TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TMEE U PAGE THREE Gomberg Quintet Wins In Dorm*Cage Playoff COLORADO BOUND: M' Hockey Team Departs Tomorrow Gymnastics Squad Hurt By Lack of Experience By JIM DYGERT Gomberg House put on the +freeze in the last few minutes to protect its lead and down Ander- son House, 41-35, last night in the first championship playoff round of the Residence Halls "A" league. Paced by Bob Woschitz, who netted 14 points, Gomberg jumped to an early lead only to see An- derson fight back to tie the score at halftime, 15-15. The winners dumped in three quick buckets at the beginning of the second half to take a lead they never relin- quished. * * * WITH JACK Gallander leading the way on a 15-point total, An- derson matched Gomberg basket for basket the rest of the way, but finally yielded to Gomberg's stalling tactics. In the other championship playoff, Winchell dumped Hins- dale, 32-25, in a game dominated by defensive play. The teams played on even terms until the end of the first half when Win-. shell scored a basket for a 16-14 margin. The West Quaders then poured ti 1-M Scores BASKETBALL "A" LEAGUE, CHAMPIONSHIP PLAYOFFS Gomberg 41, Anderson 35 Winchell 32, Hinsdale 25 SECOND PLACE PLAYOFFS Cooley 43, Van Tyne 16 Chicago 45, Williams 28 THIRD PLACE PLAYOFFS Taylor 82, Michigan7 Allen-Rumsey 38, Huber 17 FOURTH PLACE PLAYOFFS Lloyd 38, Kelsey 36 (overtime) Strauss 35, Wenley 33 (over- time) FIFTH PLACE PLAYOFF Hayden 44, Adams 21 B' LEAGUE, CHAMPIONSHIP PLAYOFFS Wenley 32, Cooley 26 Gomberg 56, Lloyd 26 SECOND PLACE PLAYOFFS Allen-Rumsey 24, Huber 21 Winchell defeated Fletcher (for- feit) THIRD PLACE PLAYOFFS Chicago 65, Kelsey 34 Anderson 41, Williams 32 FOURTH PLACE PLAYOFFS Adams 33, Reeves 29 Hinsdale 24, Van Tyne 21 FIFTH PLACE PLAYOFF Hayden 60, Taylor 12 Michigan defeated Scott (for- feit) in points to grab a 28-20 lead with Ivan Goldberg, who totaled 12 counters, in the driver's seat. * * * WINCHELL then settled down to protect its edge and eliminate Hinsdale from the playoffs. Laur- en Schleh topped the losers with ten points. Chicago House exploded in the second half to trounce Wil- liams, 45-28, in a second place playoff tilt. Chicago, sparked by Phil Thibault's 14 pounts, cut an early nine point deficit to trail, 19-17, at halftime. The winners then snared 14 points while Williams was garner- ing only one, to take the lead, 31- 20. Caught off guard by the on- slaught, Williams was able to net only eight more points while Chi- cago was widening its margin. COOLEY, starting slow, woke up in the second half to overwhelm Van Tyne, 43-16, in the other sec- ond place playoff. Although Cooley held only a 14-9 lead at the half, it started to click after the sec- ond-half tip-off with Stan Gooch dropping ten of his 12 points through the hoop in that period. In the championship playoffs in the "B" league, Gomber House opened up a wide 30-17 halftime advantage and went on to wal- lop Lloyd House, 65-26. Frank Drinan and Marshall Sylvan led the devastating attack with 15 and 14 points respectively. Wenley came out on top of Coo- ley, 32-26, in the other "B" cham- pionship contest. Wenley grabbed a 15-8 edge at the half and with- stood a Cooley rally to win. Bob Schoenhals of Wenley and Jim Powers of Cooley topped the scor- ing, each with 12 points. Fourteen veterans of Wolverine ice wars, many of them bruised and lame from last weekend's rug- ged series with Michigan Tech, leave tomorrow for hostile Colo- rado Springs in quest of Michi- gan's third successive national collegiate hockey championship. The plucky puck chasers will meet a chartered plane at Wil- low Run at 1 p.m. Aboard the plane will be teams representing Boston University and Rensaleer Polytechnic Insti- tute, the two Eastern entries in the NCAA playoffs. The fourth team is Minnesota, co-champion with Michigan in the Midwest Collegiate Hockey League. Final destination is the Broad- moore Ice Palace, home rink for the Colorado College sextet and scene of numerous Wolverine heartbreaks and successes. It was on Broadmoor ice that Michigan, only team to makeall NCAA playoffs, won three out of five national c1hampionships, in- cluding the first in 1948. Last March the Wolverines rubbed it in with a 4-1 victory over hometown Colorado in the finals. BUT in December, the Colorado fans got their revenge, as Denver whipped Michigan, 5-4, in over- time. Wolverine forward Johnny McKennell was accused of slug- ging the referee and was suspend- FINAL BIG TEN BASKETBALL STANDINGS ed for the year. Coupled with the between-semester loss of Earl Keyes, the suspension put the damper on Michigan hopes to make the playoffs this year. Undaunted, Vic Heyliger's men in blue skated to the top of the MCHL with the hat trick of college hockey-three straight crowns--as their goal. Friday night, Boston University will present the first obstacle in Michigan's path. Saturday night, the winner of this game will play the winner of Thursday's Minne- sota--R.P.I: contest for the NCAA championship, A consolation match between the two losers is scheduled for Saturday afternoon. SEVERAL players are still on the injury list, but trainer Karl Isaacson expects to have them all in working condition for the first faceoff Friday evening. Willard Ikola's groin injury is healing slowly, but he will prob- ably feel good enough to start Friday night. Assistant goal tender Bill Lucier, one of the heroes of last weekend's twin victory over Michigan Tech, will make the trip for insurance. Defenseman Reg. Shave's bad back is responding to treatment as are Doug Philpott's sore leg and George Chin's sore face. Bert Dunn is carrying four stitches on his head, but the scrappy Mon- treal junior expects to be in top shape for the coming weekend's festivities. The bus carrying the team to Willow Run leaves the Union at 12:30 p.m. tomorrow. Michigan's lack of versatility and experience showed in last weekend's Big Ten gymnastics meet. The Wolverines finished sixth registering less than a third of the point-total of meet-winning Illinois. * * * TWO OF THE SIX men whom Coach Newt Loken took to East Lansing are in their first season of competition. Jim Barbero, while looking good on the side horse still lacks the finess which makes a Conference champion. The same may be said of trampoliner Jack Eckle. Eckle managed to edge- into a spot in the finals competition but did not place against the Midwest's top men.. Of the Maize and Blue's four remaining men Dick Bergmann I ~ - - is known as a threat in only one event, the flying rings, and Don Hurst sticks strickly to tramp and tumbling. MARV JOHNSON came through in four events to give the kind of all-round performance that won the meet for Illinois. The Illini boasted four top men in Bob Sullivan, Frank Bare, Jeff Austin, and Gil Brinkmeyer. All but Brinkmeyer placed in the top five in more than one event. EXHIBITION BASEBALL New York (N) 9, Chicago (N) 4 Boston (N), 6, St. Louis (N) 4 New York (A) 6, Boston (A) 4 Detroit (A) 7, Cincinnati (N) 3 Cleveland (A) 12, Chicago (A) 7 N.I.T. BASKETBALL St. Johns 75, LaSalle 74 Niagara 82 Brigham Young 76 Michigan Five Bows to OSU; Finishes in Conference Cellar (Continued from Page 1) Don Eaddy netted the first Michigan bucket with 6:46 left in the opening session to make the tally read 7-3, and Eaddy's rebound with 55 seconds remain- ing and a jump shot by Ray Pavichevich were the only other Maize and Blue field goals in the first ten minutes. Ralph Kauffman came off the bench to pace the Michigan quin- tet in the next stanza. The Elk- hart, Indiana sophomore who had seen only reserve action for most of the season, found the range for seven of Michigan's 22 points in the second quarter. KAUFFMAN was aided by John Codwell off the boards and from the floor. Codwell, however, drew his fourth personal foul with 48 seconds to go in the half as did center Paul Groffsky. Ebert and Wilks went wild again in the third session that saw the Ohio Staters go ahead as they pleased, finally making the count read 73-51 after thirty minutes. Captain Doug Lawrence, making his last appearance in a college basketball game, opened the final chukker with a pair of quick lay- ups to close the ga) to 73-55, but the losers never ca ne closer. LAWRENCE wound up with 14 markers, all coming in the last 18 minutes, second only to Kauff- man who poured in 16 to pace coach Bill Perigo's charges. Cod- well with 12 and Milt Mead with 12 also hit double figures as Mich- igan concluded its worst basketball season in a decade. The Wolverines could manage only three wins in 18 league startstand six wins and 16 losses overall. The 95-point OSU attack was the highest ever scored here at the Coliseum. The former standard was 93 set by Illinois as the Illini trounced the Buckeyes last Satur- day night. Indiana Illinois Mich, State Minnesota Wisconsin Iowa Ohio State Northwestern MICHIGAN Purdue w 17 14 11 11 1 9 7 5 3 3 L 1 4 7 7 8 9 11 13 15 15 Pct. .944 .778 .611 .611 .556 .500 .389 .278 .167 .167 One Man Tells Another WE PRIDE OURSELVES ON HAVING THE MOST LOYAL CUSTOMERS THAT ANY STORE COULD POSSIBLY HAVE. NOT ONLY DO THEY WEAR THEIR STAEB & HUSS CLOTHES WITH GREAT PRIDE, BUT THE GO OUT OF THEIR WAY TO ACT AS AMBASSADORS OF GOOD WILL FOR US. IT IS A DAILY OCCURRENCE IN OUR CLOTHING AND FURNISHINGS STORE TO HAVE MEN IN- TRODUCED TO US AS NEW CUSTOMERS BY THEIR FRIENDS WHOM WE HAVE SERVED FOR MANY YEARS. THIS CLOSE RELATIONSHIP BE- TWEEN OUR PATRONS AND STAEB & HUSS IS OUR GREATEST ASSET. IT MAKES OUR EXTRA EFFORT TO SELL AT "THE SMALLEST MARGIN OF PROFIT KNOWN"-TO PROVIDE THE FINEST CLOTHING KNOWN -- A WORTHWHILE AND GRATIFYING WAY OF DOING BUSINESS. 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KAHN TAILVRE "LVTHES 613 EAST WILLIAM STREET MICHIGAN CodwelG f Mead f Kauffman I Bruce Groffsky c Lawrence g Eaddy g Pavichevich g Totals OHIO STATE Wijiams f Wilks I Ebert c Hatfield g Cook g Jones g Miller f Leggett f Ropes e Smith g Totals MICHIGAN Ohio State 4 3 6 0 3 6 2 27 G 5 6 14 5 4 3 0 0 1 39 F 4 4 4 1 0 0 17 F 3 3 6. 3 2 0 0 0 0 0 17 I, 4 3 3 I 5 3 1 21 P 4 2 4 3 I 1 1 0 1 0 17 T 12 10 16 2 7 14 6 4 71 T 13 15 34 13 10 6 0 0 2 95 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Illinois 86, Northwestern 70 Indiana 68, Iowa 61 Wisconsin 58, Michigan State 51 Kansas 69, Missouri 60 Princeton 70, Columbia 58 Penn 77, Harvard 49 Collegiate Cuts FOR SPRING: They're Smart, Suave, Individualistic 8 TONSORIAL ARTISTS - No Waiting -- The Dascola Barbers Liberty, near Mich. Theatre __ _ 10 22 19 20-71 22 25 26 22-95 I MY QUESTION TO THE G-E .STUDENT INFORMATIONIPANEL: t b" hat qualitiesrdo T need for a successful career with a comp like General Electric?" ... HARRY K. LEADER, Lafayette College, Two answers to this question, given at a student information n held in July, 1952, between G-E personnel and representative c students, are printed below. If you have a question you wou answered, or seek further information about General Electri your request to College Editor, Dept. 221-6, General Electr Schenectady, N. Y. G. C. HOUSTON, Manu- facturing Services Division ...° While this is a rather broad question; I am sure it is one of real importance to any1 young man starting out in industry and looking forward to a po tion of responsibility in any of our successful in-, dustrial enterprises. The mere asking of this question indicates that the in-, 'dividual has a definite goal or objective. This is important since progress can be made only if we attempt to reach a well-defined objective-even though it may be modified to some extent in the light of later experience. In G.E. we are looking for young men who have not only deter- mined their objective but who are ready to work for it-. who accept responsibility and have ability to get things done-who work well with others-to be a part of the team. This calls for other qualities essential to long range success. We look for the enthusiastic individual, one not easily discouraged, and who can inspire the confidence of his co-workers. We desire individuals who show im- agination and good judgment--particularly the ability to look ahead and maintain perspective beyond the imme- diate situation. Finally, we cannot overlook the qualities of loyalty and dependability since these are important in' steering the individual through periods of discouragement which occur in every career. 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