Sunday, _March 30' 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven Sunday, March 30, 1969 THE MICHIGAN DAILY y MM IrI Indiana wins, Wolverines finish in fourth, edge out Yale by four points swimming crown Cyclones take wrestling title; Cornell places second in finals Special To The Daily i BLOOMING'ON-An unherald- ed Michigan team snuck off with fourth place in the NCAA Swim- ming Championships that ended last night , As expected, Big Ten Champion Indiana ran away with the team' championship, scoring a record 427 points, 81 higher than the pre- vious record, which they set last year. Also finishing as predicted were southern California, which wound up second with 306 points, and third place Stanford, which totaled 190. However, Yale, which was ex- pected to challenge the front-run- ners, fell to fifth place by scoring only 160 points. The Wolverines edged out the Eli's with 164 points, as Michigan's divers came through with 21 points on the three-meter board, Wolverine diver Dick Rydze led the way as he totaled 497.5 points for third place. Indiana's Olympic' bronze medalist d ~o of Jim Henry and Win Young were the only ones to top the Michigan sophomore. Senior Jay Meaden's seventh and junior Bruce McManaman's elev- enth provided just enough points to put the Wolverines in fourth. UCLA with 102 points and sixth place, Long Beach State at 82, Ohio State at 61, plus Oregon and Florida who both had 45, rounded out the top ten. Michigan State finished 13th with 38 points. t On the final day of competition Indiana swimmers took three firsts to bring their number of event victories to a record-tying nine. 'Ruggers nip Cleveland; play raged Michigan's ruggers yesterday swept a pair of games against the Cleveland Rugby Club. The first team, despite ragged play, won 8 to 6, while the second string play- ed a steady game and parlayed their performance into an 11 to O final tally. The uneven performance of the first unit is disturbing in view of the fact that the Big Ten tour- nament is a mere two weeks away.! Cleland Childs; and John Bow- ers each scored tries. for the Wol- verines, but their scores came as a result of individual determina- tion rather than precision team- work. Makeshift halfbacks M a x Gail 'and Dave Mildner played M well for Michigan, as did J o e 1 Penoyer. Tom Fagan helped by, converting the second try, but the! sloppy individualism of the squad nearly cost them the game. Cleve- land's score came as a result of. two penalty goals. The Wolverine second team! fielded a mixture of veterans, walking wounded, and novices. The forwards played with g r e a t spirit, and made up for having to play a man short for the great- er part of the second period. Per- severing running brought tries by Gary Jones and John. Weeks. Colin Warbrick converted one of these and scored another. Next Saturday afternoon, t h e two squads travel to East Lansing to take on the Spartans. M o r e consistency in the quality of play will be necessary for Michigan to match today's results. Sensational freshman Marki Spitz $... took first for the third time, Hoosier captain Charlie Hickcox won his second event, and Jim Henry~and Win Young were again 1-2 in the diving. Throughout the meet there was little doubt that Indiana would breeze to their second straight championship, as their coach, < Counsilman repeated his state- ment last year, "This is the best team I've ever had." In the first event on the last x day, Long Beach State freshmen Hans Fassnacht became NCAA champion for the second time in as many days by setting a newa American record in the 1,650 yard freestyle with a 15:54.2. Southern Cal's Andy Strenk was second, while Indiana's Bill Baird, B i g Ten freshman champion in t he event, was third, WOLVERINE CAPTAIN LEE Olympic gold medalist Charlie butterfly yesterday in the fi Hickcox came back to win the 200 taken a surprise second in yard backstroke with a 1:53.6, af- rlyta sh pre h ter being upset in the 100 yard .relyta sh pre h dorsal event last night. Mark Ma- ys SAR WINS: dr oiaUSC was second, while FLE SZ A R WIN Miciga'sGary Kinkead w as. third. Kinkead's time of 1:56.46, was two seconds better than his, effort last year in the NCAA's when he was sixth. Special To The Daily PROVO. Utah - Iowa S t a t e, led by its undefeated 137-pound champion Dan Gable, ran away from heavily-favored Oklahoma in the 1969 NCAA wrestling cham-, pionship here last night. The Cyclones, who had finished a distant third in the Big Eight tournament, piled up 104 points to far surpass the Sooners' 69 total. Oregon State overtook Michigan State for third place when heavy- weight Jess Lewis routed -Michi- gan State's Jeff Smith, 7-1, for the championship. Gable scored his fifth straight pin of the tourney in the finals when he pinned Marty Willigan of Hofstra in 4:17 to extend his un- daily sport's NIGHT EDITOR: BILL DINNER beaten string to 140 matches - Lewis and Smith were undefeated his entire high school and col- for the year and had pinned seven lege career. of their eight combined opponents Michigan finished in ninth place in the tournament. with 27 points, and boasted one The expected battle turned into finalist in captain Pete Cornell, a flop, as Lewis completely domi- who took second at 177 when he nated his bewildered Spartan op- was pinned by Chuck Gene at ponent. The match was so lopsided 7:26. Jesse Rawls fought off all that Smith was twice penalized opposition to take third place by points for stalling. Oregon State. overwhelming Oregon's im Van- which trailed the Spartans 57-55 dehey, 12-3 in the consolation in the fight for third place going finals 'Cornell's match was "ex- into the match, thus edged the tremely exciting," according to Spartans by one point. Michigan Assistant Coach Rick In evaluating Michigan's per- Ray. formance in the meet Coach Bay "Pete was ahead during the en- commented. "We didn't have a tire match. He had a 4-3. advant- great team this year, but the team age in the final period and also performed well in the tourna- had riding time. Then he went for ment." a one-leg takedown, but Gene FINAL TEAM sTANDINGS caught it, and pinned Pete with a Iowa state 104 cradle." Oklahoma 69 Rawls, who dropped a one-point Oregon state 58 Michigan State 5 decision in the semifinals Friday Cal Polytech 52 night, decisioned Jim Vandehey of Oklahoma State SI Oregon, 12-3, to gain third place UCLA 38 honors. Earlier he had squeezed Miclmiga n 27 by Navy's Ben Welsch, 1-0, to Temple 22 earn his way to the final consola- tion round. The biggest disappointment to the crowd of 7500 which packed Smith Field House was the fea tured heavyweight match. Both The third in a series of meet- ings with representatives of athletic organizations sponsored by the Advisory Committee on Recreation, Intramural a n d 2 Club Sports will be held Mon- day afternoon in the Student Activities Building, SGC cham- bers at 4 p.m. The meeting will be held with athletic chairman from the Lawyer's Club, Ma- ratha Cook, East Quad, the Residential College. All inter-P C ested students are invited. Pete Cornell BISBEE displays the form which gave him sixth place in 100-yard nal day of the NCAA swimming championships. Bisbee had earlier the 200-yard butterfly and swam on Michigan's fourth place medley Wolverines to an unexpectedly high fourth place in team standings. Iv-T- In the 200 yard breaststroke,' Oregon freshman Mike Dirksen was a surprise victor, winning in 2:08.6. Stanford's Dave Shilling was second, while Indiana's Don1 McKenzie, the 100 yard breast- stroke champion, was third. Mich- igan's Bill Mahoney was timed at 2:12.0 for eleventh. In the 100 yard freestyle UCLA's Francis Heath score a surprise triumph as the almost unknown Bruin sprinter was timed in a winning 46.24. Southern Califor- nia freestylers Don Havens a n d Dan Frawley finished second and third, while Michigan State's Mike Kalmbach was fourth. By taking the 100 yard butter- fly, Indiana freshman M a r k Spitz became the only triple win- ner of the three day meet. His 49.69 clocking nosed out Prince- 111.1 ne, Wildcats split. pair TUCSON-The last game of a paw's .second in three decisions series proved lucky, once again for this season. Coach Moby Benedict's Michigan Michigan scored first in the baseball team as the Wolverines game in the fourth inning. A single by John Arvai and a dou- defeated the fifth-ranked Univer- sity of Arizona Wildcats, 6-5, in the second game of a doubleheader yesterday afternoon. The Wild- cats won the opener. 4-3. The victory marked 'the second time this spring that the Blue lost the first four games of a series before capturing the finale. Sophomore Tom Fleszar, hurled the Wolverines to their victory. Fleszar yielded only three hits and one run to Arizona in the first six innings before he tired in the seventh. The win was the south- . gVn V En Nr ble by Pete Titone coupled with a wild pitch produced a 1-0 Blue lead. Arizona scored in the bottom half of the inning, but the Wol- verines scored another c.ingleton in the fifth when Chuck Schmidt singled and moved to second on an error. Steve Forsythe sacri- ficed him to third and '.he Wol- verine shortstop scored on an in- field hit by Jim Hosler. The lead zoomed to 5-1 in the sixth frame on the strength of a bunt single by Arvai, a double by Pete Titone, a triple by FleszarI A fine pitching performance by and a squeeze play by Schmidt. Jim Burton was wasted in the Singles by Glenn Redmon and opener of the doubleheader. Bur- Mike Rafferty produced the sixth Michigan run in the seventh. ton struck out seven and walked The Blue's 6-1 lead looked safe six during his eight innings on the going to the bottom of the seventh mound, but one shaky inning and last inning but a last inning proved to be his undoing. rally almost overturned the Wol- v verine lead. The Wildcats had four Arizona bunched three singles runs in, with the key hit being a and two walks in the second homer by Joe O'Brien, and had inning to produce all four runs in two runners on base when reliever their victory Gerry Christman struck out pinchtei hitter Danny Joe Ryan to end the Steve Forsythe ledthe Blue with game. three hits in the contest. ton's Ross Wailes who finished se- cond in the event for the third year in a row. Wolverine Captain Lee Bisbee, Big Ten champion in the e v e n t, finished sixth with a 51.19, while Michigan's Juan Bello was sev- venth. Southern California's 400 yard freestyle relay of Dan Frawley, Ross Kidder, Frank Heckl, and Don Havens won the final event ; in a record 3:02.8. Indiana finish-,I ed second and Stanford wast third.I SEU D GAME MVICHIGAN (6) Schmidt, ss Forsythe, 2b Redmon, lb Hosler, lb Kraft, if Orr, If Rafferty, cf Arval, rf Titone, c Fleszar, p Carrow, p Christman, p TOTALS ARIZONA (5) Driscoll, 2b Ballard, ss Rokey, ph F(O'B~rien, lb AU R III Prest, rf 3 1 2 Gump, if 3 0 1 Rhodes, of 4 1 1 Williams, j 4 0 1 Anderson, 3 4 0 0 Wicklund, p 0 0 0 Grossman, 4 0 1! Johnson, c 3 2 2 Hinton, ph 3 1 3 Bridges. p 3 1 iCarey, p 0 0 0 Jacome, ph 0 0 O1Shields, p t=-----Ryanph~ 31 6 12 y AB R H! 3 1 0 MICHIGAN 2 0 0 ARIZONA b ph pr 0 1 0 3 1 1 3 I11 1 0 0 2 1 8 1 0 0 3 0 0 o 0 0 I 0 0 2 0 1 2 0 1 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 24 5 5 113 1-6 12 4 100 4-5 5 4 Wings tie Hawks for fifth Canadiens grab Eastern tit By The Associated Press history of 'the National Hocke DETROIT-The Chicago Black League last night, defeating tli Hawks fought the Detroit Red second place Boston Bruins 5-3. Wings to a 1-1 tie last night, but The Bruins, needing a sweep c it wasn't enough to keep the their home-and-home weeker Hawks from a last place finish in series with Montreal to catch t- the East Division of the National Canadiens, fell behind quickli Hockey League. staged a rally, but never qui Both teams meet again today caught up. in Chicago for their final game of TORONTO - Third-period goa the season, but the Black Hawks by Bob Nevin and Ron Stewa: needed victories last night and carried the New York Range today over Detroit to escape the past Toronto 4-2 last night, a cellar ahead of the fifth-plase Red suring them of a third-place fir Wings.. ish in the National Hockey Lea It was a blazing slap shot by gue's East Division. Bobby Hull on a power play in the The victory gave the Rangers second period that tied the game four-point edge over fourth pla after Detroit had gone ahead 1-0 Toronto going into their seaso earlier in the period on apower- finale against the Maple Leafsa play goal by Alex Delvecchio. New York Sunday. Hull's goal was his 57th of the Nevin's 31st goal of the seaso season and his 105th point. a S r' 5th career tall TOTALS 000 000 I I I ls art 3rs s- n- a. a .ce on at an llv Knickerbockers, Hawks roll on By The Associated Press The ball-hawking New Y o r k! Knickerbockers, led by Walt Fra- zier, Dave DeBusschere and Bill Bradley, stormed by Baltimore 107-91 yesterday and surged into a commanding 2-0 lead in their Eastern Division semifinal series in the National Basketball Asso- ciation playoffs. New. York, which had not won two consecutive playoff games since 1953, broke open the game late in the third period and then cruised to its sixth victory in its last seven games against the Bul- lets, who finished on top in the East during the regular season. LeW offered $3 million; East stars clobber West By The Associated Press MINNEAPOLIS -- Commissioner George Mikan announced' yesterday the American Basketball Association and the New York! Nets were offering Lew Alcindor a $3.25 million package to sign. Alcindor had disclosed Friday night he was going to sign with the Milwaukee Bucks of the rival National Basketball Association. Mikan disclosed the offer at a news conference in the ABA of- fices and displayed a $1 million cashier's check that he said would be given to the 7-foot-1% inch All-American for signing. The Milwaukee organization reportedly offered Alcindor $1.4 million over five year. In addition to a $1,000,000 contract, the ABA offer includes a $62,500 a year annity for 20 years, a $500,000 cash bonus, ten per cent of the proposed ABA television contract, during its five year term, plus five per cent of the New York Nets franchise. * * * * * INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. Six-foot-1 Neal Walk of the University of Florida led the East to a 104-80 victory over the West yesterday in the seventh annual' College All-Star Game sponsored by the National Association of Basketball Coaches. The East, coached by Tony Hinkle of Butler, never trailed in the game, which gave it a 4-3 lead in the series..# 00 K * a NEW YORK - Australia's Tony Roche is missing something special-his lucky white tennis shorts. The size 33 shorts, which he had worn three years, vanished Thursday and his snappy serve dis- appeared Friday as the 23-year-old top-seeded pro was upset 6-4, 6-4 by Sain's Andres Gimeno in the semifinals of the $25,000 Madison After 19 lead changes and 12! ties in which neither team led by more than six points, the Knicks pulled ahead to stay, 77-75, on! Frazier's rebound. DeBusschere added a jump shot and Bradley two free throws as t h e margin grew to 84-77 entering the final period. Then, with the score 86-80, they Knicks, controlling the boards and stealing the ball consistently, ran' off nine straight points, -four by DeBusschere and three by Bradley. The Bullets never recovered. Dick Barnett led the balanced New York offense with 27 points,! four more than Frazier, who cele- brated his 24th birthday Saturday. DeBusschere added 19 points, 1 in the second half, Willis Reed had! 18 and Bradley 16, 12 after inter- mission. ATLANTA, Ga. - Two free throws by Walt Hazzard with nine seconds remaining yesterday pre- served Atlanta's hard-fought 116- 114 victory over San Diego and gave the Hawks a 2-0 lead in their! National Basketball Association! playoff series. Hazzard's foul shots staved off a determined San Diego comeback paced by rookie guard Rick Adel- man which saw the Rockets nearly overcome a 13-point lead which Atlanta carried into the final quarter. The Hawks apparently had: clinched the victory in the thirdI period when Zelmo Beaty and Bill . .. | .j'.. " | | Bridges tallied 26 of Atlanta's 32, STEVE FORSYTHE, a Senior second baseman from Lyndhurst, points and drove the Hawks into Ohio, had another fine day in yesterday's doubleheader against an 83-70 lead. the University of Arizona. Forsythe had four hits in the twinbill. But the Rockets came roaring The Bu ers t o nd g sme - a fe r lo sin the ope nr l-. from behind and began closing the The Blue won the second game, 6-1, after losing the opener, 4-3. gap rapidly as Adelman and fel-!~ ~-~ - - low rookie Stu Lantz began hitting IOHAN STARS: from outside. Beaty ended the night as the game's leading scorer with 31 points while Bridges had 25 and Lou Hudson, the hero of Thurs- Vo ver1Rne iii day's Hawks' victory, pumped in 21. The Hawks also got 16 points from Joe Caldwell and 14 from Special To The Daily Senior Rod Sumpter grabbed Walt Hazzard. CORAL GABLES.Fla. - The second place on the squad fin- ,men capture fifth d NUL Detroit 1, Chicago 1 New York 4, Toronto 2 Montreal 5, Boston 3 NBA, Atlanta 116, San Diego 114 Atlanta leads best-of-7 series 2-0 New York 107, Baltimore 99 New York leads best-of-7 series 2-0 AAU Championship Armed Forces All-Stars 62, Akron 45 Exhibition Baseball New York (A) 5, Pittsburgh 1 New York (N) 5, Philadelphia 2 Washington 5, Houston 1 Cincinnati 9, St. Louis 7 Kansas City 4, Minnesota 1 Detroit 10, Boston 7 San Diego5, California B 4 Atlanta B 7, Montreal 3 San Francisco 9, Cleveland 5 Seattle 8, California 5 Chicago (N) 10, Oakland 4 Los Angeles 3, Atlanta 2 Baltimore vs. Chicago (A), at Miami Fla., night College Basketball East All-Stars 104, West All-Stars 80 4. V NC3. liL 1.11' ., 1 G. 1 1 Michigan golfers rounded up their spring tour yesterday by capturing fifth place in the an- nualMiami Invitation Tourna- ment. The day began gloomily with a steady cold rain and high winds, but the patented Miami sun finally broke through and lifted the Wolverine spirits enough to have everyone on the team shoot in the 70's. Keith Mohan, after his disas- terious 83 of the previous day snapped back to life and fired a 74 to tie for the low Michigan score of the day and lowest combined total of 303. Assistant Coach Bill N e w- ton was extremely pleased with Mohan's performance and not- ed that, "Keith helped t h e team in both play and spirit." ishing with a 76 to supplement his superb third round 71. Randy Erskine, who was third in last year's Michigan open, ended up in third spot with 310. Newton was very pleased with the team's scoring and noted, "The teams fifth place finish was excellent when you consider that they beat every Big Ten team entered (all finished way in the back), and that the' top four teams are able to play all year round." Newton was also very enthu- siastic over the teams future prospects, "The team is strong with a lot of depth and we could sweep the Big Ten title." The Wolverine linksnen will have an opportunity to size up all their Big Ten competition when they play in the Robert Kepler Invitational at Columbus in two weeks. Because of the closeness of the finishers Newton was unable to commit himself on who would be chosen for the number one spot, but he noted, "Mohan, Sumpter, and Erskine will battle it out for the top spot while Christenson will probably hold down fourth. The last two spots will be fought for between the rest of the team." * * * offset a third-period marker by MONTREAL - The Montreal Toronto defenseman Tim Horton Canadiens clinched their second after Jean Ratelle gave the Rang- straight East Division champion- ers a 2-1 edge early in the second ship and 20th title in the 52-year session. S- - - -- - -- Keith Mohan Rod Sumpter Randy Erskine Mark Christenson Gene Denk Rocky Pozza 74 72 78 80 80 81 78 79 81 85 76 84 83 71 75 83 78 83 74-303 76-305 74-310 76-316 76--320 77-320 1., 2. 3. 4. 6. 7. TOP SEVEN LEADING TEAMS Florida 1146 Florida State 1148 Miami 1184 New Mexico 1193 MICHIGAN 122P Duke 1229 Southern Florida 1230 TH NKING ABOUT not wz l NO DELI HOUSE TODAY (it will resume in Fall) 0V ( PASSOVER? JEWISH MUSIC FESTIVAL I join us for PART Il: SUNDAY, MARCH 30-2:30 P.M. 2 SEMINARS AN FXPFRIMFNTAL CREATIVE SEDER . I ,I .' I I