I uesday, August 10, 1.976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven Tuesday, August 10, 1.976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Eleven ~jthe IZsai4 By The Associated Press Diver enrolls at 'M' AIR FORCE ACADEMY, Colo.-Air Force Capt. Phil Boggs, who won the men's springboard diving gold medal at the Montreal Games, said yesterday he plans to leave the military, and might attend the University of Michigan Law School. Boegs, 26, an instructor in astronautics and computer scieuces at the Academy, said his plans are indefinite, but he has applied to the University. Boggs, from Akron, Ohio, entered the Air Force in 1971. Yesterday, he presented an exhibition of the dives that won him the gold medal at Montreal. Mayor Larry Ochs of Colorado Springs, among the 2,000 persons who watched Boggs' exhibition, presented him a Bicentennial medal from the city. Hall of Famers COOPERSTOWN, N.Y.-Robin Roberts and Bob Lemon, pre- meier pitchers during the 1950s, were among the six new members inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in ceremonies hampered by rain here yesterday. "It's downhill from here on," said Lemon. "This is the whole thing. My whole life." Roberts said simply, "I'm just very thrilled." Also inducted were Fred Lindstrom, a lifetime .311 hitter in the National League; former American League umpire Cal Hubbard; Roger Connor, home run king in pre-1900, and Oscar Charleston, Negro League standout during the 1920s and 1930s. Both Connor and Charleston are deceased. Roberts won 20 games or more six straight years starting in 1950 with the National League champion Philadelphia Phillies. Lemon posted seven 20-victory seasons including an over-all 207-128 record, all with the Cleveland Indians. The house Ali built MIAMI--Muhammad Ali says his lawyers won't like it, but he's going to buy a new home for sprinter Houston McTear and his family. All said he'd buy the house after hearing that McTear was one of 10 family members sharing a small rural home-some call it a shack-in Baker, Fla. "God blessed me and made me the most famous person on earth," Ali said in a telephone interview with the Miami News from his training camp in Berrion Springs, Mich. "And I've made $41 million boxing. So I hate to see a boy in that condi- tion. I always think about myself and the other boys who have been in the ghetto with great talent. And I want to help them." "So I'll get McTear a house. Even if he can't pay me back. I'll get him a house. Something nice, no shack." "I'd go broke if I helped everybody," Ali added. "But I want to help this boy . . . Anybody who his risen to the heights he has under the poor conditions under which he's lived deserves to be helped." The Chicago White Sox' irrepressable owner, Bill Veeck may be out to out-Finley Charlie Finley as his team unveiled his nowest secret weapon Sunday for the hometown crowd-short pants. Here Jerry Hairston puts his best leg forward to avoid being picked off at first in the first game of a doubleheader against Kansas City. There may be something to it, the Sox won the opener, but donned the traditional knickers in the nightcap and lost, 7-1. Stockholmtrack me sees Olymp ic reruns; Stones in STOCKHOLM (A') - John Walker of New Zealand missed his own world mile record by 3.7 seconds and American Dwight Stones avenged his poor Olympic showing by beating Jacek Wszola of Poland in the pole vault yesterday at an inter- national track meet here. Walker, the Olympic 1,500 Wynn doesn't choke this time, meters champion, lunged past West German Thomas Wessing- hage at the finish to win the featured mile race for the Dick- son Trophy in 3 minutes, 53.07 seconds. Stones, the world record hold- er from San Diego, cleared 7 feet, 5 2inches, a new meet record but well off his world mark of 7-714 which he set last Wednesday in Philadelphia. Stones finished third in the rain at the Olympics, and Wszola won the gold. Wszola was second at 7-4%, and American Mike Winson was third, also at 7-414. OTHER American winners in- cluded Olympic broad jump champion Arnie Robinson and Jim Bolding in the 400-meter hurdles. Also, Carlos Sousa Lo- pez of Portugal ran history's sixth fastest 10,000 meters. Lopez, silver medalist in the Olympic 10,000 meters behind Finland's Lasse Viren, set a new Portugese record of 27:42.8 and finished 3.2 seconds ahead of runnerup Dick Quax of New Zealand. MANY Africans, including world 1,500 meter record holder and former mile record holder Filbert Bayi of Tanzania, with- drew after learning the New Zealanders were coming. Tanzania led the boycott of almost 30 African nations to the Olympics protesting a tour of segregationist South Africa by New Zealand's rugby team. The men's 100 meters went to Guy Abrahams of Panama in 10.4 with James Gilkes of Gu- yana second in 10.6. wins rainy ENDICOTT, N. Y. (fit - Bob Wynn, who has a history of blowing the big ones, settled down yesterday, birdied a pair of holes and finished with a 13- under-par 271 to win the rain- plagued $200,000 B. C. Open Golf Tournament- Wynn, fighting off the chal- lenge of rookie Bob Gilder, birdied the last two holes they played-the 17th and 18th-and pocketed $40,000 as he won his first major Professional Golfers Association title. Gilder, who barely missed a birdie on the 18th, had to settle for a 272 and $22,800. Each had final-round 69s. Terry Diehl, who finished Sun- stay with a 67-274, shared third place with Jerry McGee, George Knudson and Ed Sneed. A year ago, Wynn led by two strokes in the Philadelphia Open, B.C. golf tourney then had a quadruple bogey- par-71, 6,868-yard En-Joie Golf eight on the 71st hole. Just two Club and interrupted fourth- weeks ago, he was in front by round play with 11 players two strokes in the Canadian still on the course. Open and faltered as Jerry Pate surged to victory. After Wynn sank his 20-foot But Wynn was not to be de- putt for the birdie-two on the nied in the B. C. "I felt com- - 17th, Gilder made good from fortable after a good night's two feet out to match Wynn. "I sleep," he said yesterday at the thought I got him at 17 when I 17th tee. He birdied that hole hit a six iron in there and he with a 20-foot putt. was 16 or 17 feet away," said Gilder, winner of the Phoenix He was about to tee up at Open this year in his second that hole late Sunday when a start as a touring pro. "But he heavy downpour struck the made his." 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