FRMAY. MARCH 19, 1954 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE THREE FRIDAY, MARCH 19, 1954 TIlE IIHCIIIGAN DAIlY PAGE THRFE Ld .Y ;igmCli, Gomberg Caure age Titles Sigma Chi,. Cooley Win Swim Titles By HAP ATHERTON Close finishes were the rule ra- ther than the exception last night in the I-M residence hall swim- ming finals as Cooley House splashed to the championship spot- The East Quadders captured five of the eight first places as they went on to an easy victory with 36, points. Gomberg took second with 24 points. 1 * * * THE WINNERS' Earland Reu- ter put on a great display of swim- ming ability to win the 200 yard free style, take third in the 100 yard free style, and swim on the winning 200 yard relay team. Cooley's other firsts were tak- en by Carl Sylvester in the 50 yard breast. stroke and Pat O'Brien in the 50 yard free style. Sylvestor also was on Cooley's winning 150 yard medley re- lay team. Reeves' Don Gilger broke the Cooley winning streak as he won in a very close finish over Gom- berg's Bill Colmer, in the 50 yard backstroke. '* TAYLOR'S Ronald Fukushima left the rest of the field far behind in the 100 yard free style as he won in 1:05.2. In the diving event, James McClurg of Gomberg al- most doubled his nearest competi- tor's score as he posted 115. Sigma Chi captured only two firsts, but far outdistanced the rest of the fraternities as it won the Fraternity S w i m m i n g Championship with 30 points. Second place Sigma-Nu posted 13 points. Sigma Chi's Larry Colman cap- tured the diving events on 57.8 points. The other first for the Sig- ma Chi's came in the 150 yard medley relay, when they beat out the Sigma Nu team by less than one stroke. JOHN McLaughlin of Theta Xi was way out front as he captured the 100 yard free style event in :56.3. He also walked away with the 50 yard free style event in :24.2. In the 200 yard free style event, Dick Radway of Sigma Al- pha Mu led all the way as he won in the time of 2:21.4. Phi Del- ta Theta's Frank Haag captured the 50 yard stroke event in a close 1-2-3 finish. 'B' Finals Go to Sigma Chi, PLANS VAST ITINERARY Greene at I-M Open House Mann To Begin World Sale of Swimming By LEW HAMBURGER __ 9 _. .... .it Delta Sigma Delta Downs Phi Chi, 40-39; Fletcher Hall Beats Lucky Seven, 45-34 --Daily-Chuck Kelsey DON PETERSON and GLENN COURY jump for the ball in one of last night's I-M cage finals, won by Gomberg over Hinsdale, 49-38. Undedo Tems Battle For NCAA CageCrown By WARREN WERTHEIMER The topsy-turvy NCAA basket- ball tournament moves into the semi-final round tonight at Kan- sas City, Missouri with four teams that were given very little chance of winning the crown seeing ac- tion. Southern California is sched- uled to meet Bradley in the first contest while Penn State opposes La Salle in the afterpiece. The winners will play tomorrow night for the title and the losers will meet in the consolation game. The championship game will be tele- vised nationally on NBC. * * * BRADLEY is the choice to top- ple Southern Cal tonight, mainly because it defeated the Nittany Lions, 79-65, when the teams met earlier in the season. Both are good rebounding teams with the Trojans. playing a more deliberate game. The second game will pit against each other the two cag- ers who probably stand the best chance of being named the tour- ney's most valuable player. All- American Tom Gola is La Salle's bright light being its top scor- er, rebounder, and playmaker. Jesse Arnelle, a 6-5 hook shot artist is primarily responsible for Penn State getting this far, La Salle in the tournament for the first time, has been given the role of favorite. However with fa- vorites being knocked off left and right thus far, the Explorers prob- ably wish that they were picked to finish fourth TEAMS like Indiana, last year's champs, Notre Dame, and Oklaho- ma A&M have not survived the regional playoffs. The Irish sur- prised Indiana, 65-64, to become the top choice to take the title and1 the next night they found them- selves in thebrole of spectators after having been upset by Penn State, 71-63. Oklahoma A&M, playing on its home court, was ousted by Bradley, 71-54, in another form reversal. La Salle came through more or less as expected at Philadelphia, defeating Fordham in overtime, 66-64, and then overcoming Navy, 64-48. The Explorer's regular sea- son record was 21-4. * * * PENN STATE made the semi- final round the hard way. Before knocking off favored Notre Dame, the Nittany Lions also upset LSU with All-American Bob Pettit. Bradley, 15-12 before the playoffs, was another team that was figured to be along just for the ride. The Braves felt differ- ently however and toppled fa- vored Oklahoma City before running up the highest score ever posted against the Oklaho- ma Aggies on their home floor. Southern Cal put together two of its best games of the season during the regionals on the west coast including a double overtime victory over Santa Clara. IR 1 3 By STEVE HEILPERN Six intramural basketball cham- pions were crowned last night at the annual Intramural Building Open House. Sigma Chi stole the spotlight as it gained top honors in the fra- ternity 'A' and 'B' first-place play- offs. Gomberg House garnered the Residence Hall 'A' honors, but bowed to Greene in the 'B' final. Delta Sigma Delta took the pro- fessional fraternity crown, while Fletcher annexed Independent laurels. * * * GRIDIRON star Gene Knutson's 12 tallies led Sigma Chi to a 41-34 victory over Phi Delta Theta for its second straight 'A' champion- ship. The winners led, 23-18, at halftime and were not seriously threatened in the second half. Inability to control the back- boards was probably the chief factor in the Phi Delts' loss. They rarely got more than one follow-up shot, and due mainly to the efforts of the winners' Knutson and Tom Maentz. A 13- point effort by Bill Wisner led the losers. Residence hall powerhouse, Gomberg, added the 'A' cage crown to its impressive list of first-places by defeating Hinsdale, 49-38. An 18-point Gomberg spurt in the last quarter broke up a close struggle. THE HALFTIME score was 15- all, but Hinsdale could not keep pace with fast-breaking Gomberg, and faded in the last minutes of action. Leading the winners' was Marshall Silvan, with 11 mark- ers. Bob Hitchmough totalled nine for Hinsdale, all of the coming in the second half. Delta Sigma Delta came from behind to score a 40-39 win over Phi Chi in the professional fra-, ternity championships. Charley Murray and Stan Gillilan scored 11 markers each to pace the Delta, Sigma Delta five, while Ken Veen- stra's 13 was high for the losers. LATE SCORES BASEBALL Detroit 1, Boston (AL) 0 New York (NL) 9, Chicago (NL) 6 Baltimore 7, Cleveland 6 BASKETBALL Benton Harbor JC 72, Highland Park JC 67 NATIONAL AAU (quarter-finals) Peoria 56, San Francisco Young Men's Institute 55 '"! Grihalva Motors 63, Phillipps 66ers 58 NHL HOCKEY Boston 3, Detroit 3 FLETCHER HALL'S 45-34 win over Lucky Seven in the Independ- ent finals was highlighted by Dave Baker's 20 points. The husky for- ward continually thwarted the los- eas' hopes with driving lay-up shots. Mack Finch and Jim Vuko- vich topped the Lucky Seven scor- ing column with eight tallies each. The 'B' basketball trophy went to Sigma Chi for the fourth straight year as they trounced Delta Tau Delta, 49-28. Sigma Chi's height advantage was again. in evidence. The Delts cooled off after a good first stanza, and actually lost the con- test with a meager four-point total in the second period. No one scored in double figures for the well-balanced victors, John Wiese Wins Nick Wiese captured the all- around gymnastics title in the all campus meet held at the Sports Building last night. He was closely followed by Wayne Warren and Bob Arm- strong. Wiese was rated first in the tumbling and still rings events, while placing second in the side horse and parallel bars. Fortenberry leading the attack with four field goals. Jack Demor- est's 10 was high for the Delts. The halftime score was 26-15. DON MAZIN netted 10 points in the last quarter to spark Greene to a 39-34 win in the residence halls 'B' championship tilt over Gomberg. Gomberg led, 27-23, going into the final stanza, but fell by the wayside when the Green quintet found the range. Mazin's game total of 21 was tops for the even- ing's activity. Bob Sharp's 10 points led the losers. Other scores: ALL CAMPUS SQUASH FINAL Gus Leinback 3, Conrad Matthaei I VOLLEYBALL CHAMPIONSHIP Latvian Team 4, Turkish Team I VOLLEYBALL Psychology A 6, Natural Resources 0 Public Health 3, Education 3 PADDLEBALL TOURNAMENT Cooley 2, HinsdaleUA Anderson 2, Taylor 1 Scott 3, Strauss 0 At seventy years of age most men are contentedly retired, reliv- ing the past in their minds, plan- ning trips abroad if they are so in- clined, and rarely thinking of any- thing remotely connected with work. With Matt Mann II, for 29 years Michigan's varsity s w i m m i n g coach, such is not the case. Mann, whose compulsory r e t i r e m e n t comes with his next birthday, is not happy about the idea of leav- ing Michigan or swimming. He has, on several occasions expressed the desire to remain in his pres- ent capacity, * * * HE HAS said, "They don't have to pay me to work here. I'd glad- ly stay on for no monetary re- ward. My boys around the world are my reward." Mann will definitely not leave the swimming picture. Following the NCAA championships to be held next week at Syracuse, U. - - '1 N iew York, Miann will get his career of increased activity" under way. This career will en- tail a series of clinics and trav- el that would stagger the imagi- nation of men in their youth. The flamboyant coach believes that a "young man of 69 should Honored Matt Mann, Michigan swim- ming coach for 29 years, was honored at a surprise dinner last night at the Detroit Vet- erans' Memorial Building. He was awarded a plaque by the Michigan Swimmers Officials' Society. increase the scope of his activi- ties instead of hunching up by the fireside." Increasing his scope is precisely what Mann has set about to do. * * * IHIS PRESENT itinerary includes :- JUST ARRIVED FROM SCOTLAND We have received our first spring shipment of shetland sweaters which are made for us by e J & D McGeorge. They are styled in the classic crew neck and hand-fashioned from only the finest of shetland yarns. Colors: Blue, Grey, White, and Green Heather Szes: 40 to 46 $1350 OXXFORD CLOTHES DOBBS HATS BURBERRY COATS ANN ARBORE DET R OIT trips to Canada and England, with trips to Australia, New Zealand, and Europe in the back of his mind. Next Wednesday he and his last Michigan team will leave from Willow Run airport for Na- tional Collegiate Championships in Syracuse. On April 16 the 1952 Olympic coach will board a stratocruiser bound for London and more clin- ics. They will, get under way at Loughborough College, the only physical education school in the British Isles, where 40 of Britain's top swimmers and their coaches will be on hand. * * * LATER in the month he will hold similar clinics in the West- ern Counties and beginning with the last week in April and contin- uing until his return to this coun- try on May 15, he will journey to Leeds and Sunderland. id IT'S TIME YOU RELAXED! 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