SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2,1956 'THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE SUNDAY, DECEMBER 2,1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FIVE r Lee, Burton Lead coring in First VI' Cage Wain Woolley Wins Two Events In 'Gala' Swim Spectacle By BRUCE BENNETT Hopkins battled with winner Michigan sophomore Carl Wool- Chet Jastremski of the Toledo ley took top honors here last night j YMCA for three-quarters of the' in the 22nd Michigan Gala Swim-'individual medley, but faded in ming meet, in the first meet at the last lap and had to settle for the new Varsity pool. third when Woolley passed him. Woolley, one of the top sprinters Senior Fritz Myers took third in the country, captured first place place in the 100-yd. freestyle, but medals in the 100-yd. freestyle 1 fell to fifth in the 50-yd. free- and the 50-yd. freestyle and also style. Soph Dick Lahde placed placed socond in the 200-yd. mdi- fourth in the 100-yd. backstroke. vidual medley. Former Michigan captain Bur- In the 100-yd. freestyle, he bare- well "Bumpy" Jones won the 440 ly nipped Wolverine:freshman freestyle to no one'snsurprise. Leigh Corby, :51.7 to :51.8. Wol- The all-time Wolverine great verine sophomore Dave Tuggles splashed to victory in 4:52.3, well and Corby pushed him in the 5- ahead of Michigan freshman Tony yard freestyle, finishing two- Tashnic, who finished second. three, behind Woolley's time of :23.2" 1~ VL MPI1C TP A CK CnV Gymnasts Cop Fourth Spot In Midwestern Open Meet Special To The Daily on the trampoline in his first CHICAGO-Paced by Don Ton- college meet. ry, Illinois, 1955 NCAA Gymnas- Other Wolverine places were tics champions won the Midwest taken by Wayne Warren, fifth on Open Gymnastics Meet yesterday. the parallel bars; Captain Nick Tonry, NCAA all-around cham- Weise. seventh on the still rgs; pion, took a first in his specialty and Nino Marion tenth in the and a first on the parallel bars. all-around. Michigan was shut out The surprise team of the meet on the side horse. I was Florida State, who placed Illinois scored 91%1 points in third behind Illinois and Iowa, on winning; Iowa was second with the efforts of their only three 77%, points; Florida State third, participants. Jamile ._Ashmore, 67; Michigan fourth, 37%! ; -Daily-Dave Arnold CARL WOOLLEY-Michigan's sensational sophomore swimmer shown as he starts the 50 yd. freestyle in the Michigan Gala last night. Woolley took two firsts, in the 50 and 100 yard freestyle, and finished second in the 200 yd. individual medley. LEE SCORES-George Lee (3 scoring two of his 26 points. M points, seems to be giving Lee aI of Delaware forward Ray Crawfo Smith Tops Scoring Wit (Continued from Page 1) a lay-up by Ron Kramer and two quick baskets by Lee nullified the spurt. After making the second of these baskets. Lee fell to the floor in agony with what appeared to be a cramp in his leg. He recovered, however, with the aid of trainer Jim Hunt, but left the game. Delaware came close again with -Daily-John Hirtzel 35) Wolverine sophomore guard 9. C. Burton (24), who scored 24 helpful lift to overcome the efforts , ord (25). Fh 28 Points about two minutes to go, 72-68, but this time it was Pete Tillotson who shot Michigan back into a commanding lead with two tip-ins. Delaware didn't score again. Captain Kramer didn't start the game, but he made lengthly ap- pearances in both halves. His short duration of practice showed up in his play as his passing and shooting were considerably off. His rebounding, however, didn't seem to suffer in the football-to- basketball transition. Rebounding was the major fac- tor in the Wolverine victory. Both teams had a nearly equal shooting percentage-.398 for Michigan to .394 for Delaware, but Perigo' s squad grabbed 48 rebounds to Del- awares 21. A factor in this lop-3 sided figure was an inch and a half per man height advantage enjoyed by the Wolverines. The dominance under the boards gave Michigan not only control of the ball for the majority of the game, but also let them take 17, more shots at the basket, a fac- tor which will make the difference in any game. 4PFTITION TFNfI - Kimball Wins Another Michigan winner was Dick Kimball, who compiled 495.20 points to capture the Junior Na- tional A.A.U. low board diving championship. Michigan captain John Narcy placed third in the event, finishing behind Ann Arbor High star Alvaro Gaxiola.. In another fine individual per- formance, Paul Reinke. swimming unattached from East Lansing, set a new Michigan A.A.U. mark in the 100-yd. breaststroke at 1:04.8. This time was made in the qualifying heats in the after- noon, but Reinke came back strong in the evening to capture the finals in 1:05. Woolley and Kimball were the only Michigan winners, but sev- eral other Michigan performers gave good accounts of themselves. Sophomore Cy Hopkins placed sec- ond in the 100-yd. backstroke and came back for a third in the 200- yd. individual medley. Top Rookies NEW YORK (A')-Outfielder Frank Robinson of the Cincin- nati Redlegs and shortstop Luis Aparicio of the Chicago White Sox won in a landslide yester- day in the balloting for Major League rookies of the year for 1956. U.S. Wins 15 Olympic Track Tiles first on the still rings; Don Ham- ster, first on the high bar; and Al Ciccio, first in the free exer- cise. Coach Newt Loken's MichiganI team finished fourth led by the performance of Jim Hayslett who garnered a fourth on the high bar, a fifth on the parallel bars, a fifth on the still rings, and a fifth in the all around. Coach Loken said he was well pleased with Hayslett's perform- ance as well as the other team members. He had special praise for Ed Cole who finished fifth NFL Games The leaders in the NFL wiU be challenged for their top po- sitions this afternoon as the Chicago Bears meet the Lions in Detroit and the New York Giants host the Washington Redskins. In other games Green Bay meets the Cards at Chicago, Los Angeles plays at Pittsburgh, Philadelphia at Cleveland and San Francisco at Baltimore. Initial Win MICHIGAN FG Lee, g ................12 Shearon, g........... 2 Tillotson, c .........4 Tarrier, f............. 4 Burton, f............10 Kramer, c............ 1 Wright, g............. 0 Lewis, g...............0 DELAWARE FG Smith, g ..............10 Schiliro, g.............3 Brown, c.............. 3 Wickes, f..............1. Crawford, f............8 McKelvey, c........... 0 Mosher, c.............. 0 Louth, g ..............1 Mahla, f.............. 0 FT 2 0 2 3 4 0 1 FT 6 1 2 2 4 0 0 0 0 TP 26 4 10 26 2 a 1 TP 26 7 8 4 20 0 0 2 0 MELBOURNE (P)-U. S. Olym-j pians, having dominated the track and field phase of the 1956 Games with brilliance, now must look to their swimmers and divers in the final run with Russia for the un- official team championship. Despite a record-smashing 15 gold medals in men's track and field, in which the U.S.' piled up 232 points, America enters the last week of Olympic competition with only a 463 to 390% edge over Russia in the point stand- ings. Overall, the United States has bagged 28 gold medals to 18 for Soviet athletes, but in the remain- ing events, with the exception of swimming, the U.S.S.R. is expected to score quite heavily. In the opening of swimming competition, America gave indica- tions of being able to hold its own against the powerful Australia natators, finishing one-two in the men's springboard diving event, and taking a gold medal in the 200-meter butterfly, in yes- terday's competition. In the men's track and field competition, Bobby Morrow, of the United States won his third gold medal of the Games-tops for the men-by anchoring the American 440 meter relay team to victory in the world record time of 39.5. The U.S. 1600 meter relay team, with Charley Jenkins running his lap in a sparkling 45.4 won their event in 3:04.8. Mildred McDaniel of the United States unexpectedly won the wom- fn's high jump and set a new world record of 1.76 meters. In probably the top single event in the track and field competition, slender Ron Delaney, the Villan- ova student from Ireland, topped the greatest 1500 meter field ever assembled and took the metric mile title in 3.41.2 for an Olympic; record. The American basketball team wound up the Olympic tourna- ment, with a gold medal by de- feating Russia 89-55. COLLEGE FOOTBALL ROUNDUP: Army Holds Favored Navy to 7.7 Tie By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA - Favored Navy, stunned by a ferocious Army defense, sent sophomore fullback Dick Dagampat for the fourth period touchdown that provided a 7-7 comeback tie with the Cadets { yesterday. Navy received an official invita- tion to meet Texas Christian in the Cotton Bowl, but voted to turn down the bowl bid. The indication was that Navy officials decided the team's performance was not bowl-worthy. It was a fumble that launched Navy's late attack as third string end John Kanuch fell on a loose ball on the Cadet 27. Dagampat piled over his right tackle for the touchdown at 7:35 of the final period, after a drive had carriedI the Middies to a first down on the Army one foot line. Oklahoma Wins 40th Straight STILLWATER, Okla. - Okla- homa emphasized its claim to a second straight national football title, smashing its traditional rival, Oklahoma A&M, 53-0, yesterday. The win was the Sooner's 40th straight for a new all-time record, and the 116th consecutive .game, that the Sooners have scored. Georgia Tech Trounces Georgia ATHENS, Ga. -- Georgia Tech's powerful Engineers whipped arch rival Georgia, 35-0, yesterday, and immediately voted to accept a bid to the Gator Bowl. NHL SCORES Toronto 4, Detroit 0 Montreal 7, Chicago 0 USC Downs Notre Dame LOS ANGELES-Southern Cali- fornia beat the Fighting Irish ofj Not-e Dame, 28-20, yesterday in 3' Baylor 46, Rice 13 Auburn 34, Alabama 7 Mississippi 13, Miss. State 7 LSU 7, Tulane 6 Clemson 28, Furman 7 Miami 20, Florida 7 TCU 21, SMU 6 Missouri 15, Kansas 13 Bowl Games Tennessee, Baylor, Syracuse, and Georgia Tech accepted prized bowl bids as a result of yesterday's gridiron activities. 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