FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE McClellan Makes Two All-Star Hockey Squads Idins over RPI 3-2 Greenwood Club, Delta Sigma Delta Win To Advance in Intramural Cage Tourney . .y . Michigan, Boston U. Tangle In 2nd Semi-Final Tonight Desperate Gophers Score Twice in Final Period To Break 1-1. Deadlock for Victory Alex McClellan, star defense- man of the Wolverine hockey sex- tet, was named to two honorary all-star squads in recent polls. The Maize and Blue standout was picked as one of three de- fensemen on a 12-man All-Ameri- can hockey team picked by coach- es from leading colleges. Dick Binning of Middlebury, and Bob Monahan of Michigan Tech com- plete the trio picked by the coach- es representing ten schools, in- cluding four from the west and six from the east. IN THE Denver Post's 1953 Mid- west Hockey League All-Star team selections, McClellan placed on the second team along with team- mates Willard Ikola in goal, and John Matchefts at center. Minnesota's great hockey team dominated the first team on se- lections by placing four men on the squad. Goalie Jim Mattson, defenseman and captain Tom Wegleitner and forwards John Mayasich and Dick Dougherty made up two-thirds of the first team. North Dakota's star wing Ben' Cherski and Denver defenseman Eddie Miller filled out the start- ing lineup. Miller is the only re- peat selection from last year's team. Rounding out the second ALEX McCLELLEN . . . All-American squad is Elwood Shell, North Da- kota defenseman, and wingmen John Campbell of Minnesota and Bill Abbott of Denver. Gophers Mayasich and Mattson, Herb LaFountaine and Frank Chi- arelli, who led the east in scoring for the second straight year, of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, and high tscoring Dick Rodenhish- er of Boston University headed the All-American selections conducted annually by Bob Bier, sports edi- tor of the Colorado Springs, Colo- rado, Free Press. Jim Haas of Michigan and Joe DeBastiani of Michigan Tech re- ceived honorable mention. By PAUL GREENBERG Special To The Daily COLORADO SPRINGS - Tiny RPI, fourth seeded, in a quartet of collegiate hockey squads in the NCAA tourney here, threw a bad scare into the favored Minnesota Gophers before bowing by one goal, 3-2. Paced by the great netminding of Bob Fox, and some clever stick handling by Frank Chiarelli, Am- bros Mosca, and Co-Capt. Al Moore, the Engineers from Troy, N.Y., extended the Minneapolis sextet all the way before losing. TONIGHT MICHIGAN'S puck- sters face off against Boston Uni- versity at 8 p.m. The Terriers had a 14-5 record during the season. They boast a fast skating offense, sparked by forwards Dick Roden- hiser and Paul Whalen. The Wolverines, despite the fact that they came out of last weekend's series with Michigan Tech in poor physical shape, will be at full strength for tonight's encounter. The winner plays Minnesota Saturday for the Na- tional Collegiate title. Minnesota took advantage Of a penalty to RPI's co-captain Herb LaFontaine to jump into an early lead at 8:48 of the first period. Bob Johnson slapped the puck into an open net, vacated by Fox while making a fine save on Min- nesota wingman Ken Yackel. )JLENSSELAER, refusing to crum- ble, came fighting back to tie up the game early in the second stan- za, on an unassisted effort by the No. 1 scorer in the Eastern area, Frank Chiarelli. With the score tied 1-1, play speeded up considerably in the -nal period. With LaFontaine in the penalty box again, this time for tripping, Dick Mere- SCORING SUMMARY FIRST PERIOD: 1-Minnesota, John- son (Yackel, Tschida) 8:48. Penal- ties-Minnesota: Meredith (trip- ping), Wegleither (tripping); RPI: LaFontaine (holding). SECOND PERIOD: 2-RPI, Chiarelli, (unassisted) 22:12. Penalties-Min- nesota: Dougherty (holding), Yack. el (slashing); Campbell, (tripping). ThIRD PERIOD: 3-Minnesota, Mer- edith (Johnson, Yackel) 4:35; 4- Minnesota, Dougherty (Mayasich, Campbell) 16:02; 5-RPI, Chiarelli (unassisted) 17:34. Penalties-Min- nesota: Dougherty (high stick), Campbell(hooking); RPIn: LaFon- taine, 2 (hooking, tripping). dith flipped one past Fox to give the Gophers a one-goal ad- vantage. Minnesota continued to press and only brilliant netminding on the part of Fox kept the Minne- For The Birds Badminton players in a Wat- erman gym physical education class were playing with birds yesterday, but not the usual kind. They were visited by several pigeons, who flew in the open skylight, and proceeded to dive- bomb the spacious gymnasium. One of them apparently lost his way, for he wound up as the bird in a Badminton game, when he slammed into a girder and sailed down over a bad- minton court. The hard working players didn't notice the bird until he entered the game by splatter- ing himself all over the court floor. The class instructor removed the remains in short order, and the players returned to their game, using a bird of true Bad- minton variety. apolis sextet from building a size- able lead. * * * FINALLY DIICK Dougherty gave Minnesota its third and clinching goal at 16:02 on assists from John Mayasich and Gene Campbell. RPI made a valiant effort to recover from the two-goal defi- cit, and Chiorelli on a brilliant solo dash made the score 3-2 at 17:34. However, Minnesota goalie John Mattson turned aside the Troy outfit's remaining drives to seal the decision. Minnesota's victory paved the way for an all-Western final should the Wolverines triumph to- night. Michigan defeated Colorado College in last year's champion- ship tussle, 4-1. The wintover Rensselaer sends Minnesota into the finals in its first trip to the tournament. Mich- igan on the other hand is playing in the tourney for the sixth straight time and is shooting for its fourth title and third in suc- cession. Dukes Upset By Redmen In NIT Tilt NEW YORK - (R) - Slick passing St. John's of Brooklyn scored its third straight upset vic- tory in the National Invitational Basketball Tournament Thursday night, beating favored Duquesne, 64-55, to enter the final round. Duquesne, made a six-point favorite by the local price makers, didn't play up to the form it had shown in two earlier tournament games. * * * ST. JOHN'S thus reached the NIT final for the first time since 1944. The Brooklynites will meet the winner of Thursday night's sec- ond game between Seton Hall and Manhattan in Saturday's final. St. Johns, which wasn't seed- ed in the 12-team tournament, had surprised St. Louis and de- fending champion La Salle in earlier tournament games. The Brooklyn Redmen now have won 14 of their last 15 games. The Redmen were cool and sharp in their passing and floor work and they seldom let go a shot un- less there was a good opportunity to score. Seton Hall 74, Manhattan 56 By PHIL JACOBUS led at the half, 24-10. Jim Gault The Greenwood Club otulasted had 14 and Slim Van Donelen 10 a determined Newman Club last for the winners, while Ralph Straf- night in the first place semi-finals of the Independent League to take Entries to the all campus a hard won 66-65 verdict. badminton doubles and singles In the professional fraternity end today, Friday, March 13. play-offs Delta Sigma Delta Competition begins Tuesday, and Phi Delta Phi continued March 16. their winning ways to become -Shelly Chambers the first place finalists._________________ Delta Sigma jumped to a quickf lead and led at the first quar- fon was hgh-point man for Nu tet, 16-10, but their opponent, the Sigma with 7 points. Law Club closed the gap to 25-23 Power-laden Sigma Chi placed at the half. Chuck Murray, former 10 men in the Fraternity qual- Michigan basketball captain, led fying swim meet to lead all oth- the Delt Sigs with 17 points. Bill er houses. Sigma Nu and Theta Randall had 10 for the losers. Xi followed the leaders by qual- *, *. * ifying 6 and 5 men respectively. IN THE OTHER game Phi Del- Led by Chuck Mitts, Dave Hig- ta Phi easily rolled past Nu Sig- gins, and Jim Peterson, who all ma Nu to capture an easy 45-23 victory. The Phi Delta Phi boys * * * I-M SCORES Independent League (Second Place Playoffs) Dearborn 44, Lucky Seven 43 Lestor Co-op 46, Michigan Christian Fellowship 20 (Third Place Playoffs) Standish Evans 2, Canterbury 0, (forfeit) (Fifth Place Playoffs) Presbyterians 34, Actuaries 17_ Professional Fraternities (second Place Playoffs) Phi Alpha Kappa 50, Alpha. Chi Sig- ma 24 (Third Place Playoffs) Psi Omego 2, Alpha Rho Chi O. (forfeit) _______ Alpha Kappa Kappa 30, Alpha Ome- ga 16 LATE HOCKEY SCORES Detroit 2, Boston 2 Montreal 2, Chicago 2 qualified in three events, defend- ing champions Sigma Chi seem to be well on their way to annex- ing another fraternity swimming title., Mitts qualified in the 100 and 200 free styles and swam on the 200 yard free style relay. Peterson qualified in the 50-yard free style, the 50-yard backstroke. and the 200-yard medlay relay. Higgins is entered in the 50 and 100-yard free style. Other double qualifiers were Wi- ley Sams of Sigma Nu in the 50 and 100-yard free style, and Lee McLaughlin in the 50-yard free style and the 50-yard backstroke event. McLaughlin, incidentally, set a new IM record in the 50 yard free style, covering it in 24.3 sec- onds. [NTERVIEWS z ..wair kJ .F a L U . i.A 1 l ___SAVE AT SAM'S STORE___" -.dome%%, SPECIALLY Ready to wear with cuffs MEN'S GABARDINE DRESS PANTS $ 595. * WELL TAILORED e SPOT e WET # WRINKLE RESISTANT Colors: Blues, Brown, Gray, Tan PRICED I will be held on CAMPUS MARCH 19 and 20 by BOEING AIRPLANE COMPANY Movie will be shown at group meeting on first day of visit. See B-47 and B-52 jet bomber flight fests, guided missiles and other Boeing projects. Discussion period will follow movie. Openings are available for graduating and graduate students in all branches of engineering (AE, CE, EE, ME and related fields) and for physicists and mathe- maticians with advanced degrees. Fields of activity include DESIGN, DEVELOPMENT, RESEARCH, TOOLING and PRODUCTION. Choice of locations: Seattle, Washington, or Wichita, Kansas. These are excellent opportunities with one of the country's leading engineering organizations-designers and builders of the B-47 and B-52, America's first- announced jet transport and guided missiles. For details on group meeting and persona appointment contact your PLACEMENT OFFICE How do YOU get' from college to here2 One answer is the men's Management Training Program of the Bell Telephone System. It leads to an interesting job -with good pay and a solid future. To get the facts, see rep- resentatives of Michigan Bell Telephone Company who will be here for personal interviews at BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS March 19 and 20 Here are answers to a few of your questions: WHAT IS MANAGEMENT TRAINING? A training program, with pay-and regular increases-for future Mvanagement positions in the Bell System. WHERE WILL I WORK? Probably with Michigan Bell Telephone Company, although a } few may work with other divisions of the Bell Telephone System. IS ANY SPECIALIZED BACKGROUND REQUIRED? No. College graduates need neither experience nor special training. Opportunities are unlimited in the fast-growing Bell System! MICHIGAN BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY C.7 r I SAM"S STORE 122 East Washington St. Samuel J. Benjamin '27-Lit Owner District Champions Meet' In NCAA Hoop Tourney =- ' Iin LOWER PRICES 111 "-- *u OEING ---___________________ y, x...wwrs__I~ lot-41 I 'mFgi NEW YORK - P) -- With the preliminary skirmishing out of the way, the NCAA Basketball Tour- nament gets going in earnest Fri- day night with four regional tour- naments at widely-scattered cen- ters. Nine teams who won their way to conference championships start the route to the NCAA title, with seven at-large teams also scrap- ping for the crown. Only twice in 14 years have teams from outside the conferences won the title. * * * THE CONFERENCE kingpins are favored to win it again this year, since teams high up in the latest Associated Press poll of the top 10 are pegged in each of the four regionals. The regional winners will meet in the finals at Kansas City next Tuesday and Wednesday. Kansas' defending champions, currently rated fifth in the na- tion, appear to have the most difficult road to the finals. In their regional tourney at Manhattan, Kan., the Big Seven champions, with a 16-5 season record, meet Oklahoma City, 18-4, a strong independent team ranked 10th in the country, in the first round. Then they must face the winner of the game between Ok- lahoma A & M, 22-6 champions of the Missouri Valley, and Texas Christian's Southwest Conference champions. Oklahoma A & M, All freshmen out for the track team, and any who are interested are asked to come down to Yost Field House on Saturday, March 14, 1953, at 2:30 P.M. rated No. 6 nationally, is favored over the Texans, who have a 14-7 record. The Aggies split two regu- lar season games with Kansas. Indiana (19-3) goes against De Paul (18-7). The other Chi- cago game matches Notre Dame (18-4) against Penn's Ivy League champions. Penn has a 21-4 mark and All- America Ernie Beck, but Ivy League teams haven't won many NCAA tournament games and a repeat of the early season thriller between Notre Damne and Indiana seems likely Saturday night. The Irish nipped the Hoosiers, 71-70, last December. That was before the 17-game winning streak which brought Indiana the Big Ten title. * *~ * THE FAR WEST tournament has two All-America players, Bob Houbergs of Washington and Johnny O'Brien of Seattle. BASEBALL SCORES Athletics, 5, Dodgers 2 Yankees 5, Detroit 0 Red Sox 9, Cards 6 Beginning Today i IN TIME FOR EASTER . .*. RABIDEAU-HARRIS 24th Anniversary Specials SAVINGS UP TO 25% More than 1500 fine new suits and topcoats in branded names-Don Richards, Worsted-Tex, Rock-Knit, Fashionmode If this dress-up season presents a budget problem . . . you can now shrug it off - for RABIDEAU-HARRIS comes through with a tremendous suit and 'topcoat special. Here in one full swoop, is the double solution to your prob- lems of style and price. Here, at a savings of many dollars are the fine suits and topcoats that put you for ahead in the traditional Easter Parade. The QUALITY ranks high, the selection is vast, the savings are important! So, make an early visit to RABIDEAU-HARRIS and save on your new Suit and Topcoat this spring. SIZES - IN REGULAR - SLIMS - SHORTS - STOUTS ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL - SPORTCOATS More than 300 of America's Finest Sportcoots in an overwhelming Anniversary Special. Campus capers call for Coke It depends oan the point of view, of cou; everyon antics. An( a quick need ft K.. rse, but almost ne enjoys these d when there's or refreshment have a Coke I Hundreds of new Spring Slacks to