THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MARCH 21. THE iWICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. MARCH 21. vivw a/ali) i ialla'V 11 N1 1~V hamps Decided 11 I-M igma Phi Epsilon Downs lpha Tau Omega, 55-43 I-M Championships By GARY WINER Sigma Phi Epsilon almost made it a complete rout in Social Fra- ternity "A" basketball finals last night, by defeating Alpha Tau Omega, 55-43. Dennis Sofiak of SPE lead all scorers with 19 points while team- mate Jack Rashleigh chipped in 17. Dave Molhoek and Harvey Chapman led the losers with 12 and 11 markers, respectively. Superior rebounding by the Sig Ep quintet, especially by Dave Liddle, made the difference. On more than one occasion the win- ners had two or three men all alone under the boards fighting for the ball amongst themselves as the ATO squad could only watch helplessly. Sigma Phi jumped to a quick 4-2 lead on basket's by Bob Gow- dy and Sofiak. ATO's Bob Hunt knotted the score at 4-4 and then an exchange of baskets made it 6-6. Rashleigh then dumped in the first of his total and SPE never trailed after that. Playing under a handicap of having only five players in uni- form, ATO exhibited a weak of- fense in the first half as the fast- breaking Sig Ep squad took ad- vantage of the situation. With the score 10-8, ATO switched to a zone defense, but SPE greeted the change with a fast barrage of baskets to make the score 19-10 at the quarter. The second quarter was merely a repeat of the first as the ATO basket seemed to have a, lid on it. Molhoek pumped in ten points by the half, but the eventual los- ers found themselves trailing by a 31-18 count at intermission. ATO trailed by as much as 20, points three times in the third quarter. With the score 41-21 late in this period, they finally began to find the range. Chapman, who had been unable to score in the first half, hit on some of his long outside jumpers as ATO closed the gap to 43-27 as the contest entered the final period. Sigma Phi Epsilon, however, failed to buckle under the con- tinued surge by ATO in the fourth quarter and walked away with the "A" title.. SPE's coach, Doug Her- ner, cleared his bench with two minutes remaining. Dodgers Dodge Sports In the independent basketball title contest last night, the Draft Dodgers outlasted the Sports- men, 47-38. John Wiley, Dave Kroll, and Pete Patterson led the winners with 12, 11 and 11 points respec- tively as the Dodgers lengthened their 20-19 halftime lead. The Sportsmen's John Jones paced the field with 16 tallies for the eve- ning. 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Residence Hall Basketball Huber 66, Kelsey 46 Huber 36, Reeves 29 Swimming Williams Van Tyne Hinsdale Adams Wenley Water Polo Williams 7, Strauss 4 Social Fraternity Basketball Sigma Phi Epsilon 55, Alpha Tau Omega 43 Delta Upsilon 37, Sigma Alpha Epsilon 17 61 46 37 23 14 1. 2. 3.; 4. Swimming Sigma Chi 39 Alpha Tau Omega 31 Sigma Alpha Epsilon 30 (tie) Phi Gamma Delta Alpha Delta Phi 25 SAE WINS 'B': Huber Wains Crowns ' In 'A', 'B' Basketball Spectacular Sigma Chi, Williams Sweep Swimming Championships By PERRY HOOD with James Lawrence's 100.9. A total of eight records were Hinsdale finished fifth, followed shattered last night as -Sigma Chi by Allen-Rumsey. and Williams House swept to vic- More Spectacular tories in their respective divisions The fraternity division saw in the I-M swimmin gchampion- much more spectacular diving skill in the person of Tom Oster- ships, land of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. Os- In the residence hall division, terland tallied a remarkable Williams' 200-yd. medley relay 216.3 points in winning the title. team of Fred Jardon, Robert Mark Roseman of Sigma Alpha Gross, Doug Westerkamp, and Mu was no competition, but cop- Ron Bastian set a new I-M record ped second with 148.6 points, of 1:56.6. A new 200-yd. free- trailed by Jack Forester of Zeta style record was set by Tom Mack Psi with 79.3. of Van Tyne with a time of 2:15.2 Between the residence hall and Mack also set a new cecord of fraternity swimming meets a div- 24.3 in the 50-yd. freestyle event ing exhibition was presented by Van Tyne copped another record members of the varsity diving in the 50-yd. backstroke with team. The exhibition included a Dave Wilber turning in a time of session of clown antics, in addi- 29.7. Fred Eurich of Hinsdale set tion to the team's usual fine per- a record of 26.5 in the 50-yd. formance on the one-meter board. butterfly.The last event of the evening Point-wise, Williams cleaned up in the pool was the residence hall with 61, followed by Van Tynein ter polo tite atchinchich with 46, Hinsdale 37, Adams 23, Williams house amainchalk d up and Wenley 14 for fifth place. ' Wlamsiose again chaup ATO Rcorda championship, whipping Strauss ATO Record house 7-4. Alpha Tau Omega's 200-yd. freestyle relay team swept to a l new record of 1:42.9 in the fra- Exhibition ternity division. Angie Deluca of ATO set a new mark of 2:10.8 in Baseball the 200-yd. freestyle event, and Bob Shaefer of Phi Gamma Delta St. Louis 4, Baltimore 3 set a record of 26.2 seconds in the Cincinnati 6, Minnesota 5 50-yd. butterfly. New York (A) 18, Washington 3 Sigma Chi won the meet and Chicago (A) 7, Philadelphia 5 Pittsburgh 4, Detroit 0 title for the second year in a row New York (N) 4. Los Angeles (N) 3 with a score of 39 points. Alpha Boston 5; Cleveland 2 Tau Omega was second with 31, Los Angeles (A) 2, Chicago (N) 1 followed by Sigma Alpha Epsilon Houston 16, San Francisco 12 (13 inn) with 30, Phi Gamma Delta and Alpha Delta Psi tied for fourth with 25 each, and Beta Theta Pi It's Complete was. fifth with 20. Earlier, in the residence hall Barber Servicesr! diving competition, Carl Cronk of Try one of our: Anderson turned in a first for his SHAVES and HAIRCUTS house with a point total of 135.1. SCALP and FACIAL Second place was tied down by TREATMENTS teammate Rodger Winn with 115.7 Shoe Shines Available points. Adams house had a close THE DASCOLA BARBERS third in Alan Adaschik with 111.5, while Williams chalked up fourth near Michigan Theater B'NAI BRITH HILLEL FOUNDATION TOMORROW, MARCH 22, SABBATH SERVICE at 1:30 FOLLOWED at 8:30 by DIALOGUE No. 2, of "WHAT WE MEAN BY THE JUDAEO-CHRISTIAN HERITAGE"1 Theme;Sources and Values of the Good Life Participants: Guild House-The Rev. J. Edgar Edwards and students Hillel-Dr. Herman Jacobs and students IF A Y PRO SPORTS:, Keo'sClutch Goal G ives Leaf s First., By MARK BENDER Huber House captured the Res- idence Hall "B" basketball cham- pionship last night in a fast-mov- ing battle with Reeves House by a 36-29 tally. Superior speed and capable ball- handling allowed the Huber five to overcome the taller Reeves men whose average height is 6'3". The losers started off in fine fashion, drawing first blood and extending their lead to six points by the middle of the first quar- ter. Their early flourish soon fal- tei ed, however, as the speedy vr t rs began to click. By the end of the hectic first quarter, Huber had made up its deficit and gone on to lead 14-11. Stretch Lead The victors continued to play a fine game, capitalizing on sev- eral Reeves errors and stretching their lead to 28-19 by the begin- ning of the final quarter. The game appeared all but sewn-up when the tmderdogs, led by sharpshooting Bill Dornbos and John Bollick, began rapidly clos- ing the gap. Huber Takes 'A, Huber House had a battle on its hands for half a game, but put on a surge in the second-half and swept to a 66-46 victory over Kelsey House to win the Residence Hall "A" basketball champion- ships. It was the second victory of the night for Huber House. The "B" defeated Reeves house for the crown earlier in the evening. Jack Clancy was the high scorer for the victorious Hubers, dump- ing in 16 points. His effort was eclipsed, however, by Pat McCleer of Kelsey; McCleer finished with 19 for the night. SAE Dumps DU In the finals of the Fraternity "B" basketball tournament, Delta' Upsilon failed to defend its last year's championship, bowing be- fore a powerful Sigma Alpha Epsi- lon five 37-17. It was a one-sided affair from the start as DU suffered contin- uously from loose ball handling and haphazard shooting. This factor, plus the superior speed and height of its opponent, creat- ed a hopeless situation for Delta Upsilon. Although outclassed, the losers fought fiercely, producing a rough and tumble contest in which both teams emphasized the defensive.' The result was a game low in scoring (only three points were scored in the third quarter) but rich in excitement. n - I By The Associated Press TORONTO-Dave Keon scored his second goal of the game with 8 seconds to go last night, giving the Toronto Maple Leafs a 3-3 tie with Montreal and their first Na- tional Hockey League champion- ship in 15 years. With Toronto goaltender Don Simmons out of the net in the last minute of play, and some fans on their way out of the rink, the pint-sized center beat Montreal netminder Jacques Plante from a scramble. Only seconds before the Ca- nadiens Dickie Moore had missed scoring by inches, his shot hit- Oily Cox Represents M 9 'M'in Meet' NEW HAVEN, Conn. (5 - Minnesota's Steve Jackman and Indiana's Chet Jastremski low- ered American records last night in successfully defending their Na- tional A.A.U. men's indoor swim- ming titles. The only Michigan tanker to reach the finals was diver Pete Cox. The 21-year-old Jastremski and Dick' McGeagh, a Southern Cali- fornia. freshman, hit the finish line in the 200-yd. individual med- lay as though they were twins. Each was timed in '1:58.5, but the judges ruled Jastremski the winner. He broke his own mark of 1:59.4 set last, year. Three-Foot Win Jackman, the Big Ten champ and a 21-year-old senior from Rochester, Minn.. beat Yale's Steve Clark by about three feet in the 100-yd. freestyle. His time of :46.5 shattered Clark's :46.8 scored two years ago. The record smashing show in Yale's 25-yd; pool got the four- day meet off exactly the way ex- perts had predicted. p.'"W ting the side of the vacant goal. The tie brought Toronto's point total to 82, four more than Chi- cago and Montreal, tied for second, and each with two games to go. While either of the contenders possibly could match the Leaf's total points, they cannot catch Toronto in total 'victories, thus clinching the title for Toronto and breaking Montreal's five - year string. In other NHL action, the New York Rangers, led by Andy Bath- gate's three assists, beat the Bos- ton Bruin's, 5-1. The three points moved Bathgate to within three points of league leading Gordie Howe. Hawks Take One ST. LOUIS - The St. Louis Hawks dug themselves out of an early 16-point hole and defeated the Detroit Pistons 118-99 in the .opener of the National Basket- ball Association's Western Divi- sion semifinal playoff series last night. The second game of the best-of- 5 set will be played in St. Louis Friday night. Oklahoma Challenges Rival Oklahoma State CAMP STAFF OPENINGS WSI'S, Sailing, Canoeing, Tennis, Camping, Riflery, Field Sports, Photography, Ceramics. Camp TO-HO-NE for Boys-Great Barrington, Mass. Also, man to help 6 bright boys build ham radio and prepare them for operators license. And, physics students with knowledge of astronomy, meteorolgy, and electronics.rGraduate students or upperclassmen pre- ferred. Interviews Today thru Friday. Tel. for appt.: Peter Menaker, Michigan Union, Room 336. If no answer, leave message. I By The Associated Press KENT, Ohio - Three defending champions, a former title-holder, seven runners-up and four third- place finishers highlight the glit- tering field in the 33rd annual NCAA Wrestling Championships starting today. Oklahoma State shoots for its third straight title and eighth crown in 10 years. Only its arch- rival, Oklahoma, has broken the Cowboys' grip in the last decade. The Sooners won in 1957 and 1960. Oklahoma has two of the de- fending titlists, Mickey Martin at 130 lbs. and Wayne Baughman at 191. Army's Mike Natpig holds the 147-lb. crown. Entries from last week's na- tional college division champion- ship pushed the starting fiell to 287 wrestlers from 62 schools. This is the first time the top four win- ners in the small college class have advanced into the showcase tournament. Michigan Daily Classifieds CHECKMATE FOR BETTER VALUES t:,. _% s \ FLORIDA SPECIAL! O Hand Woven THE RIGHT SUIT "Versatile 300" I Derives its name because it is versatile enough to be worn 300 days a year. For years, men have searched for a suit like this. It was never possible with wool alone. With the advent of Dacron (DuPon't polyester fibre), Abbott of New Eng- land developed the perfect blend of 55% Dacron and 45% fine worsted wool. Result: a fabric with tropical weight comfort, but with all season appearance. Redwood & Ross, with an ear tuned to the times, meticulously directing the manufacturer, confidently presents "Versatile 300" as THE RIGHT SUIT, for Spring, Summer and early Fall. Traditional shades in plains and plaids. No point of quality has been sacrificed in bringing you this fine Suit at the outstanding price of 5200 India Madras 2995. Regular 35.00 Quality 11 ' . r .. : t ...:.J " . 1 :4 } iV:"::: . . . }: { y m 's =:. f.'." l }'. A" -. :5. A;:S i' >i: " " K;i , t. ' .i i'ti ' . Vii d Z5 V ny t S Natural Shoulder Coats, Plain Front Trousers I I 11