PAGE EIGHT THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 23.1962 PAGE EIGHT TINE MICHIGAN DAILY ~TThJflAY.. ~EP'rE1wRT~1?. 22.. Itaa2 1.7 Vili.Uiai} $OJL- lJWITA"X14 IVV9 L,7UkJ Weatherly Wins by 26 Seconds NEWPORT, R .I. (A')-Defenider Weatherly stood off a dramatic dosing surge by Gretel and nar- rowly beat the gallant Australian challenger yesterday by 26 sec- onds-the closest America's Cup finish in history-for a 3-1 lead in the series. President John F. Kennedy and a floating gallery of about 800 craft saw Weatherly's canny skip- per, Emil (Bus) Mosbacher Jr., send his blue-hulled queen of sea racers into a 340-yd. lead on the opening eight-mile leg into the wind, then called on all his sail- ing wizardry to withstand a strong Giretel challenge on the final two legs of the 24-mile triangle. Handled Masterfully Gretel, handled masterfully by 46-year-old Jock Sturrock, chop- ped Weatherly z commanding lead in half on the second eight-mile lap-a beam reach across the southerly wind under spinnaker headsails--and almost caught the American sloop on the final leg. The first 40 minutes of the race, in moderate winds, provided a thrilling bow-to-bow duel, then Mosbacher moved Weatherly to the front. Pointing higher toward the wind and going faster, the U.S. sloop turned the first weather mark with a lead of 1 minute, 26 seconds. Sturrock cut the lead on the second leg-a beam reach across the wind-with colorful spinna- kers flying-and then engaged Weatherly in a stirring war of tactics over the final eight-mile stretch. The pulsating finish brought an ear-shattering roar of cheers, whistles and horn blasts of trib- ute from the spectator fleet. Now Weatherly needs only to capture the fifth race Tuesday to insure continued possession of the bottomless old pitcher symbol of world yacht racing supremacy won by America 111 years ago and never budged by 17 challengers who preceded Australia. An archaic New York Yacht Club law, which forbids firing cannon on Sunday makes today a tradi- tional holiday. There will be, no race Monday because the Aussies, still experimenting with their gear, exercised their prerogative to ask for a "lay day"-their fourth in as many races. Rounding the final turning mark, the Aussie crew was quicker and more polished in setting Gret- el's spinnaker and "cheater"-a small auxiliary headsail. MUSKET MASS MEETING TONIGHT! UNION BALLROOM 7:30 W - - - --- --- - _- -_ _ - _.__ I RI __ __ - Gretel immediately went into at- tack by attempting to go to wind- ward of Weatherly. After about 12 minutes, both boats were steering so high in relation to the wind that Weatherly set a Genoa jib. Gretel followed suit three min- utes later. Then Gretel tried to climb onto Weatherly's wind. Mos- bacher responded by pointing up and keeping Gretel on his wind- ward wave. When Gretel's skipper saw that Weatherly would not let him pass, the Australians re-hoisted their spinnaker and bore off, down- wind. Weatherly put up a spin- naker, too. Steer Upwind Gretel made a final bid ten minutes from home by steering up again toward the wind, trying to speed past to windward of Weath- erly. Her bold effort just failed of success, and Weatherly crossed the line as winner by the smallest margin in the entire series his- tory. The previous closest victory was the 47-seconds last Tuesday, when Gretel beat Weatherly over a sim- ilar triangle in the second race of the 1962 challenge. Before that, the United States entry, Vigilant, beat Britain's Valkyrie II by 40 seconds in a handicap race. The British en- deavour edged Harold S. Vander- bilt's Rainbow by 51 seconds in the second race in the battle of Majestic "J" boats in 1934. Van- derbilt was a guest of President Kennedy today on the destroyer. Australia's magnificent showing in winning one race and making such a gallant stand in the other seems to have justified the million dollars in money and all the thought and effort put into the challenge. Harris Cops U.S. Amateur Golf Crown PINEHURST, N.C.) (R)-Labron Harris Jr., 20-year-old son of an Oklahoma professional, stormed from behind an almost hopeless deficit with a string of pars and birdies yesterday and won the 62nd U.S. Amateur Golf Championship with an incredible 1 up victory over insurance man Downing Gray of Pensacola, Fla. Five down and all but counted out after the morning round on the 7,150-yd., par 36-36-72 No. 2 Pinehurst course and still five down with 15 to go, the scholarly- looking Harris won five straight holes to square the match. He went two up with a par at the 28th and a clutch birdie at the 34th and closed out the match on the 36th. MICHIGAN FRiATER-ITES INVITE YOU TO RU-SH- ACACIA ALPHA DELTA PHI ALPHA- KAPPA LAMBDA ALPHA SIGMA PHI ALPHA TAU OMEGA BETA THETA PI CHI PHI CHI PSI DELTA CHI DELTA KAPPA EPSILON DELTA SIGMA PHI DELTA TAU DELTA DELTA UPSILON KAPPPA ALPHA PSI KAPPA SIGMA LAMBDA CHI ALPHA PHI DELTA THETA PHI EPSILON PI PHI GAMMA DELTA PHI KAPPA PSI PHI KAPPA SIGMA PHI KAPPA TAU PHI SIGMA DELTA PHI SIGMA KAPPA PI LAMBDA PHI PSI UPSILON SIGMA ALPHA EPSILON SIGMA ALPHA MU SIGMA CHI SIGMA NU SIGMA PHI SIGMA PHI EPSILON TAU DELTA PHI TAU EPSILON PHI TAU KAPPA EPSILON THE TA-CHI THETA DELTA CHI THETA X TRIANGLE TRIGON The open house usually consists of a tour of the house and a talk with some of the brothers. Remember- everyone houses is welcome at all open OPEN HOUSES During the more informal smokers you socialize with the brothers SMOKER At lunchesc a further to fraternal izir like. Relax- and find ou, things. and other rushees, making lots of .; friends and having lots of laughs, but most important, deciding if and where you want to pledge. and dinners, you get ste of -what the ,ig atmosphere is realIly -enjoy the food- it a lot of interesting LUNCHES and DI MEETING Cleopatra, with feminine guile, Said to Tony,"Let's barge down the Nile!" When she reached for an asp. Her belt lost Its clasp, So she stapled it up Swingline style. SWVINGL IN E STAPLER , NNERS ZETA BETA. TAU ZETA PSI MASS Michigan Union Baliroe r . .. Sept. 26 7:30 P. M. 0. I SIGN-UP: UNION-First floor registration on desk Get your IE II I