THE MICHIGAN DAILY Cincinnati Smashes Ohio State, 71-5 U: Z NCAA WRESTLING: Oklahoma State Retains Mat Crown 4 1 STILLWATER, Okla. (91-Okla- homa State crowned three nation- al champions last night and tied the record 82 points it set in win- ning the NCAA wrestling title last year, but one of the Cowboy de- fending champs was dethroned. Oklahoma State had wrapped up 23rd national title in the semi- finals Friday night. Oklahoma, which also crowned three individual champions, was second with 45 points. The Cowboy champions are Ma- saaki Hatta, at 123, Ronnie Clin- ton, at 167, and Bob Johnson at 177. Johnson was a defending champion. Phil Kinyon, Oklahoma State's defending 157 pound champion, was soundly beaten by Jack Flasche of Colorado State Col- lege. Oklahoma champs were Mickey Again . . CHAMPIONSHIP FINALS 115-Gary Simons, Lock haven, outpointed Mark, McCracken, Okla- homa State, 7-2. 123-Masaaki Hatta, Oklahoma State, outpointed Frank Freeman, Iowa Teachers, 7-4. 130-Mickey Martin, Oklahoma, outpointed Al Deleon, Mankato State, 5-2. 137-Bill Carter, Oklahoma, out- pointed Bill Dotson, Iowa Teachers, 6-4. 147-Mike Natvig, Army, outpoint- ed Kirk Pnedleton, Lehigh, 5-4. 157-Jack Flasche, Colorado Col- lege, outpointed Phil Kinyon, Ok- lahoma State, 5-2. 167-Ronnie Clinton, Oklahoma State, outpointed Terry Isaacson, Air Force, 3-2. 177 - Bob Johnson, Oklahoma State, outpointed Dean Lahr, Colo- rado, 3-2. 191-Wayne Baughman, Oklahoma, outpointed ,Joe James, Oklahoma State, 2r1. Heavyweight - Sherwyn Thorson, Iowa, pinned Roger Pillath, Wis- consin, 3:21. CONSOLATION FINALS 115 - Okla Johnson, Michigan State, defeated Frank McCann, Iowa, 1-1, 1-1 (split referee deci- sion). 123-Mike Nissen, Nebraska, out- pointed Richard Martin, Pittsburgh, 5-2. 130-Tom Huff, Iowa, pinned Lew- is Kennedy, Minnesota, 1:06. 137-Doug Wilson, Oklahoma State, outpointed Dan Fix, Colorado Mines, 147-Harold Thompson, Nebraska, outpointed George Kelvington, Pitts- burgh, 6-5. 157-Ron Pifer, ,Penn State, pin- ned ,im Reifsteck, Minnesota, 2:46. 167--James Harrison, Pittsburgh, outpointed Don Millard, Southern Illinois, 2-2, 1-0 (overtime). 177-Ronald Paar, Wisconsin, out- pointed Jinm Detrixhe, Lehigh, 3-0. 191-Ken Houston, Southern Illi- nois, outpointed Pat Clock, Lewis and Clark, 3-1. Heavyweight-John Baum, Michi- gan State, outpointed Rory Weber, Northwestern, 4-1. II Martin, at 130, Bill Carter at 137, and Wayne Baughman at 191. Other champs were Gary Sim- ons, 115 of Lock Haven State, Mike Natvig, Army, 147, and Sher- wyn Thorson, of Wisconsin, heavy- weight. Flasche dropped behind Kinyon in the first period when he yield- ed a takedown, but then the Colo- rado wrestler took command and outwrestled the defending champ the rest of the way. Simons, who has posted a fan- tastic 85-0 record during his col- legiate career, won his third con- secutive NCAA title and was nam- ed the tournament's Outstanding Wrestler for the second straight year. He manhandled Mark McCrac- ken of Oklahoma State, 7-2, in the finals. Hatta took a 7-4 decision from Frank Freeman of State College of Iowa. Clinton Wins Clinton, Oklahoma State's 167- pounder,: took down Terry Isaac- son of Air Force in the final 40 seconds, for a 3-2 decision. Clin- ton wrestled despite a painful hand injury suffered the night before the tournament began. Johnson, the defending 177- pound champion, took down Dean Lahr of Colorado late in their match to squeeze out a 3-2 vic- tory. Carter, who finished third in the NCAA last year, had to rally to subdue Bill Dotson, State College of liwo, 6-4, and Martin outpoint- ed Al Deleon of Mankato State, 6-4. Stiff Challenge Big Eight Conference 191-pound champion Baughman resisted a stiff challenge from sophomore Joe James of Oklahoma State for a 2-1 decision. Natvig conquered Kirk Pendle- ton of Lehigh, 5-4, for his title. Horse Show To Be Staged The Michigan Riding Club will hold its annual horse show today at 3 p.m. at the Huron River Rid- ing Club at the corner of Geddes and Huron River Drive. There will be 19 entrants in the show. There will be participating in the Hunter class and also in beginning, intermediate and ad- vanced Horsemanship. There will also be competition in bareback riding and jumping. Another fea- ture of the show will be a crop and saddle drill exhibition. EASTER CARDS and BIBLES Now Available, OVERBECK'S BOOKSTORE Hogue Outpl Bearcats to Se LOUISVILLE (A') - Mighty Cin- cinnati, with Paul Hogue playing ailing Jerry Lucas, crushed Ohio State in their long awaited re- match last night, 71-59, and won the National Collegiate Basketball Championship for the second straight year. Wake Forest won third place, edging UCLA 82-80 in the opener of the showdown doubleheader be- fore 18,469 at Freedom Hall.. Hogue, a 6-8, 240-pound bull, was facing a Lucas considerably under form as a result of the sprained left knee the Buckeye ace suffered in Friday's semifinals. But it's doubtful that even a 100 per cent Lucas wuld have made any difference., Played Five The Bearcats of Ed Jucker, who shocked the basketball world by beating Ohio State 70-65 in over- time in the title game last year at Kansas City, played it almost all the way with their wonderfully cohesive unit of Hogue, Tommy Thacker, Ron Bonham, George Wilson and Tony Yates. Still it was Hogue who made the difference this time, the first time two schools ever met in suc- cessive years for the NCAA cham- pionship. Scores 22 Hogue scored 22 points and did a tremendous job on the boards, both on offense and defense. This, combined with the jump shooting, of Thacker and the high pressure defense and ball-hawking of- the Bearcats, made the outcome never in doubt after a 37-29 halftime lead. The pressure began to tell on Ohio State as time ticked away and with the massive crowd roar- ing as it turned into a rout, the Bearcats poured it on. They led by as many as 20 points before a late Buckeye flurry cut down the final margin. Two for Two Making it two chamipionships in two years of coaching for Jucker, the Bearcats pushed their season record to 29-2 and wound up win- ning their last 18 games. Ohio State finished 26-2 and the loss was only the sixth against 78 vic- tories since Lucas joined the var- sity and began his spectacular career three years ago. The big fellow from Middletown, Ohio--ironically located only 28 'miles from Cincinnati--did his best with a left knee heavily ban- daged but obviously bothering him. Not Up To Par He couldn't rebound like he us- ually does, he couldn't defend like he usually does, and he didn't shoot like he usually does. The three-time all-America and player of the year the last two seasons has an over-all shooting average of nearly 63 per cent in his collegiate varsity career, which ended tonight. Against the Bearcats last night, he hit only five of 17 shots and scored by 11 points. Hogue, who came to Cincinnati from Knoxville, Tenn., four years ago because he wanted to play on a team with the great Oscar Rob- ertson, also wound up his collegi- ate career..And if he has suffered in the shadow of his highly pub- licized rival to the north at Colum- bus, he barged out of it last night. Paul took 18* shots, many of them hookskand short jumps over Lucas, and hit on 11. He added 19 rebounds. With Thacker pepper- ing away consistently at long range, they made a pair that Ohio State couldn't come close to matching. JERRY LUCAS .*. injured and outclassed 'Proved Our Point,' Says Cincy Coach LOUISVILLE W)--"We showed them tonight we're the nation's No. 1 college basketball team," said Cincinnati Coach Ed Jucker after his Bearcats mauled Ohio State 71-59 to win their second straight National Collegiate Bas- ketball Title. 1 "This is a real great satisfaction to me and the boys," he said. "Everyone thought it was a fluke when we beat Ohio State last year for the title. We had a point to prove when we sta'ted out tonight -and we proved it." In last year's finals, Cincinnati defeated Ohio State 70-65 in over- time. Contended All Season Jucker has contended all season his Bearcats, co-champions of the powerful Missouri Valley Confer- ence, were not getting the credit they deserved.. Jucker couldn't say too much about his great team-and in par- ticular 6-9, 240-pound Paul Hogue. Hogue, throughout his collegiate career has been in the shadow of Ohio State's three time all-Amer- ica Jerry Lucas. Jucker was reminded of this and was asked if Hogue was'out to prove a point, too. Much To Do "I'm sure this had much to do with Hogue's great performance," Jucker said. "I know Paul feels deeply about this. He played a great tournament and he did a, great job on Lucas "Tom Thacker was like five men out there. He was all over the place, feeding, jumping and re- bounding. He played a very power- ful game. And I can't say enough for him." Thacker scored 21 points, topped only by Hogue's 22. Hogue also had 19 rebounds. Stymied'Feeding Asked what made the difference In the game Jucker said "I thought we stymied their feeding game and had them standing still. This proves defense has a big place in basketball. When our team plays defense, we play of- fense." Cincinnati tied for the Missouri Valley title with Bradley and had to win a playoff with the Braves to earn a berth in the NCAA Tour- nament. ays Injured Lucas To Lead cond Straight NCAA Crown Dayton Wins in NIT; NEW YORK 01)-Dayton ended a long string of frustrations yes- terday by winning the National Invitation Basketball Tournament with a powerful 73-67 victory over St. John's of New York. The exciting final was played before a Madison Square Garden crowd of 16,037 after Loyola of Chicago had beaten Duquesne 95- 84 for third place. Chmielewski. Stars Dayton, a fiveltime runnerup in nine previous NIT's, was led to its first triumph by sophomores Bill Chmielewski and Gordy 'Hatton. Chmielewski, completely out-play- ing St. John's vaunted Leroy El- lis, spearheaded the Flyers into control of the game and Hatton applied the clincher in the closing minutes. Dayton went with its starting five until just one minute was left and each had a big hand in the victory. Playing tight, patient basketball, the Flyers refused to wilt against a' furious St. John's rally at the finish. Dayton pushed ahead by 11 points midway in the second half butsaw the lead dwindle to five with 7:18 to go. Then Hatton, a 6-foot guard, put on his clutch performance with 11 of Dayton's 13 points. Named MVP Chmielewski, a bruising 6'10", 235-pounder, was named the tour- nament's most valuable player. He niontown Wins HARRISBURG (M)-For the first time since 1925, the heyday of Charley (Chuck) Hyatt, who later starred at Pitt and became a mem- ber of basketball's Hall of Fame, Uniontown won the Pennsylvania State High School Basketball Championship last night by beat- ing Norristown 70-57. wt rif io1n A T T HE U NIVE R SIT Y O FM IC H IG A N t i PASSOVER ; SEDA RIM . _P Hillel Members GS OdC rflysting"at Non-Members full year's rate and Guests a Special" Package Rate for call 16 Meals....... . $30.00 $34.00 , Each Seder (Complete Ceremonial & Dinner) . . .. 3.75 4.25 ; Each Lunch . .. . . . . . .. . .......... . . 1.40 1.75 ; Each Dinnet . . . . .. . . . .......... 2.30 2.75 s Enclosed is my check Q (Check appropriate box.) , money order drawn to "B'nai B'rith H illel Foundation Trust-Account" for ; - $ to cover, the following: (Be sure to specify.) ; [~ ALL 16. MEALS SSeder, Wednesday, April 18 Q Dinner, Sunday, April 22 , QLunch, Thursday, April 19 Lunch, Monday, April 23 [ Seder, Thursday, April 19Q Dinner, Monday, April 23 ; Q 'Lunch, Friday, April 2d' Lunch, Tuesday, April 24 ; j~ Dinner, Friday, April 20 Q Dinner, Tuesday, April 24 ; -1Lunch,'Saturday, April 21Q Lunch, Wednesday, April 25 ; Q Dinner, Saturday, April 21Q Dinner, Wednesday,'April 25 i QLunch, Sunday, Apri l 22 Q Lunch, Thursday, April'26 R NAME (Type 'or Print).E Last Name First Middle , CAMPUS ADDRESS PHONE ; NOTE i scored 24 points forda four-game total of 107, and had 11 rebounds yesterday as he thoroughly out- classed Ellis, St. John's 6'10" sen- ior center, under the boards. Hatton, who had a cold hand in the first half, netted 18 points and had 94 for the tourney. Ellis scored 22 points for the Redmenshitting only five of 19 from the floor but clicking on 12 of 13 free throws. Kevin Loughery was high man with 26 points for St. John's, which has won the NIT title three times in 16 appear- ances.' St. John's had an 18-11 lead midway in the first half before Chmielewski paced Dayton into the lead. It was see-saw for the next few minutes, but the Flyers gradually moved ahead, led 35-29 at intermission, and never was headed1. Sweet Triumph The triumph over favored St. John's was a sweet one for Day- ton Coach Tom Blackburn, who has brought teams into this 25- year old classic 10 times in the last 12 seasons. Five times before his clubs had finished second-in 1951, '52, '55, '56 and '58. Blackburn said after Dayton's three previous victories this time out that his squad was at its peak and yesterday's game proved him right. On Defensive With its advantage in height, Chmielewski'ssuperiority over El- lis, and the overall, polished team- work, Dayton clearly -had St. John's on the defensive after tak- ing its halftime lead. Time and again the Redmen were forced into desperation shots and they just weren't going In. Dayton put together a string of six points while holding St. John's scoreless for a span of nearly four minutes as the midway point ap- proached in the second half. Exhibition Baseball Baltimore 9-0, Detroit 6-4 Chicago (A) 11, New York (A) 0 Philadelphia 3, Pittsburgh 1 St. Louis 6, Minnesota 2 Chicago-(N) 3,. Cleveland 1 New York (N) 14, Kansas City 7 Boston 5, San Francisco 4 Los Angeles (N) 7, Cincinnati 4 Washington 7, Milwaukee 5 Houston vs. Los Angeles (A), night NHL Montreal 5, Chicago 3 Detroit 2, Toronto 2 STATE HIGH SCHOOL CHAMPIONSHIPS CLASS A Saginaw 69, Benton Harber 58 CLASSB' River Rouge 69, East Grand Rapids 36 CLASS''C ' Muskegon Christian 79, Kalamazoo Christian 54 CLASS D Flint St. Matthew 60, Brimley 52 ZINDELL OLDSMOBILE For Complete Collision and Body Shop Service Col Ann Arbor NO 3-0507 -Free Estimates- All Makes of Cars ...And OHIO STATE Nowell Haviicek Reasbeck Lucas McDonald Doughty Gearhart Bradds Totals CINCINNATI Bonham Wilson Hogue Thacker Yates Sizer Totals OHIO STATE CINCINNATI 29 30-59 37 34-71 Attendance-18,469. Grfih K0 ..Pa ret in , Twelve . NEW YORK (A)--Fired up Emile Griffith of New York stopped champ Benny (Kid) Paret of Cuba in the 12th round last night and regained the world welterweight title. A series of right hand blows to the head staggered the 25-year-old Paret midway in the twelfth round, and, as he started to slump to the floor, referee Ruby Gold- stein stopped the fight at 2:09 of the round. As Goldstein grapped his arms around Grifflith, the dazed Paret continued his slow slump to the floor. He collapsed on the canvas as the announcement of Emile's . victory was made Dr. Alexander Schiff rushed into the ring, to attend the stricken champion. Then Paret was carried out of the ring on stretcher. Head Injury "It looks like he suffered a head injury but we don't know what it is, said Dr. Ira McCown, of the State Athletic Commis- sion's medical staff. Paret, who had taken a severe beating although he had floored Griffith in the sixth round, didn't seem to have any pep at all in the twelfth. He was sluggish and mov- ing flatfootedly. Griffith, eager to make up for his split decision defeat to Paret last Sept. 30, nailed Paret with a right to the jaw. Paret went against the ropes, where he had spent most of the fight. Hammered Griffith hammered him with 'a series of rights that sent Parets head between the second and top rope. Griffith hammered him with several uppercuts to the head that kept the blood flowing from Par- et's nose and a cut under his right eye. Altogether Griffith landed more than 20 punches without a -return_ as Paret sagged on the ropes. Paret To Surgery NEW YORK OP) -- Benny (Kid) Paret, knocked out by Emile Griffith in that nation- lily televised world welterweight title fight last night, was being prepared for surgery at Roose- velt Hospital early this morn- ing. A spokesman for the hos- pital said that Dr. Lawrence Schick, neuro-surgeon, would perform an operation on the stricken fighter's skull to re- lieve pressure caused by a blood clot. "Four holes are to be drilled," a staff doctor said. 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