Y, DECEMBER 11, 1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TIMER' !, DECEMBER 11, 1956 TIlE MiCHiGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Goal in Final Seconds Gins Tie for MCihigan Wolverines Pull Goalie; Switzer Delivers Tally I 4 Lee, Burton, Kramer Lend Future Hope (Continued from Page 1) penalties, six in the opening frame, being handed out. Both teams struck quickly. Mich- igan opened the tallying at 3:01 when center Don McIntosh slapped at the puck just barely over the Toronto blue line. It bounced when it got about halflway to the cage, then caromed through the legs of the dazed Dunn, who played in place of Toronto's goalie of Sat- urday night, Al Cecutti. But less than a minute later, the blue-shirted Canadians retaliated, perhaps in more spectacular a manner. Their forward line of Brian, Anderson, Grant Mills and Ken Linseman roared down the ice, flipping the puck back and forth until the last possible second, when Anderson took a perfect pass on the left side and poked it past the helpless Howes. Toronto Defense Tough For a brief period after this, the play was relatively even, with both goal-tenders shining on several saves. The Toronto defense soon stiffened, however, and from then until late in the third period, it was almost all in their favor. Just before the two-minute mark of the second period, Anderson had a tremendous opportunity in front of the Michigan net from 10 feet out, but Howes did a quick sit-down to prevent the lead marker.. Not to be outdone, however, Anderson grabbed the disk from a center-ice mixup and bolted in from the left side to put his team ahead, catching the far corner of the cage on a perfect shot. Outstanding Saves Toronto pressed constantly after this, with Howes dropping to make several outstanding saves. But the Wolverines couldn't seem to get a sustained offensive threat together until their stunning last-period surge took place. Howes,; at times almost incred- ible, turned aside 30 shots, to Dunn's 22. Cubs, Cards Swap 10 Men In NL Trade C H I C A G O (P)-The Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cardinals com- pleted a 10-player deal yesterday involving front-line pitchers Sam Jones and Tom Poholsky. The transaction was expected to set off a chain-reaction of deals which have been hanging fire at the major league meetings. Only First Trade In what John Holland, vice pres- ident of the Cubs described as "only the first of several deals we have in mind," Chicago obtained catcher Ray Katt, relief pitcher Jackie Collum and infielder Wally Lammers along with Poholsky. The Cardinals acquired south- paw Jim Davis, catcher Hobie Landrith and utility player Eddie Miksis along with Jones, who pitched a no-hit game against Pittsburgh May 12, 1955. In ad- dition, the Cubs will get'twp play- ers from the Cards' triple A farm clubs by March 1. To Twice Def By JIM BAAD Even after a bad weekend by the record, Michigan's three basket- ball headliners, George Lee, M. C. Burton, and Ron Kramer, had nothing to be ashamed of. All three played well in the two losing causes, and therefore lend hope for better things to come. E Burton Flustered Burton had a somewhat slow night scoring against Wichita, but came back strong at Nebraska. "They had him pretty well scouted Friday night and played him real tight," said coach Bill Perigo. "I! think he got a bit flustered from lack of experience." Lee played well in both games. Perigo feels that Lee is beginning to get the feel of his guard posi- tion, but now he isn't sure that he can leave him there. "We're go- ing to be experimenting this week", he said. "Lee has been do- ing a fine job outside, but I'm be- ginning to think we'll have to move him inside." Perigo hasn't been getting the 'eated Basketball Squad results he's wanted from his un- derneath men and he figures that Lee's height and scoring ability will be of more advantage there. "Of course, that will give me a problem at guard," he said. BOTTOMS UP-An unidentified Toronto player lies upended in the background as Michigan de- fenders Neil Buchanan (11) and Ed Switzer (17) move in to help goalie Lorne Howes clear the puck from near the Wolverine net. The action took place last night as Michigan tied Toronto, 2-2, at the Coliseum. Bears Drop Cards from Eastern Race, To Meet Lions for NFL Western Crown As for the performance of Kra- mer - "He was the difference in there Friday night", said Perigo. "Without him they would have run all over us." Saturday, Kramer, along with the whole team suffered from a chain of unusual circumstances, which made playing basketball a rather difficult thing to do. Kramer had gotten up Satur- day morning at 5:00 to catchy a plane to New York where he was to attend the Look Magazine All- American banquet. When he ar- rived at the airport, he learned that his plane had been grounded. Team Grounded The rest of the Wolverines fol- lowed an hour and a half later to find themselves in the same fix. "We sat in the plane about three hours waiting for them to get it de-iced," said Perigo. ' Kramer's plane never left so he had Joined the group again. At Kansas City they had to wait for a train which finally took them as far as Union, Nebraska, and it was 40 miles overland by bus from there. Four Foul Out Perigo feels the tiredness was a major factor in the Nebraska loss and pointed to the four men who fouled out, Kramer, Jim Shearen, Pete Tillotson, and Ran- dy Tarrier, as proof. Foul shooting, the old Wolver- ihe nemesis, also took its toll. Michigan only hit for .500 in the Wichita game and .619 against Nebraska. "It hurt us badly," said Perigo. "We should hit up near .700 if we want to win." M. G.BURTON ..a bit flustered" <" - I ED SWITZER .. averts 'M' defeat By PAUL BORMAN In the "do or die" battle for both Chicago teams of the Nation-. al Football League, Sunday, the Bears edged the Cards, 10-3. The Bear victory set the stage for next week's showdown with the Detroit Lions who are currently leading the Western Division and knocked the Cardinals out of con- tention in the race for the Eastern Division title. Fans, Player$ Fight The annual roughhouse between the two windy city squads was highlighted by a free for all in the closing minutes of the game which found the fans as well as the play- ers expressing their emotions with fists. A blocked Cardinal field goal attempt on their 45 set up the only touchdown of the game. From that point, the Bears' crushing running attack led by rI fullback Rick Casares and half- back J. C. Caroline powered the pigskin into the Qardinal end- zone. Two Card touchdown runs by sensational halfback Ollie Matson, one for 83 yds. and another for 65 were called back because of penalties. Lions Roar After the first three minutes of the Motor City game, there were no doubts left in the minds of the Detroit fans because the Lions had jumped to a 14-0 lead over the Pittsburgh Steelers by capitalizing on two Steeler fumbles. The game quickly became a rout with the final score being Detroit, 45, Pittsburgh, 7. The New York Giants missed an opportunity to clinch the Eastern Division title as they dropped a' decision to the Cleveland Browns, 24-7. O'Connell Rallies Offense Quarterback Tom O'Connell, who the Browns picked up after George Ratterman and Babe Parelli were sidelined with injuries, put some life into the previously sputtering Brown offermse. O'Connell scored two tallies on quarterback sneaks and passed to fullback Fred Morrison for the final one. Sam Baker, whose talented toe has been the difference between victory and defeat on many oc- casions for the Washington Red- skins this season, kept them in contention for the Eastern Divis- ion crown by booting a 21-yd. field goal with 25 seconds left to give the Skins a 19-17 win over the' Philadelphia Eagles. Statistics FIRST PERIOD: Goals - 1- Michigan -- McIntosh - (Unas- sisted) 3:01; - 1 - Toronto - Anderson - (Lniseman, Mills) 3:52. -Penalties - Toronto - Elik (illegal checks) 7:08; Michigan - Rendall (charging) 9:14; Michi- gan - Rendall (tripping).14:33; Michigan - Hayton (roughing) 16:01; 'Toronto - Brodie (rough- ing) 16:01; Michigan - Rendall' (illegal check) 18:31. SECOND PERIOD: Goals - 2 -Toronto -- Anderson - (Mills) 2:06. Penalties - Michigan - Gour- ley (tripping) 8:09; Toronto - Kearney (tripping) 15:45. THIRD PERIOD: Goals - 2 - Michigan - Switzer - (Hayton, McDonald) 19:38. Penalties - Michigan - Ren-, dall (charging) 9:45; Michigan - Hayton (board checking) 10:48; Toronto - Fisher (tripping, mis- conduct) 10:59. By The Associated Press J White Sox Owner Dies 1 C H I C A G O-Grace Comiskey, president of the Chicago White Sox, died suddenly yesterday in her apartment. Death to the head of baseball's pioneerinng family apparently was caused by a heart seizure. She had been in poor health ever since suf- fering a serious heart attach in March of 1950. Mrs. Comiskey was in her late 60's. She seldom attended White Sox games but she was the club's absolute boss and ruled with an iron hand. Proposal Rejected C H I C A G 0-Hank Greenberg, Cleveland Indians general man- ager, yesterday withdrew his pro- posal for interleague play, it was learned at baseball's major league meetings. Greenberg had been crusading for each major league club's sea- son schedule of 154 games to in- clude 28 with teams in the oppo- site league. It was assumed that the Amer- ican League turned down the pro- Sport Shorts posal at its session yesterday. It was on the agenda of the joint meeting of the American and Na- tional leagues, but if the American circuit rejected it there would be no point to bringing. it before the joint group. The withdrawal fol- lowed. PRO STANDINGS Western Conference W L T Detroit 9 2 0 Chicago Bears 8 2 1 Baltimore 4 6 0 .0 San Francisco 4 6 1 Green Bay 4 7 0 Los Angeles 3 8 0 Eastern Conference W L T New York 7 3 1 .0 Washington 6 4 0 Chicago Cardinals 6 5 0 Cleveland 5 6 0 Pittsburgh 4 7 0 Philadelphia 3 7 1 Pct. .818 .800 .400 .400 .364 .273 Pct. .700 .600 .545 .455 .364 .300 This Week In S ports Saturday, December 15 BASKETBALL-Butler-Yost Field House-8:00 p.m. HOCKEY-McGill-Coliseum-8:00 p.m. 'Kansas, Sa Francisco top First AP Cage Poll COMPLETE FORMAL RENTAL SERVICE Tice &Wren. 1107 S. UnIversity Ave. '- = = == USSR Takes Olympic Team Point Title With Victories in Wrestling, Gymnastics i 10trleS1H rS 1RHlRRII4S By AL WINKELSTEIN After suffering what to them was a humiliating defeat in the 1952 Olympic Games, the Soviet Union has spent the last four years in intense preparation for the recent Games at Melbourne. The Russian athletes ri ere not to be denied either. Aftertrailing in the unofficial team point totals for top honors for most of the Games, the Russians spurted in the last few days of competition and walked away with the mythi- cal team title. Australia Third The USSR completely dominat- ed the gymnastics, wrestling and women's events. Final point totals gave the Soviet Union 722 com- pared to the U.S.'s 593. Australia, lead by its great swimming team finished third, far behind the top two with 278%/ points. In the summary of Olympic medals, Russia garnered 99, while the United States had 77. Of these There will be an important meeting of the "M" Club Thurs- day night at 7:30 p.m. at which time the club group picture will be taken. -Tom Maentz, President Russian athletes picked up 37 Gold Medals for winning perfor- t mances, compared to 32 for the Americans. As was expected the Americans scored heaviest in the track and field competition, setting a mod- ern Olympic record with 16 Gold Medals. Russia got five, and theirf only two in the men's competition went to its great runner Vladimir Kuts. Kuts rates as probably the out- standing single performer in the Games, with his wins in two of the most grueling events, the 5,000- and 10,000 meter runs, Three other performers also de- serve special recognition for their great efforts in the Olympics, Bobby Morrow, the Texas sprinter, Murray Rose, the Australian dis- tance swimmer, and Ron Delany, conqueror of the world's greatest mile runners. Morrow Wins Three Morrow was the only triple medal winner of the men's track and field events taking top honors in the 100- .and 200-meter dashes, and anchoring the world record breaking 400-meter relay team. Rose was a double medal winner in swimming, beating the great U.S. swimmer George Breen in both the 400- and 1500-meter free- style. Delaney, the Villanova star run- ning for Irelan(!, defeated the world's greatest mile runners in the Olympic metric mile. In the field with Delaney were 11 other runners who had broken the Olympic record in the 1500, and five others besides Delaney who had run a mile in less than four minutes. Among the other prominent Am- erican stars in the track and field events were Hal Connelley, who gained- an unexpected victory in the hammer throw; Tom Court- ney, in the 880-meter run; Char- lie Dumas in the high jump; Milt Campbell, the ex-Indiana foot- ball star, in the decathalon; Lee Calhoun in the 110-meter hurdles; Parry O'Brien in the shot put, andj Bob Richards in the pole vault. Richards and O'Brien were re- peaters from the 1952 Games. Hungary, which was picked to finish third with its great distance runners, water polo team, swim- mers, and fencers could do no better than fifth. It appeared that Soviet guns in Budapest are not exactly conducive to fine athlete performance. CI I-M Scores SWIMMING Residence Hall Gomberg 34, Reeves 23 Taylor 40, Williams 17 Fraternity Chi Psi 39, DUi 17 VOLLEY BALL Professional Fraternity Nu Sigma Nu 4, Delta Sigma Delta 0 (Championship game) Law Club 4, Alpha Omega 0 (Third Place game) Phi Delta Chi 4, Alpha Kappa Psi 1 (Fourth Place game) By The Associated Press Wilt Chamberlain, Kansas' 7' sophomore whiz with a 45.5 point average in his first two college games, has helped his team move out front in the first Associated Press basketball poll of the 1956- 57 season. A total of 58 sportswriters named Kansas as the number one team on the strength of. the Jay- hawker's early season wins over Northwestern and Marquette. Kansas polled 896 points. The San Francisco Dons, with their 59 game winning streak are in second place with 18 first place votes and 675 points. The Dons, minus many of their top stars of last year, have knocked off four opponents. The point standings are figured on the basis of 10 for first, 9 for second and so on. The top teams, won-lost records through Dec. 8 and first-place votes in parentheses:, 1. Kansas (2-0) (896) 2. San Francisco 3. Kentucky 4. Louisville 5. Southern Methodist 6. North Carolina 7. Illinois 8. N. Carolina Statei 9. Alabama 11. Ohio State 10. Canisius 12. Western Kentucky 13. West Virginia 14. Kansas State 15. Dayton 16. Niagara 17. Iowa State 18.'Oklahoma City 19. Oklahoma A&M 20. Seattle (4-0) (3-0) (3-1) (2-0) (2-0) (2-0) (3-0) (3-0) (3-0) (4-0) (1-0) (3-0) (131) (2-0) (98) (2-1) (62) (2-1) (61) (3-0) (55) (1-1) (48) (3-1) (45) (3-1) (32) (675) (514) (403) (401) (350) (338) (271) (252) (220) (225) (180), STYLING TO PLEASE YOU!- Try our: 0 WORKMANSHIP 0 PERSONNEL 0 SERVICE The Daseola Barbers Near Michigan Theater WANTED, RECENT MATHEMATICS GRADUATE FOR DIGITAL COMPUTER d PROGRAMMING Advanced degree preferred. 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