SUNDAY, 4 APRIL 1965 TIHE MICHIGAN DAILY llwi - . r P, G B VW Iobie, Scheerer in in AAU 'S TAKE 5 FIRSTS: 1IJ'(ndTrmn n, TOim By The Associated Press NEW HAVEN, Conn. - Carl Robie took his second first place and teammate Paul Scheerer add- ed another triumph for the unat- tached Michigan swimmers here yesterday at the NAAU Men's In- door Swimming Championships, but both were over-shadowed by the performance of Yale's Steve Clark in the 100-yard freestyle. Robie and Scheerer led four finalists from Ann Arbor, as Ken Wiebeck and Ed Bartsch placed in the individual medley and back- stroke events, but Clark seemed to have mastered his home pool. Winner of three gold medals in the Olympic games, Clark de- fended his title with an awsome performance in the race, finishing in :45:6 seconds, to eclipse every - existing .record. Steve Jackman of Minnesota previously held the mark at :46.5. Clark had lowered it to :46.1 last week in the NCAA meet, and qual- ified for yesterday's finals with an equal time. Double Winner Robie became a double winner in the meet with a 4:44.1 effort in the 500-yard freestyle event. His time surpassed Don Schol- lander's listed mark of 4:44.5, but USC's Roy Saari has a pending time of 4:43.6, which he registered in the NCAA's. After a disappointing fifth place finish in Friday's 200-yard event, meet's high scorer with 19 points,- 'W ' won the 200-yard individual med- ley with a time of 1:56.2, which;JCo betters all listed and pending rec- ords for the event. Saari's NCAA record of 1:56.7 set a year ago is the fastest mark previous to yes- Special To The Daily terday. COLUMBIA, S.C. - Michigan's Wiebeck, an unattached Mich- cindermen reacted favorably to a igan freshman, finished fifth with mixture of warm air and South- a time of 2:02.1, ern hospitality yesterday as the North Carolina A. C.'s Thomp- Wolverines earned five first-places son Mann took his second back- and snapped four meet records stroke title with a clocking' of at the South Carolina Relays. :52.5 for the 100 yards, surpassing The relays, in which 17 teams the existing American mark. He competed, marked the Inaugural was followed by Southern Cal's o the inesura- Bob Bennett and third was taken the Wolverines outdoor sea- by Bartsch of Michigan, with a ' :54.7. No point totals were kept for In the 100-yard butterfly, Luis the meet, but the Michigan thin- Nicolao of the Santa Clara Swim clads tied Maryland for the most Club won in a time of :50.9, with first-place finishes with five, The Minnesota's Wally Richardson, Wolverines also added one sec- swimming unattached, second with ond, two thirds, and two fourths a :51.1 to their list of honors. -Daily-Dave Abineri SOPHOMORE PAUL SCHEERER, swimming unattached from Ann Arbor, won the 100-yard breaststroke title in the NAAU meet yesterday with a time of 1:00.4. Scheerer's first, along with teammate Carl Robie's double win, gave Michigan swimmers three individual victories as well as a total of five spots in the na Relays Michigan outdoor varsity record in addition to breaking the old meet mark. This was the third time within the last month the Wolverine junior, the best pole vaulter in Michigan's history, cracked the 15-foot barrier. Ted Benedict finished ahead of the field in .the two-mile run with a 9:11.9 clocking to break the meet and track records. Marion Hoey, Dan Hughes, Bob Gerometta, and Kent Bernard combined to win the mile relay for the Wolverines. Heaving the shot 54'7" for a meet record, Jack Harvey placed, first to gain the other Michigan victory. Summer Sublet $49 per month 4-mon opt. 326 E. Madison I Apt. 6 2 bedrooms, fully carpeted, with full bath, study room, kitchen, open patio, parking, air conditioning Call 665-2898 finals (top six) in other events. Scheerer came back to a triumph- ant finish in the 100-yard varia- tion of the breaststroke. He was accredited with a clocking of 1:00.4, touching out Ken Merten of Los Angeles by :00.5 second. Merten, swimming unattached, had won the 200-yarder Friday. Tom Tretheway (Indiana, unat- tached) and Bill Craig (USC), NCAA champions in the 200- and 100-yard breaststroke races a week ago, finished fifth and fourth, re- spectively. High Scorer Saari, who wound up as the Gymnasts Fall Short in NCAA's Hoosiers Tops The Hoosiers' divers continuedI to dominate with another one- two-five finish off the three-me-1 ter board. This time Rick Gilbert won with Ken Sitzberger in the, runnerup spot. Rich Earley grab- bed the other place. Bernie Wrightson, diving unat- tached from Phoenix, Ariz., took! a fourth after taking a third on the one-meter board Friday. Southern Cal's medley relay team of Bob Bennett, Bill Craig, Dick McGeagh, and Roy Saari accounted for the last victory of the night, touching at 3:31.9. The Trojans' time was faster than the listed American record, but again there is a pending rec- ord which is faster. An Indiana team of Pete Hammer, Fred Sch- midt, Tom Tretheway, and Bob Williamson chalked up a 3:30.7 400-yards in the NCAA meet in Ames, Iowa, this year, which is now pending recognition. In the final team standings, USC totaled 74, North Carolina A. C. had 47, with the Yale fresh- men third with 25. Yale and Foothill tied for fourth with 21, and the unattached swimmers accumulated 143 points. Special To The Daily CARBONDALE, Ill. - Michigan gymnast Gary Erwin suffered a disheartening defeat yesterday, as he fell on the springs in his sec- ond trampoline routine which forced him to stop and take a sixth place. Frank Schmidt of Southern Illi- nois University won the trampo- line with a 96.. Dan Millman of University of California was sec- ond with 94. Two Michigan gym- nasts followed-Fred Sanders with 93 and John Hamilton with a 91. Erwin went into the finals last night in first place and was hop- ing to win his third consecutive NCAA trampoline crown. Coach Newt Loken explained that Erwin had a bad knee which hindered his performance. Loken said, "Gary is a great competitor and it's a real shame that his career had to end on such a bad note. He will be greatly missed next season." Leading the Michigan victory parade, George Canamare turned in another fine performance in the pole vault clearing the height of 15'33%" to take a first-place in the event. The vault set a Hospitable SHOT PUT-1. Harvey (Mich), 2. Haaron (Md), 3. Stewart (Duke), 4. Terrice (Md), 5. Christensen (SC). Iistance-54'7" (meet record). HIGH JUMP-1. Costello (Md), 2. Saier (Furman), 3, Densham (Mich), 4. Barnes (Duke), 5. Scott (Wake For). Height-610%11 (meet, track record). TWO-MILE RUN - 1. Benedict (Mich), 2. Mittle (NC), 3. Rothen- berg (Brown), 4. Caldwell (Va), 5. George (Md). Time-9:11.9 (meet, track record). DISCUS-1. Warts (SC), 2. Gobs (Clemson), 3, Donnelly (Mich), 4. Feldman (Citadel), 5. Hearan (Md). Distance-172'1%" (meet, track rec- ord). POLE VAULT - 1. Canamare (Mich), 2. William (Md), 3. Brown (SC), 4. Corn (NC State), 5. Chap- man (SC). Height 15'334" (meet record). 120-YD. HIGH HURDLES - 1. Fogle (Duke), 2. Dawson (Furman), 3. Sheerer (Md), 4. Woodton (Mich), 5. Williams (Citadel). Time-:14.3 (meet record). 440-YD. RELAY-1. Marlyand, 2. Michigan, 3. South Carolina, 4. Clemson, 5. East. Tenn. Time - :41.6 (meet, track record). ONE-MILE RELAY -- 1. Michigan, 2. Maryland, 3. Colgate, 4. South Carolina, 5. Clemson. Time-3:14.1 (meet, track record). TWO-MILE RELAY-i. Michigan, 2. VMI, 3. Colgate, 4. Maryland, 5. N.C. State. Time-7:42. OUR FAMOUS UNIVERSITY MODEL SUIT IN OUR OWN DISTINGUISHED "OXFORD BLUE" We introduced this deep, cool color a few years ago and its reception was so enthusiastic that we made it a Saks Fifth Avenue "staple." A hand- some mixture of charcoal and navy, it is un- usually versatile, going from office to evening engagements with aplomb. For spring, we pre- sent Oxford Blue in several interesting weaves of Dacron polyester and wool, styled in our natural-shoulder University Model. Impeccably tailored to our exacting standards of workman- ship, these suits are now ready for your selec. tion. From $65 to $115. University Shops. THE UNIVERSITY SHOP SAKS FIFTH AVENUE 332 South State Street, Ann Arbor Yale - Princeton'Harvard " University of Michigan - *Stanford *-.NwYork* -Wht. olm Springfield- Garden City - Washington - Fl Lauderdale -Chicago # Detroit- Beverly Hill, - Phoenix GO 2 GAMES UP: Montreal Wins, 3-1 In NHL Sem-Finals Seven individual crowns were given out last night. Loken com- mented that in all the events a new champion was crowned, show- ing the prevalence of new faces on the gymnastic scene. "I was quite impressed by the entire meet, but especially in the finals," he said. "Excellent per- formances were put on by each of the finalists." Michigan State gymnast Jim Curzi won two individual crowns. He scored 94 on the horizontal bar and 95 on the parallel bar. Another dual winner was Mike Jacobson of Penn State. Jacobson finished first in the all-around with a 54.7, and tied Curzi on the horizontal bars with a 94. The last dual winner was Sch- mitz. Besides winning the tram- poline, he also won the floor ex- ercise with a score of 95.7. The side horse competition was won by Bob Elsnger of Springfield University with a score of 93. The long horse was won by Millman with a scoreaofs97. Glenn Gialis of Iowa University captured the final crown on the rings with a score of 96. Last night the NCAA school crown was also decided. Penn Statebeat Washington University by the score of 68 to 51. - - - - - - - - - - { SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR BOB CARNEY iL prince of the guitar AVAILABLE MONTREAL (R) - Veterans Claude Provost and Jean Beli- veau fired power play goals as ;he Montreal Canadiens, capitaliz- ing on Toronto penalties, defeated the Maple Leafs 3-1 last night for a two-game lead in the clubs' Na- tional Hockey League semifinal playoff series. The Canadiens have a 2-0 mar- gin over the defending Stanley Cup champions in the best-of-7 games series. The third game will be played at Toronto Tuesday night. Snaps Tie Beliveau, the Montreal captain, s napped a 1-1 tie with 48 seconds remaining in the second period and Toronto's Bob Pulford serv- ing a penalty. Provost had scored with the game less .than three minutes old and two Leafs players in the penalty box. Henri Richard, who had assist- ed on the first two Montreal tal- lies, scored an insurance goal with 7:48 to play in the contest, which was mild in contrast to Thursday's series opener. Rookie Scores Rookies Ron Ellis and Pete StemkOwski collaborated for the Leafs' lone goal, midway in the second period, Ellis converting Btemkowski's pass for his initial tally in post-season play. Referee John Ashley called 19 penalties in the game. The Cana- diens drew half of the 18 minor infractions and Montreal's Bob- by Rousseau was hit with a 10- minute misconduct rap following a second period argument. Frank Mahovlich was called for hooking at 1:19 of the opening period. Eight seconds later Tim Horton was penalized for trip- ping. The Canadiens made good on their two-man edge as Pro- vost banged home Rousseau's re- bound. Pulford was jugged for hooking' at 18:21 of the period and, 51 second later, Beliveau pushed the puck under goalie Terry Sawchuk after Yvan Cournoyer had taken the initial shot. The goal was Beliveau's 43rd in playoff compe- tition. Only Detroit's Gordie Howe, among activesNHL players has more. Sawchuk was in the Toronto nets because Johnny Bower, the scheduled starter, suffered a hand injury in the pre-game warmup. Sawchuk finished with 36 saves, five more than Hodge. at LISTEN FOR W SUII! JJJ 417 E. LIBERTY US ON WCBN , b Ph. 662-0675 ... 4 I has arrived in the musical world: John Williams...God has laid a finger on his brow, and it will not be long before his name becomes a byword in England and abroad, thus contributing to the spiritual domain of his country. 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THE SOUND OF GENIUS __ ON COLUMBIA RECORDSM ML 600$/Ms 6608* ML 6096 SCORES REVITALIZE SGC If you want to become part of a dynamic attempt to revitalize and expand a vital campus organization - an organization that offers you an opportunity to become an integral part of this complex university- If you want to develop a broad outlook by meeting and working with people in all areas of key decision making positions, and at the same time further your own educa- tional objectives by gaining practical experience in the means of implementing ideas: EXHIBITION BASEBALL Cincinnati 6, Los Angeles, N, 1 Houston 1, Milwaukee 0 New York, N, 7, Kansas City 6 St. Louis 2, Pittsburgh 0 Boston 9, Chicago, N, 5 Detroit 7, Chicago, A, 4 Cleveland 7, Los Angeles, A 6 San Francisco vs. Los Angeles, A, at Palm Springs, Calif., postponed, rain. New York (A) 8, Washington 7 Baltimore 6, Philadelphia 1 NHL Semifinals Montreal 3, Toronto I (Montreal leads in games, 2-0) ""COU5 ' 4,ARCAS REG. 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