,WEDNESDAY, MARCH 6, 1951 ILME MICHIGAN DAILY 11Af"-w ftmurv WEDNSDAY MARH 81957T~lEMICIGANDA~l a r T$TH~xz REEm 1Maxwell's Overtime Goal Decides Vital Ice Contest Michigan Assured of NCAA Bid; Icers Rally Twice in Third Period I-M PLAYOFF RESULTS: Gomberg, Sigma Chi Cagers Upset (Continued from Page 1) Both teams made serious bids for victory in the last six and one- half minutes of regulation play, but both goalies withstood the rushes. This pace was continued in the overtime. Finally, Barrie Hayton scooped up the puck at his own' blue line and flashed along the left boards, carrying the puck in- to the corner and around towards the net. The retreating defense bottled up the goal mouth, preventing! WIHL STANDINGS Team W L T Pts. PL *Michigan 11 4 1 141/2 71/ Colorado Col. 14 4 0 19 5 Michigan Tech 8 6 4 121/2 91/2 North Dakota 12 8 0 12 8 *WIHL's entries in NCAA tourna- ment at Colorado Springs, Coo. March 14-16. Two eastern teams will be selected from Clarkson College, R.P.I., St. Lawrence College, and Harvard. Hayton from shooting. The puck dribbled off his stick and scooted toward the goal mouth. But the bewildered Yurkovich did not see the puck. Maxwell, anxiously waiting at the right corner of the net, poked it in for the deciding tally. In contrast to the tremendous finish of both teams, the first two periods Were extremely sluggish. Michigan was the aggressor through most of the first period but its rushes were stymied time and time again by poor passing and timely poke checks of the * North Dakota defense. SPEED-Neil McDonald outraces two Sioux defenders. Swim Title Meet Looms As Four Teams Struggle By AL WINKELSTEIN By ART ROSENBAUM 1 Although they lacked control of the board, Sigma Nu combined superior ball control and shooting accuracy to upset Sigma Chi in an unexpectedly easy manner, 52-37, in the First Place Social Fraternity 'A' basketball quarterfinals last night. Sigma Chi wasn't the only pow- erhouse that fell last night. Gom- berg, titan of the Residence Halls, fell in the Residence Halls 'A' semi-finals before the well bal- anced attack of Wenley, 34-33. It wasn't until after a minute of furious but scoreless play in the closing minutes that Wenley was able to break the tie and stay ahead. The Sigma Nu's scoring punch came in the form of John Larson and Robert Groff who combined to score 34 of their team's 52 points. With four minutes left in their game, Sigma Phi Epsilon took a one-point lead over Beta Theta Pi, climaxing a fantastic comeback that saw them overcome a third quarter deficit of 15 points and continue on to win, 59-56, in a quarter-final first place playoff. Adams blasted a 23-10 half-time lead over Michigan and then with- stood a second half rally to finally win the game along with the right to face Wenley in the first place fin a ls . .._____________________________________ Looking for GOOD DRYCLEAN1NG? Individual and thorough attention aiv- RESIDENCE HALL Alpha Delta Phi 26, Phi Sigma Kap- Second Place Semi-finals pa 14 Taylor 28, Van Tyne 27 Fourth Place Quarter-finals Chicago 44, Williasms 34 eifnl Fourth Place Semi-finals Theta Delta Chi 46, Phi Epsilon P1 Huber 51, Allen-Rumsey 9 23 < Lloyd 38, Strauss 36 Delta Kappa Epsilon 16, Psi Upsi- SOCIAL FRATERNITY ion 10 Second Place Quarter-finals Zeta Psi 25. Tau Kappa Epsilon 23 BODY CHECK-Michigan's Dick Dunnigan (6) is hampered by the actions of North Dakota defender Bob Morrison in last night's action at the Coliseum. Nodak goalie Tom Yurkovich looks on. Phones NO 8-6335 NO 8-7017 g gdavIr 1 nI tkrlrrt.i,4IFntt=I-uj-rI n,.- en to each garment, trouser cuffs brushed and tacked, seam rips re- paired, buttons replaced, and linings sewed. Michigan goalie Ross Childs had little work in the first period, making only six saves. As the second period opened, it was obvious that North Dakota was a changed team. The Sioux's tiny All American, Bill Reichart, blasted a couple of tremendous shots off the pads of the Michi- gan goalie to open play. Finally at 16:18 of the second mark, Reichart rifled a shot in the left hand corner of Childs' net to put North Dakota into the lead. An intercepted pass from the stick of the Wolverines' Bob,;Pitts led to the Sioux's second score. Steenson took the wayward pass Sport Shorts to fatten the NoDaks' lead to two goals at 18:27. Michigan was playing sporadic hockey at this time and didn't fi- nally start to click until the team began its comeback in the third period. Goalies Excel Both goalies were brilliant throughout the contest. North Da- kota's Yurkovich made 34 saves while Childs garnered 24. Only their acrobatic netminding kept the score from climbing. Colorado Bound FIRST PERIOD: Scoring - none. Penalties - N.D., Steenson (trip- ping) 2:30; N.D., Steenson (tripping) 5:38; N.D., Wilems (high sticking) 11:03, 'M', Switzer (high sticking) 11:03. Saves - Yurkovich 10, Childs 6. SECOND PERIOD: Scoring - N.D. Reichart (Paschke), 16:18; 2 - N.D. Steenson (Poole) 18:27. Penalties - 'M', McDonald (high- sticking) 1:32; N.D., C a s t e l l a n o (boarding) 6:20, N.D. Paschke (slash- ing) 8:00; 'M', Hutton (hooking) 11:58. Saves - Yurkovich 9, Childs 7. THIRD PERIOD: Scoring - 1. 'M', Karpinka (unassisted) 6:05; 2. 'M'., McDonald (Switzer, Dunnigan) 13:40. Penalties - N.D. Wiilems (cross- checking) 1:42, 'M', Hayton (slash- ing) 3:47, N.D., Armbruster (tripping) 7:11, N.D., Morrison (holding) 7:58, 'M', Maxwell (charging) 8:27. Saves - Yurkovich 11, Childs 9. OVERTIME: Scoring - 1. 'M', Max- well (Hayton) 5:35. Penalties - none. Saves - Yurkovich 4, Childs 2. Total saves - Yurkovich 34, Childs 24. The Big Ten swimming title race shapes up as a four team battle at Minneapolis this week- end. Undefeated Michigan, Michi- gan State, Ohio State and Indi- ana appear to be the strongest contenders. On the basis of dual meet competition, the title could easily go to any of the four. In all probability, the team that is "hot" will wind up with the championship crown. Michigan has compiled the best dual meet record in the Confer- ence, and holds decisions over all three of its rivals. However, dual meet competition is quite differ- ent from the Conference cham- pionship, and at Minneapolis, dual meet records have little or no meaning. Defending champion Ohio State has the Big Ten's two most out- standing performers, Al Wiggins and Don Harper. Wiggins can swim in any event, and it will take a tremendous effort to deny him at least two individual titles. Harper is the nation's best col- legiate diver, and should face little opposition in taking top div- ing honors. Michigan State lacks the in- dividual stars that the other three teams have, but undoubtedly has the greatest depth. More than likely, the Spartans should cop first honors in both of the relay events, and with several other strong swimmers may fare quite well. Indiana is in much the same position as Ohio State. They have two of the nation's top collegiate swimmers in Bill Woolsey and Sonny Tanabe, both given good chances for first place finishes. Outside of these four teams, only Iowa has even an outside chance. The Hawkeyes have a great sophomore swimmer in Gar- ry Morris, but do not appear to have much else. On the basis of paper strength, it appears that of the four lead- ing contenders, Indiana is the weakest. In dual meet competi- tion they suffered defeats at the hands of Ohio State, Michigan State and Michigan. Ohio State, last year's title holder does not appear to be quite as strong as it has been, but the Buckeyes are always a threat in any swimming meet. The men from Columbus only suffered one dual meet defeat, that at the hands of the Wolver- ines last week. ,WANTED: Camp Counselor for Y.W.C.A. Summer Camp. 25 miles from Ann Arbor. Call NOrmandy 2-2581 Mrs. Groz , . ' 1 All This Is Part Of Our Regular Service FAST SERVICE ON REQUEST GOLD BOND CLEANERS 515 East William . . . Mon.-Fri. 7-6 . . . Sat. 7-5 w By The Associated Press A.P. Cage Poll Collecting 55 first-place votes and 711 points, the North Caro- lina Tar Heels held a comfortable margin over the runnerup Kansas Jayhawks in the season's next- to-last Associated Press poll. The top five positions remained unchanged with Kentucky in third, Southern Methodist in fourth and Seattle, fifth. The most notable advances were made by Michigan State and Oklahoma City. State, unranked last week, moved into eighth po- sition and OCU jumped eight notches to 10th place. The top teams with first place votes and won-lost r e c o r d s Dees Wins Scoring Crown CHICAGO - Indiana's Archie Dees won the Big Ten all-games basketball scoring title in a breeze, outdistancing his nearest oppo- nent by more than 100 points. Dees compiled a 25-point aver- age with 550 points in 22 games while Frank Ioward of Ohio State finished second with 442 points in 22 games for a 20-point average. Coan to Quit LAKELAND, Fla. - Holdout Gil Coan has decided not to re- port to the Detroit Tigers and will ask the commissioner of baseball to place him on the voluntarily retired list. Distinctive Haircutting for WOMEN Stylists to please you The Daseola Barbers near Michigan Theatre THE. CARTER OIL COMPANY RESEARCH LABORATORY TULSA, OKLAHOMA Affiliate of Standard Oil Company (N.J.) 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