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October 29, 1948 - Image 6

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1948-10-29

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

0

PAGE SIX

THE IM ICI I GAN DAILY

s .SAY, O VER 26, 1948 ,

THE MICH1t~AN DATTY

FRIDAY. OCTOBER 29. 1948

I

Illl Residence Cross Country Title

Fall

o Lloyd

Fraternity Grid League
Nears Semi-Final Games

a
Distance Crown Remains
or Second Straight Year

Intramural Sport Slate
To Include Hockey Loop

0

The Alpha Tau Omega's nosed
out the Phi Delta Theta's last
night in a close game of 8-7.
Last year's title holders, the
ATO's, also beat the Phi Kappa
Psi's by a score of 8-7 and the
Sigma Alpha Mu's 12-6 thus as-
suring themselves of a semi-final
position in the first place playoffs.
THE OTHER FIRST place con-
testants are still battling it out.
Beta Theta Pi defeated Chi Psi
15-0 in the quarter finals and will
meet Chi Phi in the other semi-
final position.
Chi Phi beat Sigma Alpha Epsi-
lon 13-6.
For second place honors the
Delta Kappa Epsilon's will clash
with the Delta Tau Delta's, the
winner will take on the Theta
Chi's who defeated the Sigma
Phi Epsilon's 8-0, for a semi-
final place.
Psi Upsilon will play Sigma
Alpha Mu and the 'ictor will fight
with Delta Upsilon for the other
semi-final position.
I-M Volleyball
StartsMonday
Beginning Monday /next week
110 teams will take to the courts
as Fraternity, Professional Frater-
nity, Independent, Residence, In-
ternational Center and Faculty
volleyball leagues get under way.
Games will be played at seven,
eight, and nine o'clock on Monday,
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thurs-
day nights as the schedule is
slightly overloaded. The Faculty
games will be played in the after-
noons at five in an effort to ease
the crowded situations.
The volleyball program is ex-
pected to be complete by Christ-
mas vacation.

IN THE THIRD place playoffs
Lambda Chi Alpha will take on
the Phi Sigma Kappa's. The
winner will meet Alpha Sigma Phi
and the victor of this contest will
fight it out with the winner of the
Zeta Beta Tau-Zeta Psi playoff
for third place.
Fighting for fourth position
Theta Delta Chi was trounced by
Sigma Phi 25-0. The Sig Phi's will
in turn meet the winner of the
Alpha Delta Phi-Kappa Sigma
tussle.
Professiona l
Fraternities.
Enter Finals
The Nu Sigma Nu's, last year's
holder of the professional frater-
nity touch football title, are in a
position for a repeat performance
when they meet the Go Betweens
in the championship game next
Thursday.
Last year's trophy winners, the
Nu Sig Nu's, were victorious over
the hard-fighting Phi Chi's in the
semi-finals by a score of 19-12.r
The Go Betweens in a close,4
non-scoring game with the Phi
Rho Sima's finally edged out a
1-0 yardage victory.
The Lawyers Club and the Alpha-
Kappa Psi's will be the contenders
for second place honors when the
whistle blows next Thursday after-
noon.
To reach the semi-finals the
Lawyers Club beat Alpha Chi Sig-
ma by a 7-0 score.
Yesterday the Alpha Kappa Psi's
rolled up thirteen points to defeat
Phi Delta Phi who pressed them
closely with twelve points.
Buy an Ensian, it's a sure bet.

Daily-Peterman
WEST QUAD CHAMPIONS-Stu Hertzberg (left) receives the
Wagner Centennial Trophy for Michigan House in the West
Quad from Mr. Wagner of a local haberdashery. The trophy is
awarded annually to the house in the West Quad placing highest
in the Ihtramural program.
Greene ouse Trips Wenley
In Residene Pioskin Fray

By SAM ALTMAN
It was Lloyd House again, dom-
inating the Residence Halls Cross
Country Meet for the second con-
secutive year.
In the meet held on Tuesday,
the Lloyd harriers swept by all
other entries to finish first withI
the low score of 51 points.
ONLY ONE member of lastl
year's championship team was rep-
esented in the person of Norman
Doorenbos, and he improved h:s
eleventh place standing of last fall
:y finishing a close third on T'ues-
:ay.
Individual honors were taken
by Paul Shaler of Prescott, who
ran through the two and one
quarter mile course in the fast
time of eleven minutes and ten
seconds.
An interesting note is attached
to this timetas atnew course rec-
ord was set last year by Lou
Calabrese running for Phi Gamma
Delta in the inter fraternity meet,
his time being only 11:37.
LAST WEEK Willis Caldwell,
running for Beta 'Theta Pi, tra-
versed the course in 11 :9, thereby
making Shaler's time only one
second off the present cotuxse rec-
ord.
Running at Shaler's heels
throughout the entire race but
fading towards the finish was
Dick Conn of Allen-Rumsey who
crossed the finish line eleven
minutes and twenty-four sec-
onds after the firing of the
starting gun.
Doorenbos was behind him in
third, followed by Bill Pierce of
Prescott and Binkley, running fifth
for Hinsdale.
LLOYD'S winning entries were
all bunched between third and six-
The MosT Talked About
Pipe Mixture in America

first Lloyd man to complete the
run and was followed by Harvey
Burley who finished eighth, Lloyd
Kibberd, right behind him in ninth
The IM Building has an-
nounced that there will be a
temporary change in their
hours. The building will be
closed all day Saturday because
of the Homecoming Dance.
position, and Robert Smell and
Joseph Yakas who placed fif-
teenth and sixteenth respectively.
TEAM SCORES: Lloyd -- 51;
Wenley-86; Hinsdale-91; Pres-
cott-110; Chicago-134; Hayden
-145; Greene - 157; Williams-
160 Tyler-204; Michigan--216.

For the first time since 1939,
Michigan students will have the '
opportunity to play Intramural
Hockey.t
Earl Riskey, I-M head hast
called an organizational meeting
for 7:30 on the evening of Wed-
nesday, November 10.
* * *
PLANS SO FAR have been for
i-bt teams who will play in twoj
different leagues. These leagues1
will be run through twice, giving
each team six games to play be-
fore the playoff series begins.
The teams would play every
Monday night at 6:30, 7:30, 8:30,1

I

0

and 9:30 in the Michigan ice rink
where varsity hockey is played.
AS YET THERE has been no
team organized, and almost all ac-
tivity is pending the meeting
where all those interested will pre-
sent ideas on how the games would
be officiated and the equipment
obtained.
No special organization will be
allowed to place one team on the
field because of the limited facili-
ties.
However any group may get to-
gether as a team, electing their
own manager who would in turn
represent them in all meetings at
the I-M Building.

I HALLOWE'EN "WATCHCRAFT" I

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CLEANING AND NEEDED PARTS:
Watches - less than $6.75
Chronometers less than $15.00
Clocks - $3.25 - $5.00 (depending on type)
VETERAN'S WATCH REPAIR SERVICE
All Work done by Certified Craftsmen
Blue Front Cigar Store, State at Packard
Campus Drug, S. State at Liberty
Witham Drug, S. University at Forest
West Lodge PX, Willow Village

0
0
0

With the final playoffs sched-f
uled to start this coming Monday,
the Residence Halls Touch Foot-
ball League will soon be able to
proclaim one of their competing
teams as champion for the present
season.
Preliminary league play has al-
ready been completed, and in the
elimination playoff that follows
all individual league winners will
compete against each other for the
Residence Halls crown.
IN THE DECIDING game played
yesterday in League A, Greene
House emerged the victor by de-
feating Wenley 28-0.
Previous to this, both teams
had identical records of three
wins and no losses, but Greene's
triumph gave them undisputed
control of first place.
Wenley's 3-1 record puts them
in second, while a triple tiere
sults between Michigan, Adams
and Cooly, all boasting one win
and three losses.
HAYDEN AND Anderson fin-,
ished their regular league play
deadlocked in a tie with 2-1 rec-
ords.
In a playoff between the two.
teams, Hayden came out on top,
thereby copping the League B
title, and putting Anderson in
second. Tyler ended up in third
while Chicago's 1- record could
do them no better than last.4
Allen-Rumsey emerged from
and
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league championship. Their super-
iority was evident last week and
yesterday's game with Prescott,
resulting in a7-0 win, was nothing
but a formality.
FLETCHER and Lloyd both fin-
ished the season with a .500 rec-
ord of two wins and two losses
to capture secoind place while
Vaughan and Prescott found
themselves in a tie for last place
with 1-3 records.
It was Wliliams House all the
way in League D, for this team's
superiority was never threatened
as it finished the season with a
record of three wins against no
defeats.
No team in the league was able
to score upon them either as they!
The IM Building will be open
for co-recreational sports Fri-
day night at 7:30.

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