THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, ROCKETS OUST NATION'S NUMBER TWO TEAM: Toledo Crumples NYU as Loyola Wins Squeake Have you met our man on campus yet? Better see him soon, if you want to save money and see the world. C >- I, 0 v By The Associated Press The Sheraton Campus Representative will give you free a Sheraton Student ID or Faculty Guest Card. With it you can stay at any of 87 Sheraton Hotels round the world at special low discount rates ... even in single rooms! Save even more with 2 or 3 in a room. Group rates for clubs and teams. Wherever Sheraton is, there's a world of things to see and do. For more information and your ID Card, contact this Sheraton Campus Representative: Michael Margolis, 425 Hill, Apt. 304 Sheraton Hotels 2 Motor Inns Coast to coast in U.S,A. in Hawaii; Canada; Nassau; Jamaica; Mexico; Puerto Rico; Venezuela; Tel Aviv, Israel; Tokyo (opening Sept., 1964) NEW YORK-Toledo's Rockets barged into Madison Square Gar- den last night, threw up a harras- sing 'defense and bewildered New York, the nation's second-ranked college basketball team, for a 87-74 victory. The unbeaten Rockets, now 5-0 for the season, swept out in front in the early going on the strength of their rebounding and carefully controlled offense, fought off a Violet revival after intermission and took it going away. Jim Cox, a 6-foot-5 corner man with a deft, feather-light shooting touch, was the beneficiary of most of the Rockets' carefully planned patterns and finished with 33 points, high for game. The Rockets ripped the Violet defense to shreds with their wide offense. At times they used half the court to run their patterns, spread the NYU defense and sent Cox barreling through time and again for easy layups. The Violets, meanwhile, were unable to shake }Toledo's shifting man-to-man defense. Generally, it was one shot and out for the Vio- lets, who lost their first of the season. Cox ripped through for 19 points in the first half as the Rockets hustled out t' a 43-33 lead. After Toledo's crew of 24 danc- ing coeds entertained at halftime, NYU made its biggest bid, flash- ing back to within six points, 47-41 on nine consecutive free throws and a tip in by Happy Hairston. Cox then hit on a shot from the corner and added a layup and it was all over. They pulled steadi- ly away. A key was the defensive job done by Ray Wolford and Larry Jones on NYU's big two of Hair- ston and Barry Kramer. Hairston finished with 25 points and Kram- er with 23, but Barry managed only one from the field in the last half. Newsome Scares Loyolan KALAMAZOO - Little Manny Newsome of Western Michigan threw a giant scare into Chicago Loyola last night, but the nation's - . a - . Y 0 * . ? * * *3? *** .** * 'a -- - *4 0 * i" ... -0 f . *1 "ET SKIFPACKAGE A A 534995 . SKIS, BOOTS, POLES AND BINDINGS & FREE SKI LESSONS ON OUR OWN HILL, ONE MILE FROM CAMPUS, BY CERTIFIED INSTRUCTORS. * COMPLETE WINTER APPAREL SHOP ' "" 100 SETS OF SKI RENTALS AVAILABLE- ALL. NEW EQUIPMENT s " : A0 NO 2-7307 530 S. FOREST ; OPEN 7TIL 9 MONDAY-FRI DAY. MANNY NEWSOME ... scares Loyola No. 1 college basketball power hung on for a 105-102 triumph. . Newsome, 5-foot-10, scored 44 points and ignited Western's blaz- ing second half surge. Trailing 91-66 with 11:28 remaining in the game, the Broncos roared back to within three points. The Gary, Ind. senior poured in 12 points early in the second half while teammates Ajac Triplett and Bill Street accounted for an- other eight. Loyola managed only six points in the interval. Free Position ... Would you like an extra present this year? Well, Uncle Mike Block of the Daily sports staff is waiting for you--with your position on the Daily sports staff. Simply walk over to' The Daily, 420 Maynard, walk up the stairs, find the sports department, and you'll have your gift. t- With 5:25 left to play, the Ramblers held a 97-85 lead. Then Newsome got hot again, collecting 10 of Western Michigan's final 14 points. Loyola, which now has won all five of its games this season, spurted to a 69-49 lead at half- time on the shooting of Art Hunt- er and Ron Miller. Miller paced Loyola with 33 points and Hunter had 28. Chiefs Beat Dons OKLAHOMA CITY - Okla- homa City's Chiefs put on a tight zone defense after a close first half last night to claim a 97-84 basketball victory over San Fran- cisco. The Chiefs relied heavily on Bud Koper, who scored 34 points. Teammate Charlie Hunter added 22. The Dons were led by Dave Lee and Ollie Johnson, with 21 each. The game was tied seven times in the first half, and the lead changed 13 times before the half ended in 42-all. Then OCU's 7-foot Eddie Jack- son, who finished with 17 points, started hitting from the outside to lead the Chiefs to a command- ing lead. Providence Rallies To Win ST. LOUIS - John Thompson and Jim Benedict sparked rallying Providence to a 72-66 basketball victory over the St. Louis Billikens last night. Thompson, 6-10 senior from Washington D. C. scored 25 points and Benedict, 6-4 sophomore from Hartford, Conn., adedd 22 as the Friars improved their record to four victories against one defeat. The loss was the third straight for St. Louis. St. Louis opened a ten point lead I 24-14 midway through the first half but Providence out-scored the Bills 25-8 to go ahead at the intermission 39-32. * * * Iowa Downs SMU IOWA CITY -- Iowa pulled off its fourth basketball victory of the season -without a loss last night by downing Southern Methodist 73-70 but had to survive a stiff Mustang challenge in the second half to do it. For the third game in a row the Hawkeyes depended on accuracy at the free throw line to remain undefeated. But Dave Roach con- tributed 29 points for scoring hon- ors on 11 of 22 field goal tries and seven of nine charity shots. Scores Pro Standings NHL STANDINGS W L T Pts.GF GA Chicago 17 4 6 40 93 54 Montreal 13 8 5 31 81 72 Toronto 13 8 4 30 71 61 Detroit 8 13 3 19 53 78 Boston 613 6 18 55 73 New York 617 4 16 74 95 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Montreal 6, New York 4 Boston 2, Chicago 1 TODAY'S GAMES No games scheduled NBA STANDINGS WESTERN DIVISION W L Pct. GB Los Angeles 16 10 .615 - St. Louis 17 12 .586 % San Francisco 12 12 .500 3 Baltimore 7 15 .318 7 Detroit 6 17 .462 8% EASTERN DIVISION W L Pct. GB Boston 19 2 .905 - Cincinnati 19 12 .613 5 Philadelphia 11 13 .458 9% New York 8 22 .267 15J YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cincinnati 112, New York 102 Baltimore at Los Angeles (Inc) TODAY'S GAMES Boston at Philadelphia Baltimore at San Francisco ]I Toledo 87, NYU 74 Loyola (Chi) 105, W. Michigan 102 Oklahoma City 97, San Francisco 84 Iowa 73, Southern Methodist 70 Notre Dame 107, Valparaiso 60 Rhode Island 77, Brown 62 The Citadel 97, Prebyterian 61 Georgetown 98, Manhattan 87 Massachusetts 93, Boston College 74 villanova 58, Buffalo 56 Maryland State 98, Elizabeth City 85 Florida Southern 81, Georgia St. 64 Texas Christian 66, Florida State 60 Providence 72, St. Louis 66 New Mexico 49, Denver 43 Oklahoma State 71, Brigham Young 64 Northw'trn. Louisiana 63, McNeese 53 Concordia 81, Kearney 75 Colorado72, Houston 61 ALL-NFL: AP Picks. 'M' Grads For Squad Terry Barr, Ron Kramer, and Bennie McRae, three of Michigan's grads to the pro football wars, have recently been named to the NFL-all-star team by the Associat- ed Press. Barr, an outstanding pass re- ceiver for Detroit, was honored as second team flanker back. He has a record of 60 receptions, good for 1,022 yards and 12 touch- downs, fourth best in the league. Kramer claimed a position on the squad's second team as tight end. He plays for Green Bay, after being named All-American twice as a Wolverine. Now a top defensive back, Mc- Rae was Michigan's top ground gainer as halfback in 1961. He received an honorable mention for the all-stars, performing for Chi- cago. Both Barr and Kramer graduat- ed in'1956, while McRaegraduated in 1962. A 1 k 9 inEN I1 Wide Variety of Tours planned for students only SORBONNE STUDY TOUR 70 days, $1388 including England, Holland, Belgium, France, Spain, Portugal DISCOVERY ADVENTURE TOUR OF EUROPE 76 days, $1295 Many other Student Tours featuring. Europe, Israel, Greece and USSR. Ask-for Plans and Profitable Organizer Arrangements SPECIALISTS IN STUDENT TRAVEL. UTRA SINCE 1926 for folders and details SEE YOUR LOCAL TRAVEL AGENT or write UNIVERSITY TRAVEL COMPANY Cambridge 38, Mass. III I Ill Your Discontinued Textbooks are worth real money. if sold to Ulrich's WITH your currently good ones. YOUR BEST DEAL-FIGURE IT OUT! Ulrich's sell your discontinued books to over 600 college bookstores. This way we get the highest possible prices for YOU. At least 25% of the books used this semester are now obso- lete or discontinued. -another Ulrich service- i SELL! SELL! SELL! SELL? SELL! SELL! YOUR 800KS BACK TO... TO FOLLETT'S' FOR CASH THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: JOHN M. 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