R 11, 1960 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAG O~s Edg an EgeDrake Dumps Wolverine Cagers, 83-72 (n ivre Montreal Beats Detroit in NHL; Warriors Top Celtics in NBA Neighboring University of De- troit proved itself in a class with the best basketball teams in the country last night by defeating' third-ranked Indiana 81-79 in a double overtime. Reserve guard Tom Villemure sank the winning basket from 18 feet out as the clock ran out. Detroit's Dave DeBusschere, 6'S", won the battle' of All-Americans as he ooutscored Indiana's 6'10" Walt Bellamy in head to head competition 23-17. Both hauled down 25 rebounds. Charlie North scored 23 for Detroit and jumping jack John Morgan added 14. Indiana was led by its highly touted sophomore, Tom Bolyard, who contributed 18 points, 12 in the tight second half. Guards Jerry Bass and Gary Long each had 14. Fast breaking Indiana, picked by many to unseat Ohio State's Big Ten champions, surprised De- troit by opening the game in a zone defense. But with North and rMorgan moving well inside and DeBusschere and Villemure shoot- ing over the zone, Detroit left the floor at hafltime leading 41-31. In the second half Indiana, now operating from its familiar man- to-man defense, stormed back to tie the score 45 all on Tom Bol- yard's jumper with 14:45 remain- ing. From there the two teams bat- tIed evenly down to the final gun, with Bolyard and Bellamy, who got 13 points in the last half, lead- ing the Hoosier attack. Bolyard opened the second over- time period with a jumper but Frank Chickowski came back to score his only points of the eve- ning on a driving layup, tying the score at 77-77. Bellamy sent In- diana ahead on a dunk shot but with less than two minutes left: North tied it again on a spec- tacular backhand tip-in. Detroit stole the ball and played for one shot. It went in. Both teams managed to shoot a sickly 34 per cent from the field as Detroit made 33 for 96 and Indiana 29 for 84. SAE Wins Swimp Tes-t, Intramural powerhouse Sigma Alpha Epsilon churned throughr the water for a 711-182 win over Sigma Chi in the semi-finals of the intramural swimming playoffs,f yesterday afternoon. Displaying a well balanced squad, SAE took first places in every event to roll to an easy victory.' In the 100 yard freestyle relay, the team of Jim Boylor, Tom Os- terland, Bill Niemann and Mike Martin of SAE established a new TM record of 43.5 seconds, eclips- ing the old mark, set in 1956, of 46 seconds. Other winners: Martin, 50 yard freestyle, 24.9; Dick Law, 25 yard orthodox breast stroke, 14.9; Os- terland, 25 yard free style, 11.4; Boylor, 25 yard back stroke, 12.9; and Boylor, Darrel Messel, Martin, and Law, 100 yard medley relay, 50.8. Guyden, who scored 15 of his 25 points in the second half, kept the Wolverines from catching up, not only with his long jump shots, but also with his fine defensive play on Tidwell, who had been averaging 27 points over the first four games. Drake, which left its five starters in the game until the final four seconds, had three others besides Guyden in double figures. Tom Cole, the 67' sophomore center, provided the biggest sur- prise of the game for Michigan. Cole, who had seen only limited action before the game, came in early as a replacement and gave the team a big lift. His board work received praise from Strack, but it was his shooting which was most un- expected. He scored on long jump- ers as well as i close. Cole's nine rebounds, along with 11 each from Maentz and Bob Brown, gave the Wolverines a 45-37 edge over the Bulldogs in that department. Michigan also kept pace with Drake in shooting by scoring on 40 per cent of their shots as compared to Drake's 43 per cent. Drake picked up their advantage, by controlling the ball and taking a great many shots in the first half, but it was only by hot shoot- ing (55 per cent) in the secondj half that Drake could manage to withstand the Wolverine's strong finish. .Statisticsj By The Associated Press MONTREAL - Dickie Moore last night scored the 200th goal of his National Hockey League career to cap a 6-4 victory by the Montreal Canadiens, who came from behind four times to down the Detroit Red Wings. It was Montreal's seventh straight triumph-all with sec- ond-string goalie Charlie Hodge in the nets-and gave the league leaders a seven point margin over the Red Wings and Toronto, which are tied for second place. Toronto 5, Chicago 2 TORONTO - Toronto twice came from behind last night to defeat the Chicago Black Hawks 5-2 in a National Hockey League game,' Bobby Hull scored both Chicago goals-in the first and second periods-that gave Chicago tem- porary leads. But the fast-skating and precision-passing Leafs took session and wrapped up the game session and wropped up the game with three straight goals. New York 3, Boston 0 BOSTON - Earl Ingarfield, goalie Gump Worsley .and their New York teammates continued their mastery over Boston last night, climbing out of the Nation- al Hockey League cellar with a 3-0 victory. Center Ingarfield scored the goal Worsley needed to wrap up his first shutout in two years, scoring while the Rangers were shorthanded at 18:17 of the sec- ond period. He took a deflected clearing pass at center ice then skated in alone to beat rookie goalie Bruce Gamble, Philadelphia 102, Boston 97 PHILADELPHIA -- Ed Conlin scored 23 key points last night as the Philadelphia Warriors came from behind for a 102-97 victory over the Boston Celtics. The win gave Philadelphia a one-game lead over Boston in the Basketball Scores Wake Forest 84, Penn State 78 Purdue 73, Ball State 48 Temple 64, Navy 57 Bradley 71, Butler 65 Ohio State 103, Army 54 North Carolina St. 88, Citadel 77 St. Bonaventure 78, Eastern Ky. 69 St. Louis 61, Iowa 55 Louisville 76, Xavier (Ohio) 64 Auburn 74, Florida State 57 Maryland 64, Minnesota 53i Mlissouri 73, Northwestern '' Arkansas 77, Mississippi 71 Wichita 75, Iowa State 58 Duke 66, west Virginia 64 Utah 101, Texas Christian 55 Eastern Division of the National Basketball Association. The two 'teams had been tied'for first With 17-7 records before the game. Conlin came into the game in the second period when the Cel- tics were leading 27-21 and spark- ed a drive which put Philadelphia ahead for good at 64-63 in the third period. * * * St. Louis 111, Los Angeles 108 ST. LOUIS -- The St. Louis! Hawks finally shook off the stub- born Los Angeles Lakers last night, 111-108, with the help of some hot shooting by Clyde Lovellette down the stretch. The victory gave the Hawks a 17-7 season record and kept them far in front in the Western Divi- sion of the National Basketball Association. Lovellette scored 29 points com- pared to Bob Pettit's 30 which led St. Louis and 34 by Laker star Elgin Baylor. But Clyde hit five baskets tn the last quarter, getting 10 of his team's meager 17 points in the fourth period. He was effective both from inside and outside. * * * Syracuse 117, Detroit 107 DETROIT -- The Syracuse Nationals grabbed the lead in the second minute and styed in front all the way yesterday in downing the Detroit Pistons 117-107 in a National Basketball Association game. Hal Greer, Larry Costello and Dolph Schayes shared scoring honors with 22 point each. Gene Shue and Don Ohl had 10 apiece fo the losers, who dropped into the basement in the Western Division. -00 SHAWL COLLAR SWEATERS WOOL FLANNEL TROUSERS now only $7.77 . . . all colors SSAM'S .STORIE 1 22 E. Washington, Paret Retains Welter Title; Warmath Coach of the Year aM A Holday Tradtion The custom shirtmaker of the last century was relied upon to know the personal requirements of his cus- torner. When the problem of holiday gifts came' iup his advice was much sought, and resulted in gifts that were gratefully received because of their proper fit and style. Although the real custom shirt is of the past we at Van Boven s maintain the personal interest and desire to please each individual customer. Shown below are two of our most popular shirt styles. I\ The Unlined Button-Down This style is distinguished by a slight arch in the collar, center-back box pleat, and un- lined collar and cuffs. A particular favorite o f men who seek comfort in their shirting. VHITE and PLAIN COLORS 5.95 STRIPE from 5.95 I ". l The English Tab r he extraordinary cut of this designaran f ees a look that is infinitely correct and infinitely interesting. WHITE BATISTE OXFORD 6.50 ARTFUL STRIPES fro~m 6.50 11 By The Associated Press NEW YORK (/M - Welterweight champion Benny (Kid) Paret of Cuba last night retained his title by hammering out a unanimous 15-round decision over cut and blood-smeared Federico Thompson at Madison Square Garden. Both judges, Joe Eppy and Leo Birnbaum had Paret ahead, nine rounds to six. Referee Art Mer- cante had Paret the winner, 7 to 6, with two rounds even. The As- sociated Press had Paret in front, S-6. 9 * * NEW YORK-Murray Warmath of national champion Minnesota yesterday was named coach of the year by the Football Writers' As- sociation of America. Warmath, focal point of alumni and student protests a year ago, had a wide margin over runner- up Jordan Olivar of Yale. PERTH, Australia - Former Michigan Tennis Captain Barry MacKay gave the U.S. Davis Cup Team a 2-0 lead over Italy in the interzone finals yesterday with a comeback win over Europe's top amateur, Nicola Pietrangeli. One more victory will send the U.S. against Australia in the chal- lenge round on December 26th. * * * CHARLOTTESVILLE Va.-The University of Virginia and football coach Dick Voris, whose teams lost 28 straight games, came ami- cably and predictably to a parting of the ways today. MICHIGAN Tidwell Maentz Cole Schoenherr Petroff Brown Donley Higgs Eveland Totals DRAKE Guyden Torrence Forrester Hahn Ayers Prescott Totals MICIIIGAN Drake FG FT T 6 7-11 19 7 0-0 14 6 3-5 15 3 0-0 6 1 2-24 2 0-2 4 1 2-2 4 2 0-0 4 1 0-1 2 29 14-23 72 11 3-5 25 8 4-5 20 6 5-8 17 3 8-9 14 1 4-5 6 0 1-2 1 29 25-34 83 33 39-72 42 41-83 S s S, Sr Sr r " r S S S " " " " S' S: " " " s S a " " w Oxford for comfort.,, quolity ...oppeorance The r;Cr r ,g of fine oxford. the skillful faoing give the assur- once of being well-dressed. Case in poirI: the Arrow Tabber, the au- thentic British type improved with self-snop tobs. Yor wardrobe is Sncomp ee without this Arrow shirt. $5.00 c loode coflection -ARRO W" P4; t 1 I " f 00 0 " 0 0 "" " " 0* " 0 " 0 " Marking another Milestone Rich in history and rich in promise, too-that's York County, Pennsylvania. And the telephone company covering this prosperous and progressive community has recently become a member of the General Telephone family. seesesSes f*# " "0 " " " 00 60 0 0 " t " S { S .- :;. { ': Oxfom.. . of its best Favored in university circles for its hand- .- a -nm nrn mr. ik rt. rrmfnrt A " S 4 -"- . c. _ +L i .s' u' , York's pattern of growth is typical of the areas Gen Tel serves in 31 states. Long famous for its fertile fields and well-kept farms, the county has enjoyed a remark, able industrial expansion since World War II. Tvoical. too. of these growing areas is their grnwing -9 , 11 11.