23, 1956 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAV-V. PrUUVW- 23,.1956 TilE v+.il1aal Eta I Y A . ('~i A 1.J. LZT~IUS i Iowa To Meet Dons in Cage Finals Four Michigan Matmen In NCAA Tournament Hawkeyes Defeat Temple; San Francisco Wins, 86-68 By DAVE RORABACHER Oklahoma A & M will be seeking its 18th national mat title in 26 years when the NCAA Wrestling Championships get under way on the Aggie campus at Stillwater this afternoon. Once again the fabulous men from Wolverine Coach Cliff Keen's m .alma mater will be favored to cap- Former Star Dies CRYSTAL FALLS, Mich (A') Edward Chambers, captain of Michigan's 1927 Big Ten bas- ketball champions and former teammate of Bennie Ooster- baan, died suddenly here Wed- nesday night of a heart ail- ment. ture the team laurels, although, surprisingly, their expected win- ning margin is a small one. The four man Wolverine con- tingent of captain Mike Rodri- guez, Jack Marchello, Frank Hirt, and Dan Deppe is too small to even be in contention for the team title but will concentrate on gar- nering individual honors. Rodriguez Leads 'M' Rodriguez, two-time Big Ten, champion and runnerup in last year's national tournament at 157 pounds figures to ha e the best chance for a title, but he will be forced to turn in one of the best performances of his career in or- der to annex it. His competition will include such outstanding greats as Larry Ten- Pas of Illinois and Pittsburgh's Dave Johnson.. Local fans will recall that Ten- Pas is the grappler whom Rodri- guez pinned to win the Confer- ence crown while Johnson is re- sponsible for the Wolverine cap- tain's lone defeat of the season, that coming on a-3 decision in Michigan's first dual meet. Marchello, 12.7-pound Western Conference champion, will drop down to 167 in his national bid. However, he is accorded little chance of winning out over the nation's best. Hirt will move down to the 130- pound division after having gar- nere4 second in the Big Ten at 137. Deppe will compete at his regular 123-pound position. Carrying the main hopes of a Big Ten team victory will be a strong Iowa squad of nine men. EXHIBITION BASEBALL Cincinnati 10, Washington 3 New York (N) 8, Chicago (N) 1 Brooklyn 4, Detroit 2 Chicago (A) 8, Milwaukee 6 St. Louis "B" 3, Chicago (A) "B" 2 Boston 2, PiNttsburgh 1 St. Louis 7, New York (A) S -Daily-Jim Owens SIG EP'S Chuck Turner (left) nips ATO's Ted Kilar in 440-heat. NU SIGS COP I-M SWIM: Al" WTins Track -Crown LIGHTWEIGHT BICYCLES $41.95 and Up REPAIRS ON ALL MAKES OF BICYCLES WHIZZER MOTOR SALES Corner Main and Madison ... Phone NOrmandy,8-7187 "OPEN MONDAY NIGHT" till 9:00 Only 4 Blocks West of the Law Quad By MIKE FLYER and JOHN YORK Barefooted Charlie Gunn spark- ed Alpha Tau Omega to first place in the I-M social fraternity track meet last night at Yost Field House. Gunn, running without shoes because he "always does," earned 10 of ATO's total of 15 points with wins in the 60 and 440-yard dashes, Sig Eps Second Sigma Phi Epsilon and Phi Gamma Delta finished close be- hind with 13 and 121/ points. They were followed by Phi Delta Theta with 10% points, while last year's champion Sigma Chi and Delta Upsilon tied for fifth scoring eight points apiece. A highlight of the meet was Gagnier Seeks Gym Honors Yesterday morning a one-man team left Ann Arbor to represent Michigan at this weekend's NCAA Gymnastics Meet at Chapel Hill, N.C. Ed Gagnier, Coach Newt Lok- en's best gymnast, and Loken will be the only Michigan representa- tives in the large throng of talent that will gather on the University of North Carolina campus. Be- tween 25 and 30 :other colleges will compete in the tournament. Gagnier's third in the Big Ten all-around event, his parallel bars championship, and his several other places in the Conference meet will rate him as a threat to capture several more honors on the national scene. the record-shattering perform- ance of Fred Potter of Sig Ep in the 65-yard high hurdles. Pot- ter's time of :08.7 betters the old mark of :08.8. Jerry Goebel of Phi Delt cap-j tured first place in the high jump with a leap of 5'8", besting Jack Burchfield of Theta Xi and Phi Gam'.s Dick McCracken. Minutes later, Goebel finished in a four-way tie for first at 10'6" in the pole vault, sharing honors with Theta Xi's Ken Fowler, Phil Mitchell of Phi Delta Theta, and Acacia's Tomn Tuttle. Rounding out the top 10 teams in points were TKE with six; Theta Xi, 5%; and Zeta Beta Tau and Theta Chi each with five points. Nu Sigs Win Swimming Nu Sigma Nu placed in five 'of the seven events to walk off with first place in the professional fra- ternity swimming meet in the I-M pool last night. Led by former Michigan star Burwell "Bumpy" Jones who won both the 200-yard freestyle and 50-yard backstroke, the Nu Sigs racked up 26 points to outdistance second place Phi Rho Sigma by eight points. There are openings at pres- ent in the managerial systems for sophomores and juniors to work this spring in track and next year in swimming, gym- nastics, and wrestling. Anyone interested s h o u I d contact Cap Grathwohl, at NO 2-3256, or Dave Lundquist, NO 2-6373. --Undergraduate Athletic Managers Council By ALAN EISENBERG Associate Sports Editor. Special To The Daily EVANSTON, Ill.,-Everything went according to form last night at McGaw Field House. San Francisco's Don's, obviously playing under wraps, waltzed to an easy 86-68 win over a mis- matched Southern Methodist Uni- versity five. In the opener, Iowa stopped a gallant Temple squad, 83-76. The winners will meet for the championship before another cap- acity crowd this evening. The con- solation game, getting under way at 8 p.m. (EST), pits Temple against SMU. Within eight minutes of the opening half, the defending champ Dons had better' than a 10-point edge. From that point on, prac- tically the only interest the sell- out crowd had was to see whether the Dons and Bill Russell could live up to their press notices. Dons Not Pressed The winners and the 6' 10" cen- ter did not really impress; they played just hard enough to win. Every time the Mustangs moved close, San Francisco started to press harder. Russell, though he scored 17 points, had only a few b)right moments in the dull game. The opening game, on the other hand, was one of the most ex- citing to be played here in many a day. Two defense-minded teams threw caution to the winds and Track Squad To See Actionr This Weekend There's no rest for Michigan's trackmen. At a time when most varsity athletes aren't worrying about for- mal competition, many of Coach Don Canham's men are showing their wares before fans at various indoor meets. Take this weekend, for instance. Ten -Wolverines will compete in two important indoor extrava- ganzas. An eight-man contingent will be on hand for the annual Chica- go Daily News Relays tomorrow night. Eeles Landstrom, in the pole vault, Jim Pace, in the 60-yard dash, Captain Ron Wallingford, in the two-mile run, and high- jumper Brendan O'Reilly are slat- ed to see action in the Windy City. High - jumper M a r k Booth and former Michigan miler, John Moule, have arrived at Montreal, where they will compete in the Eastern Canadian Indoor Track Championships. Dirty Buck White Buck played a wide-open offensive game which had the crowd roaring con- stantly. Iowa just refused to buckle un- der the relentless pressure of the underdog Temple quintet. With only 3:10 remaining in the game, the Owls had reduced a 12-point lead to a narrow 75-72 margin. But the Hawkeyes again pulled away-this time for keeps. The difference between the two squads was accuracy from the foul line. Temple made only six of 17 from the charity lane-an inept 36 per cent. - High scorer in the tilt was Iowa's Bill Logan, with 36 points. But the individual stars of the contest were Temple's Hal Lear with 32 and Guy Rodgers with 28. The two guards ripped through the Hawkeye defense constantly for picture-book layups. They passed and dribbled superbly-set- ting up numerous scoring plays. SCORES NIT SEMI-FINALS Louisville 89, St. Joseph's 79 Dayton 89, St. Francis 58 STANLEY CUP Semi;-Final Playoffs Detroit 3, Toronto 1 Detroit leads the best of seven series, 2-0.) 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