THE MWICHIGAN DAILY Canadiens Edge Maple Leafs,_3-2 TORONTO QP).- The Montreal Canadiens moved within one game of an. unprecedented fourth straight. National Hockey League. Stanley Cup last night by defeat- ing the Toronto Maple. Leafs 3-2 before 13,329 fans at Maple Leaf Gardens. The victory gave the Canadiens a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven finals. Ab McDonald, Ralph Backstrom and Bernie (Boom Boom) Geof- frion' scored in rapid succession in'the third period after Bill Har- ris had broken a scoreless tie with a Toronto goal at 3:45 of the third. Short Lead Harris tipped in a rebound on Gerry Ehman's 30-foot drive from the right wing for the Toronto goal at 3:45. The lead lasted only a little more than six minutes. McDonald picked up his first goal of the playoffs; tying the score at 1-1 at 9:54 by shooting the puck through Johnny Bower's legs while the Leaf goaltender's vision was obscured by Tim Horton. Backstrom, standing at the right side of the net, whacked McDon- ald's goal-mouth pass behind Bow- er at 13:01 as Montreal moved out front for the first time. Geoffrion, taking a pass from -ienri Richard, fired a 20-footer from right wing into the corner of the Leaf cage for a 3-1 lead at 13:01. At 18:36 of the final period, Frank Mahovlich scored for Tor- onto, closing the gap to one goal. Mahovlich Gets Final The final Toronto goal came on a wild scramble in front of the Montreal, goal. Ehman drove the puck into the midst of several players and Mahovlich tapped it in. In the final 55 seconds, Coach Punch Imlach of the Leafs bench- ed goalie bower in favor of a sixth forward but he couldn't pull it out of the fire.- LACK OF INTEREST: Fraternity Separation Proposal Dies Quietly By DAVE LYON 16 championships decided so h The recent proposal by some "Despite this domination fraternity men, to separate the large houses, nobody seemed : large- and small-sized houses in terested in pushing the separat I-M athletic competition, has died proposal," Cross continued. for "lack of interest," William Earl Riskey, I-M director, a Cross, Assistant Dean of Men in -that at the most "only three charge of fraternities, said yes- four of the smaller houses favoi terday. the plan." Even the houses with the fewest Popular Proposal members, which would stand to Proposals similar to this ; gain most by a division of the 42 have been advocated before, a houses into two groups based on will probably continue to be ma size, were cool to the proposal. Cross said. But Riskey was of 1 "Almost all- of them objected to a opinion that the disadvantages plan which would split the fra- splitting fraternities into two di ternities," Cross said. sions outweighed the advantag Reasoning Is Good "I don't think a division wou "Actually, there is a pretty good help the small houses enough rationale for such a plan," he warrant its being done." said. Under the present setup, against each other for I-M all- ,year and individual sport cham- pionships, the houses with the most members usually dominate. w hi s PK T For example, in 1957-58 I-M competition, 16 of the 23 cham- pionships were won by the six True baseball weather greet largest houses, and in the all- I-M competitors as diamond a year standings seven of the nine tion continued iyesterday. largest houses finished in the top A hard working Lambda ( 10. This year the six largest fra- Alpha "B" team ignored the s ternities have captured 12 of the, and concentrated, on Bill Yor JUNIOR TOURNEY STAR-Joe Brisson, a Detroit sophomore, is one of the keys to the balanced varsity golf team that Michigan Coach Bert Katzenmeyer plans to start against the University of Detroit tomorrow. BRISSON, YOUNGBERG COUNTED ON: Two Sophs Crack M' Golf Lineup By JIM BENAGH Can Michigan's golf team be blessed with the wonderful case of sophomoritis that the Wol- verines used to plague the Big Ten basketball, track, swimming, wrestling and gymnastics circles this year? "PURCHASE FROM PURCHASE" During Our Annual "Spring Housecleaning" Coach Bert Katzenmeyer !says he hopes so, and has turned to former junior tournament aces, Joe Brisson and Dick Youngberg. Katzenmeyer plans to fit this duo into his balanced six - man team that will meet the University of Detroit at Detroit tomorrow. Brisson lists a Detroit Junior Championship, the Michigan State Jaycee Championship and a ninth- place finish in the. National Junior Jaycee finals among his honors. Both Katzenmeyer and Brisson admit the latter wasn't as low- scoring as was hoped on the Easter trip to North Carolina. Youngberg, of Northbrook, Ill., has a background similar rto Bris- son. He won his state junior Jaycee meet in 1956 and finished second the following season. He also placed 19th and 15th in the Na- tional Jaycee meets in those years. Like Brisson, he found spring trip problems, despite two wins and a loss. "I had trouble cutting across the ball," he said. "But I've been eliminating the difficulty since then." Ntmn Must Adapt Game To Suit Various. Surf aces Katzenmeyer says that these' sophomores must fit in the over- all balance of the team if Michigan is to improve last year's ninth place finish in the Big Ten. By BUZ STEINBERG To the novice tennis player, the court's surface has little meaning. In contrast is the expert who, puts a certain value on every type of court on which he plays. On each of the five predominant types of playing surfaces - as- phalt, clay (dirt), grass, cement or wood - the ball reacts differ- ently, and in turn the player must alter his type of play to corres- pond with this reaction. backcourt and take advantage of my speed." Frank Fulton, whose court play a1most duplicates Sassone's, agreed. Fulton is one who "likes to- run around." Rounding out the advocates of a clay-type court is Larry Zeit- zeff, a transfer student who has earned- his niche on the squad. Referring to the indoor wood- type courts which provide the tennis ball with a low, fast bounce Zeitzeff commented, "Wood courts are' great for helping one get into shape, because footing' is better and it is easier to move up to the net." 3 Days tOnly I 11 ARGUS C-3 All metal Slide files reg. $2.95 $1.59 MOVIE CAMERAS up to 50% off $3750 Camera only I GADGET BAGS 25% to 50% off .on.,entire stock SLIDE PROJECTORS up to 50% off BARGAIN TABLE Filters, Flash Equipment, Chemicals Frames-cases, etc. . . 5c and up 35brm CAMERAS from $14.95_ 500 watt Keystone K-75 Movie Projector Reg. $74.95$48.50 11 I U I Now Is th e ime to BUY. Sale Ends Monday, April 20 at 8:30 P.M. -Store Hours 9-5:30 Monday 9-8:30 P.M.- I Convenient Parking available l I . * A LA * I r~ t. I I I 11