THE MICHIGAN DAILY St. Louis Edges Dayton, 67-60 Montreal Stopped as Litzenberger's Late Goal Evens Playoff for Chicago the overtime and it gave Provi- dence an edge it never lost. John Egan dropped in another basket to boost Providence's lead to 81-75. Then Jack Foley hit two for Holy CCross to narrow the margin by two points but Ernst was fouled as he drove in for a shot and put in two free throws. Egan Connects Egan connected on a 3-point play, then the final field goal to wind up the game. Hadnot, although he made a good many mistakes and missed several shots, had the height that was invaluable to Providence un- der the basket. He scored 25 points, second to Egan's 29. Foley topped all scorers, however, with 31. Providence went out to an early lead but the Crusaders caught up after ' about 12 minutes. From there on the score was tied three times and- each team took the lead twice before the half ended with Providence in front 43-39. Friars on Top Early in the second half, Ernst and Hadnot shot Providence into an 8-point lead at 53-45. At that point it looked as if the Friars had the game wrapped up. But Holy Cross, which earned its tournament invitation by beat- ing Providence in the last game of the regular season, refused to give up. Never more than four points back, the Crusaders tied it up with only a few seconds remaining on a basket by George Blaney. Then Ernst was fouled on the final play of the regular time but miss- ed the free throw to send the. game into the extra period. Exhibition Baseball San Francisco 13, Los Angeles (A) 0 Boston 11, Chicago (N) 7 Los Angeles (N),S, Washington 7 Minnesota 5, Los Angeles (N) 4 Cincinnati 4, Kansas City 3 Baltimore 4, NeW York 3 St. Louis 6, Detroit 5 Pittsburgh 15, Philadelphia 0 Chicago (A) 3, Milwaukee 2 ii natural wonder in, ,~ r RLO'S (LIGHTEST ORT COAT iral instinct is to play it er, you'll flip your rasp- n Odd Jacket by HI.S.:-, lenless to begin with, it's rnatural how such simr. %V. i generate so much high- pion Three-button front;: - tirely your own; hacking ter vent. i+ orite campus store; in a Incomparable India Madras carries'the nderfut selection of wash- co on fabrics and automatic of t hat ge >ear :Dacron. piolyeste richer and purer with each 4.95 to $25.00. 1 - washing. Incisive native shades set off the surely flared button-down collar and short sleeves that make news. II U S, -95 vailable ot ILD'SOXXFORD CLOTHES BURBERRY COATS ANN ARBOR DETROIT eet on the Campus HALL IN ACTION-Chicago Black Hawk goalie Glen Hall makes one of his numerous saves in last night's game against Montreal. Boston Smashes.Syracuse For. Second Playoff Victor " BOSTON (JP)-The Boston Cel-l tics, their attack once again in gear, rolled oyer Syracuse 133-110 last night and took a 2-1 lead in their best-of-seven Eastern Divi- sion playoff. The defending National Basket- ball Association champions led all the way, by as much as 29 points in some stretches. Boston was unimpressive in win- Johns ton Calls It Quits As Philadelj PHILADELPHIA (R) -- Neil Johnston resigned yesterday as coach of the Philadelphia War- riors in the National Basketball Association. He said it was best for all con- cerned, but he didn't say why. :Johnston submitted his resig- nation to Eddie Gottlieb, owner of the team, at a brief meeting with Gottlieb. Gottlieb said he did not try to dissuade Johnston, who, has coached the Warriors to two sec- ond place finishes in the NBA. "I simply accepted his resigna- tion," Gottlieb said. "It was all very friendly. We had a pleasant talk. I did not know he was going to resign, but I was not surprised. A few- days ago he said he wanted to talk things over with me and I suspected something then." Johnston ended an outstanding playing career as center for the phia Mentor Warriors to become coach of the team two years ago. Last- season the Warriors were eliminated by Boston in the Eastern Division playoffs. Last week Syracuse de- feated Philadelphia 3-0 in a best- of-five series to determine which of the teams would meet Boston for the Eastern Division title.. "It is best for all concerned that I retire at this time," Johnston said. "It's been coming since last' year, actually. I felt the situation would improve this year and it didn't. If it had I might have stayed, I think, but I'm not sure. I wasn't very happy this year." But Johnston steadfastly refus- ed to elaborate on "the situation" or to give any further inkling of his feelings. He said he did not want to put any blame on anyone, adding that the decision was en- tirely his own. ning the first playoff game and dismal in the second game defeat at Syracuse. It was Boston all the way last night. The Celtics rushed to a 12-4 lead and took it from there. The Nats stayed close until Boston put together a 42-point third quarter.' That was it. The Nats, who swept three straight from Philadelphia in a preliminary playoff, simply never caught up. Boston led all the period stops, 35-27, 66-52 -and 108-81. The closest Syracuse came was four points backat 56-52but Bos- ton retaliated with 10 straight points. The Celtics put six men in double figures, led by old pro Bill Sharman. Playing one of his better games, Sharman led the at- tack with 30 points. Tops for Syracuse were Dolph Schayes with 18, and Dick Barnett 22. . Bill Russell, the Celt's defensive ace who had played the entire game collapsed five minutes from the end. Russell didn't appear;- to have been struck or shoved. just suddenly sank to the floor. He was led from the floor and did not'play any more. It was a bruising battle in the back court with Boston veterans Sharman and Bob Cousy having a slight edge. Cousy, held to one field goal in the first half, finished with 17 points. Barnett and Larry Cos- tello had 33 between them. The series shifts to Syracuse for the fourth game tomorrow after- noon. The Canadiens, who won the regular season champloiship on the last night of the campaign, defeated the Hawks -6-2 in the opener of the, series Tuesday night. The series shifts to Chicago for the third game Sunday night. The fourth also will be played in Chi- cago Tuesday night. Mikita opened the scoring at 9:02 of the second stanza with a 12-footer that beat Montreal goal- ie Jacques Plante while the Cana- diens werp shorthanded. Whar- ram made it 2-0 at 13:18 as Plante was drawn out of position. Hull converted; Bill Hay's re- bound with Plante flat on the ice for a 3-2 Chicago edge that was short-lived when Goyette slap- ped in his own rebound midway in the finale, scoring on Hall's far side' Girl ,Gymnasts Perform Here This Saturday The Michigan AAU gymnastics meet will be held Saturday at 11 a.m. in the large gym of the I-M building. The competition will be in three divisions: novice; junior and senior for boys and girls. Admission is free to students at the University. Twenty teams will compete in- cluding squads from Central Mich- igan, Eastern Michigan, Flint Jun- ior College, Turner's YMCA, and five unattached Michigan fresh- men who are Arno, Lascari, all- around; Phil Bolton, Arnold Finn, John Hunt, and sidehorseman Paul Levy. Also featured in the meet will be a group of top female gymnasts from Flint Junior College, plus hundreds of youngsters from all over Michigan. Gymnastics Coach Newt Loken has this to say about the Michigan AAU's's "It will be a four-ring circus." N E W S T Y L E S FI R S T A T W IL D' S SMART AGROUND AND SAFE - GOING SOUTH SPRING VACATION ??*.** , Ft. Lauderdale Miami Bea ch .t r- Nassau Cotton/Dacron Check p Sport Coats ... ............ . from $22.95 -~*~ Washable'slacks of every good fabric .................from $5.95 -Jantzen Swim Trunks (new Hawaiian lenght).......from $5.95 Dacron/Wool Summer Suits " , ..." Ur . - : ita .... . :... . # L . l i " wt ftft U wfT a m4 !''i : '"