THE MICHIGAN DAILY THU THE MICHIGAN DAILY TH~ GALS ONLY! LEAGUE LIBRARY Third floor, Women's League No Break for 31' Swimmers Meet Minnesota, Iowa Away PRO ROUNDUP: Celtic Rally Drops Pistons, 126-1 Hawks Fall to Warriors in Overti listening rooms main library special drama section records for music Lit. courses By BILL BULLARD Coach Gus Stager is not going to ease off practice for his swim- ming team during the next two weeks, but he said, "We will change our pace." He could hardly do otherwise as exams will scarcely be over when the squad is scheduled to take on Minnesota and Iowa on February 8 and 9 in away meets. Later on in the month the tank- ers will face Michigan State, Wis- consin, and Ohio State before 11 SPECIAL EXAM HOURS Monday-Saturday 9-6, 7-11 30 Sunday 2-6, 7-1 130 11 11 - - - - - - - - - - - w W I I TODAY EUROPEAN TRAVEL FILM Continuous Showing from 10 A.M.-5 P.M. UNION-ROOM 3C LOW COST L. Student Tour to EUROPE SAIL ON DUTCH $128500 ALL EXPENSES STUDENT SHIPS (All College Students) 75 DAYS - Leaving JUNE 27 FOR:-" INFORMATION ELLIOTT Travel Service BROCH UR ES 18663 Livernois, Detroit 21, Michigan RESERVATIONS 7 winding up the season with three rough meets in March. The Big Ten Championships start the month, the NCAA Cham- pionships end the month, and in between, will be a home meet against Indiana, considered the best swimming team in the coun- try. Preliminary Indication The Purdue meet and time trials after the meet last Saturday were a preliminary indication of what might be expected this season. Coach Stager said, "I was very impressed. I've always felt we've got a good team." Stager believes that all the times were good but few were "very good." "We have the same quan- tity of swimmers as last year, but we need to improve the quality," he said. "There are four good men in every stroke except backstroke, where there are two," he said. Butterfies Encouraging The butterfly times of sopho- mores Jeff Moore, Jeff Longstreth, Bob Shaefer, and Enn Mannard were encouraging. This is the one event with no veterans and Stager is counting heavily on these and other sophomores to bolster the team. Stager said about hissoph- omores that, "I hope they'll im- prove. If they don't improve, we won't have a team." Although the depth in theback- stroke isn't, great, Fred Wolf and Mike Reissing are filling their role very competently. In the breast- stroke races Saturday, Stager characterized the times as "not impressive." But NCAA 100-yd. breaststroke champion Dick Nel- son, and Jon Baker, Geza Bolo- lay, and Mike Hinnen should pro- vide solid support in that event. t Freestyle Strengths, WeaknessesI Distance freestyle is a teami strength, but the freestyle sprints are a problem. Captain Bill Darn- ton, John Dumont, Win Pendle- ton, Warren Uhler, and sopho- mores Roy Burry and Tom Dud- ley are an effective group for the long races. Steve Thrasher and Dennis Floden, who won fifth place in the 1961 Big Ten meet in the 50-yd. freestyle, could use. some help in the 50 and 100-yd. freestyle events. Individual medley artists Fred. Wolf, Steve Thrasher, Jeff Long- streth, Jon Lundin, and Bob Rodes shouldhandle that event capably. The same goes for divers Ron Jaco, Pete Cox, and soph Paul Attar, although the loss ofhOlym- pic champion Bob Webster has hurt. The strength of this team will be thoroughly tested next semes- ter. Lions' Lane Appendicitis Sufferer LOS ANGELES (MP)-Dick Lane of the Detroit Lions disclosed yes- terday that when he played in the Pro Bowl game Sunday he had appendicitis-for which he under- went an appendectomy yesterday. Despite illness and weakness, he scored the first touchdown for the Western all-stars with an inter- ception and 42-yard run, then continued to figure as a defensive halfback in the West's 31-30 vic- tory before 57,000 at the Coli- seum. Only 'his wife, Geraldine,. knew he was ill. In St. Joseph Hospital at near- by Burbank, "Night Train", 33, said yesterday he stopped eating last Friday and by Saturday was sure he had appendicitis. "Saturday night was the worst," he told a reporter. "I never slept a wink that whole night. If }it hadn't been for the game next day, I'd just as soon have died." The doctor gave me a few pills and that sort of eased the pain. I could tackle guys without feeling too much pain, but I couldn't shake a weak feeling. I've never felt so weak so long." Lane entered the hospital Mon- day. It was the ex-Los Angeles Ram's seventh Pro Bowl Game. He has returned five times as a Cardinal and twice as a Lion. SAM JONES ... 33 points with a late flurry 126-116 before 8,379 fans, the largest crowd to see a game in the Motor City's new arena, last night. It was Boston's 35th win of the season against only eight loss- es. After Bailey Howell with 23 points and Gene Shue with 14 had combined to pace the Pistons to their halftime bulge, Sam Jones and Bob Cousy took over to spark a third quarter Boston uprising which shot the Celtics in front 91-87 by the period's close. Dur- ing the 12 minute span Jones col- lected 13 points and Cousy 12. Lead Changes Hands The first eight minutes of the final period saw the Celtics move ahead four different times only to be tied on each occasion, the fin- al time at 106-106. Then Tom Heinsohn dropped a 20-footer which put the Celtics in front for keeps. Frank Ramsey and Heinsohn quickly followed with two more baskets and Sam Jones added another pair to put the game out of reach. Sam Jones led the scorers with 33 points while Cousy had 28, Heinsohn 22 and Bill Russell 21 plus seven blocks. Howell finish- ed with 35 and Shue with 31 for Detroit. * * DETROIT-In the first game, Wilt Chamberlain drilled in 62 points as he paced the Philadel- phia Warriors to a 136-130 over- time victory over the St. Louis Hawks. Wilt the Stilt ran up his total Scores Pittsburgh 77, Columbia 66 Louisville 85, Xavier 60 Pennsylvania 66, St. Joseph's 60 By The Associated Press In the second game of a Detroit doubleheader, the Boston Celtics rallied from a 62-52 halftime def- icit to rip the Detroit Pistons for the last four games to 249 poitns. A jumping 20-footer by Len Wilkens of St. Louis with five seconds remaining knotted the score at 120 to force the overtime. Chamberlain Hits But Chamberlain quickly put the Warriors back in front at the out set of the extra session and two more baskets by Tom Meschery and Paul Arizin gave the Warriors a six point bulge. St. Louis jumped in front 32-29 at the end of the first quarter but Chamberlain's 17 points in the second period enabled the War- riors to gain a 62-58 halftime ad- vantage. The Hawks still led by five points going into the fourth per- iod, in which the score changed hands 10 times and was tied on two other occasions. BobhPettit led the losers with 37 points while Wilkens had 23. * * * CHICAGO-The Montreal Ca- nadiens, leaders of the National Hockey .League, beat Chicago's Black Hawks 7-3 last night. The loss ruined the night for Black Hawk goalie Glenn Hall who was playing in his 500th consecu- tive- game. The seven Canadien goals was the largest number Hall had allowed in the Chicago Sta- dium this year. The win allowed the Canadiens to keep their two-point 16ad over Toronto for first place in the league. Beliveau Scores Jean Beliveau scored first for Montreal. Jean Guy Talbot con- verted a pass from Henri Richard a few minutes lates. Bobby Hull of Chicago scored twice for Chi- cago. Ab McDonald got the I close at 15:01 of the second iod. However, Don Marshall ed up a loose puck in Chicag and scored Hall with a s left to go in the period to gi Canadiens out of trouble. Hull's second goal of the and his 20th of the year th ened the league leaders once in the last period but Ralph;I strom, Bill Hicke and Rot again, scored to complete rout. TORONTO-Outplayed fo periods, the Toronto Maple came to life with four goa FRANK MAHOVLICH ... scores two goals Miss. State s6740 STATE COLLEGE, Miss. MA) - Tenth-ranked Mississippi State countered an Alabama slowdown with a first half stall of its own, but poured it on in the second half to crush 'Bama 67-40 in a Southeastern Conference basket- ball game last night. Alabama used cat-and-mouse tactics the first time it had the ball. The Maroons led 21-5 at in- termission. Leland Mitchell led the Maroons with 20 points. W. D. Stroud was runnerup with 16 while Joe Dan Gold had 10. Gary Blagburn paced Alabama with 16 points. the last period last night and beat the slump-ridden New York Rang- ers 4-2 in a National Hockey League game. It was New York's sixth straight loss and eighth in the Rangers' last nine starts. The Rangers grabbed a 2-0 lead in the first period, and there was no scoring in the middle frame. Then the Leafs, sparked by the shooting of big Frank Mahovlich, erupted for four goals against the tiring Rangers, Mahovlich got two goals, his 21st and 22nd, and the other Tor- onto scorers were George Arm- strong and Ron Ste'art. The NHL's leading scorer, Andy Bathgate, got one of New York's goals and assisted on the other by linemate Dean Prentice. Bathgate now has 18 goals and 41 assists for 59 points, 13 ahead of runner- up Gordie Howe of Detroit who was idle last night. The Rangers outshot the Leafs 20-16 over the first 40 minutes and their 2-0 lead .loomed large as the final perior opened. The Rangers were skating faster and checking with authority but they ran out of steam under the deter- mined Toronto drive. N.C. Whips N.C. State By The Associated Press North Carolina fought off a game North Carolina State sec- ond-half comeback last night and registered a 66-56 victory over their Atlantic Coast Conference basketball rival. The Tar Heels suffered through six scoreless minutes in a row late in the game as State picked away at what once was a 16-point lead. State pulled to within three points, 58-55 with 41/ minutes left in the game, but the Tar Heels regained their shooting ability and vaulted to their margin of victory. North Carolina made 69.7 per cent of its field goal tries in the first half, and wound up shooting at a 60.5 per cent rate. State hit on 50 per cent of its shots, but made only 8 of 21 free throws. The victory gave the Tar Heels a 5-1 ACC mark and boosted them into first place ahead of Duke and Wake Forest. Over-all they are 6- 2. 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