PAGE !SEVEN THURSDAY, MARCH 14,1957' TIRE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, MARCH 14, 1957 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ; A xx{W! coMU ri1N Michigan SextetArrives in Colorado Sport Shorts 3 L- Colorado College, Clarkson" Open Ice Playofs Tonight Sigma Chi Downs Sigma Alpha Epsilon To Enter Intramural B' Fraternity Finals By BRUCE BENNETT Michigan's hockey team arrived in Colorado Springs, Colo., late yesterday afternoon hnd took a light workout at the Broadmoor Ice Palace last evening in prepara- tion for its first round NCAA tour- nament game tomorrow night with Harvard. The tenth annual classic will get underway tonight with Colorado and defenseman Mike Buchanan had been declared ineligible. Plane Delayed Then, after boarding the giant 56-passenger airliner "Broadmoor Special," also carrying the Har- vard and Clarkson seams, they en- countered a storm over the plains and Rockies and weren't able to land in Colorado Springs. The plane made a landing in Denver and the teams took buses the rest of the way, approximately 60 miles. Thb absence of Maxwell for the series will place an added burden on Michigan's highly regarded "second line" of Neil McDonald, Ed Switzer and Dick Dunnigan. The line has "blossomed" tremen- dously in the last month and end- ed the season with 30 goals. Dun- nigan, the team's leading scorer with 27 points in the Western In- tercollegiate Hockey League, has twelve of these goals. Collection of Stars Rarely has such a collection of stars graced the same ice arena at once as those who skated at the Broadmoor Ice Palace yesterday. In addition to Michigan stars To'm Rendall, Bob Schiller and Bob Pitts, there was Clarkson All- American Eddie Rowe. In Ed Mac- Donald ,the Knights have probably the best goalie in the East. Their opponent tonight, Colo- rado College, practiced earlier in the day. NHL SCORE Boston 2, New York 1 By SI COLEMAN known. Dave Bowers hit for seven Sigma Chi's 'B' basketball team of his total 16 points in the clos- qualified for the first place finals ing minutes of the contest to by defeating SAE, 38-28, last clinch it for the Phi Delts.- night in I-M play. Only one point separated these ED SWITZER .. faces tough task NEIL McDONALD ... shoulders extra load College meeting Clarkson College. The winner of tonight's encounter will meet tomorrow night's win- ner in the finals Saturday evening. It was a stormy day on two 4 scores for Vic Heyliger and his Wolverines,. Shortly before leaving Ann Arbor they were informed that high-scoring star Wally Maxwell ICe Coverage In keeping with The Daily's policy of on-the-spot coverage, Hockey Editor Bruce Bennett hops a plane for Colorado Springs today to send back a first-hand account, of the NCAA hockey tournament. MAJOR LEAGUE BASEBALL Brooklyn 9, Chicago (A) 4 Pittsburgh 3, Boston 1 Cincinnati 11, Milwaukee 4 Kansas City 5, St. Louis 4 Philadelphia 6, New York (A) 5 Washington 3, Detroit 2 Cleveland 9, Baltimore 5 Chicago (N) 9, New York (N) 3 Don't spoil a good typewriter for lack of a little expert service ... C all MORRILL'S 314 S. State NO 3-2481 WE HAVE THREE OF THE FINEST TYPEWRITER MECHANICS to serve you and keep your ma- chines operating to perfection. Sigma Alpha Epsilon got off to' a fast 6-2 lead in what turned out expectedly to be a fast and rough basketball game. But Sigma Chi's Gordon Mor- row, hitting from all angles, kept his ball club in the game and closed the gap to 17-16 at the half. Lead Changes Early in the second half the lead exchanged hands seven times until, with five minutes left in the game, Sigma Chi gained the lead and won going away. In the other first place game of the evening, Phi Delta Theta downed ATO, 28-21, to earn the right to play Sigma Chi in the finals. This, too, proved to be an ex- tremely close encounter. Not un- til the last two minutcs of the game was the outcome really two teams at the half. Shooting by both teams accounted for the low 12-11 halftime margin. But with Bowers getting hot Phi Delta Theta eked out the victory. Help Own Cause The Phi Delts helped their cause byfreezing the ball for the last ninety seconds. It took the winners the first half to get used to a zone defense thrown around them by ATO, but once they broke it, the game was theirs. In second place playoffs, Sigma Nu and Phi Gamma Delta both won their games to gain the right to meet each other in the final. Sigma Nu defeated Kappa Sigma, 40-14, and Theta Chi, lost to Phi Gamma Delta, 62-24. The Phi Gams jumped off to a 9-0 lead before Theta Chi broke its own ice with a two-pointer. From the start Phi Gamma Delta could not be stopped and it rolled to 31-13 advantage at the half- way mark. In the second half the Phi Gams doubled their total and won easily, 62-24. Walt Scherer and Dave Haller led the winners with 17 points apiece. Sigma Nu had little trouble in downing its opponent, Kappa Sig- ma. Ted Horn registered six of Sigma Nu's first eight points as he helped his team to a one-sided 40-14 win. Closest Game The closest game of the night involved Tau Kappa Epsilon and Acacia. The Tekes squeezed out an 18-17 win, although they were losing 10-8 at the half. They will now face Delta Upsilon who toppled Tau Delta Phi, 60-13, in the third place final. Other games saw Pi Lambda Phi defeat Alpha Sigma Phi, 31-21, and the Seldom Seen Kids down Chemistry, 55-21. Phi Sigma Delta won its game by forfeit over Psi Upsilon. l l J R By The Associated Press NCAA Second Round The next phase of the NCAA Basketball Tournament opens in four cities tomorrow night with the nation's top-ranked teams, North Carolina, Kansas, Kentucky and Southern Methodist; all booked for action. Unbeaten North Carolina and Canisius, winners in first-round games in Madison Square Garden Tuesday night, clash in Philadel- phia. Kentucky meets Pittsburgh at Lexington, Ky.. and faces SNM at ballas. Royals on Block ROCHESTER, N.Y. (A') --- Les Harrison, general manager of the Rochester Royals of the National Basketball Association, said yes- terday the Royals' franchise defi- nitely was on the market. Harrison, whose teams have won three world championships and five division titles in 12 years, said the operation "blew about $30,000 this year." Kansas 3 I a ---- "I NCAA Ruling Hits Icers I 't (Continued from Page 1) the NCAA would abide by the deci- sion handed down the Western Conference. Suspension Reduced The Eligibility Committee of the Western Conference ruled in Feb- ruary, 1956, that Buchanan and Maxwell "were in violation of Con- ference regulations in that they accepted expense money fir out- side competition while still in high school and, therefore, are ineligi- ble for further intercollegiate com- petition." Later, the suspension wvas re- duced by the Conference to one year. The pair sat out the last two semesters and were reinstated by the Conference at the beginning of the current semester. It now develops that Conference rulings on matters of eligibility and NCAA rulings are two separate matters. Loss Hurts The loss of Maxwell will be felt by the Wolverines in their title defense. Buchanan sustained a knee injury shortly after his return to action last month and was not expected to play in the tournament anyway, due to the injury. Maxwell, however, will be hard to replace. Heyliger expected to move Jerry Karpinka up from the third to the first line to replace Maxwell, who had scored 10 goals in the 10 games he played this year. CHeyliger said that the team greeted the decision withe"mixed emotions" and that they felt Max- well and Buchanan had received a "raw deal." HAIRCUTTING for Collegians * SUAVE * SMART * INDIVIDUALISTIC The Dascola Barbers Near Michigan Theater Congratulations, Michigan 1957 Graduating Class From KING-SEELEY CORP., Ann Arbor, Michigan What are your plans for Future Employment # We have opportunities for graduates of electrical and mechanical engi- neers, engineering physics graduates, and graduates with B.S. in physics in our engineering laboratories. * We also have opportunities for graduates with B.B.A., B.S., B.A., and industrial engineering degrees in standards, production, controls, plant layout, estimating, accounting, production supervision, and personnel. $ Information on our organization is in the placement office. 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