SIB THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 24, 1963 TIlE 1~HCHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, MARCH 24, 1963 Butts In First Libel Suit Steps CHAMPIONS FALL, 60-58: Loyola Upsets Cincy in Overtime Battle BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (IP-Attor- neys for Alabama football Coach Paul Bryant demanded yesterday that the Saturday Evening Post retractwan article in the current issue which charges Bryant with conspiring to rig a football game. The attorneys released a letter which was sent to Curtis Publish- ing Co., publishers of the Post. The demand for a retraction is required by Alabama law as a pre- liminary to filing libel action for punitive damages. Bryant already has filed a $500,000 suit againsththe Post for an article which appeared last October. An attorney for Wallace Butts, former Georgia athletic director, has said he would enter a $10; The Fraternity-Sorority Board of the Newman Club presents a FRATERNITY-SORORITY DINNER TONIGHT at 5:45 p.m. JOHN FELDKAMP University Counselor to fraternities, guest speaker Spaghetti, garlic bread,. tossed salad, sundaes 75c Tickets can be bought at the door. NEWMAN CENTER ... 331 Thompson St. million libel suit against the Post. He also has demanded a retrac- tion from the magazine. The article charges that Butts,' then athletic director, revealed Georgia secrets to Bryant before the Alabama - Georgia football game last Sept. 22. Both have denied the charge, which was based on a telephone conversation an Atlanta insurance man, George Burnett, says he lis- tened in on eight days before the game. LOUISVILLE, Ky. (P)-South- eastern Conference Commissioner Bernie Moore said that ."no mat- ter what develops in the Wally Butts-Paul Bryant investigation, there will be football as usual" in the conference next fall. "There is no crisis in the con- ference. As I see it-and I won't have all the facts until I get down there," LOUISVILLE, Ky. (P) - In- credible Loyola of Chicago won the National Collegiate Basketball Championship last night, dethron- ing two-time champion Cincinnati 60-58 on a tip-in by Vic Rouse with one secon dto go in an over- time. In becoming the first at-large team to win an NCAA title in 13 years, George Ireland's remark- able Ramblers overcame a 15- point second half deficit, caught the top-rated Bearcats at the wire on a jump shot by All-America Jerry Harkness, then scaled the heights of college basketball when the 6'6" Rouse came up with a perfect follow to a 10-foot jump shot by Les Hunter. Old Buddies Rouse and Hunter were high school teammates in Nashville, Tenn., and came to Loyola as a sort of bonus from a high school coach theie. Another sellout crowd of 19,153 that sat on its hands during a' ragged third place game won by Duke over Oregon State 85-3 roared throughout the gruelling, never-give-an-inch title battle be- tween two tremendous teams. Loyola, third-ranked nationally and playing in the NCAA for the first time, got 'the impetus it needed when Cincinnati decided to sit on a 15-point lead with 11 minutes, 45 seconds remaining. The Bearcats of Ed Jucker, seek- ing an unprecedented t h i r d straight championship, slowed Ferndale Wins Class A Crown; River Rouge Repeat's in Class B things down so much that they scored only two field goals in the last four minutes of play. With Harkness steadily peppering away after a miserable first half, Loy- ola gradually cut into what looked like a safe lead. Fast Finish With 4:29 remaining, Harkness hit his first field goal and his fourth and fifth points of the game. He wound up with 14 points over-all. Cincinnati, losing only its sev- enth game in 89 games played un- der Jucker in three years, still had a three-point lead at 53-50 with 45 seconds left in regulation time, and was two points ahead when little Larry Shingleton sank the first free throw on a one-and- one bonus situation with 12 sec- onds to go. But Shingleton missed the sec- ond. The leaping Ramblers grab- bed the rebound and Harkness flew down the court, let fly from the side about 10 feet frpm the basket and got Loyola even for' the first time since the first three' minutes of the game. Streak In In the overtime, Harkness grab- bed the ball on the tip-off and streaked in for an easy shot for a 56-54 Loyola lead. Cincinnati's George Wilson tied it at 56-56 with a twisting, close-in shot. With three minutes left, Ron Miller's 25-foot jump shot put Loyola two points ahead again. Toh Thacker fed Shingleton a court-length pass against a Loy- ola pressing defense for a layup with 2:15 showing on the clock and it was 58-all. Loyola, winding up with a 29-2 record, tried to control the ball for one final shot but Shingleton forced a jump ball against John Egan at 1:21 and it came down to which of the two 5'10" guys- the smallest men on a court of bounding, leaping kids-could con- trol the tip. It turned out to be Loyola, Mill- er grabbing the ball in a race with Tony Yates and the Ramblers stalled out until Hunter's final shot and Rouse's tremendous leap and tip-in. Duke Third LOUISVILLE, Ky. W) -- Duke captured third place in the Na- tional Collegiate Basketball Cham- pionships yesterday, . whipping Oregon State 85-63 as Player of the Year Art Heyman closed out his Blue Devil career with 22 points and a brilliant floor game. Oregon State, completing a 22-9 season, was never really in the game after the first half. Duke had a 34-23 halftime lead, ex- panded the margin to 20 points early in the second half and coasted in. ' 1mmamm Wal*=WN mmmm ana Wmwmmmimm wmmmaWa u =mmmmmmmini =on= ninfm WNWMUM===mm -."= nnin B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION ; 1429 Hill St. announces _ " " I I PASSOVEMR LUNCH, and DINNER Monday and Tuesday - April 15 and 16 - Hilfel Members Non-Members " in current standing and guests LUNCH........... . ...............$1.40 $1.75 DINNER........................ ..2.30 2.75 i * I check MI Enclose or bring your omey o or money order Q drawn to "BBHF Trust Account" for $_ to cover the following: (BE SURE TO SPECIFY) ; * U QjLunch Mon., April 15 QIDinner Mon., April 15 * Lunch Tues., April 16 Q Dinner Tues., April 16 , I I " NAMF (Please Print) " * I CAMPUS ADDRESS Phone_ * 1. Reservations must be in Hillel Office by March 27 2. Payment in full must be made at the time of reservation. 3. There will be no cancellations or refunds. " 4. Reservations will be filled in the order they are received. u 5. Hours: Lunch ..............12:15 P.M. I # Dinner...............6:00 P.M. j " " CUT OUT AND USE THIS AS YOUR RESERVATION FORM ; 6 .I Lm..m....m.m.mm ....m..mm...mmi ..m.rninm..mm.inmmm.mm..mmm .minmm ..uwm.i.m.nI By BILL BULLARD Special To The Daily EAST LANSING -Unheralded Adrian, loser of four games in the regular season, saw its string of state tournament upsets end here last night as a rugged Ferndale squad clobbered them, 76-58, to win the state Class A basketball championship.I River Rouge won its third straight Michigan Class B crown over Hudsonville Christian Unity, 59-49. New Buffalo and Britton Macon took the honors in Classes C and D for the first time in each school's history, both by identical 59-58 scores. Outrebounded The tall Ferndale team, with three 6'3" starters dominated the rebounding to end any Adrian hopes of a state title. The Eagles grathered in 65 rebounds to Ad- rian's 38. The game was quite a change for Ferndale as its last three vic- tories were by one point. Friday night Ferndale came from behind to nip Detroit Northwestern, but tonight's game was another story. The Eagles scored 25 points in the second quarter after a first period lead of 19-15 to put the game out of Adrian's reach. Ferndale controlled the boards and Adrian was just worn into the ground by the tough board- play. Bruce Rodwan, the Ferndale center who is the only junior on the starting team, and substitute Louis Smith, also a junior. each scored seven points in the first five minutes of the second period. The Leader Rodwan led both teams in scor- ing and rebounding. He pulled down 20 rebounds and pumped in 25 points. Two other Ferndale starters hit double figures. Tru- man McNeal had 14 points and Bob Falardeau scored 13. Falar- deau also collected 15 rebounds. Both teams had practically the same shooting percentages. But Ferndale took 24 more shots from the floor in scoring their 30 field goals. Adrian shot 40 per cent which six per cent less than in their upset victory over previously unbeaten Saginaw Arthur Hill Friday night. The Maples fell behind by as many as eight points in the first quarter. But by the end of the per- iod Adrian had closed the gap to only four points. The second quar- ter scoring splurge for Ferndale cinched the victory. The Eagles coasted to victory in the second half by outscoring Adrian by only three points, in the last half. First Crown This was Ferndale's first state basketball championship. T h e Eagles won only their second reg- ional title last weekend. Their! previous regional title was in 1949 and this year's team was the first to make it past the quarterfinals. Ferndale ended the season withn a 22-0 record, the only unbeaten Class A team in the state. Senior Bill Dunston led River' Rouge with 16 points in Rouge's fifth trip to the state finals in five years. All four othre Rouge start- ers are juniors, including 6'6" Class B All-State center Willie Betts. Maintain Lead River Rouge led from the mid- dle of the first quarter until the end of the game. However, the lead was never more than 12 points at any time. Rouge reached its biggest mar- gin of the game at 2:10 of the third period. The score was 38-26 and it looked like the Rouge pow- erhouse was finally starting to pull away. But Hudsonville wasn't ready to give up. Jerry Terpstra drove in for a bucket, hit on a jump shot and san two free throws to make the score 38-32 at the end of three quarters. At the start of the fourth per- iod, Lee Dykema made two free throws and Terpstra put in an- other jumper to close the gap to two points. Rouge took control' from then on and never allowed Hudsonville to get within four points on its total. MENOMU Rouge had three players in double figures and Hudsonville had four. Dunston was high with 16 points for Rouge followed by teammates Willie Betts with 13 and Larry Brazon with 15. Terp- stra was high for his team with 15. Britton Macon won its first state Class D championship and closed out a perfect 23-0 season record by edging Nagaunee St. Paul, 59-58. The lead switched back and forth between the two teams in the first half before St. Paul went ahead at halftime, 30-29. Britton tried to catch up throughout the third quarter but didn't tie the score until midway in the last period. Britton fought to take the lead but couldn't pull ahead until there were 36 seconds left. A tip- in put them ahead and another seconds later put them in a 58-54 lead. A Britton free throw put the game out of reach with seven Fec- onds remaining. St. Paul's Dom- inic Jacobetti raced down' the court to put the ball in the hoop without opposition as the buzzer sounded. With 6'8" Class D All-State cen- ter Phil Benedict and a 6'7" for- ward, Britton won the rebound battle 68-37. But St. Paul out- shot Britton 40 per cent to 34 per cent -to make the game a close contest. New Buffalo and Houghton, two teams which finished second in their leagues during the regu- lar season, battled it out for the Class C championship, with New Buffalo coming from behind to win, 59-58. Providence Defeats Canisius,1 NEW YORK (A') -Providence's cool and clever Friars raced to their second National Invitational Tournament championship yes- terday, methodicallysweeping past Canisius 81-66 in the title game of the 26th annual basketball classic. Marquette beat Villanova, 66., 58, in the consolation game. Parlaying their versatile talents, the Friars turned what had been a close game into a romp in the second half before a packed Mad- ison Square Garden house of 18,499. Edge at Halft A closing s p u r t of seven straight points gave Providence a 41-32 halftime edge and the ad- vantage was steadily increased in the second half as the Friars rakes NIT, FIGHTER HANGS ON: Moore's Injury Lai d To Fall, Not Punches ZINDELL OLDSMOBILE For. Complete Collision and Body Shop Service Call Ann Arbor NO 3-0507 -Free Estimates- All Makes of Cars FILE YOUR TROUBLES AWAY WITH A FILING CABINET FROM MORRILL'S 314 South State LOS ANGELES (W) - Davey Moore's chances for survival are still "very doubtful . . . very much less than 50-50," a team of doctors told newsmen last night. While T'oore, 29-year-old ex- featherweight champion, clung to life in a nearby room, three spe- cialists met with newsmen at White Memorial Hospital and gave these opinions: 1) It appeared that the damage to the boxer's brain stem resulted from a fall rather than a punch or even a series of punches. 2) A bruise to the brain does not swell immediately, and this could explain why Moore didn't lose consciousness for nearly an hour Thursday night after his 10th-round knockout by Sugar Ramos, the new featherweight champion. 3) Surgery was not performed because there was no hemorrhage that necessitated an operation., Even if surgery had been indi- cated, Moore's condition was so precarious that none of the con- sulting specialists felt he could have survived it. The doctors reported this slight encouragement: Moore's toes mov- ed for the first time when the soles of his feet were tickled. His blood pressure was up from 90 to 100, also a hopeful sign. His body temperature was 94 degrees, well below the normal. In response to a question by Mrs. Aileen Eaton, co-promoter of the tripleheader championship bouts in which Moore was injured, the doctors said it was possible, but not probable, that Moore sus- tained the injury before the fight. None of the three physicians- Drs. Kenneth H. Abbott, Phillip J. Vogel and Cyril B. Courville- saw the fight. They said they were trying to arrange a screen- ing of the fight to pinpoint the events that led to Moore's col- lapse. The ex-champ's manager, Willie Ketchum, told newsmen he didn't recall that Moore's head hit the floor, ring post or rope during the bout. However, the doctors agreed that a bruise such as Moore sustained is apt to happen when the head is in motion and hits a solid ob- ject. In the event that Moore recovers his mental pOwers probably would not be affected. Moore's injury is not similar to that suffered by Argentine heavy- weight Alejandro Lavorante, they added. Lavorante was knocked uncon- scious six months ago. He has remained in a coma at California Lutheran Hospital since. thoroughly outplayed an out-man- ned Canisius club. Providence, winner of the NIT in 1961 with some of the same players, posted its 15th consecu- tive victory. Getting the bulk of its scoring from Ray Flynn, voted the tour- nament's Most Valuable Player, and Jim Stone, the Friars hustled into a commanding lead by the midway point of the second half. Chinese Wall T h e i r Chinese defense - a scrambling combination of man- to-man and zone - completely shattered a Canisius attack that had been so impressive earlier. The Providence defense forced Canisius outside and when the Griffins' marksmanship fell off it turned into a rout. The taller Providence inside men, 6'11" John Thompson and 6'8" Bob Koval- ski, so controlled the backboards in the breakaway second half that Canisius seldom got more than one chance. Added to this was the all-around quick-handed hustle of the Friars, which resulted in many steals and interceptions. Warriors Romnp NEW YORK (R) - Marquette's long-range bombing Warriors flew away from Villanova in the second half and beat the Wildcats 66-58 for third place in the National Invitation Basketball Tournament yesterday. Marquette, led by back court sharpshooter Ron Glaser, broke open its tight game against Vil- lanova with 14 minutes to go. With the score 48-44, the Warriors con- sistently outfought and outshot the Philadelphians and went into a comfortable lead. . Glaser was high man in the game with 26 points for the War- riors, who were remarkably effi- cient outside. The 6'3" guard fin- ished the tournament with 69 points in three games as third- seeded Marquette finished with a 20-9 record. 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