecutive NCAA championships,. was evident throughout the meet. All of Michigan's eight individual victories were won by different swimmers. Five of these winners were sophomores. They were Bill Darn- ton, 220-yard freestyle, Dennis Floden, 50-yard freestyle, Fred Wolfe, 200-yard individual medley, Chuck Babcock, 100-yard free- style and Win Pendleton, 440-yard freestyle. Other Michigan winners were juniors Mike Natelson, 200-yard butterfly, Ken Ware, 200-yard (Continued from Page 1) game, Neither team got many shots on goal but those few were tough ones as both Coyle and Tech goalie George Cuculick were forced to make last minute skate saves. Three Fast Goals The Wolverines came on the ice with blood in their collective eye and. proceeded within eight min- utes to methodically tear the Huskies apart, and dispel any i1- lusions of a Tech win. When the ice dust had. cleared away, Mich- igan.was sporting a 4-0 lead and well out of the reach of the in- vaders from the north. Only a minute of play had gone by before Gary Mattson and Pat Cushing, playing for the first time as line-mates, had literally fought the puck down the boards and to Dale MacDonald behind the net. MacDonald centeredthe puck to the front of the net and saw a defenseman deflect it past Cucu- ('4' lick for what proved to be the de- cisive tally at 1:29. Steve Bochen made the score 3-0 on the prettiest goal of the evening at 7:01. Skating from the side right toward Cuculick, Boch- en faked a pass and flicked it into the corner when the Tech net- minder went for the fake. Lunghamer Scores. A little more than a minute lat- er, Joe Lunghamer balanced out the scoring by lines as he took Bill Kelly's face-off draw and slipped it in. The pace let up in the final minutes as the Wolverines were content to sit back and play a defensive, checking game. Early in the last stanza, Michigan had a number of opportunities to pad its margin, but some great goal- tending by Cuculick (who looked better than the scorewould indi- cate) kept the door shut. When the Wolverines finally broke his spell, it took another defenseman to do it. Ed Mateka, who has been blasting away at opposition goalies all season from Hockey Stats Starting Lineups MICHGAN Michigan Tech Coyle Goalie Cucick Watt Defense Akervail Palenstine Defense Sosiancic Bochen Right Wing Angotti Wvhite Center Coppo Hinnegan Left Wing Fabbro First period scoring: Michigan -- Palenstine (White) 8:09; Michigan Tech -- none. Penalties: Michigan -MacDonald (tripping) 16:39; Michigan .Tech - Akervall (hold- ing) 7:26. Second period scoring: Michigan --MacDonald (Mattson, Cushing) 1:19, Bochen (unassisted) 3:57, Lunghamer (Kelly) 10:00; Michigan Tech - none. Penalties: Michigan --Kolb (holding) 7:02, Hinnegan (tripping) 17:09; Michigan Tech -- Fabbro (tripping) 8:18. Third period' scoring: Michigan- Mateka (Hinnegan, Bob White) 5:22; Michigan Tech -- Angotti (Fabbro, Coppo) 7:11. Penalties: Michigan - Watt (interference) 6:30; Michigan Tech - Lauriente (tripping) 3:42. Saves by periods 1 2 3 Total Coyle 9 4 6 19 Cuculick 5 8 16 29 Scare by periods Michigan 1 3 2 5 Michigan Tech 0 0 1 1 the point, made one count as he drilled a hard slap shot into the upper corner of the cage. Production Line Ilalted Although Coyle kept Tech's touted "production line" of Paul Coppo, John Kosiancic and Ger- ald Fabbro shut out for the night, flashy sophomore forward Louis Angotti played the spoiler, tally- ing the lone Tech goal at 7:11 of the final period. blreaststroke and Ernie Meissner, diving. The squad's seniors swam only in the two relays. The visitors from north, of the border were only able to win the 200-yard backstroke, .taken by John Shortreed, and the 400-yard freestyle, which they won by dis- qualification. The outstanding individual per- formances of the evening were re- corded by Wolf and Darnton. Swimming the 200-yard indi- vidual medley Wolf took an early lead on teammate -Harry Huffa- ker, lengthened it to five yards in the backstroke, his specialty, and increased the margin to seven yards as he splashed home in the time of 2:07.8. By comparison Wolf's time would have been the fourth best In the nation in 1959 and must be labeled as outstanding for, this early ini the season. Darnlton, who also led all the way, covered the 220-yard free- style, course in 2:07.5, a time which would have placed him in last year's top ten. "Our performances were excep- tional," stated Stager, "Everyone, with few exceptions, swam fast- er than they had previously this season. I hope we can keep this kind of work up, I am really quite pleased," the usually pessimistic Stager added. SWim Stats ' 400-yard medley relay -- 1. MICH- IGAN (Smith, Clark, Gillanders, Hanley), 2. Western Ontario. Time: 3;46. 3. (breaks pool record of 3:46.6 held by Michigan, and school record of 3:46.4). 220-yard freestyle - '. Darnton M}),'2. Pendleton.(M), 3, Freema (W). Time: 2:07.5... 50-yard freestyle "--1. Floden (M), 2. Reilly (M), 3. Fowler (W). Time; ;23.3. 200-yard individual medley - 1. Wolf (M), 2. Huffaker (M), 3. Red- wood (WO). Time: 2:07.8. One-meter diving -1. Meissner (M}, 2. Jaco (M), 3. Meredith (WO) Points: 260.75. 200-yard butterfly - 1. Natelson (M), 2. Pettinger (M), 3. Fowler (WO). Time:-2:16.5... 100-yard freestyle - I. Babcock (M) 2. Heiber (M), 3. Gugino (WO) Time: :52.3.. 200-yard backstroke - 1. Short- reed (WO), 2. McMahon (M), 3. Han (M) Time: 2:19.4. 440-yard freestyle -- 1. Pendle- ton (M}, 2, Bro" n (M), Backus (WO}. Time: 4:4!3.2, 200-yard breaststroke - 1. Ware {M), 2. Bechtel (M), 3. Grace (WO) Time: 2:27.4. 400-yard freestyle - I. Western Ontario; 2. (Michigan disqualified) Time: 4:49.3. SPORT SHORTS: NCAA Keeps Limited Substitution in Effect M' Wrestlers Face Iowa State Associate Sports Editor grapple today, Coach Cliff Keen Another top-flight match today Michigan's wrestling team makes said yesterday. will pit Michigan's Jim Blaker shome debut today when it faces Olm wrenched his knee in prac- against Iowa State's Larry Hayes at 147 pounds. The Wolverine juni- wa State in Yost Field House at tice earlier this week, but has suf- ior is off to a fast start this Year, p m. ficiently recovered. His opponent beating tough opponents at Penn The Cyclones from Ames rank today will be ISU junior, Jan State and Syracuse on Michigan's Schwitters, a fourth-place finisher December eastern trip. iong the nation's top teams,and in the Big Eight last year. e Wolverines will be at virtually Fitzgerald, recuperating from a Unbeaten 11 strength for .the meet, which rib injury, will have his hands full In the 130-pound bout, Ypsi- omises to be the best of Michi- today when he faces Ron Meleney, lanti's Ambi Wilbanks hopes to n's four home engagements this Big Eight 177-pound champ who add to his 2-0 record at the ex- ason. ' is competing at 167 this season. pense of soph Dick Brown. Plagued Senior heavyweight Fred Olin Fitzgerald was undefeated in dual by injuries, Wilbanks sat out all .d junior 167-pounder Dennis meets as a soph last year and of last season, but is doing very tzgerald will both be ready to placed second. in the Big Ten. well now that he's healthy. ! e Volverines Open Big Ten Cage Season igainst Spartans at East Lansing Tonight By TOM WITECI Conference opener last Saturday, Scott, who just became eligible; Michigan opens its Big Ten bas- defeating Wisconsin. this week. Filling in for Bechinski bball season tonight in a game . will be sophomore guard Art ainst defending champion iich- Academic Casualties Schwarm. n State at East Lansing., Michigan State will be playing The Spartan's three other start-' A. sellout crowd of 12,500 will its first game without academic ers will be guard Dave Fahs, and n Jenison Fieldhouse to watch casualties, Art Gowens and Jim twc" of last year's regulars, forward e two traditional rivals battle Bechinski. Gowens, the team's Lance Olson and center Horace, out. The Spartans, although second leading scroer, and Be- Walker. Walker, a flashy perform-, rd hit by recent academic losses, chinski, a steady playmaker, were er in the pivot, is the team's lead-, heavy favorites to post their both starters. ing scorer and rebounder. ond Big Ten win of the season. Replacing Gowens at the for- Lost Just Two E'orddy Anderson's sqpad won its ward slot will be senior Dave Michigan State has lost just two contests-to defending NCAA champion California and to Brig- ham Young-while winning six. Michigan's record is just the re- verse, two wins and seven losses. Starting for Bill Perigo's squad will be John Tidwell and Scott Maentz at the forward slots. Tid- }{:, well is the team's leading scorer with a 20.8 average, while Maentz, just a sophomore, is the team's leading rebounder. Guards will be Terry Miller, sec- ond leading scorer with a 14.2 average, and sophomore Dick Clark. At center will be Lovell Farris. Tonight's game will match the two shortest teams in the Big Ten. The Spartans' tallest man is Olson at 6'4", while the Wolverines have three players at the 6'3" mark, Fritz Kellermann, sophomore 137-pounder, draws a tough as- signment in Les Anderson, Iowa State captain who has been beaten only twice in dual meets in two years. Michigan captain Mike Hoyles, with a victory and a draw so far, will attempt- to stay unbeaten when he faces Cyclone 123-pound junior Dennis Fredricks, a fourth- place finisher in the Big Eight in 1959. Similar Record Karl Fink, with a record similar to Hoyles', is paired against ISU junior Tom Green in the 177- pound bout. At 157 pounds, Michi- gan's Dick Fronczak engages Iowa State sophomore Larry Schulz. Today's meet will be scored in the customary fashion. Victories by fall Will count five points toward the winning man's team score. Decisions will be worth three points to the victor's team, and draws will add two points to each squad's total. Two years ago ISU Coach Harold Nichols' squad beat Michigan, 21- 7, in the only previous Cyclone- Wolverine meeting. Nichols, who won Big Ten and NCAA 145-pound titles under Keen in 1939, has coached Iowa State to one league championship and five seconds in his six years there. In dual meets, he has a 53-10-3 mark. By The Associated Press NEW YORK-The National Col- legiate Athletic Assn. yesterday delivered a surprise attack on un- limited substitution by formally recommending that no substantial change be made at . this time in the football rules governing sub- stitution. The NCAA, meeting in its 54th annual convention, approved by majority vote (90 to 46) a resolu- tion recommending its Football Rules Committee stick with cur- rent rules at least for the 1960 season. In other convention business, the NCAA:} 1. Overwhelmingly defeated a constitutional amendment that would have limited the athletic eligibility requirements for foreign athletes. 2. Approved a two-year program for controlled TV programs of col- lege football during the 1960-61 seasons. 3. Certified a new bowl game in New York City, to be played either Dec. 3 or 10. s* + NEW YORK - Coach Woody Hayes of Ohio State apparently has been dressed down by the Committee onEthics of the Amer- ican Football Coaches Assn. Hayes was accused last season of striking a Pasadena sports writer after Ohio State lost 17-0 to Southern California on the west coast. The Ethics Committee report, released yesterday by Paul Gover- nali of San Diego State, said in the case concerning the "alleged striking of a sports writer, the disposition of the case;was made known verbally to the individual involved." Hayes appeared in a highly agi-' tated state when he left the com- ,mittee room. . I the end of FINALS make reservations NOW for mid-semester TRAVEL JrikAI ... I E1 D I I'1 rmmmmmmmmmmmnmnnua amm ----------- -mm mm mm mmm I I U I I U i. " i i ii f you write funhy, or have ever thought you could, U #-. PES oN i E R i " Ir :- 1 i i I will}accept contri- U but ons for its U Gala Readers U Digest Satire Issue up to Jan. 15, ii II e 1 1 I r t i U i