THE MICHIGAN DAILY w 9UTHERN CAL KEEPS CROWN: Tankers Finish Fourth in NCAA Meet Puckmen Take NCAA Crown 4 ' ! s , 'S By MIKE MEYERS er event, most experts thought Special To The Daily that 5:00.0 would have been good NEW HAVEN-Michigan's re- enough, but Farley's 4:58.0 was building swimming team took a two-tenths of a second off the small six-man squad plus three slowest qualifying 'time. As it divers to the 41st National Col- turned out, 4:58.0 would have legiate Swimming and Diving been sufficient for a fifth place Championships and chalked up finish as two of the quailfyers 30 points for a fourth-place finish. went over five minutes. Southern California repeated It was the same story in the last year's championship with 96 200-yard freestyle. Farley's trial points to Indiana's 91 and Yale's time was 1:46.8, and the slowest 87. As expected, new NCAA rec- qualifyer was 1:46.6-again :00.2 ords were established in each of second. theds5 eventsn h The California sophomore, who the 15 events, holds the Wolverine varsity rec-, The divers, Ed Boothman, Bruce ords in the 200, 500, 1000, and Brown and John Candler, per- 1650, finally got into the spotlight formed excellently in the one- on the last night of the three-day meter event. Boothman finished meet. He led most of the way in second to AAU and Japanese the 1650-yard endurance race and champion Rick Gilbert of Indiana, finished with a brilliant "time of and Brown and Candler followed 16:56.1, a full 27.9 seconds under fourth and fifth. Boothman, a the NCAA record set by Jon Kon- junior, also repeated last year's rads of USC last year. runner-up showing at three- Good for Second meters. His performance was only good, Two Disappointments enough for second place to USC's Freestyler Bill Farley suffered amazing Roy Saari who touched two disappointments as, his times out in 16:49.5., Senior Tom Dudley for both the 200- and 500-yard placed fifth in the event. Dud- race failed to qualify. In the long- ley's clocking of 17:29.3 was over t Hoosiers, Eclipse Elis, Whip Wolverines... Graef (Princeton), 1:56.2 (NCAA record. Old record 1:56.9 byTom Stock, Ind., 1963); 2. McGeagh (U- SC), 1:56.9; 3. BARTSCH (MICH), 1:57.9; 4. Goettsche (Yale), 1:58.1; 5. Stock (Ind), 1:58.2; 6. Mann (N. Car), 1:59.0. 200-YD. BREASTSTROKE-1. Bill Craig (USC), 2:12.1 (NCAA record. Old record 2:12.7 by Cet Jastremski, Id., 1963); 2. Kiefer (Yale), 2:13.1; 3. Doesburg (USC), 2:14.4; 4. (tie) Tretheway (Ind) and Frost (Ind), x:14.7; 6. Andersen (Ind), 2:16.6. 200-YD.: FREESTYLE -- 1. Steve Clark (Yale), 1:44.4 (NCAA rec- ord. Old record 1:46.2 by Clark, 1963); 2. Lyons (Yale), 1:45.3; 3. Townsend (Yale), 1:46.2; 4. Marker (Wash St), 1:46.2; 5. Merrill (N. Car), 1:46.6; 6. Doscher (Stanford), 1:47.$. 200-YD. INDIVIDUAL MEDLEY- 1. Roy Saari (USC), 1:56.7 (NCAA record. Old record 1:59.7 by Ted Stickles, Ind., 1963); 2. Townsend (Yale), 1:59.0; 3. Kendrick (Ind), 2:00.1; 4. Stickles (Ind), 2:00.7; 5. Lacey (SMU), 2:00.9; 6. Rice (Yale), 2:01.1. 1650-YD. FREESTYLE-I. Roy Sa- ari (USC), 16:49.5 (NCAA record. Old record 17:24.0 by Jon Kon- rads, USC, 1963); 2. FARLEY (MICH), 16:56.1; 3.'McAneney (So Ill), 17:10.2; 4. Foss (USC), 17:21.9; 5. DUDLEY' (MICH), 17 :29.3; 6. Townsend (nd), 17:36.2. 100-YD. FREESTYLE -1. Steve Clark (Yale), :46.3 (NCAA record. Old, record :47.0 by Mike Austin, Yale, 1962); 2. Austin (Yale); :46.7; 3. Van Kennen (Conn Wes), :47.6; 4. Marker (Wash St), :47;5; 5. Geo-. ghegan (Villanova), :47.6; 6. Stauf- fer (Minn), :47.7. 100-YD. BREASTSTROKE-I. Bill Craig (USC), :59.9 (Set.NCAA record of :59.7 in qualifying heat. Old rec- ord 1:00.4 by Chet Jastremski, Ind., 1963); 2. Tretheway (Ind), 1:00.8; 3. Doesburg (USC), 1:01.5; 4. Luken (Minn), 1:01.4; 5. Frost (Ind), 1:01.6; 6. Schaible (Ind), 1:01.6. 100-YD. BACKSTROKE - 1. Bob Bennett (USC), :53.1 (NCAA and American record. Old NCAA record :53.8 by Bennett, 1963. Old Ameri- can record :53.3 by Chuck Bittick, 1963); 2. McGeagh (USC), :53.1; 3. Mann (N. Car), :53.2; 4. Graef (Princeton), :53.9; 5. BARTSCH (MICH), :54.2; 6. Goettsche (Yale), :54.6. 100-YD. BUTTERFLY-1. Richard-" son (Minn), :50.2 (NCAA and American record. Old record :50.6 by Richardson, 1963); 2. Schmidt (Ind), :51.6; 3. Hull (Stanford), :52.1; 4. Schulhof (Ind), :52.2; 5. Kennedy (Yale), :52.3; 6. Livingston (Fla), :52.8. THREE-METER DIVING-I1. Ran- dy Larson (OSU), 523.75; 2. BOOTH- MAN, (MICH), 499.35; 3. Gilbert (Ind), 487.75; 4. Morse (Ind), 478.60; 5. Early (Ind), 438.30; 6. Neel (Ind), 406.90. 400-YD. FREESTYLE RELAY -1. Yale (Dave Lyons, Ed Townsend, Frank Mice, Mike Austin), 3:08.7 (NCAA record. Old record 3:09.7 by Charles Mussman, Lyons, Townsend, Austin,, Yale, 1963); 2. Villanova, 3:10.4; 3 USC, 3:11.0; 4. N. Caro- lina, 3:12,8; 5. Indiana, 3:13.6; 6. So. Methodist, 3:13.4. FINAL TEAM STANDINGS - 1. Southern California, 96; 2. Indiana, 91; 3. Yale, 87; 4. MICHIGAN, 30; 5. Minnesota, 22;-6. (tie) Ohio State and North Carolina, 13; 8. Villanova 12; 9. Princeton, 10; 10 (tie) SMU and Connecticut Wesleyan, 8; 12. (tie) Washington St. and So. Illi- nois, 7; 14. Stanford, 5; 15. Colgate, 3; 16. Northwestern, 2; 17 (tie) Okla- homa., Oregon, Texas and Florida, 1 each. 20 seconds under his third-place time of last year. Ed Bartsch, who was backstroke champion last year at 206 yards,. had to settle for a third place this year with his time of 1:57.9. In the 100-yard event, Bartsch had to compete with Tom Stock of Indiana and Roger Goettsche of Yale in a swimoff to decide which of the three would fill the last two places in the finals. Bartsch won the duel with a time of 54.0 fol- lowed by Goettsche, 54.1, and Stock, 54.2. In the finals Bartsch came in fifth, timed at 54.2. Other Wolverine competitors were Rich Walls, who finished second in his trial heats of both the 100- and 200-yard freestyle; Geza Bodolay, who finished sec- ond to record-breaker Bill Craig of USC in their heat of the breaststroke; and Rees Orland, who scored' a third in his heat of the 200-yard individual medley. Place in Medley Michigan also scored two points by finishing sixth in the finals of the 400-yard medley relay. The team of Bartsch, Orland, Bodo- lay, and Walls was clocked in 3:40.5. USC didn't wrap up the victory until the final event, the 400-yard freestyle relay. At that point they led 88-87 over Indiana, and whichever finished ahead in the relay would be the national cham- pion. So, while Yale's great free- style sprinters were setting a new record to finish first, USC fin- ished third and Indiana fifth to give the Trojans the victory. Southern Cal took twice as many individual championships as did Yale. The Trojans claimed eight titles to four for the Elis. Indiana had two individual win- ners, and Ohio State, Princeton, and Minnesota had one each. Saari was the only triple win- ner in -the meet, taking firsts in the 500-yard frestyle and 200-yard individual medley in addition. to his victory in the 1650. Teammate Bill Craig won both breaststroke events and Yale's Steve Clark took the 1004 and 200-yard free- style sprints. One reason for the fabulous times is'that it's an Olympic year, and the swimmers are getting in pitch for Tokyo. The Indiana swimmers really wanted to win, because they have had champion- ship material for three years, but have been on probation. The next step for most of the top swimmers and many outstand- ing freshmen is at Bartlesville, Okla., for the ,AAU's tomorrow through Saturday. BOB GRAY IN, NCAA MEET: Gymnasts Take Third Place By LLOYD GRAFF - Luck was a lady on the tramp but a frump for the rest as the Michigan gymnastics team fin- ished third in the NCAA cham- pionships last weekend in Los Angeles. Southern Illinois won the title with 84.5 points with Southern California nudging out the Wol- verines for secorid with 69.5 to Michigan's 65. No other team got more than 30 points. Coach Newt Loken's trampo- linists kept the Wolverines close by registering an unprecedented sweep on the tramp. Gary Erwin won his second consecutive na- tional championship just nosing out teammate John Hamilton. Fred Sanders; third member of tramp trio, finished third, tied with George Hery of Iowa. This was exactly the order of finish in the Big Ten meet. Erwin quali- fied behind Hamilton but sur- passed him in the finals to win the top spot. Back from London Erwin arrived in Los Angeles from London, England, where he represented the United States in the first world trampoline cham- pionship. He finished second be- hind Danny Millman, a Califor- nia freshman. Loken, who accom- panied him to England, says, "There is little difference between them. Gary will get another shot at him next year." Michigan was great on the tramp but it lost its bounce on the apparatus. Captain Arno Las- cari, whose final season has been a nightmare because of a chronic elbow injury, managed a third in his specialty, the parallel bars and; an eighth on the high bar. Ron Barak of Southern Cali- fornia won both of these events on his way to the all-around championship. The slightly built California native placed in three other events to record 45.5 of his team's points. He and teammateI Bill Buckner, also an all-aroundt By PERRY HOOD A fired-up Michigan hockey team played its best game of the season against Denver over the, vacation to bring home a 6-3 vic- tory and the NCAA champion- ship. "We hit a peak for that game," said Coach Al Renfrew. "We got' good goal-tending from Bob Gray and the defense checked hard. It was really a thrill to beat them there after they had beaten us here.r In the 17 years that the tour- nament has been held, the Wol- verines have taken the title seven times, the last time Michigan won was in 1956. The final victory tied the season record for the most wins with 24 for a final 24-4-1" standing. The victory also made' the icers the highest scoring, win- ningest team to ever take the na- tional title. TOM POLONIC The Michigan sextet stormed out to a 3-0 lead with goals by Wilfred Martin, Mel Wakabaya- shi, and Jack Cole before Denver was able to muster a score early in the second period. Denver picked up another goal before Jack Cole belted in the winng goal with Tom Polonic getting the assist. Denver got a third point before Wakabayashi got his second goal to ice the game, with Alex Hood scoring the last. Each line scored two goals. Goalie Gray, named unanim- iously "Most Valuable Player" of the playoff series, turned away 15 shots in the first period, as much of the. play took place in the Michigan zone due to several Wol- verine penalties. The turning point of the con- test according to Renfrew was "early in the first period. They had a two man advantage and couldn't score. Our players were so keyed up that the two-man difference didn't seem to matter." The defense's effectiveness was shown. particularly well 'in that Denver had only a few chances to regain control of the puck after their first shot at the goal. De- fenseman Poonic was named to the first team of the all-tourna- ment selections, in addition to his being chosen ' All-America. Captain Gordie Wilkie tied for the tournament scoring lead and was also all-tournament and first team All-America. Providence succumbed to the stronger Wolverines late -in the semi-final game to suffer a 3-2 defeat. Providence led for a short time .in ,the tussle, but goals by Ron Coristine and Gary Butler put the Michigan icers ahead to stay.. The score did not indicate the Wolverines' domination of much of the contest, as they took over 100 shots on goal, most of which were off target. "Providence play- ed. well," said Renfrew. "They're a well-coached team. They took advantage of breaks when they got them which made the game close, We just couldn't put the puck in the net." Denver had beaten the Mich- igan squad the -week before in Ann Arbor, 6-2, to take the WCHA playoff crown. "I think we were just mentally exhausted after playing Tech the two nights before that game," said Renfrew. "It's a great thrill to have been able to bring the NCAA cham- 'pionship back." UP IN THE AIR are (left to right) Michigan gymnasts Gary Erwin, John, Hamilton and Fred Sanders. Placing one-two-three in the trampoline event, the trio led the Wolverines to a third place finish in the NCAA Championships, behind champion Southern Illinois and runner-up Southern California. THE NEW HUE IN EAGLE BUTTON-DOWNS: - FORFESEE ABLE FUCH SIA HNOKS pink,*doesn't it? * We chose tlie name for this color from- among the entries in our recent competition for new color-names because of its aptness: we predict great things. Remember you heard it here first. * What makes our solid pink new is that it isn't solid pink: the vertical yarn. (or warp) is somewhere between a Robert Shaw Coral and a Lawsy Miss Scarlet; whereas the horizontal yarn (or woof) is a sort .of 'Enry 'Iggins Just You White. * Thus creating an illusion, but of the finest oxford cloth all the same; with button cuffs and our dear, old bulgy collar, about $7.00. If you don't know where to buy this and other Eagle Shirts in your town, please write Miss Afflerbach who does; at the address below. *Use your imagination; this paper doesn't print in pink. p 1964, EAGLE SHIRTMAKERS, QUAKERTOWN, PENNSYLVANIA Scores 1 NHL Stanley Cup Playoffs. Semifinals Detroit 3, Chicago 0 (Detroit leads, 2-1 in best of 7 series) Montreal 3, Toronto 2 (Montreal leads 2-1 in best of 7 series) NBA PLAYOFFS Eastern Division Finals Boston 103, Cincinnati 87 (Boston leads 1-0 in best of 7 series) i t t a 'I man, were literally the Trojans' entire team. Southern Illinois, which won the meet, abandoned the role of bridesmaid it has played for the last two years Led by Rusty Mitchell, who Loken calls "just phenomenal, a tremendous per- former," the Salukis hit for 21 points on the last two events, still' rings and tumbling. Mitchell took first in tumbling with the score of 97.2. Four, Southern Illinois men finished in the top ten in the rings. Michi- gan 's Phil Bolton came through with a fourth in tumbling with Mike Henderson sixth' and John Hamilton seventh. In the biggest upset of the day Dale Cooper of Michigan State, who had never lost in college on the still rings, finished a distant seventh. Chris Evans of Arizona' State won the event. Southern Illinois' Mitchell, a Los Angeles native, scored nearly half his team's total by winning in floor exercise and tumbling and placing in three other events for 41 points. Fuss Mills of Yale successfully defended his side horse title. Mills and Michigan's Erwin were the only men to repeat as champions. Sig Ogelsby of Syracuse won the long horse competition with a i Mlatmen Wind Up Sixth In NCAA Tournament 1. Exhibition Baseball Chicago (N) 6, Cleveland 2 San Francisco 9, Boston 1 Kansas City 5, New York (A) 5 (10 inn) Minnesota 6, Philadelphia "B" 0 Milwaukee 6, Detroit 3 Washington 11, Baltimore 5 Houston 6, Los Angeles (N) 3 Chicago (A) 7, St. Louis 6 Pittsburgh 8, New York (N) 4 1 score of 95 Prospect bright eve ines will Bolton. .7. is for next year are an though the Wolver- be losing Lascari and By BOB CARNEY "We've got no alibis," wrestling coach Cliff Keen declared yes- terday. "The' boys that" went, went to wrestle, and did it well., Keen was referring to Mich- igan's, rather disappointing sixth' place finish in last week's NC.AA mat championships. The Wolver- ines tallied 29 points in the tour- nament, which saw Oklahoma; State score 87 to win. Unfortunately for the veteran mentor "the boys that.' went" didn't include starters Cal Jenk- ins, Chris Stowell, Bill Johanes- sen and Rick Bay. All these mem- bers of Michigan's Big Ten cham- pionship team were out with in- juries. "Sure, we were in bad shape," admitted Keen. "There's no ques- tion that we might have placed much higher with a full slate,but the team that we sent came through when they were caled upon. Two more wins and we might have had second." Recives Praise Receiving much of the coach's praise was senior Gary Wilcox, Michigan's only representative in the finals. "He surprised everyone," added Keen, "especially in the semi finals." In that match Wilcox, who re- placed Jenkins, upset top-seeded and undefeated Bob Buzzard of Iowa State, favorite in the 137- pound class. Wilcox was defeated Exclusive: PLAYERS PICK '64 PENNANT WINNERS Which teams will win the '64 pennants, and who are the indi vidual players expected to star this season? Read the inside anal. ysis by the players themselves in SPORT's Annual Poll. In the same big issue A special five featureIreport on the pitching explosion including: SANDY KOUFAX AND LEON WAGNER DEBATE -IS THERE A PLOT AGAINST BATTERS? PLUS THE THREAT TO OUR OLYMPIC TEAM in the finals, however, by Mike Stager of Oklahoma. "Bob Spaly was another stand- out," said Keen. "And Wayne Mil- ler' narrowly missed knocking off the 157-pound winner." Lises In Opener SpalY, who was defeated in the tournament's opening round, went on to win the 191-pound consola- tion championship and gained a third place for the Wolverines. Miller also advanced to the con- solation finals, only Ito lose on a referee's decision in overtime. Two "of Michigan's regulars, Ralph Bahna (115-pound) and Lee' Deitrick, defending 147-pound champ, scored first round victor- ies, but were eliminated in the quarter-finals. "Everyone gave 100 per cent, though," said Keen, "it would have'.been easy to throw' in the towel with four starters injured, but they did nothing of the sort. That kind 'of drive has charac- terized this team all year." Get Talked Into Sending Somethin Back Home taP 'i 0 . BUT, g. Get Caught a little GARY WILCOX W ELCOM E STUDENTS! -5 Barbers to serve you- at I' Short of Funds? I I~