THE MICHIGAN DAILY Bangers Overcome Bruins, 4-3; Warriors Wi n NBA Playoffs I-M CAGE: Theta Xi Takes Crown; Defeat Zeta Beta Tau St. John's, Dayton in NIT Finals By The Associated Press BOSTON - Battered goalie Gump Worsley and player-coach Doug Harvey led New York to a precarious 4-3 National Hockey League victory over Boston last night, moving the Rangers closer to the final Stanley Cup playoff, berth. the Rangers, hitting at a 44 per cent shooting average, broke away to a 4-0 first period which had all the earmarks of a run- away. But the battling last 'place Bruins came back to score three times in the middle session. Worsley, hit in the left eye by a puck in the pre-game warmup and carried off by his teammates for first aid, made 30 saves in a re- markable display of an athlete responding with the big play when it was most needed. Harvey led a rough scrappy de- fensive corps which supported Worsley in staving off Bostin in the final period, when the Rangers were shorthanded three times. Even if Detroit wins its two remaining games, New York needs only a tie with Chicago in its re- maining contest. The teams would then have identical records and the Rangers would win the playoff berth on thebasis of having scor- ed more goals over the season. The deciding tally came short- ly before the end of the first per- iod on which Dean Prentice got credit for his 22nd goal. Boston goalie Bruce Gamble appeared to have the stop laying on the ice but when teammate Charley Burns hurdled over him trying to give support, he knocked the puck loose for a goal. Earlier in the period, Johnny Wilson and Camille Henry had scored on short deflections and Harry Howell on a screened 40-, footer. Rookie Tommy Williams, Burns and Johnny Bucyk were the Bos- ton scorers. Referee Dalton MacArthur was struck by a fan as he left the ice after the second period and a po- lice escort was summoned when fans tried to break into the offi- cials' room moments later. PHILADELPHIA -Wilt Cham- berlain scored 56 points, a play- off scor'ng record, as he led the Philade hhia Warriors into the final round of the National Bask- etball Association Eastern Divi- sion playoffs last night with a 121-104 victory over the Syracuse Nats. Philadelphia took the best-of., five Eastern semifinal series 3-2. The Warriors now will meet the Boston Celtics tomorrow in a na- tionally televised game at Boston in a best-of-seven series for the Eastern Division championship. Chamberlain abandoned his role of feeder and connected on 22 of 48 shots from the field. Wilt also grabbed 35 rebounds and made 12 of 22 foul tosses. Teammate Paul Arizin had 24 points. Rookie Lee Shaffer cooled off after a 23-point first half but topped the Nats with a total of 30. Philadelphia didn't assert real authority until the final moments of the third period when successive baskets by Guy Rodgers, Chamber- lain lain and Tom Meschiery boost- ed them from a four-point lead to an 84-74 bulge. Rodgers added five more points in the, final two minutes of the period as the War- riors increased the margin to 90- 77 at the end of the quarter. s a : MONTREAL - The Montreal Canadiens whipped the Toronto Maple Leafs 4-1 in a penalty- studded National Hickey League game last night and just about wrapped up the Venzina Trophy for masked goalie Jacques Plante. The Venzina goes to the goalie who plays the most games for the team that allows the fewest goals and Plante now has a solid 12- goal bulge over Toronto's Johnny Bower. The Leafs and the Cana- diens each have two more games to play before the regular season ends Sunday night. The outcome of the game meant nothing to either team as far as final positions, in the League standings, the 'Canadiens already have clinched a fifth straight title and the Maple Leafs second place. By JERRY KALISH An out-rebounded, but not out- hustled Zeta Beta Tau five finally fell to taller Theta Xi in the so- cial fraternity "B" championship game in the only IM cage action last night, 35-24. The strong rebounding of 6'4" Don Person,. who took high point honors with 16, and 6'5" Jay Pease gave the new champions an ad- vantage that ZBT could not over- come, as the. two big boys played volleyball over the rim. Minus Two Starters Minus two starters and with a front line of 6'3" Brad Schwartz, 6' Jeff Hass, and 5'1" Bob Flax- man, the game ZBT's threw up a sticky zone defense, but couldn't find the range themselves, Finding themselves down at half time, 11-7, ZBT struck quick at the opening tip-off of the second period. Schwartz controlled the tip to Steve Linker who spotted his running mate at guard Tom Hal- pern cutting towards the basket, and the speedy little backcourt man drove by a Theta Xi player for the lay-up. Halperin and Link- er combined to lead ZBT scorers with six points each. But Theta Xi hit four jumpers in a row and gradually began to pull away behind the shooting of Person. ZBT started to press with only a few minutes remaining but it was too late, as the Theta Xi's romped home. * * *t In IM swim competition, two champions were crowned in close- ly fought meets. Delta Sigma Del- ta scored 48 points to become Pro- fessional Fraternity champs edg- ing past Psi Omega with 42 and Nu Sigma Nu who had 40. Trust took the Independent title by out- scoring Nakamura 341-31. The winter sports program is rapidly drawing, to a close.- The remaining indoor events are the social fraternity foul shooting con- test March 26 and indoor track meet March 29, while the Inde- pendents are through for the win- ter March 26 with their foul shoot- ing contest. 4 NEW YORK MJP-St. John's of New York overcame Duquesne 75- 65 and Dayton swamped Loyola of Chicago 98-82 in a pair of daz- zling second half comebacks last night, setting up a championship final between the Redmen and the Flyers in the 25th National Invi- tational Basketball Tournament. St. John's and Dayton will meet in the championship final tomor- row afternoon, following a conso- lation game for third place be- tween last night's losers. Out-Played Favored St. John's cleanly out- played by the hustling Dukes in the opening half, cut loose behind soft shooting Leroy Ellis and grad- ually drew even with Duquesne midway in the second half at 51- 51. For the next six minutes the U.S. Basketball Coaches To Form Federation two teams played even, then a pair of clutch blocks by Ellis and Donnie Burks turned the tide for the Redmen. Shortly after that, a fight be- tween Burks and Mike Rice broke out under the Duquesne basket and quickly involved players from both teams plus several spectators. The lively brawl lasted for about a minute before it was broken up by Madison Square Garden and New York City police. There were no injuries and no fouls assessed. Three-Point Play Kevin Loughery scored a three- .point play, making it 66-61 'for St. John's with,3:11 to play, and the Dukes never caught up. St. John's protected its lead through the closing moments with a delib- erate, carefully-controlled delay- ing game before a howling crowd of 17,326. Dayton, a five-time runner up but never an NIT champion, trail- ed 44-41 at intermission but quick- ly took charge at the outset of the second half behind the quarter- backing and scoring of sophomore Gordy Hatton and his brother, Tom, a senior. Netted 33 Gordy netted 33 points for the night, 18 in the second half, Bill Chmielewski, the Flyers' hefty 6- 10 pivot, totaled for 27 points after being held to one basket in 11 tries in the first half. Tom Hatton ,who teamed with his younger brother to give Day- ton a fiery backcourt combination, had 12 points and Garry Roggen- burk added 20. The Flyers went with their start- ing five until five seconds before the end, when Chmielewski drew" 1_ t his fifth foul. The burly sophomore proved to have too much height and bulk under the boards for the smaller, lighter Ramblers of Loy- ola and hauled down 19 rebounds. Loyola, paced by the driving John Egan and the smooth shoot- ing Jerry Harkness, took a 32-24 lead with a streak of 10 straight points in the opening half and appeared to have Dayton on the run. NCAA MEET: Three Teams T ie for Lead in Wrestling STILLWATER (MP- Surprising Wyoming put three men into the quarterfinals of the NCAA wres- tling championships last night and tied defending champion Okla- homa State and Lehigh for the lead with preliminary action com- pleted. The leaders each had 11 points. Although Wyoming had fewer men advance than Oklahoma State and Lehigh, two pins along the way pushed its score up. Oklahoma State advanced seven men to the quarterfinals, all by decisions, and Lehigh advanced five, one by a pin. Oklahoma and Iowa also sent five men into the quarterfinal round which is scheduled torpor- row afternoon. Oklahoma State is seeking, its 23rd title in the meet which winds up tomorrow night. Exhibition Baseball St. Louis 3, Chicago (A) 1 Baltimore 6, Milwaukee 0 New York (N) 4, New York (A) 3 Cincinnati 4, Philadelphia 2 Pittsburgh 6, Minnesota 3 Los Angeles (N) 6, Detroit 4 St. Louis 3, Chicago (A) 1 Los Angeles (N) 6, Detroit 4. Kansas City 6, Washington 3 San Francisco 6, Cleveland 5 LOUISVILLE (J)-Like the situ- ation in track and field, the na- tion's college basketball coaches wil form a federation for the sport with or without participa- tion by the Amateur Athletic Union, Bud Foster said yesterday. Foster, chairman of the National Basketball Rules Committee, re- ported at the opening session of the coaches annual meeting on progress made by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. "We're at a stalemate with the AAU," the former Wisconsin coach said, "but I'm confident we'll form a solid group this spring to bid for international recognition." Foster said the new group, to be called the Federation of Ama- teur Basketball for the U. S., will include representatives from .high schools, colleges, armed services and YMCA, along with a group to cover open competition. * * * Harold Anderson of Bowling Green State University of Ohio was elected president of the Na- tional Association of Basketball Coaches yesterday. NCAA Semi-Finals To Begin ATTENTION, ALL STUDENTS AT UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN 1 WHAT ARE YOU GOING TO DO THIS SUMMER? You may win A SUMMER JOB LOUISVILLE, Ky. (W) - Ohio State and Cincinnati, the Thun- derous Two of college basketball the last two seasons, are heavy favorites to sweep past semifinal opponents tonight" and set up an unprecedented second straight showdown for the National Col- legiate Championship. A sell-out crowd of 17,805 will pack Freedom Hall to watch play- er of the year Jerry Lucas lead top-ranked Ohio State against bulky Wake Forest and defend- ing NCAA champ Cincinnati play UCLA. There's hardly a basketball We are now Delivering PIZZA and SUBS DOMINICK V5 NO 2-5414 buff around this derbytown who doesn't expect the Buckeyes of the Big Ten conference and the Bear- cats from the powerful Missouri ,Valley to advance to tomorrow night's final and a rematch of last year's beautifully played cham- piofiship, , in which Cincinnati snapped Ohio State's 32-game winning streak, 70-65 in overtime. Since that night in Kansas City a year ago, Ohio State has lost only once-a meaningless 86-67 decision at Wisconsin after the school's third straight Big Ten title had been clinched. Cincin- nati, which like Ohio State, re- turned three starters from last year, has lost twice-by one point at Wichita and by two points In, overtime at Bradley. Rival coach- es insist both teams are stronger than they were in 1960-61. The Buckeyes, No. 1 in the AP ratings for two years, wound up with a 25-1 record. The Bearcats, No. 2 again, are 27-2 and have, won their last 16 games. Both had little difficulty in the Regional Eliminations in the NCAA Tournament last weekend. Ohio State won the mideast title at Iowa City, beating Western Kentucky 93-73 and Kentucky 74- 64. Cincinnati smothered two touted foes in the Midwest Re- gional at Manhattan, Kan., drub- bing Creighton 66-46 and Colorado 73-46. If Coaches Fred Taylor of Ohio State and Ed Jucker of Cincinnati have a problem it would seem to be to keep their kids from look- ing beyond the semifinals to to- morrow's showdown that everyone is talking about. In Wake Forest in the 7:30 p.m., EST, opener, the Buckeyes will meet a team that floundered for half a season, then took off on a winning streak that reached 12 after a six-game sweep through the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament and the Eastern NCAA Regionals at Philadelphia and College Park, Md. l eading to a 4 - LIFETIME CAREER in the field of your choice Enter Viceroy's Career Opportunity Contest now ! 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