g THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 25,1959. THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 25,1956 U ~ Gagnier Outstanding As Illini Win Special To The Daily CHAPEL HILL, N. C.-By virtue, of a sparkling 25-point perform- ance by Ed Gagnier, Michigan's one-man gymnastics team placed first in the NCAA Championships held here last night. Representatives from 26 differ- ent schools were competing in the tournament. Gagnier took a second in the all- around, second in the parallel bars, and a fourth in the high bar, com- peting against 30 or 40 men in each event. Illinois' Big Ten champs, boast- ing a 10-man squad, also emerged victorious here with a total of 123 points. The individual star for the Illini was Don Tonry, who repeated his Big Ten championship form in winning the coveted all-around title. Penn State, Florida State, and UCLA also finished ahead of Mich- igan in the tourney. Right behind the Wolverines in standings were Michigan State, Navy and Los Angeles State. 'M' Shines at Chicago Relays Wallingford Runs Top Two-Mile Time, Yet is Still Nipped by Deacon Jones RON WALLINGFORD .. shines at Chicago ED GAGNIER ... .'M' places fifth THE EARLY BIRD GETS THE WORM! Special To The Daily CHICAGO - Michigan's track captain, chunky Ron Wallingford, ran the best collegiate two-mile in the country this year last night, only to lose to Iowa's ineligible Deacon Jones before 16,000 en- thusiastic onlookers in the annual Chicago Daily News Relays. The pace was too much for ex- Olympic great and world record- holder Horace Ashenfelter, who dropped out of the running early. The winning time turned in by Jones was 9:04.9. Wallingford was clocked in 9:05.1. An idea of the pace can be gar- nered from the fact that the first mile was run in 4:34. The mile- and-a-half time was 6:48 - ten seconds faster than Wallingford was able to run the 11/2 mile run last year. At this-the 112-mile point- Ashenfelter, who was setting the pace, faltered, ae dWallingford was forced to take over. This, ac- cording to Coach Don Canham, spoiled his chances, for if Ashen- felter had stayed in front, it is assumed that he could have worn Jones down and Wallingford could have passed In the stretch. With one lap to go, Jones at- tempted to take the lead, but Wall- Netmen Eye Spring Jaunt Thirteen matches have been scheduled for Michigan's Big Ten tennis champions this season. There are six matches scheduled for the home courts, with the opener against the University of Detroit, April 26. Included in the away contests will be a three game southern trip during spring vacation. The net- ters will meet Vanderbilt, Georgia Tech, and Georgia in Dixie. The schedule: April 2 at Vanderbilt Apri1 4 at Georgia Tech April 5 at Georgia April 26 Detroit 'April 27 at Wayne May 2 Western Michigan May 4 Wisconsin May 5 Indiana May 7 at Notre Dame May 11 Illilnois May 12 at Ohio State May 14 Michigan State May 19 at Northwestern ingford held him off. Then, with about 10 yards to go, he barreled past Wallingford to victory. Third and fourth were Spartans Selwyn Jones and Henry Kennedy, respectively. In other events, Michigan's mile- relay team raced to victory in its section of the University mile relay in an undetermined time, said by Canham to be around 3:20. The official timing was 3:45.3, but this poor timing was due to the fact that the anchor man ran an extra lap. The quartet consisted of Laird Sloan, George Gluppe, Dick Flodin and Bob Rudesill. Runner-up was Wisconsin. Michigan's Eeles Lanpdtrom placed third in the pole vault with a leap of 14'6". The event was won by ex-Ohio Stater Jerry Wel- bourne in 15'/". Second was Bob Richards, who managed 14'9". Wolverine Brandan O'Reilly high-jumped 6'4", good for a third- place tie. Ernie Shelton of Los Angeles and Floyd Smith of Chi- cago tied for the one-two spots with leaps of 6'61". The other Maize and Blue entry -Jim Pace--ran well in the 50- yard dash to take third in his heat. Only the first and second-place finishers in each heat qualified for the finals, however. SPARTANS LOSE COLUMBIA, S. C. (M.)-Mich- igan State's Ray Collard hit t*o home runs and, a triple yester- day, but the Spartans lost the opening game of their 15-day spring training baseball tour to the University of South Caro- lina, 7-5. LORNE WORSLEY, the New York Rangers' workhorse netminder, was no match for the power-laden attack of the Montreal Cana- diens last night, the Canadiens skating to a 3-1 Stanley Cup victory at New York. Wings Win in Overtime; Canadiens Top Rangfers TORONTO,(RP)-Fiery little Ted Lindsay, who watched Toronto score two goals while he was serve ing penalties, tied the score late in the third period last night and counted again in the sudden-death overtime as the Detroit Red Wings edged the Maple Leafs, 5-4, in the third game of their Stanley Gaup semi-final playoff for a 3-0 lead in their best of seven series. The Red Wings, defending cup champions, now lead the best of seven series, 3-0, with the fourth game to be played here Tuesday night. The Maple Leafs, playing with- out their great center, Tod Sloan, who was injured in the second game at Detroit Thursday, held a 2-1 lead the end of the first period and increased it to 3-1 after the second frame. Then the Red Wings, a terrific comeback squad, counted three times in the final 20 minutes to tie Toronto at regulation time ending in a 4-4 tie. That set the stage for Lindsay, who had scored the fourth Detroit goal In the third period, to drive home a short shot from the goal mouth at 4:22 of the sudden death overtime period. Montreal 3, New York 1 NEW YORK (P)-Bert Olmstead, who set a National Hockey League record for assists this season, scored twice last night to lead Montreal toa 3-1 victory over the. New York Rangers and enabled the Canadiens to take a 2-1 lead in their Stanley Cup semi-final play- off series, The high-scoring Canadiens played it unusually close to the vest. Only Guy Gendron was able to pierce their tight defense, netting the Blueshirts' lone goal to tie the score at 16:02 of the opening per- iod. i 4 4 A $i t; I' FOR THIRD STRAIGHT: Varsity Rifle Squad Defeats Spartans 4 Michigan's Varsity rifle team scored its third straight Big Ten win yesterday at Michigan State, trouncing the Spartans, 1388-1317., Dr. J. B. Stetson, the squad's coach, viewed this triumph as a significant one. "It looks like Michigan again in the Big Ten meet," he observed. Leading the Wolverines again THE DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISER GETS THE RESULTS Phone NO 2-3241 1-3 P.M. Assignment for today: . . I FLORSHEIM n s.s..w ..s , . .....A....".r1. .e v rt v.v:: "":}:Oa mc;o o >o o =>0 SYLVIA STUDIO DANCE i 4- at the Special Spring Rate of just *75 I '4. No reading! No writing! No research! Just stop in and we'll show you the smartest shoes in town. Florsheim is at the head of the class when t tn stvlennd muuality. And for value- B ; I I