THURSDAY, APRIL '19,1962 THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY. APRIL 19. 1962 TINE MICHIGAN DAILY Boston Wins Title in Overtime STARTS TODAY: Young Girl Swimmers Favored in AAU Meet 11 U, _.. MUG-TGIT This Thursday 4:15 P) BOSTON (P)-The incomparable Boston Celtics captured an un- precedented fourth consecutive National Basketball Association championship last night,Lvan- quishing the Los Angeles Lakers 110-107 on the heroics of Sam, Jones and Bill Russell in an over- time battle. Boston led most of the way in the game played before a sellout crowd of 13,909 in Boston Garden. But the Celtics had to beat down the tenacious Lakers in a five minute overtime session after Frank Selvy brought Los Angeles back from the bring of defeat in the final 40 seconds of regulationz play.1 The Celtics were in dire trouble because personal fouls late in the game sent Tom Sanders, Jim Los-F cutoff and Tom Heinsohn to the bench. With 74 seconds remain-E ing Boston was leading 100-96. Selvy made it 100-98 with 401 seconds and tied the count 20 sec-; onds later. Selvy barely missed on1 what would have been the winner with three seconds to go. Looks Easy But the world champion Celticsj made it look easy in the overtime period. Sam Jones scored five of Boston's 10 points in the extra se-; mester and Russell added four, Bob Cousy getting the other point. Los Angeles' great Elgin Baylor had put the Lakers in front 102- 100 with a pair of free throws at; the outset of the overtime but the visitors were, shut off until Tom Hawkins netted a pair of baskets, in the final minute. Reports Back Baylor, who must report back to his Army 'duties at Ft. Lewis, Wash., led all scorers with 41 points. Jerry West, who with Bay- lor sparked the Lakers' fourth period comeback, had 35. Probably the greatest single con- tribution in the game was made ~by the 6'10" Russell, the league's most valuable player. Big Bill hauled in 44 rebounds to tie a playoff record. He also scored 20 points. Won Three The Lakers won three straight NBA crowns from 1952 to 1954 when the franchise was in Min- neapolis. But never. before had a team put four titles together as the Celtics did this season. The Celtics did it despite a clus- ter of injuries and their second half foul troubles. Los Angeles lost the services of big Rudy Larusso, Baylor and Jim Krebs in the over- time period to ease the Boston burden. Three Foul Out Larusso went out after 1:45. Baylor fouled out with two min- utes left and Krebs followed a minute later as the score stood at 110-103. The game was a gigantic defen- sive battle after both teams got away to slow starts. Baylor didn't sink his first bask- et until 8:15 of the opening per- iod and then went cold again i the third period until the 7:50 mark. West and Baylor combinedj to bring the Lakers back to a,75- 75 deadlock at the end of three periods. Boston had the lead up to six points early in the final frame be- fore Baylor and Krebs got hot, West popped three baskets and Selvy came in with the two tying hoops. "People say the Celtics are the' greatest basketball team in his- tory," said Lakers coach Fred' Schaus, bitterly disappointed at Los Angeles' near-miss. "Well, perhaps they are, but if they are then we're not very far behind.' "Now Frank Ramsey's going to be overlooked," said a very happy Jones in the Boston dressing room.! "But you have to give all. the credit to Frank. "I was tight in the first half, then Frank got ahold of me at halftime and told me to loosen up. ,It's just another ball game,' he told me." SACRAMENTO (P)-A field of 220 swimmers, a majority young- sters in their early teens, opens competition today in the AAU Women's Swimming Champion- ships. With many stars from the vic- torious 1960 Olympic team now in retirement, the United States looks on the big group here to provide the nucleus for the 1964 squad. Competition in the three-day meet is in the 25-yd. pool of the Arden Hills Swimming and Tennis Club at Carmichael, a suburbof Sacramento. On the opening day program are the 100-yd. freestyle, 250-yd. breaststroke, 200-yd. back- stroke, 400-yd. individual medley and the one-mete rdiving. Chris Von Saltza and Lynn Burke, pace setters for the Olym- pic team two years ago, have re- tired and so has Becky Collins, winner of two events in the na- tional indoor meet a year ago. At least two girls who won one title in 1961 try for doubles this time. Nina Harmar of the defending champion Vesper Boat Club from Philadelphia seeks to successfully defend her 100-yd. backstroke ti- tle and add the 200 crown captur- ed by Miss Von Saltza last year. Featuring TTHE ASTRONAUTS and FOLKSI NGER BEN GLASER I FREE COFFEE :J J ELGIN BAYLOR ..high scorer AT LAST: Fuilmer To Face Pender for Crown SAM JONES . leads Celtics Davis Cup Team To Open AgtainstC anada in July CLEVELAND (WP)-Robert S. Ma- laga, of the U.S. Davis Cup Coin- mittee, said last night the United States team will play Canada in the first round of the American zone contest in Cleveland July 13- 15. This- will be the third straight summer the Davis Cup matches will be staged here. Malaga, who will serve as direc-' tor of the event, said professional tennis player Pancho Segura has been hired to coach the U.S. team, and Bob Kelleher, a 49-year-old attorney from Los Angeles, has re- placed David Freed of Salt Lake City as non-playing captain. The U.S. feam has not been picked yet, Malaga said, but the quartet could come from among Chuck McKinley, Dennis Ralston, Don Dell, Jon Douglas, Whitney Reed and Frank Froehling. McKinley of St. Ann, Mo., and Ralston of Bakersfield, Calif., paired in the doubles last year. Reed, of Alameda, Calif., is a top Bradley Beats Hawkeye Nine IOWA CITY (IP)-John Fauser's two-run single in the top of the ninth inning gave Bradley a 10-8 victory over Iowa today in the third game of their three-game series here. The Braves loaded the bases on two hits and an error before Fauser's blow. The Hawkeyes also followed the three men aboard and scored two of them before relief pitcher Jim Troy, who took over in the eighth, stopped the rally. The Hawkeyes move to Peoria tomorrow for a four-game series against Bradley this weekend. Iowa won thefirst two games here. ranked singles player. Douglas is a former Sanford football star. Dell, who lives in Bethesda, Md., has tried out for a Davis Cup spot be- fore, but Froehling, a Florida teen- ager, is making his first bid. Two years ago here the U.S. team easilyrdefeated the visitors from Venezuela. Last August, how- ever, it was a different story. Mexico led 2-1 at the end of the second day, but McKinley and Bernard (Tut) Bartzen of Dallas rallied to sweep the final pair of singles matches for the American victory in the zone finals. Those singles victories came aft- er a stormy duobles match that McKinley and Ralston lost. Ral- ston later was suspended by the U.S. Tennis Association for his be- havior in that match. ORIENTATION LEADERS? Sign up now UNION-LEAGUE CHICAGO (A') - Gene Fullmer and Paul Pender signed yesterday1 for a world middleweight cham- pionship bout to be held the sec- ond week of June in the Montana State College Fieldhouse. The signing in a Chicago hotel (Drake) was unheralded. It even-1 tually was announced by promot- ers Sam Silverman of Boston and Norman Rothschild of Syracuse, N.Y., following a meeting with the fighters and their representatives. Pender is recognized as cham- pion in New York, Massachusetts and Europe. Fullmer is recognized as middleweight titlist by the Na- tional Boxing Association., Mary Jensen, Fullmer's man- ager, and John Cronin, Pender's legal advisor, were included at the; meeting.1 The promoters, who staged a1 Touring Cyclists Making Flat Time MEXICO CITY (k)-Two Chilean cyclists on a goodwill trip from Santiago to Nevw York arrived here yesterday and said they have encountered few difficulties out- side of punctures. They are Elias Ramirez Ibarra, 60, and Enrique Alberto Mejias Ramirez, 30, his nephew. Fullmer-Joey Giardello fight at Montana State in 1960, predicted a $175,000 gate for the champion- ship fight. Full terms of the contract have not yet been set, said Rothschild. However, Fullmer and Pender are to get an even split in the shares. Jeantown Race Rated Tossup BOSTON (P)-A darkhorse has not won the Boston A.A. Marathon since the days of prohibition. But though Eino Oksanen and Paavo Pystynen of Finland and Johnny Kelly of Groton, Conn., are rated the runners to beat today, any- thing could happen. Oksanen and Kelley, both 31, also are both former winners. Oksanen won in 1959 and last year, beating Kelley over the-final mile on both occasions. Kelley, a teacher, set the ad- justed course record in 1957, being clocked in 2:20.05. Pystynen, a drill sergeant in a cavalry unit of the Finnish army, is entering the Hopkinton to Bos- ton run for the first time. But the 31-year-old Laplander is Finland's 10,000 meter champion and has a 2:23.11 marathon to his credit. The Noble Savage 1#4 Edited by SAUL BELLOW and KEITH BOTS- FORD. The most exciting issue thus far. Featuring an ill-tempered blast at Seymour Krim; arias on fallout shelter geopolitics and the dangers of the two cultures view (by Stephen Spender); "count Nulin," Push- kin's little-known parody of Shakespeare's "The Rape of Lucrece"; 19 poems; and non-fiction by Dan Jacobson, A. Slonimski, and Louis Guilloux. "A most remarkable paperback periodical."' -Herald Tribune News Service. M125 / 256 pages / $1.50 LOVE AND DEATH IN THE AMERICAN NOVEL By LESLIE FIEDLER. A provocative, frankly Freudian comparative s' ady of American fiction from Cooper to Kerouac. "One of the most ambitious surveys of our litera- ture since Parrington's Main Currents..." --Malcolm Cowley/MG43/640 pages/$2.25 NOW in an inexpensive paperback edition THE RECOGNITIONS By WILLIAM CADDIS. The modern novel that has become a classic. MF20 / 960 pages / Only $2.75 FREE CATALOG MERIDIAN BOOKS are used as inex- pensive paperbound texts and read- ers In universities and junior colleges. 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