THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MARCH 22,1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. MARCH 22. 1982 r=v.....v.aa . a aaaaurvs.s. frrwf ivvw -M Night Decides Cage Champs I-M SWIM CHAMPIONSHIPS: Sigma Chi, Huber Win Firsts 1 rvma Chi W. At DU's Tali By MIKE BLOCK and STAN KUKLA Sigma Chi downed Alpha Tau Dmega 53-44 last night in a high- pirited basketball game, and valked off with the social frater- alty 'A' basketball crown. However, in a previous intra- nural contest, Sigma Chi's 'B' quad lost their game and the irst place championship to Delta Jpsilon 'B', 46-35. In what was a tight battle al- most all the way, Sigma Chi 'A' ook advantage of its greater ieight to control the ball and he boards. Springing from a 28- 4 halftime lead, the new champs aptalized on an ATO cold streak ind crept to a 41-33 advantage it the three-quarter mark. ATO Comes Back ATO, however, urged on by a ociferous group of rooters on the idelines, moved back in the ame. Tightening up their defense ER D UMs P PEK, 61-33, In Pro Final By TOM ROLAND Tau Epsilon Rho's bucket bri- 'ade-tall timber under the boards nd out-court hotshots-teamed up ast night to out-hustle and out hoot Phi Epsilon Kappa in the rofesional fraternity basketball inals, 61-33. TER snatched up an early 9-2 ead, and the winners were never ireatened. While Phi Ep bolstered .p its defense to cope with the ieights of TER's up-court duo of oe McDade and DeLyle Condie, uards Si Coleman and Ira Jaffe oured home two-pointers from hie outside. Big Halftime Lead The out-court scoring duet aced TER to a 30-12 halftime Pad. PEK, playing minus the services f Scott Maentz, couldn't get the d off the basket until the second alf, and then it was too little too te. Tau Ep stretched the margin o'50-25 at the end of the third uarter andythen coasted home or the victory. As soon as Phi Ep set out to halt ER's out-court aerial bombard- aent, the big men went into ac- Lo under the boards. It was ondie, former Utah star, who ountered PEK with three quick u kets midway through the third starter to throw. the cog into any 'hi Ep come-back scheme. Conie Scores 20 Condie threw home 20 points or the evening, topping both eams. Coleman was next with 16. McDade, TER center, kept the 'inners' offensive machine rolling ith some niffty rebounding under oth offensive and defensive oards. The former Bradley cager etted seven points. Phi Epsilon Kappa had to throw 11 its hopes on gunner Gary Mc- itt and playmaker Tom Kerr. The wo scored four of PEK's six uckets in the first half, and in he final tally the duo accounted or 26 of Phi Ep's 33 points. gins 'A' Title ie B'Crown in the final period, the ATO's cut the deficit down to 44-42. They got control of the ball again but couldn't get the tying basket and never got the chance again. Sigma Chi's Bill Dodd then drib- bled the length of the court and sank a basket which upped the count to 46-42. The winners were never in trou- ble thereafter. They slowed down the action whenever they got their hands on the ball, and forced ATO to foul them. The resultant char- ity shots enabled them to insure their victory with a 51-42 lead. Townsend, Dodd High Sigma Chi's big man, John Townsend continually mystified his opponents with a sort of back- hand hook shot and accounted for, 15 points. He was tied for scor-, ing honors with teammate Dodd. Dave Molhoek and Bill Newcomb led ATO with 13 and 11, respec- tively. The game started evenly, with the teams tied at 16-all just be- fore Sigma Chi went ahead to stay. Tempers flared momentarily in the beginning of the second half, as members of both teams hit the hardwood for a loose ball and came up swinging. Order was restored immediately, . however, and there was no further incident. DU's Cop 'B' Crown Paced by Larry Morawa's 12 points in the second half, Delta Upsilon pulled away from an 18- 17 halftime margin to defeat Sig- ma Chi 46-35 for the first-place 'B' championships. Delta Upsilon scored seven straight points in the opening min- utes of the second half and at the end of the third quarter held a comfortable 37-25 margin. The scoring outbreak was trig- gered by Morawa with his tip-ins and Gary Phipps, who showed amazing accuracy from 25 feet. Phipps tossed in a couple before Sigma Chi could organize its de- fense. . Morawa Leads Scorers Morawa and Phipps were also the game's two high-scorers, with 13 and 12 points, respectively. Phipps not only starred on of- fense but also on defense where he was teamed at guard with Steve Richey. The pair hampered the Sigma Chi offense by repeat- edly stealing the ball. With five minutes left to play, Phipps and Richey took it upon themselves to stall the game. Sig- ma, Chi was unable to curb the tactics and DeltaUpsilon sailed home. Get One Rebound Two minutes later, Sigma Chi got the ball on one of the few rebounds that Morawa missed, but managed only three shots in the remaining minutes. They made two and out-scored Delta Upsilon for the only time in the game, 10- 9. Sigma Chi, who did not have a man in double figures, was led by John Marcum, with seven points, John Yanz, six, and Tom Mott, five. Three players, Doug Schmidt, Wayne Sparkman, and Bart Hazelton, tossed in four points apiece. Helping out Delta Upsilon's high-scoring duo were Bill Kerr with seven, Richey and Larry Pe- trowski, six, and Mike Shirley, two. 'ZN -Daily-Bruce Taylor ALMOST-ATO's Harvey Chapman can't quite get the ball away as Sigma Chi's defense (Bill Dodd, in particular) stops the shot in I-M final cage action last night. That's John Townsend fol- lowing up the rear. Sigma Chi won the game and the social fra- ternity championship. Gomberg, Kelsey W in Residence Titles By GEORGE WHITE and MIKE COHN On the strength of its rebound- ing and accuracy from the floor, Gomberg defeated Huber to win its second straight 'A' Residence Hall Championship, 67-49. In the Residence 'B' Champion- ship game, Kelsey defeated Reeves 33-18. %The Gomberg five rolled on the big shoulders of Bill Stawski and Ron McCleasse in their victory over a sluggish Huber crew. Tough To Beat McCleasse and Stawski formed a boardsweeping team that was tough to beat. In addition to stif- ling Hubber's offense the Stawski- McCleasse twosome poured in al- most half of the Big Red's 67 point total. Four Advance In State Prep Championships By The Associated Press Mighty Saginaw slipped past Muskegon last night to rumble in- to the semi-finals of the Class A division of the Michigan high school basketball tournament. The Trojans, top-ranked in the class and undefeated, eked out a 65-63 victory over gl tough Mus- kegon club. Detroit Pershing upset Detroit Eastern 58-53 and will meet Sag- inaw Friday in the semi-finals. Benton Harbor downed Dear- born 88-62 and plays Detroit Northwestern in the semi-finals. Northwestern nipped Pontiac Cen- tral 46-43. CLASS B East Grand Rapids 73, Mason 50 Ludington 64, Escanaba Holy Name 62 Northville 57, Elkton-Pigeon- Bayport 55 River Rouge 66, Redford St. Mary 40 CLASS C Grosse Pointe St. Paul 67, Sebe- waing 57 Houghton 70, Frankfort 53 Kalamazoo Christian 47, Detroit All Saints 43 Muskegon Christian 58, Jackson St. Mary 54 CLASS D Brimley 46, Champion 41 Flint St. Matthew 74, Potterville 51 Lawrence 59, Britton 57 Suttons Bay 57, Beal City 49 Trailing at the half, 33-24, Hu- ber attempted to correct the mis- takes that put it as much as 12 points down, namely more effec- tive work on the boards and a stickier defense. Huber's star forward, Richard Horning, didn't seem to be up to his usual shooting potential, hit- ting a chilly 4 of 15 shots from the floor. Picking up the slack for Huber were Roger Chatterton and Rich Monroe who dumped in 12 and 18 points, respectively. Un- fortunately, this couldn't negate the total of the six Gomberg men who cracked double figures, Staw- ski high with 18. The Big Red cause wasn't hindered any by polished foul shooting, dropping in 13-14 from the charity line. Ironically enough, the game ended like Gomberg's triumph over Reeves last year, with Staw- ski shooting two foul shots, only this year, there wasn't as much pressure. Kelsey Wins 'B' Title Kelsey proved to be just too strong for Reeves in the 'B' cham- pionship game, winning a low- scoring battle, 33-18. Captain Joe Pulliam, a quick play-making guard, sparked Kel- sey to an early lead and his team was never seriously challenged after the second quarter. Kelsey's Dave Seamon, the game's top scorer, dumped in nine of his 13 points in the first half to push Kelsey to a 15-6 halftime margin. Reeves Doesn't Quit Reeves refused to quit, how- ever, and narrowed the margin to five points early in the second half with a pair of quick baskets. Mel Anthony, a good three inches shorter than Kelsey's big front line, tried to keep Reeves inrthe game with some tenacious re- bounding. He couldn't d r i v e through Kelsey's rugged defense, though, and managed only five points. Kelsey used a full-court pressing defense throughout and forced Reeves into many costly errors. Pulliam did the most damage for the winners by making it a prac- tice of stealing the ball in the Reeves backcourt. Jackier Adds 11 Larry Jackier aided Kelsey's cause with 11 points, but also turn- ed in a sparkling defensive game. Rounding out the scoring for the 'B' champs were Pulliam with three, and Terry Dolan and Bill Beck with four each. Trust Takes Independenit Title in Rout By BOB ZWINCK The 1962 Independent Basket- ball Champion is Trust-via a 67- 39 rout of Fletcher Hall. Fletcher Hall jumped into an early 12-7 lead, but turned cold late in the first quarter and Trust had a 15-12 margin at the end of the first period. With Joel Boyden controlling the boards and using an effective fast break, Trust expanded their margin to 33-23 at the half. Ted Wasson, Jerry Fullmer, and Rich Mattias all scored eight first-half points to spark the leaders. Fletcher Hall did narrow the gap midway through the second quarter with some effective screen shots, two each by Jim DeSpain and Tom Hoaglund, but couldn't get close enough. Play Gets Faster Third period play was consid- erably faster than that of the first half, but the chief result was many long shots and numerous errors by both teams. Nevertheless, Trust again had the edge, outscor- ing their opponents 11-7 and built a 44-30 budge. Trust really gave it the gas in the last period, scoring 23 points. Miscues Court Fletcher Hall tried desperately to come from behind, but almost every miscue was turned into a fast break or a ball theft by their alert opponents. There were three big scorers for Trust who garnered a total of 43 points. Fullmer was top with 16, while Mattias and- Wasson added 14 and 13, respectively. . Fletcher Hall scoring was more evenly distributed among its start- ers. Larry Goldsmith led with eight, and Earl Meyers, DeSpain, and Hoagland each tossed in sev- en. Lehigh Begins Challenge for Wrestling Title STILLWATER, Okla. (P)-Okla- homa State opens defense of its NCAA wrestling title today with the strongest challenge expected to come from Eastern Champion Lehigh. The Cowboys, who have notch- ed championships in 22 of the 31 previous NCAA meets, ripped through 12 dual matches this sea- son to run their string to 35 straight. Lehigh also won 12 straight duals this season and crowned six individual champions in the East- ern Championships while Oklaho- ma State was winning the same number of individual titles in the Big Eight Conference Tournament. DOUBLE EDGE RAZOR BLADES Finest Surgical Steel, honed in oil. Ful money back guarantee. 25-30, 100-85c, .200-$.50, 500- $3.30, 1000-$5.75. Post-paid. Packed 5 blades to package, 20 packages to carton. C.O.D. orders accepted. Post- card brings general merchandise cat- alog. Emerson Company, 406 So. Second, Aihambra, Calif. SUMMER JOBS in EUROPE THE °new' WAY TO SEE & live' EUROPE Specializing in 'European Safaris' For Summer Jobs or Tours Write: AMERICAN STUDENT INFORMA- TION SERVICE, 22, Avenue de ta Liberte, Luxembourg-City, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg Sigma Chi and Huber House placed first in their respective di- visions last night in the fraternity and residence hall swimming meets at the I-M Open House. Sigma Chi scored 681/ points in passing by runnerup Sigma Alpha Epsilon which finished with a score of 49. Huber ran away from the rest of the field. The closest to them was Hinsdale with 35. Huber copped three first places, one each in the 50-yd. breast Warriors Play Nats in Final PHILADELPHIA ()-The Phil- adelphia Warriors and the Syra- cuse Nats meet tonight at Con- vention Hall in the deciding game of a five-game Eastern Division semifinal playoff series of the National Basketball Association. Detroit has already won the Western Division semi-finals with a deciding victory over Cincinnati on Tuesday night. Exhibition Baseball Baltimore 12, Cincinnati 6 Los Angeles (N) 4, Pittsburgh 1 New York (N) 1, Detroit 0 New York (A) 13, Philadelphia 10 St. Louis 2, Chicago (A) 0 Chicago (N) 2, Cleveland 0 Houston 8, Boston 7 Los Angeles (A) 16, San Francisco 3 Kansas City 2, Washington 1 New Trends in Collegiate Hairstyling are here!! * 10 tonsorial artists " No woiting Try The Dascola Barbers near Michigan Theatre FINEST SERVICE . . GREATEST SAVI NGS SAVE UP TO 35% All European Car Plans and Services Alfa Fiat Ghia Healy Jaguar Lanciaa Mercedes MGA Renault Porsche Triumph' Volkswagen * Mercedes for Summer overseas delivery must be reserved NOW mm. -- -- - -- - - -- - - m m m m mmmmmmmm mmmm Send for FREE illustrated folder on purchasing, renting, leasing EUROPE BY CAR c/o Stanley Natkins, Regional Representative 206 South Campus Ave., Oxford, Ohio I'm Interested in Name Address stroke, won by Forrest Cole, the 200-yard freestyle relay, the 50- yard freestyle won by Pete Faul. Alpha Tau Omega finished third in the fraternity division with 32%, followed by Beta Theta Pi, 25, and Phi Delta Theta with 23. Followin gthe aeffi iBKeSimw Following Hinsdale, which also notched three first places in the residence hall meet, were Gomberg and Wenley tied for third with 31, Taylor with 26, Adams with 23, Michigan and Strauss with 13, and Scott, 8. Strauss also won the water polo game over Allen-Rumsey by a 1-0 score. City State ClassifiedAdvertising Number Is Now NO 2-4786 EUROPE by CAR' Safest way s00 _+ to carry " your money AMERICAN, EXPRESS TRAVELERS CHEQUES ANN ARBOR FEDERAL SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION Liberty at Division O rganized 1890 SPRING IS SPRUNG THE GRASS IS RIS WE WONDER WHERE YOUR BIKESE IS C ' I Buy All LP Records Now! at DISCOUNT PRICES ...bring your BIKES to us before the Spring rush . ALL FAMOUS LABELS-SAVE AT STATE ST. AT N. UNIVERSITY BEAVER'S BIKE & HARDWARE 605 CHURCH ST. NO 5-6607 - -- - ~ 71 I Jo dfs UnvErity 1209 South University WEEKEND SPECIAL SPORT SHIRTS LONG SLEEVES - TABS -BUTTON DOWNS ' OFF SENIORS order your Graduation Announcements 396 SHIRTS TO CHOOZE FROM I '