I LY, FEBRUARY 20, 1952- THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE Y, FEBRUARY 20, 1952 THE MICHIGAN DAILY I I Sammies, ZBT IM Cage Victors Both Finish Atop Their Leagues As Phi Psis, Alpha Delts Fall Victims By HOWARD ROBINSON Withstanding a last minute rally by Phi Kappa Psi, Sigma Alpha Mu came off the court a 28-24 victor in a real thriller last night in Class A basketball. Victory meant first place in their league to the Sammies who had been tied with the Phi Psis before their important win. The result left them all alone atop their league and shoved the losers into second place. * * * * THE VICTORS jumped into an early lead and were never headed until the closing minutes. They led 14-7 at the half, but the Phi Psis, holding Sammy high scorer Mort Friedman to eight points, threatened throughout the second half but failed to come closer to the victors than four points. Friedman was high scorer for the winners, but had to re- linquish game honors to the loser's Bud Jones who paced his team with 12 points. In another important contest, Zeta Beta Tau outclassed Alpha Delta Phi, 33-15 to remain in first place in their league. THE LOSERS were hampered in their efforts by a lack of pre- game practice since they arrived just in time for the opening toss-up. The ZBTs took advantage of this and quickly built up an 8-0 lead. This was more than enough for victory, but the victors, controlling the backboards, kept adding to their lead. At the half, it was 15-5, and the Alpha Delts could do little better in the second half. Irv Stenn acid Moose Weiss stood out on defense for the winners, and the combined shooting of Weiss and Dick Klein was sufficient to lead them to victory. Klein took scoring honors with 13 points and Weiss was close behind with 11.. Other basketball results: Delta Tau Delta 33, Alpha Sigs 21 Sigma Chi 44, Theta Psi 19 Betas 48, Phi Kappa Tau 10, Sigma Nu 28, Acacia 14 ATO 38, Theta Chi 21 Phi Delts beat DKE (forfeit) Lambda Chi 34, Phi Sigma Kappa 25 Delta Sigs beat Zeta Psi (forfeit) Chi Psi 30, Psi U 20 Delta Chi beat TKE (forfeit) Pi Lams 52, Tau Delts 24 Sig Ep beat Kappa Nu (forfeit) First Teams 1M' Swimmers Encounter Chosen for Strong Bainbridge Tonight BIG TEN TITANS COLLIDE: Spartans Offer 'M' Matmen Stern Test NIT Roster NEW YORK - (P) -Duquesne, with only four games to go for an unblemished record; St. John's and St. Bonaventure accepted in- vitations yesterday to compete in the fourteenth annual National Invitation Basketball Tourney. The three teams are the first to Ile named to the 12-team 1952 field which starts play with a triple-header on March 8 and will crown a successor to Brigham Young the night of March 15. * * * DUQUESNE, of Pittsburgh, has won 18 straight this year and is the only unbeaten college five in the country. St. John's boasts an 18-2, and St. Bonaventure has a 17-2 mark. In the current Associated Press poll, Duquesne is ranked third, St. John's is No. 8 and St. Bonaventure No. 10. The University of Kentucky, already qualified to play in the NCAA tournament, is one of the teams under consideration for one of the other nine berths. Other teams being considered by the tournament committee in- clude Dayton, Duke, Holy Cross, LaSalle, Penn State, St. Louis, Seton Hall, Texas Christian, Wes- tern Kentucky, West Virginia, Wyoming and New York Univer- sity. A second group lists Nortn Carolina State, St. Joseph's o Philadelphia, Utah, Siena, Miami of Ohio and Lawrence Tech. Ma..'s Crew Seeks S eveth Straight Win In Contest with Star-Studded Naval Team By BOB MARGOLIN 150 yard backstroke chat Undefeated in six outings this 1950; and Roger Hadlick winter, Matt Mann's Wolverine American diver in 1951. tankmen will put their record on* * the firing line at eight p.m. to- PURDUE University's1 night against the Bainbridge Dunlop, Big Ten 200 yard Naval Training Station. stroke champion in 1950 Bainbridge, camping grounds swims for the sailors as doI for U.S. Naval Olympic aspirants, Ohio State All-American C will send a team studded with Stephanos and his teamma * Ballou. mp in , All- Robert breast , also former Charles te Bill Wallace Wolfe, University of Southern California Olympic swimmer, and several other All- Navy and All-American tank- men round out this potent squad reputed to be second strongest in the East. Head coach for Bainbridge is a former pupil of Matt Mann, Han- ley Staley. Staley, who used to be assistant coach for Cornell, was a Michigan diver several years a ago. . The Wolverines will use their usual crew of talented swimmers this evening, led by Co-captains John Davies and Stewart Elliott in the breast stroke, versatile free JOHN DAVIES styler Bumpy Jones, and sprinters JOHN AVIESTom Benner, Don Hill and Dick .. . talented co-captain Martin. former collegiate and Olympic AP Fla h champions to try to upset the high A Plla S t pool. DETROIT - Michigan State I ConJnnl flnn l *a ,nnnt t, By HERB COHEN If past performances mean any- thing, this Saturday's wrestling meet at Michigan State should be a dilly. The Spartans. supposedly in the process of rebuilding, have come up with a team that is pro- bably as good if not better than any team in the Conference. * * * THEY HAVE defeated a power- packed Ohio State squad, virtu- ally the same one which won the Big Ten Championship last year. They have also tied Illinois, the other team generally con- sidered to be the chief threat to Michigan and Michigan State in the Western Confer- ence Championships this year. (Michigan has not yet faced the Buckeyes, but they have de- feated Illinois, 15-9:) Outstanding sophomores and just a touch of varsity experi- enced men are the keys to the Spartan's success. Try FOLLETT'S First SED BOOKS BA~;RGAIN PRICES HEADING THE list of returnees is Orris Bender, a two year letter- man at 167 pounds. Last year Bender was defeated in the Michi- gan match by Bill Stapp, last year's Wolverine grappler at 157 pounds. This year Bender will face Bud Holcombe at 167 pounds, the same opponent that his brother, George wrestled against last year. The elder Bender is now graduated from MSC. A newcomer to the Spartan ranks, and perhaps the most sen- sational new wrestler in the Big Ten this year, is Bill Hoke, who will grapple in the 157 pound -i R U DDIGOR E -a cornplete operet/a is Mou available as performed by the university of Micb. Gilbert classification against Michigan's equally competent Miles Lee. * * * HOKE, while only a freshman last year, competed in the Nation- al AAU's at 145 pouids, and emerged victorious over a field of nationally known collegiate wrest- lers. Hoke's match with Miles Lee this weekend will surely be the toughest one the Michigan grap- pler has had to partake in this year. But he has been working hard and an upset could be in the making. I i I Y " '-:: GONE.. . 0 and Sullivan Society. You can get it at.,. HIMFI Iecod'h9 ST1U DIO 521 East Liberty Phone 2-3053 to have his shirts laund- ered to a bright new clean for just.,. 122c I 510 E. Wi liam I rrrr . r di Aggressive Play Big Factor in Cagers' Third Conference Win of Fading Season By DICK LEWIS W h a t Michigan's basketball team lacks in court finesse and scoring prowess it makes up in ag- gressive play. It was only the will to give a little something extra that hand- ed the Wolverines their third Big Ten win against Wisconsin Mon- day night. COACH ERNIE McCoy's cagers had very little in their favor going into the final ten minutes of play with the Badgers. They were trailing by six points after blowing an early 24-16 lead, but more important was the fact that 6-7 Milt Mead, the home team's only big man, had fouled out with three min- utes left in the third period. This meant that in the last 13 minutes Michigan had to field a team that averaged only 6 feet as compared with the visitors 6-3 aggregate. Tallest man on the court for the Wolverines was Captain Jim Skala, the 6-3 senior from Chi- cago. MEAD'S replacement, 6-2 soph- omore John Codwell from Hous- ton, Texas, turned in a creditable effort to hold Wisconsin's 6-7 cen- ter, Paul Morrow, to a single final stanza basket. Morrow racked up eleven markers with Mead guarding him In the third session, but Codwell came off the bench to hold the big boy down and reg- ister five important tallies him- self. Sophomore R a y Pavichevich played his usual role as unsung hero. While he registered only after t h r e e periods, Codwell dunked in a layup to make it 51- 47. Morrow a n d Pavichevich traded field goals, after which Morrow canned a free throw to put Michigan five points to the rear, 54-49. * * * LAWRENCE HIT on two char- ity tosses and Wisconsin's Tony Stracka also meshed a free throw as the score read Wisconsin 55, Michigan 51. Skala then registered his 200th point of the 'season on a one-hander from the corner and Codwell found the range from the foul line to put the winners a point behind with five minutes left. Codwell's point was Michigan's 1000th of the year. Ten seconds later Skala scored on another one-hander to cinch the triumph and give him a 15- point output for the night. * * * HEADING THE array of stars is the world famous backstroker, Allen Stack. Captain of Yale's swimming team in 1948, Stack went on to win the 100 meter backstroke Olympic championship in London the same year. At the moment he defends three other world backstroke records: the 150 yard, 100 and 200 meter distances. Three other former Eli swim- mers, all of them with excellent records, are slated to perform for Bainbridge tonight. They include Ray Reid, captain of last year's National Collegiate champions and member of the 400 yard world record relay team;j Albert Ratkiewich, captain of the1 1950 Elis and Eastern Collegiate LATE HOCKEY SCORE Toronto 3, New York 3 lege won cat en events o hand Wayne University a 68- 25 dual swimming meet defeat here last night. It was Michigan State's fifth win in seven meets this year and their 12 win over Wayne. Rod Quigley, MSC backstroke artist, broke his own meet rec- ord in the 200 yard backstroke event. Quigley swam the dis- tance in 2:20.9. Wayne tankmen captured six second places in absorbing their third loss in four starts this season. injector shavers! Does your skin smart, burn, when you apply lotion after shaving? Try it on your forehead. Same skin yet no burn! That's because your facial skin is irritated from shaving - probably because you're using a razor blade ground like a penknife and you have to "bear down" to shave clean. PAL's patented Hollow Ground process makes "bearing' down" unnecessary. You shave with a light, light stroke; your face is cool, relaxed--your skin isn't irritated, is left smooth as a teen-ager's! You owe it to your face to try a a nr iF"-, i:, y. ' '' " .w ** with any other KING-SIZE cigarette 41 a a U m l I Ideal water MICHIGAN SIEAL JACKETS for spring and summer wear Zelan processed, wind resistant repellent. In navy, gray, maize, natural. ALL SIZES $69S SH R LD S. T R ICK N Team Scoring G FG FT Jim Skala 18 83 36 Milt Mead 18 67 58 Don Eaddy 18 56 29 Doug Lawrence 18 45 24 *Dick Williams 11 39 22 R. Pavichevich 18 27 20 *Bob Jewell 14 22 13 *R. Kauffman 11 10 16 John Codwell 10 6 13 Tom Tiernan 8 10 4 Bob Topp 14 7 7 Jack Levitt 9 2 3 Syd Cook 4 2 0 *Carl Brunsting 10 2 1 TOTALS 18 378 246 *Lost to squad PTS 202 192 141 114 100 74 57 36 25 24 21 7 4 5 1002 mmk i BE~"k#RP ,r'O =-- 1- (r-r four markers, the 5-11 Paviche- vich paced the Maize and Blue in rebounds and assists. A * * * - THE WINNERS' smooth-work- ing back-court duo of Doug Law- rence and Don Eaddy were the main reasons behind a four min- ute freeze which insured victory. In addition to meshing 12 points on the evening, Eaddy displayed a type of footwork in the Michigan deep freeze that branded him as a sure Arthur Murray graduate. Diminutive Lawrence, who has stepped into the crowd-pleaser togs dropped recently by big Bob Jewell, ran circles around his gar- gantuan opposition. " TOP SALARY " LONG RANGE PROGRAMS Commercial &F " LIBERAL EMPLC BENEFITS " EXCELLENT W FACILITIES f OUTSTANDING TIREMENT PLA Military d OYEE ORKING RE- N r J, /. / , ,r't /' ""' INJECTOR BLADES I Z - Ade jUILT-IN VAULT FOR USED D Aoes fO JQ0 for394 R 6 for254 in Metal injectors with vault for used blades. Fityour Injector Razor perfectly. PAS. DOUBLE or SINGLE EDGE 10 for 254 44 or ,s9 -T I Immediate Career Opportunities in Fort Worth, Texas Bell Aircraft Helicopter Division now has openings for engineering graduates includ- ing non-aeronautical engineers. Bell ap- plies your knowledge of engineering prin- ciples and trains you for aeronautical work . . . at full pay. 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