E STON 7-1: n ul-JIND Skating Huskies Take First By JI BERGER 'o The Daily UTICA, N.Y. - Michigan Tech, sparked by forwards John Ivan- itz, Jerry Sullivan, and Louis An- gotti, captured its first national 0 collegiate hockey championship last night defeating Clarkson Tech '-1 before a capacity crowd of 4,210 at Memorial Auditorium. Ivanitz scored the "hat trick" while Angotti and Sullivan each scored twice. Clarkson's lone goal at 19:42 of the first period was scored by forward Paul LaPointe. # The victory was Tech's 20th straight and it was the Huskies' 29th win in their last 30 starts. Fast Start. Michigan Tech scored three times in the first period and four times in the last to demolish any hopes the Golden Knights had of winning. Ivanitz started it off right from the beginning when he skated in on the left wing to beat Clarkson goalie Wayne Gibbons with a shot from 20 feet at 0:38 seconds. A little more than five ,minutes later, Ivanitz scored his second of the evening, which turn- ed out to be the winning goal, at At 9:26 of the first period, Hus- Tech Tops MICH. TECH CLARKSON Bauman G Gibbons Siger D Legari Akreval PGrades Sullivan C Maismith Ivanitz W LaPointe Rebellato W Lawlor First Period Scoring: T-Ivanitz (unassisted) 0:38; T-Ivanitz (Sulli- van) 5:58; T-Sullvan (Merlo, Reb- elato) 9:26; C-LaPointe (Petterson) 19:42. Penalties: C-Taylor (check- in offensive zone) 9:40; T-Pallante (elbowing) 13:33; T-Pallante (in- terference) 18:33., Second Period Scoring: None. r Penalties: C-Adams tripping) 1:32; T-Merle (slashing) 6:56; T-Wim- mer (elbowing) 10:12; T-Akervan (ipterference) 12:04. Third Period Scoring: T-Sullivan (Ivanitz, Rebellato) 0:38; T-Ivanitz (Rebellato, Sullivan) 4:53; T-Ang- otti (unassisted) 6:14; T-Angotti (unassisted) 1920. Penalties: T- Segers (boarding)29:05; T-Pallante (spearing) 10:52; T-Rebelato (hold- ing) 16:55; T-Pallante (holding) 18:10; C-Schmeler (tripping) 18:17. Scring by Periods:. MICHIGAN TECH 30 - CLARKSON 1 0 0-1 Saves:' Bauman (T) 11 13 15-39. Gibbons (C) 916 12-37 TrackMeet LONDON (M-The 4-man Unit- ed States team rounded off a 100 per cent triumph in Britain's first major indoor track meet yester- day on Wembley's new $28,000 wooden oval stadium. The Americans competed in eight events in the two-day meet and won them all. A crowd of 6,200 saw Gary Gub- ner, 19-year-old shot putter from New. York City, defeat European record holder Arthur Rowe 'of Britain a second time with a throw of 62 feet, 5% inches. Rowe set a European \indoor mark with 62 feet. Cary Weisiger, the Marine from Quantico, Va., won the 1,000 yards in 2:13.3-1.9 seconds ahead of Charlie Shillington of Britain. Weisiger /streaked into a, long lead early in the race-just as he did in winning the mile Friday night. He started the last of the seven laps 30 yards ahead, but then eased up and allowed his British rival to close the gap. Paul Winder of Pleasantville, N.J., scored a victory in the. 60- yard dash for the second straight day. He was timed in 6.4 seconds. Bill Johnson of College Park, Md., won the 60-yard hurdles in 7.5 seconds. Marcel Duriez of/ France was second in the same time. The two-day program carried similar events each day. It was designed to introduce indoor track to British fans. ky captain, Sullivan, smashed the puck into the right corner of the net to give the Huskies a three goal margin. Clarkson's lone tally was on a power-play. Penalties Hurt Michigan Tech was handicapped by penalties in the second per- iod and failed to score. But the third period was a different story. Angotti, who was later present- ed with the award for the most valuable player inthe tournament, scored both his goals in this per- iod unassisted. Sullivan began the period by tying two all-time Michigan Tech records. His goal at 0:38 seconds tied the records for most points in a season and most goals in a sea- son. He broke the point record wher he assisted Ivanitz on his "hat trick" goal at 4:53. Angetti Scores Angotti scored his first of the evening when tIe circled in back of the Clarkson net and slipped it in the corner. His second goal was scored while Clarkson for- ward, Robert Taylor, was hanging on to his back. After the game, six Michigan Tech players were named to the two all-tournament teams. De- fensemen Elov Seger and Henry Akervall and Wings Ivanitz and Angotti were named to the first team. Goalie Gary Bauman and Most Valuably MANHATTAN, Kan. (AP)-Paul Hogue, 6-foot-9 240-pound Cin- cinnati senior center, was voted the most valuable. player tonight in the NCAA Midwest Regional Basketball Tournament The selection was made by sportswriters.+ Sullivan were named to the sec- on team. Michigan placed three players on the first two teams. Captain Red Berenson was named to the first team, in addition to most valuable player in the NCAA tour- ney, while defenseman Don Rodg- ers and captain-elect Larry Bab- cock were named to the second team. The first team goalie was Rich- le Broadbelt of St. Lawrence. Oth- er members of the second team were defenseman Barry Wagner and forward Harold Pettersen, both of Clarkson. RAPID RUSH-Michigan right wing Ron Coristine makes his way past an opposing Michigan Tech defenseman in the Wol- verines victory earlier in the season. Coristine helped Michigan skate over St. Lawrence to win third place in the NCAAcham- pionships. OSU, Bearcats, Reach Semi s IOWA CITY (A')Versatile ,Jerry Lucas shot top-ranked Ohio State in the National Collegiate Basket- ball Championship tournament by powering the Buckeyes to a 74-64 conquest of third-ranked Ken- tucky tonight. The Buckeyes' victory in the finals of the Mideast Regional. Tournament was almost a repeat of last year's regional tournament finals in which Ohio State beat Kentucky 87-74. Ohio State now moves into the four-team championship tourney at Louisville, Ky., next week, meet- ing Wake Forest in a first round game. Lucas, three time All-America selection for the Buckeyes, put on a brilliant shooting and passing performance. He pumped in 25 first ,half Points, including a stretch in. which; he scored 15 in a row for his team. The 6-8 senior added 8 in the second half for a total of 33, which made up for his sub-par nine-point perform- ance in the semifinals last night. Lucas' shooting sent Ohio State to a 41-37 halftime edge and the Buckeyes quickly pulled safely in front after the intermission, be- hind the shooting of John Hay- licek. MANHATTAN, Kan. MP)-Mighty Cincinnati won the NCAA Mid- west Regional Basketball Cham- pionship for a record fourth straight year tonight, whipping Basketball Scores NCAA BASKETBALL' (Regional Finals) Oi{State 74, Kentucky 64 Wake Forest 79, Villanova 69 Cincinnati 73, Colorado 46 UCLA 88, Oregon State 69 NCAA HOCKEY Michigan 5, St. Lawrence 1 (third) Michigan Tech 7, Clarkson 1 (finals) NAIA BASKETBALL (Championship) Prairie view, Tex. A&M 62, Westmin- ster (Pa) 53 tenacious Colorado 73-46 behind Wake Forest's tournament-wise the two new members of the de- veterans blew a 10-point lead but fending national kings, sophomore came back in the second half to Ron Bonham and Ron Wilson. whip Villanova 79-69 for the Again it was a team effort of NCAA Eastern Regional Basket- smooth floor play, brilliant de- ball Tournament tonight. fense, and brutal board play, but Wake's Demon Deacons, extend- sophomores Bonham and Wilson ed into overtime in two previous did the game-breaking. tournament games, scrapped the Bonham fired one jump shot usual script with a 9-point -out- after another and scored 14 points burst during a furious three- in the first half alone. minute span early in the second COLLEGE' PARK, Md. (A') - period. CUTS TAPE IN 7.3 .Jones Wins Race Again TOKYO (JP-John Uelses, the record-breaking effort of 16 4at vaulting U.S. Marine, and New the Boston AAU games Feb. 4. Zealand's Peter Snell, the world's Hurdler Hayes Jones, formerly outdoor mile record holder, won of Eastern Michigan and now a their specialties in ordinary fash- Detroit school teacher, won his 60- ion yesterday in Japan's two-day yd. high hurdles heat in 7.3. international indoor track and Ralph Boston of Tennessee field championships. State, holder of the world broad The 24-year-old Uelses, station- jumping record, also qualified for ed at Quantico, Va., leaped 15feet, the hurdles final by winning his 1 inch, almost a foot short of his heat in 7.4. Once Again -- The Famous TCE EUROPEAN STUDENT TOUR The abuoustour that includes many unique features: The~e a dys wth a French family -- make frie~ abroadseal ut ural eents, -I eve n n imeet vis tounusual places, eiarcpto, students fromaelBve th wol C Travel By Deluxe Motor Coach SUMER 53 Days in EuropeA$625 a LL" .. Transatlantic Transportation Additional TRAVEL & CULTURAL EXCHANGE, INC. 501 Fifth Ave.. New York 17, N. Y. 0X 7-4129 s i C MICHIGAN UNION k II presents c f S Ross Lee Finney Composer in Residence University of Michigan Lecture: 'Pattern and Meaning in Music' s II