PAGE SrX 'CHI; MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, DECEMBER 14, 1959 Dodgers Swap Robinson to Giants for Litt lefie Id f Red Wings Edge Rangers, Reibel Fires Winning Goal i DIFFER FROM PRO'S: College Wrestling Rules Trade Shakes Brooks' Star, May Retire from Baseball J By The Associated Press D E T R O I T-Two power-pla goals sparked the Detroit Re Wings to a 2-1 win over the Nev York Rangers last night. The Wings capitalized on Rang penalties to score its pair in the first and third periods. The winning tally for the Wing was scored by "Dutch" Reibel i the third period, also while th Rangers were shorthanded. . The Rangers were only allowe three shots on goal in the firs and third periods, but in the mid dle stanza they fired 18 shots o Wing goalie Glen Hall and one b Danny Lewicke creased the net t avert a shutout. * * * Bruins Win 3-2 B OS T O N- Boston's Bruin minus goalie Terry Sawchuck edg ed the Chicago Black Hawks 3-2. *y Real Chevrefils poked in the win- d ning counter after Hawk Jack Mc- w Intyre knotted the score at two all with his second goal of the er evening. he Substituting for the ailing Saw- chuck was rookie Norm Defelice gs who participated in his first NHL n game e * . * Montreal Trounces Toronto ad MONTREAL-P a c e d by Jean I- Beliveau's hat trick, the Montreal - Canadiens routed the Toronto n Maple Leafs 6-2 to remain hot on by the heels of the leaders of the to NHL. The Bruins continue to main- tain a three point lead over sec- ond place Detroit which leads s, third place Montreal by a lone - point. LOOK AT' THIS! 'U' DUTCH REIBEL' ...scores tie-breaker 13Bruins .Lose Star Goalie BOSTON (A-Boston hopes for the Bruin's first National Hockey League championship in 15 years sagged yesterday with the loss of goalie Terry Sawchuck for an in- definite period due to a blood in- fection, infectious mononucleosis. Sawchuck, three-time winner of the Vezina Trophy will be out of action for as long as two months. The 26 year old goalie is con- sidered the key to the Bruins' rise to league leadership. In 26 games, he has allowed only 56 goals. By PETE MARUDAS Collegiate wrestling is a vastly different sport than the profes- sional wrestling which has gained so much popularity through tele- vision. In the collegiate style, the matches are conducted on a cir- cular mat which is 25 feet in di- ameter. The match which is nine minutes long, is divided into three separate periods. The initial period is known as the "standing" period because both contestants wrestle from a stand- ing position and attempt to take the other man to the mat and gain control of him. In the second period both men are down on the mat, but one, man is given the advantage. The man with the disadvantage is on all fours. The other wrestler kneels at his side and puts one arm around his opponent's waist and the other around hip elbow. The situation is reversed in the third period, with the contestants exchanging positions. Matches are won either by a decision on the basis of points, or by a pin in which one wrestler's shoulders are on the mat for three seconds. In team scoring, matches won by falls count three points each, those by decision count two. During the match, points are awarded foi the execution of cer- tain patterns and holds. Two points are given for a take-down, near fall, and reversal. One point is given for an escape, predica- ment, and for riding time ad- vantage. Riding time is the amount of time that each man is in control of the other. At the conclusion of the match, if one on the wrestlers has over a minute time advantage over his opponent, he is awarded the point. Three points are scored if one wrestler scores a near fall. BEARS SEEK REVENGE: Lions Face 1ears for Western Title 4.. ICE CUBES KEG BEER 114 E. William St. Between Main and Fourth Ave. Phone NO 8-7191 OPEN Daily 10 A.M. to 12 P.M. Sundays Noon to 7 P.M. "oBEER E Old German Restaurant ANN ARBOR'S FINEST, FINEST IN MUSIC AND FINEST IN FOOD TAKE OUT DINNERS Select from our entire Menu Open from 11 A.M. to 12 P.M. With meals served until 8 P.M. - Closed Thursdays Phone NO 2-0737 By PAUL BORMAN This Sunday's game between the Detroit Lions and the Chicago: Bears will climax the race for the championship in the Western Div- ision of the National Football League. Going into the final battle of the season, the Lions are in first place, one-half game ahead of the Bears. In the previous game between the Lions and Bears this year, the Lions won in a walkaway; but no one is predicting that this will happen again. In their 20 meetings at Wrigley Field dating back to 1934, the Lions have only been able to emerge victorious on five occas- ions and only twice since the Lions entered the NFL have they been able to win two games from the Bears in a season. If the Lions are to emerge as Western Division Champions, they will have to break a jinx. In the history of the NFL, there has never been a case in which a team has jumped from the cellar to the division title at a single season. Lions At Top Strength The Lions will be at full strength for the all important match with the "Monsters of the Midway." Guard Jim Salsbury will rejoin the squad after being sidelined with an injury for two weeks and rookie halfback Don McIllhenny will be I JACKIE ROBINSON ... traded to arch-rival NEW YORK (A')-Jackie Robin- son, one of the most controversial figures in baseball, was sold to the rival New York Giants by the Brooklyn Dodgers yesterday for a reported $30,000 and pitcher Dick Littlefield. The deal startled everybody in- cluding Robinson. Robinson, who will be 38 on Jan. 31, has talked often of retiring. Uncertain about his status in 1957, he asked the Giants for a few days to think it over. Obviously shocked by the news, first relayed to him Wednesday night by telephone from both in top shape after seeing only limited action in last week's game with Pittsburgh. Directing the Lion backfield will be quarterback Bobby Layne who hit for 11 of 19 aerials for 210 yards and two touchdowns in the previous meeting with the Bears. At fullback will be 6'4", 250 lb. Leon Hart who has an average of 4.7 yards per carry. In last week's game against the Steelers, Hart, who is a determined runner, ran head on into Henry Ford of the Steelers and knocked him un- concious for a few minutes. Left half will be filled by rookie Hopalong Cassady who, along with Mclllhenny, has bolstered the Lions' running attack. Gedman at Fullback Gene Gedman, who returned from the Army this year and turn- ed into the team's leading ground gainer, will probably be alternat- ing with Hart at fullback and Mc- Ulhenny at right-half. Paddy Driscoll's Chicago Bears happen to boast of the most powerful offense in the Western Division. Fullback Rick Casares, the' league's leading ground gainer, Bobby Watkins, an elusive half- back, and J. C. Caroline, who was converted to offensive halfback from the defense, make up quite a terrifying running attack, Directing this running attack will be the job of quarterback Ed Brown who is having himself quite a year in the NFL. Brown is a pin- fDodger and Giant officials, Rob- insonsaid he realized "baseball is like that." Charles Feeney, Giants' vice president, said he had talked with Robinson and had been told he was undecided about his future. "He's going to get in touch with us as soon as he has made up his mind," said Feeney. It was learned that Horace Stoneham, Giants' president, had called Robinson Wednesday night after completing the deal with Walter O'Malley, Dodger president, and assured the player that he would have no money problems with the Giants. Robinson report- edly received $33,000 last year, a cut from his 1955 salary. Robinson worked hard to get in top condition last spring and won the starting third base job from Randy Jackson, who had been ex- pected to chase him out of the lineup. Batted .275 Instead of riding the bench, Jackie appeared in 117 games and finished with a .275 batting aver- age with 15 doubles, 2 triples and 10 homers. Hebdrove in 43 runs and stole 12 bases. Against the Giants he was even more impres- sive, batting .394 at the Polo Grounds where he stole seven bases. Since joining Brooklyn in 1947, the first Negro ever to play in the majors, Robinson has compiled a lifetime batting average of .309. He started his Brooklyn career at first base and has played second, third and the outfield. Billy Rigney, manager of the Giants, said at his home in Wal- nut Creek, Calif., he plans to play Robinson at first base in place of Bill White, the 1956 regular who now is in the Army. Littlefield, who will be 31 in March, was with Pittsburgh, St. Louis, and New York last season, finishing with a 4-6 season record. At various times he also has pitch- ed for the Boston Red Sox, Chi- cago White Sox, Detroit, the St. Louis Browns and Baltimore. At his Detroit home, Littlefield said he was surprised "but I'm not unhappy about it. I'll be get- ting a lot more runs to work with." This may be only the first in a series of moves by the Dodgers, who are interested in unloading some of their older players. "I hope we're not finished trad- ing yet," said Buzzy Bavasi, Dodger vice president, "We could use another outfielder." SPORTS Night Editor AL WINKELSTEIN { a WE HAVE ICE CUBES e WINE " SOFT DRINKS HARLON HILL ... Bears' star end t Whlr.t'Q emma at Pratt, & w1/ V Vb . 0 Whitney Air cl THE HOUSE THAT JET ENGINES BUILT Engineers and scientists at Pratt & Whitney Aircraft developed the piston engines that wrote aviation history for three decades. Then came the jet age, and again it was the P & W A team that came up with the mighty J-57, most powerful production aircraft engine in the world today. Behind such accomplishments, of course, stand many development tools...tools like the house that jet engines built: the Andrew Willgoos Laboratory. Located on the eastern bank of the Connecticut River in East Hartford, this windowless, thick concrete-walled laboratory has been growing almost continuously since its initial "completion" in 1950. As more powerful, far more advanced turbojet engines are conceived, the means for testing them in development stages must itself under- go carefully calculated alteration. Hence, authorship of today's specifications for Willgoos Laboratory properly belongs to the experimental engines it is testing today. Similarly, tomorrow's proportions, capacities and equip- ment will depend upon the requirements of tomorrow's power plants. Behind the ponderous walls of this multi-million-dollar structure lies the wherewithal to simulate many of the rigorous flight conditions to be encountered by military and commercial aircraft. The range of these conditions must vary from ambient pressures and temperatures in a static condition at sea level all the way to the pres- sures, temperatures and high speeds involved in high- altitude flight. This, then, is the house that jet engines built; at the s same time, it is the house that tomorrow's engines will change and re-build. - 4. % *~ J*~ *~*** - - Ill L raft /l II g SUITS, DRESSES, COATS Cleaned and pressed ... 99c TROUSERS and SKIRTS Cleaned and Pressed ... 50e SAME-DAY SERVICE SUN CLEANERS Fourth and Washington Phone NO 2-3488 point passer and is able to throw long passes to his favorite targets. Those favorite targets probably present the biggest worry to the Lions. They are Harlon Hill, Bill McColl and Gene Schroeder. Each one ranks with the top flankers in the league, and combined with Brown's deadly arm are three big reasons why the Bears are even money to win the game. For Better Hair Design Try EDWARD LUCAS 0 X s )( & e6,, 715 N. 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