TARE MICHIGAN DAILY 'PACM. AR'VVV T H E I C H G A I D A I Y ' A F u ' W ~ 7 u i ? L 3Z~s Gymnasts Succeed In Bid for Second Jorgensen Ends Career With 24 as Cagers Fall (Continued from Page 1) .iii THE By JIM BAAD Michigan's gymnasts left last Thursday morning for the Big Ten Meet full of championship op- timism, ran smack into the most powerful gymnastic juggernaut the Conference has ever seen on Fri- day and Saturday, and came home very pleased with their second place on Sunday. "We're the best of the Big Nine," said Eddie Gagnier during the ride home, and the impact of the statement went deep. Illinois had been unbeatable. After Friday's qualifications, every other team just conceded the championship for the seventh time to the Illini, and all set out for the only prize left in reach, second S p lace. "Why was Illinois so strong?" many say. "How could they win by such a landslide when Michi-. gan beat them during the dual meet season?" These are ques- tions that have to be answered and the answer is obvious after having watched the meet in pro- gression. The Illini of the dual meet season were not the Illini of the HOCKEY TICKETS General Admission tickets for both g a m e s of this weekend's WIHL championship series between Michigan and Michigan Tech will go on sale Friday morning at 830 at the Athletic Administration Build- ing. There will be no sale be- fore this time. All reserved seats have been sold. Big Ten Meet. Three n e w, S just eligible, sophomore sensations made the difference for the con- querors from Champaign. Don Tonry won the all-around and on Saturday picked up a total of 43 points. Gavin Blair was second in the all-around, tied for the side horse championship, and picked up 34 points on Saturday. Mike Karon worked two events, tumbling and trampoline, and picked up 16 points. This is a total of 84 points in Big Ten Meet Competition from three men who weren't even around when Michigan won the dual meet. Therefore whine Illinois was running away with practically every event, the competition wa hot and heavy right under them. Jack Burchfield and Wayne Warren should be mentioned be- cause each of them performed the best they have yet. Burchfield who had performed steadily if not brilliantly on the trampoline all season, came through with s seventh. This effort and Warren's eighth on the parallel bars gave Michigan seven decisive points. --- Michigan Men of Distinction e Try our Specialty Collegiate cuts * 11 Haircutters to please you. The Daseola Barbers near Michigan Theatre A run down on all the Big Ten Champions is as follows: All- Around-Don Tonry of Illinois, 1,516 points; Free Exercise-Rol- and Brown of MSU, 272 points; Side Horse-tie Gavin Blair of Il- linois and Sam Bailey of Iowa, 261 points; High Bar-Jim Jackson of Minnesota, 253 points; Trampoline -Dick Albershardt of Indiana, 283 points; Parallel Bars-Ed Gagnier of Michigan, 263 points; Flying Rings-Don Leas of MSU; Tumb- ling-Dan Lirot of Illinois, 219 points. fishing touch on the Spartan vic- tory. Tillotson scored right be- fore the horn to make the final score a little closer. Senior guards Tom Jorgensen and Barron made their final bows triumphant ones before the large crowd of 7,000-both performed brilliantly. Jorgensen scored 24 points to lead both teams, but his tremend- ous floor play continually rattled the Spartans. He seemed to for- get that he had a bad leg, playing the whole game-and never letting up. JULIUS McCOY ... 20 against 'M' 'GUTS' SWIMMING:' Spirit .Lifts Swimmers to Second Barron, Michigan's other "one- legged" guard, also gave every- thing he had, even though one of his knees was taped profusely. He scored 14 points, but his courage- ous play couldn't quite elevate his team past the squad from East Lansing, Randy Tarrier played well. He was a giant under the backboards, and stuck to McCoy like glue on defense. Ron Kramer, not taking as many shots as usual, scored 14 points. Tillotson, with 13, was the only other Wolverine to break into double figures. The END MICH. STATE G F P T McCoy, f...........9 2-3 1 20 Ferguson, f......... 3 8-10 1 14 Peterson, c .... 5 2-4 1 12 Bencie, c ........... 0 0-0 0 0 Wilson, g........... 3 0-0 2 6 Godfrey, g ......... 6 0-2 1 12 Quiggle, g ..........1 4-4 3 6 Hedden. g .......... 2 2-2 3 6 S Totals ...........29 18-25 12 76 MICHIGAN G F P T Tarrier, f ..........4 0-1 3 8 Tillotson, f......... 6 1-3 4 13 Lingle, f ...........0o 0-0 0 0 Kramer, c .......... 6 2-3 4 14 Jorgenson, g .......10 4-4 2 24 Barron, g .......... 3 8-10 3 14 Shearon, g.......... 1 0-0 2 2 Totals.........30 15-21 18 75 Mich. State .......... 40 36-76 Michigan ............. 40 35-75 By ED SALEM Wolverine swimming fans should be proud of their team today. They should be proud of their team, supposedly demoralized by the recent Wardrop suspension; a team seemingly without any indi- vidual stars; a team which the' experts thought was Michigan's worst in 30 years.; yet a team which somehow placed second in the Big Ten meet. It's true the squad had no Al Wiggins, no Bill Woolsey, but they had something else -something most teams lack. As one of. the swimmers said after the meet, "When you cut one or two tenths of a second off your best time, it means you're up for the meet, but when you cut two, three, or even four seconds off your timeias some of the boys did tonight, it takes more .than spirit-it takes guts." Capt. John O'Reilly took third place in the 1500-meter race, the first event of the meet, and in doing so cut more than 10 seconds off his best time. When this hap- RCA jM ICTOR pened, you could tell by the reac- tions of his teammates that there was something different about this Michigan team. Something which previously had gone unnoticed. From the way the Wolverines acted-their cheers, the expres- sions on their indivicual races - you could see the desire-the desire to uphold the great Michigan swimming tradition. A tradition which has placed Michigan no lower than third in the conference in over 25 years. O'Reilly's third place just seem- ed to start a chain of events. In rapid-fire order, Bobby Knox sur- prised with a fourth in the 50-yard freestyle; reliable Jim Kruthers took third in two backstroke events; Don Adamski, on the trip mainly for experience, took sixth in the 100 yard backstroke; De- laney set a new big ten record in the 200-yard butterfly; O'Reilly took a fourth, and then another third in the 220- and 440-yard freestyles. And it didn't end there, for John Murphy, with a protective padding on his head, took a fourth in the low-board diving, while Charlie Bates took fifth. Every time Murphy dove, the crowd held 'its breath for the day before, he hit his head on the board. Then in the high diving, it was Bates, this time with John Narcy, who placed for the Wolverines; and then another surprise, Jim Thurlow's second place in the breast stroke. Breaking the old Big Ten record, Thurlow was cheated out of having lis name in the record books, when Van Leer Hoffman of OSU beat him by a tenth of a second for still another record. Then last, but certainly not least, Fritz Myers' great third place in the individual medley, losing, only to Wiggins and Sonny Tan- abe, two-of the world's best. Anyway you look at it, they're a proud bunch of boys today, and they deserve it, too. SAVE-ON-RECORDS COUPON BOOK HOW IT WORKS! You buy this amazing money saving booklet for $3.98 and you get FREE! Any $3.98 RCA Victor Album in yourdealer's store immediately (a 12" Long Play or 3-record 45-EP) FREE! Two new $3.98 RCA Victor Albums during the year SAVINGS Of as much as $2 every month on new RCA Victor popular or classical albums for the next twelve months... as much as $24.00 in all PLUS The thrill of owning new recordings of the world's greatest music by the world's greatest artists before they are released to the Public. 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