SUNDAY. MARCH 20, 1955 JjIE EliIMAN INAIL V PAGE 7 SanFrancisco WinsNCAACage Title SPORTS PHIL DOUGLIS Night Editor The New Spring Collegiate Cuts?? They're snave, smart individualistic- TRY ONEI Wings Meet Canadiens For Crown DETROIT (A) - The Detroit Red Wings and Montreal Cana- diens meet for the National Hockey League championship here tonight and the betting is they will forego any brawling and settle down to serious hockey. The Canadiens moved into a tie with the idle Detroit Red Wings for first place in the National_ Hockey League last night as they defeated the New York.Rangers, 4-2, in a game that was far cry from the riotous one of Thursday night.f A large detail of police equippedJ with teargas bombs has been or- dered to patrol Olympia Stadium and its immediate vicinity to pre- vent repetition of the bloody riot which marred the teams' meeting at Montreal Thursday night. t At last night's Montreal-New1 a York Game, some 500 policemen were on duty inside and outside1 the forum to prevent any recur- rance of last Thursday's games, when Montreal fans rioted after league President Clarence Camp- bell had suspended Maurice Ri- chard for the season. Campbell was not present last night. But there were no incidences. The policemen stationed outside Soccer a Any men interested in trying out for the Wolverine Soccer1 Club, please call Tali Cepuri- tis, NO' 3-5838. Practice begins Tuesday, March 22, for the first game which will be played here on April 16. had nothing to do except to see that no crowds gathered and kept everyone moving. Floyd Curry, Calum Mackay, Boom-Boom Geoffrion and Jean Beliveau scored for Montreal and Larry Popein and Dean Pren- tice for the Rangers. Dons Crush LaSalle, 77-63; Buffs Smash Iowa for Thirdj i BILL RUSSELL ...sparks the Dons Prep Cage Powers Win State Titles State high school basketball champions were crowned all over the nation last night - and right here in Michigan was no excep- tion. Unheralded Jackson won Michi- gan's Class "A" crown by smash- ing Benton Harbor, 74-61. L a c y Bicy dropped in 32 points as Jack- son took its third title. River Rouge put on a brilliant display of ball control in the last two minutes to edge Buchanan, 51-48, to repeat as Michigan class "B" kings. Houghton, Mass Triumph Classy Houghton, pride of the Copper Country, stood off Way- land long enough to take the "C" title, 65-62, while Mass smashed Ashley, 73-46 for the class "D" crown. Meanwhile Indiana's frenzied' tourney came to an end, as the Crispus Attucks Tigers of Indiana- polis routed the Gary Roosevelt Panthers, 97-74, in a record shat- tering game. In an all-Big Eight final, West Rockford clipped Elgin, 61-59, to win the Illinois high school cham- pionship, while Ames High School defeated Iowa City, 64-58, for the Iowa crown, before 15,000 scream- ing fans. KANSAS CITY, (W)-San Fran- cisco, No. 1 team in the nation, last night rode behind terrific play by 6-10 All-America Bill Russell to a 77-63 victory over defending champion La Salle in the Nation- al Collegiate (NCAA) Basketball Tournament Final. Although his San Francisco teammate K. C. Jones outscored him, the lanky Russell made it "no contest" against LaSalle's her- alded Tom Gola in their long- awaited showdown. Russell tallied 23 points to set a 5-game NCAA scoring record of 118, while Gola, who held the for- mer composite mark of 114 scored 16. Russell Stars Gola never lived up to expecta- tions here, while Russell did ev- erything expected of him, really sewing up the game with an 18- point first half performance which had a capacity Municipal Auditor- ium crowd of 10,500 beside itself. Jones, a rugged 6-1, 202-pound- er, copped scoring honors with 24 points on 10 field goals and four free throws. It wasn't much of a game after the Dons, scoring their 26th straight victory and completing the season wita a 28-1 mark, forged ahead by 19 points, 50-31, early in the second half. LaSalle, holding an NCAA rec- ord of 9 straight tourney tri- umphs, had a 13-game winning streak snapped and wound up with a 26-5 record. LaSalle played Gola on a roving basis and tried a sliding zone de- fense against the catlike Dons, whose Russell made some phenom- enal scoring tip-ins in the first half. Iowa Loses Paced by arn erstwhile reserve, Jim Ranglos, Colorado's Big Seven Champions ground to a methodi- cal 75-54 triumph over Big Ten Champion Iowa for third place in the NCAA in an earlier game. Ranglos tallied 18 points to lead the Golden Buffaloes to an easy victory over the favored Hawkeyes, who played poorly most of the way. JACK WARDROP . .. another record? Freestylers To Highlight NCA A Championships' Dukes Beat Dayton;-Win NIT Crown NEW YORK, (A')-Sihugo Green, a Brooklyn boy with pogo stick legs and an unerring eye, led Duquesne to a 70-58 victory over Dayton in the final of the National Invitation Basketball Tournament last night and to the Dukes' first NIT cham- pionship. Cincinnati, the fourth-seeded team, captured third place in the tournament with an exciting 96-91 overtime victory over St. Francis (Pa.). Green scored 33 points as he joined with slender Dick Ricketts in a superb two-man performance. In addition to scoring all but 14 of their team's points, these two performedthe key defensive roles in guarding Dayton's two tall tow- ers, 7-foot Bill Uhl and 6-8 John- ny Horan. A crowd of 18,496 jammed Mad- ison Square Garden to its capaci- ty for the exciting final of the 18th Invitation Tournament in which top-seeded Duquesne fell behind only once. NBA PLAYOFFS Eastern Semi-Final Boston 116, New York 109 (Boston wins best of three series, 2-1) LATE HOCKEY SCORES Montreal 4, New York 2 Toronto 5, Chicago 0 WRESTLING Illinois 18, Oklahoma 12 EXHIBITION BASEBALL Boston 6, Detroit 4 Kansas City 13, Washington 10 Milwaukee 9, Cincinnati 2 New York (N) 4, Cleveland 2 Chicago (N) 8, Los Angeles 3 Pittsburgh 4, St. Louis 0 Philadelphia 7, Chicago (A) 2 The Dascola near Michigan Barb Theati TONIGHT 8:15 "NO EXIT" by Jean-Paul Sart Sunday 8:15 Playing Wednesday thru Sundays the following two weeks. STUDENT RATE 991c - GENERAL ADM. $1.65 Please Make Reservations Early DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER NO 2-5915 327 S. Fourth record dance 8 :00-10:30 in the Union terrace room free every Sunday nite WILDS WILDS WILDS WILDS WILDS The Slim Look in Slacks Ivy-Ails by Wild's (EDITOR'S NOTE: This is the second of three articles presenting an ana- lysis of the coming NCAA swimming championships.) By LEW HAMBURGER This year, as last, freestylers will probably provide the most excite- ment for swimming fans at the NCAA championship meet Thurs- day, Friday, and Saturday at Ox- ford, Ohio's Miami University. A year ago Michigan's Jack Wardrop swam to the upset of the year when he beat Ford Konno of Ohio State in the 220 yard free- style. This season a repeat per- formance will be no upset. The two have met twice this season and each meeting has re- sulted in a win for the Michigan junior and a world record in the process. 'M' Rifle Team Wins National Intercollegiate Sectional Meet Wardrop's nomenal time, twice bettering 2.04 seconds has speculators betting on another lowering of the world's mark when they meet at Oxford. Konno will be favored in the 1500 meter swim, but in the 440 yard freestyle, Wardrop and In- diana's Bill Woolsey could again upset the Buckeye co-captain, and could push him to a world record in the event. The sprints are certain to be close, and will figure heavily in the meet scoring. Yale's sprinters boast the finest record of any team in the nation. The Eli's have four men who have bettered 51 seconds in the 100 yard event, and several 50 yard men who can go the dis- tance in less than 23 seconds. Eli's Best Rex Aubrey, Bob Armstrong, Hendrick (Sandy) Gideonse, and Kerry Donovan established a new world's record in the 400 yard free- style relay a short time ago and each man is counted on for points in the national meet. Dartmouth's John Glover is an- other Easterner who has ap- proached 49 seconds in theevent, and the Hanover star will be cer- tain to be in the thick of things at the NCAA meet. The Big Ten's 100 yard cham- pion, Michigan's Ron Gora is the Maize and Blue's hope to break up the Yale monopoly on sprint events. Iowa's Dick Pennington is the Big Ten's other sprint champion, in the 50 yard event, and was a finalist in the nationals a year ago. ,... ."" C7 L/ti Michigan's rifle team annexedv the National Rifle Association's National Intercollegiate Sectional Championships here yesterday, gaining 1412 of a possible 1500 points. High men for the Wolverines were Rhody Nornburg, Bobbie Gubbins, and Jan Gogulski with 1 I i. - i 19559 284 points, followed by teammates Dick Schwing and Bill Woodruff, 280. Schwing also took fourth place in the Individual match while Go- gulski was edged out of sixth by Dean DeLaMater of Miami (Ohio) on the tie breaking rule. Illinois won second position with 1398 points, followed by Indiana, 1391; University of Dayton, 1386; Miami, 1368; Purdue, 1365; Ken- tucky, 1350; Dayton "B", 1342; Xavier, 1335; Michigan "B", 1323; and Tri-State College, 1195. Cash Wins Individual Title Gerald Cash, Dayton Universi- ty, won the Individual Champion- ship, shooting 290 of a possible 300 points to assure him of na- tional ranking. Cash also won the team event, with a 293. Following in the Individual match were Illinois' Bob Hickey, with 287, Indiana's Russ Drake, Michigan's Schwing, and Miami's Dave Fry and DeLaMater, with 286. The match was one of 15 identi- cal sectional tournaments held yesterday throughout the nation under the sponsorship of the Na- tional Rifle Association, the gov- erning body for all competitive i s L PLAY GOLF Municipal Golf Course Fuller Street near Veterans' Hospital Now open for the season. MILITARY BALL ALL-CAMPUS FORMAL DANCE - - t a Restaurant and Pizz PIZZA IS OUR SPECIA 1204 South Universi C7) I- -J t/') -J The difference in measurements gives the stacks an entirely new slim silhouette. Knee measurements are reduced to 21"; cuff measurements to 18" . . . an adjust- able buckle and stray is placed at the back of the trousers for easy edjustment and low hip fit. The authentic army China. Black. Waist sizes 28 to 38. Cuff inseams 29 to 34. $495 ALTY ity lo W r.LD 'S A State Street on the Campus _- r'"' ...... ... .... f with 11 10:30 A.M. to II P.M. Closed Saturdays WILDS WILDS. WILDS WILDS WILDS -ram..r ....... mom e~ RALPH MARTERIE w and his Orchestra shooting. Scores from all matches are sent to Washington where the National Champions will be determined. Santee- oses Pan-Am 1500 1k II Graduating Engineers | * I *~ To Miranda and the Gulantics-Winning PSURFS $4 per Couple Friday, March 25 9 to 1 P.M. MEXICO CITY (P)-Juan Mir- anda, a long striding Argentine, outlasted Wes Santee, the United States mile king, in a thrilling stretch duel to win the featured 1,500 meter race of the Pan-Amer- ican games yesterday. Miranda burst across the finish line in 3:53.2, a games record, just a stride in front of the Kansas cowboy. The defeat in the 1,500 meters came as a stunning blow to the proud U.S. forces which had al- most completed an undefeated track season. Research, development and production activities at Northrop Aircraft, Inc., create a continuous demand for young men who are building careers in the fields of engineering and science. League Ballroom If you have had training that qualifies you for: 11 AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERING MECHANICAL ENGINEERING ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING BAUNDARY LAYER RESEARCH AERODYNAMICS THERMODYNAMICS L 7 * . . if you want to build a permanent, successful career in one of America's fore- most research, development and production centers . . . if you want to locate in the Los Angeles Metropolitan area . . . please contact the University of Michigan Placement Office.. Department of Speech Presents Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer Prize-Winning Comedy 'THE SKIN OF OUR TEETH' "One of the wisest and friskiest comedies written in a long time." --Atkinson, N.Y. TIMES Interviews Campus interviews will be conducted by Mr. E. J. Noonan, Engineering Person- nel Representative of Northrop Aircraft, Inc., on March 23 and 25 at the Uni- WED. - SAT., MARCH 23, 24, 25 and 26...8 P.M....$1.50 -$1.20 -90c versity of Michigan Engineering Placement Office. I $ s s . to III I1