sL X QI xiTITHE MICHIGAN DAILY PA E THREE Fl-II Open House Decides Campus Titles Tonight aculty-Student Exhibitions ighlight Sports Carnival * *. * * IlliniCagers Whip Lions In Tourney Nine Gymnasts Awarded Varsity Letters By JERRY BALBUS Faculty-Student team competi- on will be the feature activity wring the 20th annual I-M Open :ouse tonight, from 6:30 to 10 p. ., at the Intramural Sports Build- ig, which will also crown 16 new impus champions. Competition in handball, paddle- all, squash, tennis, volleyball and !ater polo will give the students a tance to match wits with the pro- ssors on more even terms than sual. HIGHLIGHT of the evening's ctivities will be the All-Campus bampionship boxing bouts. In ad- ition to -the five titles to be de- ided, the oustanding boxer of the ight will receive the Orwick- ;etomer trophy. The line-up shows: Isaac Akita vs. George Matsuda in the featherweight division; Phil Wyle vs. Richard Beardsley at 155 pounds; Ed Kettenstock vs. Richard Reynolds in the 145 pound bout; Martin Feldman vs. George Krassner at 118 pounds; and Millard Seto vs. Nick Popiel *for the 135; pound clash. Seto is the only defending champ td will be fighting the same man :e closely decisioned last year. ALTERNATED between each istic match will be the All-Campus restling tilts. Other All-campus. matches will take place in badminton, Flayers May hoose New lase ball Czar TAMPA, Fla.-(AP)Top drawer fseball reaction ranged from cha- rin to shocked silence yesterday allowing the suggestion that ball layers be given a voice in naming. tiae new Commissioner. Detroit Pitcher Freddie Hutchin- an, official player-representative f the Aierican League, threw the ombshell into the seething Com- iissioner squabble with the state- lent yesterday that owners will be etitioned in July to give the play- rs a part in choosing a successor A. B. Chandler. IF THE OWNERS don't agree to ais, Hutchinson warned in Lake- tnd, Fla., then the players may go ut and hire a man of their own-- laybe the deposed Happy Chand- r, himself. "Players feel we could pay a Commissioner $40,000 a year to represent us," the Tiger pitcher added. "That would be an assess- ment of $100 a player for the 400 major leaguers." codeball, diving, fencing, paddle- ball, and weight lifting. Another top event, should be the three divisional basketball cham- pionship matches to be played for the Professional Fraternity, Gen- eral Fraternity, and Residence Hall crowns. * THE CAGE PROGRAM will list Law Club, last year's professional fraternity champs, against Alpha Kappa Kappa while Phi Gamma Delta faces Alpha Tau Omega for the general fraternity title. In the last game of the night, for dorm basketball laurels, Fletcher Hall, defending titleholders will meet Chicago House. The swimming pool will be the scene of much activity through- out the evening with competition ranging from diving to water polo. Heading the program will be the fraternity swimming champi- onships. The mermen will toe the mark in seven events and Sigma Chi is being given the edge by virtue of their qualifying men for all but two races. I-M OPEN HOUSE CALENDAR BADMINTON: 8:30-10 p.m., Main Gym. All-Campus Tournaments. BASKETBALL: 6:30, p.m., Main Gym. Championship Matches-Profes- sional Fraternity (Law Club vs. Alpha Kappa Kappa), General Fraternity (Phi Gamma Delta vs. Alpha Tau Omega), Residence Halls (Fletcher Hall vs. Chicago House).' ; BOXING: 7:45 p.m., Main Gym. All-Campus Tournament bouts. CODEBALL: 8:00 p.m., Main Gym. All-Campus matches in Courts 13 and 14. DIVING: 7:00 p.m., Swimming Pool. All-Campus tournament and exhibi- tion diving. FENCING: 7:30 p.m., Boxing Room. All-Campus Matches. GYMNASTICS: 7:30 p.m., Auxiliary Gym. Exhibition. HANDBALL: 7:00 p.m., handball Courts. Faculty-Student Matches be- gin at 8 p.m. PADDLEBALL: 7 p.m., Handball Courts. Residence Hall matches. 8 p.m., Faculty-Student matches. 9 p.m., Fraternityssemifinals and All- Campus matches. SQUASH RACQUETS: 3 p.m., Squash Courts. Faculty-Student matches. SWIMMING: 8p.m., Swinming Pool. Fraternity swimming chain- pionships. TENNIS: 7 p.m., Main Gym. Fac- ulty-Student matches. VOLLEYBALL: 7 p.m., Main Gym. Residence Hall Champs (Adams House) vs. Independent champs (Ha- waiians). 9 p.m., General Fraternity champs (Sigma Phi Epsilon) vs. Fac- ulty runner-ups (Psychology). 9 p.m., Pro-fraternity champs (Phi Epsilon Kappa) vs. Faculty champs (Educa- tion Dept.) WATER POLO: 9 p.m., Swimming Pool. Williams House (Res. Hall champs) vs. Flounders (Faculty team). WEIGHT LIFTING: 7:30 p.m., Main Gym.sAll-Campus contests. WRESTLING: 7 p.m., Main Gym. All-Campus championships. Nine members of the 1950-51 gymnastics squad which won twoj matches while losing five over the regular season were awarded varsity M's by gym coach.Newt Loken. There were four reserve awards given and five yearling gymnasts earned freshman numerals. THE TUMBLERS will compete in the Western Conference meet this weekend in Madison, Wiscon- sin and will be host team to the NCAA championships in Ann Ar- bor, March 30-31. The letter winners are Edsel Buchanon, Con Ettl, Bob Check- ley, Jeff Knight, John Mills, Don Hurst, Fred Thompson, Wally Niemann, and. Stickne Davidson. Mark Neville, Remus Boil* Bob Wyllie, and lXonroe Row- land received reserve awards. Freshman awards were given to Marvin Johnson, Lee Krumb- holz, Dick Bergman, Duncan Eiley, and Tom Mericle. St. NC Johns, Kentucky, State Also Win IM MOGULS-Earl Riskey (sitting), Director of University Intra- mural Athletics, and his assistant, Rod Granbeau, plan list of events for tonight's big, all-campus open house to be held at the IM Building. Veteran Catching Staff Seen Backbone of Michigan Nine. By The Associated Press Illinois splintered Columbia's proud unbeaten record 79-71, on the phenomenal long-range sharp- shooting of substitute Ted Beach last night and St. John's breezed past Connecticut, 63-52, to gain the semi-finalsof the NCAA East- ern Basketball Tournament at New York The Big Ten Champions qual- ified to meet North Carolina State, 67-62 conqueror of Villa- nova at Raleigh, N.C., in Thurs- day's round of four at Maaison Square Garden. St. John's will play top-ranked Kentucky who beat Louisville, 79-68, also at Raleigh. Although the Illinois-Columbia game was not decided until the final minutes before a roaring Garden crowd of 17,107, it was Beach., a Senior troubleshooter who goes in when the Sophomores fall, who broke the Lions' hearts with a fantastic exhibition of set shooting just before the end of the half. North Carolina State's Wolf- pack, trailing 38-32 at halftime, fought back behind the brilliant shooting of forward Bill Kukoy to upset Villanova, 67-62 in the opener of the NCAA Southern Basketball Quarterfinals. In the second game, high scor- ing Kentucky, battled to a virtual standstill most of the game, pulled away in the last eight minutes to defeat a fired-up Louisville team, 79-68, 'before 12,400 fans. Daily Classifieds Get Quick Results .... ,..,. S. ..,. ,. *a444 .".....:'r .w.... . ... r : °.:.h "tia{-;"7:d f C .4:.. -... -... . , .$4.. " EASY LINES FOR EASTER AND AFTER You'll want one of these superbly tailored single breasted all-wool gab. ardine suits; perfect for the Easter and Spring season. * HAND STITCHING * PATCH POCKETS * 2-BUTTON STYLING By TED PAPES (EDITOR'S NOTE--This is the first in a series of four articles designed to introduce the Michigan baseball team to Daily readers.) This is the time of the year when every manager and coach in baseball sings the blues. Coach Ray Fisher of Michigan was in excellent tune yesterday as he watched his young recruits ramble through another indoor workout at their Yost Field House training base. ASK HIM ABOUT infield, out- field and pitching possibilities and he pessimistically replies, "I just don't know what to expect." But should the conversation shift to the catching department his face takes on a strange glow. Fisher thinks he has the best Giants Swamp Tigers,_16-7 LAKELAND, Fla. -- (4P) -- The New York Giants broke loose with six runs in the eighth inning yes- terday and went on to win an ex- hibition game over the Detroit Tigers, 16-7. Rookie Catcher Rafael Nobel's pinch home run tied the score at 7-7 and ignited the rally that won for the Giants. Johnny Groth hit a home run for the Tigers in the fourth. Pitcher Saul Rogovin, sidelined since last July with a sore arm, made his first start of the Spring. He walked four straight batters to give the Giants their first run but aside from that lapse didn't look too bad. He gave only three hits in four innings. EXHIBITION BASEBALL Kansas City (AA) 8, Philadelphia (N) 5 Chicago (A) 5, New York (A) 0 St. Louis (A) 6. Cleveland (A) 5 Pittsburgh 'B' (N) 3, UCLA 1 Boston (N) 2, Boston (A) 1 Philadelphia (A) 12, Brooklyn (N) I backstop corps in the Western Conference. He proudly points to three men, any one of whom could hold down a regular spot on most teams in the league. The trio is headed by senior Pete Palmer who returns after an excellent 1950 performance with the Wolverines. He was his team's second best hitter with a .340 mark in 12 Conference games. He collected 17 hits in 50 times at bat including a double and two triples. THEN COMES Line (for Lin- oln) Painter who was placed on the firing line during the south- ern trip last year and was re- tamned as a pinch hitter for the rest of the campaign. His ability with the willow might earn him an outfield as- signment this year since there is such a wealth of catching prospects; Completing the top three is personable Doug Peck, a junior target from Rockford, Michigan. He's a diligent worker with a po- tential for development if he gets the opportunity to show his stuff. Peck played a few innings last campaign, and so far Fisher is pleased with his progress this spring. * * * THERE'S no doubt that Palm- er is the class of the field, how- ever. Pitchers contend that the chunky lad radiates confidence toward the mound with his line of chatter. Handling of hurlers by a catcher of Palmer's mettle often shows up in the win-loss columns of the league's standings. Fisher's fond- est hope is that he'll have some pitchers to handle. With half the battery virtually set for the season more attention can be given to the other con- jectural positions. Solutions to those problems will be delayed un- til the weather permits outdoor drills. 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