WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 193 'C'HI, MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE Il WEDNESDAY, MARCH 19, 1958 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE "1 ZBT Wins Second Place Title FORMER 'M' 'MANN': Sooner Coach Returns For NCAA Swim Meet -M SPORTLIGHTI . by Paul Borman SAM Downs DU, Phi Eps Triumph In I-M Fraternity Cage Playoffs By CHUCK KOZOLL By HAL APPLEBAUM Come One, Come All.. Michigan's Intramural Sports year will reach its highlight to- morrow night with the annual I-M Open House at the Sports Build- ing. Once again there will be a conglomeration of 24 events going on at the same times, different times and overlapping times in the "three-ring circus" which should prove to be another triumph for its "ringmasters," Earl Riskey, who also doubles as I-M sports director, and Rod GrambeAu, his assistant. This year's co-recreation basketball game will feature Allen- Rumsey against Prescott. To protect and aid the "weaker sex", the males will have to wear boxing gloves. A suggestion from the "strong- er" sex has asked me to advise the referees to check the fems nails for jagged edges, filed off points etc. since it will probably be a real grudge battle. The annual handball exhibition will feature five of Detroit's fin- est against Michigan's team. The Wolverine squad is composed of Bill Boonstra, Al Lifshay, Al Scharfelberger, Harry Stuhldreher and Ray Smutek and has gained state recognition. Let Philbin, Michigan's boxing coach, will feature five exhibi- tion matches between students and six matches between Junior Depu- ties from Willow Run. Squash, Judo etc... . Students and faculty will team up in the squash exhibitions when1 the Michigan players face five Detroiters. Playing on the local squad will be Bob Dixon, Doug Hayes, Norm Ashton, Earl Ziegler and Ned Heppenstal. They will face Detroiters John Green, Dick Turner, Rick Austin, Len Weiner and John Blossum. For those who are constantly being swarmed over or attacked, there will be a judo exhibition provided by Harvey Glashow. Charlie Anderson, wrestling coach Cliff Keen's assistant, has arranged six exhibition mat matches. } Gymnastics Coach Newt Loken will be working overtime tomorrow night, but it will be for a good cause, since he will direct the All- Campus Gymnastics tournament. Besides the championship water polo match tomorrow night, swimming fans will be treated to an exhibition water polo match between two teams of "experts." Captaining one of the squads will be former Wolverine swim great Bumpy Jones, while another former Michigan natator, Walt Jeffries will lead the opposition. Going into tomorrow's events all the leagues except the residence halls will have the same leader as they did last year. These are Sigma Phi Epsilon among the social fraternities, Nu Sigma Nu. among the professionals and the Seldom Seen Kids among the, independents. The residence halls, however, boast a new leader in Cooley House of East Quadrangle. They have taken over the lead from Gomberg and by gaining an "A" playoff birth in basketball and the finals in water polo will stretch that lead over the "Big Red" of Gomberg. Staving off a late second half rally Zeta Beta Tau turned back Delta Tau Delta, 29-25, to win the I-M second place social fraternity 'A' basketball crown. ZBT pulled out to a 20-10 lead early in the second half and ap- peared to have matters well in hand when the Delts, led by Tom Jones, began an uprising. The Delts closed the gap steadily and with two minutes to go a basket by Jim Reider cut the ZBT lead to 26-25. ZBT's' Mark Petricoff made a free throw with 30 seconds left to give them a two point lead and Larry Mindel iced the victory with a basket in the waning sec- onds. In the playoff for third place Sigma Alpha Mu's Al Greenberg made a basket and a free throw with less than a minute to go to give his team a 46-39 yictory over Delta Upsilon. The Sammies jumped off to an early lead, but were unable to hold it and the lead changed hands several times during the second half. With two minutes to go in the game Greenberg hit a jump shot to give SAM a 37-35 lead, but DU's John Grettenberger tied the game up seconds later. This bas- ket set the stage for Greenberg's three point play, which occurred when he drove in for a layup, made the basket and was fouled. The free throw turned out to be the winning point as Art Wible hit a long jump shot to make the final score 40-39. Tom Pliner paced the Sammies in the first half as he hit five straight baskets to give them their 26-18 halftime lead. Phi Epsilon Phi won the fourth place battle byscoring three points in the last 30 seconds to defeat Theta Chi 26-23. Theta Chi had a 23-21 lead with three minutes to go, but they were unable to score for the remainder of the contest, while Phi EP netted five points to give them the vic- tory. Les Janoff and Harvey Jame hit free throws for Phi Ep to knot the score at 23 all and Irwin Shaw hit the winning point on a free throw with 15 seconds remaining. Jame added another two points to Phi Ep's total on drive in in the last second of play. Dayton, Xavier Victors in NIT NEW YORK (MP)-Scrappy Xavi- er (Ohio) turned on the steam early in the second half yesterday, roaring past favored Bradley with a 16-4 drive and holding on for a 72-62 victory over the defending champions and earning a spot in the semifinals of the National In- vitation Basketball Tournament. Top seeded Dayton, outplayed in the first half, finished strong behind the shooting of sophomore Frank Ose and defeated Fordham, 74-70, to move along with Xavier (Ohio) into the semifinals. Xavier, an eight point under- dog, thus gained revenge for its humiliating 116-81 setback by the Bradley Braves in last year's quarter finals. The Musketeers from Cincin- nati trailed 27-26 at halftime, but they took the lead on Joe Viviano's layup in the second half's opening minute. They increased their margin seconds later. However Bradley tied the score on a three- point play. Then Xavier put to- gether a 12-1 strong, sparked by Viviano's six points. MATT MANN .. .now leads Aggies' Dees Named Indiana MVP BLOOMINGTON, Ind. ()-In- diana University's Big Ten basket- ball champions named 6'8" Archie Dees as their most valuable player yesterday. Dees, Big Ten scoring leader the last two seasons, was honored last year as the most valuable player in the Conference and will be a candidate for that selection again this year. No player ever has won that distinction twice. Dees was also named yesterday to the East squad for the annual East-West all-star basketball game in Kansas City Sunday afternoon. Back into the swimming busi- ness at the age of 73, Matt Mann, coach of Wolverine squads for 29 years returns to Ann Arbor on March 27 to match his team against those of his former pupils in the NCAA finals. Leading the Big Eight cham- pions, Oklahoma, Mann will send his swimmers against the contin- gents headed by former proteges Gus Stager, Michigan, Chuck Mc- Caffree, Michigan State; and Bob Kiputh, Yale. As 'Wolverine mentor, Mann coached 16 Big Ten champions plus 13 NCAA winners in addition to amassing a record of 193 dual meet victories against 25 losses. When Stager succeeded him in 1953, over 20 Olympic stars plus 100 national champions and Countless conference medalists had passed under his guidance. Tutors Stars Included in his list of stars were Stager, who was a Maize and Blue swimmer from 1947-50, McCaffree in pre-war days, Bumpy Jones of Olympic fame, movie star Richard Arlen, and his son, Matt Mann III. Kiputh, mastermind of Yale's powerhouse, moved into New Ha- ven, after Mann had taken charge of the team and coached it to its first national championship, be- sides winning every meet while under his direction., Part of Mann's Influence4 Michigan will be felt byindivid al stars scheduled to compete the NCAA contest. Cy Hopkii breaststroke champion, learned swim at Mann's Canadian can while his teammate Dick Hanl perfected many of his strokes u der the coach's guidance. Pete Fries, who provides mu of Michigan's championship bf ance, spent seven years under t patient guidance of the coa whom he regards as "one of t best teachers around." Touted star for the Wolverines in futu years are two former Mann : pils, freshman breast stroker Mi Natelson, and free style man An Morrow. Aggies Undefeated Moving to Oklahoma after forced retirement at the end the 1953 season, Mann boasts total of three Big Eight swimmit crowns along with an unblemish record in dual meet competitic Working to make the Soor state swim conscious, he has a] launched a program of convinci people to build high school a community pools and setting ur method of teaching the sport f health and competitive reasons Building champions is n Mann's primary goal. "Conditic ing, competitive heart, clean i ing, belief in God, and self a team spirit are my real goals." where, there's life .,.there's -Daily-James MacKay PARDON MY REACH--Al Greenberg of Sigma Alpha Mu out- reaches Delta Upsilon's John Grettenberger for tipoff in I-M fraternity play last evening. Greenberg led the Sammies to the third place championship by scoring the winning points in their 40-39 victory over DU. Budweise KING OF BEERS i ANHEUSER-BUSCH, INC. " ST. LOUIS.*NEWARK *LOS ANGELES A NAME FOR EVERY TRICK: Gymnasts S1 3W.GARY GUSSIN To the visitor at a gymnastics practice, Coach Newt Loken's pleas to his athletes to attempt fliffuses, peachbaskets or crosses, mean little, if anything. But to Ed Cole, Dick Kimball, Frank Newman, Jim Hayslett, Nino Marion, Ed Gagnier, and other gymnasts, each name repre- sents one or a series of gymnas- tics stunts which may combine to form a typical gymnastics rou- tine. The fliffus, for example, is a trampoline stunt. which consists of a double summersault followed by a full twist, performed during one jump from the trampoline. Rudolph and Randolph Other stunts a trampolinist may perform include the Cody, a sum- mersault off the stomach, the Ru- dolph, which is a front. flip with a one and one-half twist, and a front flip with a two and one- Stanley CUP Matches Set Dates and sites have been set for the National Hockey League's Stanley Cup playoffs, offering $153,000 in purses for the richest in history. NHL directors meeting in New York decided the two semifinal series would open in Montreal and New York March 25, regardless of the final standings of the~teams. In the best-of-seven game series, the first-team plays the number three team, the number two meets the number four with the survivors meeting later in the chamipionship- series. Warriors Win The Philadelphia Warriors de- feated the Syracuse Nationals, 101-88, winning the best-of-three semifinal series, 2-1. The National Basketball..Asso- ciation's semifinal series opens to- night in St. Louis and Boston. Mave a WORLD of FUNI lrl Vr with $ITA Unbelievable Low Cost -AA&E on e peak Specal Language' half twist which is called a Ran- dolph. A peachbasket constitutes the successful execution of a summer- sault between and beneath the parallel bars while a cross is the term given a stunt on still rings in which the gymnast balances himself with arms parallel to the ground. In tumbling, back flips are called bounders and a series of back flips and hand springs are termed, appropriately, alternates. Varied Origins These names and others applied to gymnastics stunts have varied origins. Some -- the Moore, Cody, Stutz and so forth - were named for famous gymnasts who either invented or first performed them. Others -- dislocates, bounders, crosses - are descriptions of the stunts themselves, while still oth- ers retain traditional circus no- menclature. Judging Routines In appraising the execution of these stunts as parts of routines, judges consider the difficulty of the stunts, the combinations in which they are performed and the control and co-ordination of the athlete who performs them. Exhibition Base'ball YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Washington 10, Chicago (A) 0 Philadelphia 6, Cincinnati 3 Los Angeles 5, Kansas City 4 Cleveland 6, Chicago (N) 4 St. Louis 3, Boston 2 New York 7, Detroit 3 TODAY'S SCHEDULE Baltimore vs. Chicago (N) Boston vs. Chicago (A) Cleveland vs. San Francisco Milwaukee vs. Detroit New York vs. St. Louis Kansas City vs. Pittsburgh Philadelphia vs. Washington Cincinnati vs. Los Angeles Freshman Tennis Stars Foretell BrightFuture II ---- --- _-_ - ' 1 BARGAINS BOOKS RECORDS A pair of freshmen tennis starsv from the Motor City area give Michigan's net coach Bill Murphy a feeling of security for the fu- ture. The two are Rudy Hernando and Gerald Dubie, bothpupils of Hamtramck's renowned tennis in- structor, Jean Hoxie, and both members of Michigan's freshman tennis team. Better Than MacKay Mu hy described the pair as "better than any of last year's freshmen" and went on to de- scribe Hernando as "the best freshman tennis player he ever coached." "Rudy, right now, is better than Barry (MacKay) was when he came out in his first year," Mur- phy added. MacKay went on to become NCAA singles champion. Also being eyed for future star- dom on the courts are freshmen Bruce MacDonald, and Mike Gor- don. MacDonald hails from Bay City, home of last year's second singles star, Mark Jaffe and one of this year's promising, sophs, Frank Fulton. MacDonald's merits in- clude winning the state doubles title and playing on last year's junior Davis Cup, Team. Gordon comes to Ann Arbor from Chicago where he was at the top in high school tennis. His talent brought him the Windy City's public school championship last year. Murphy also has two transfer students, Tom Tenney and Larry Zaitzeff, on his roster. Tenney comes from Duke while Zaitzeff hails from Utah. Both, however, will have to work out with the freshmen this year since they lose a year of eligibility by transferring and will not be able to compete until their junior years. 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