TUESDAY, MARCH 21, 1954 Tilt MWTUIXNILYIJ r _ ___ _ CCNY Beats Out Bradley, 69-61, E:> McEwen Breaks Two-Mile Dambrot Paces Beavers To Victory Over Braves Varsity Mark; akes Third (Special to The Daily) CHICAGO-Don McEwen set a new Michigan Varsity record here last night as he ran a rugged 9:05.5 two-mile to finish third in the Chicago Relays Invitational Two-Mile Run. Curt Stone of the Shanahan A. C. won in 9:02.4 as John Twomey, running for the Illinois A.C., fin- 1 t.\ " The finest <>" shoes we can make are the only shoes we will sell!" Florsheim ;:::: : ished second about two yards back. Michigan's captain, Jus Williams, finished fifth behind Ohio State's Frank D'Arcy as Horace Ashen- felter of the Penn A.C. dropped out of the race with a bad sprain. * * * ED ULVESTAD, the Wolverines' other entrant in the meet, fin- ished third in the pole vault be- hind Don Richards, also of the Illinois A.C., and Don Laz, this year's Big Ten champ from Illi- nois. Ulvestad cleared the bar at 13-6 but was eliminated at the 14 foot mark. Richards' winning jump was 14-6. In the Bankers' Mile, featured event of the evening, Wisconsin's Don Ghermann ran away from Fred Wilt for a 10-yard victory as a record crowd of 17,683 packed the Chicago Stadium. Ghermann's time was 4:09.5. RUNNING a perfectly paced race, McEwen trailed in second place for the first three laps. At that point he took command of the race by jumping into the lead and pacing the runners to a 4:34 first mile. The Michigan sophomore con- tinued setting pace until Stone THE MICHIGAN CREW CUT You'll find our collegiate hair styles. Individualistic, Suave. TRY ONE TODAY! The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty off State regained the lead with about 91, laps to go. In running the best two-mile time turned in by a college competitor this season, McEwen held the lead for 16 of the 22 laps around the board track. Ghe:rmann's un'precedented third straight Bankers' mile tri- umph came on another master- fully-paced race. He overtook Wilt at the beginning of the final turn and poured on his unbeatable stretch kick to earn the 10-yard victory margin. VILLANOVA'S John Joe Berry, beaten in Cleveland Friday night by Michigan's Aaron Gordon, set the middle pace and once had a six yard lead. He wound up third ahead of fourth-place Len Truex, of Ohio, who finished second to Ghermann in the Big Ten Cham- pionships' race two weeks ago. Phil Thigpen of Seton Hall easily retained his 1000 yard title with a strong 2:12 perform- ance. Proving Western Conference su- premacy, the Buckeye's champion- ship mile-relay team won the final event of the evening by out- sprinting highly rated squads from Oklahoma, Drake and Oklahoma A. and . NEW YORK-(A)-An under- dog City College team came from behind with a splurge of points in the second half to beat the Brad- ley Indians, 69-61 in the National Invitation championships. THUS CCNY, like San Fran- cisco last year and West Virginia and Utah before that, wrote a cin- derella finish to the Madison Square Garden Event that first was staged in 1938. It was the first NIT Cham- pionship for the CCNY Beavers, and the fifth failure for Brad- ley--rated the nation's No. 1 team this season - to come through in this event. game on personal fouls two min- utes before the final whistle. CCNY, WITH no national rank- ing, left a staggering list of vic- tims in its march to its first invi- tational triumph in four tries. The sizzling Beavers knocked off a defending champion, San Francisco, in the first round 65- 46; blastedaheavily favored Kentucky, 89-54, and then hum- bled Duquesne, sixth seeded team in the nation, 62-52. CCNY now will go after the NCAA title, the other half of col- lege basketball's grand slam. The metropolitan five will represent District 2 in the Eastern Playoffs fir Be ad ria to fu es ag; be 1 w t pC be here March 23-25 and'in the finals Jittery and outplayed in the March 28 if it gets that far. rst half, Nat Holman's mspired Nat Holman, the dapper one- eavers came back with a rush to time celtic who guides City's des- d the top-seeded Braves of Peo- tinies, coached the team from the a, Ill., to the irimpressive list of bench * tonight despite an illness urnament scalps. that had bedded him for two days. * * * k t HE RAN A temperature of 102 IRWIN DAMBROT stoked the this morning, after being bitten rnace for unseeded "dark hors- by a flu-bug, and made arrange- who weren't given a chance mnents to coach his team by long ainst the star-studded field that mstcomchom-singmTylen ganfirng xacly wek ao.distance from home-using Tele- ?gan firing exactly a week ago. Ivision and Telephone direct to the Only senior in the starting bench where assistant coach Bob ineup, Dambrot tossed in 23 Sand was to be the receiving end. ioints, breaking Bradley's heart But tonight, just an hour be- vith an uncanny push shot from fore game time, he persuaded his he keyhole area. doctor to let him attend. So he Ed Roman, the six-foot-six, 225- came out, propped up with pills, und center, dumped in 19 points and guided his team to its great- fore he was ejected from the est victory. r 1 d1 DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN 11 Try FOLLETT'S First Every Book for Every Course USED BOOKS at BARGAIN PRICES $16i95 . . . and here is one of many, excellent ex- amples of that policy in action: a Florsheim Shoe that ranks with the best we've ever seen. CAMPUS BOOTERY' 304 South State Sv % G ::;2::2::? :: Ina a a a n I N in II,, P u d n Ilia has t° n 'n in n n UtG Ate )RUG COMPANY complete lines DRUGS TOI LETRI ES STATIONERY of 74 4 4i q q qI qI q1 q a a q q1 q q q q q1 qI q qI q (Continued from Page 4) Journal Club: 3054 N.S., Mon., Mar. 20, 12 noon. At 12:30 Dr. Charles Carlston, Oberlin College, will speak on "Trends in Geomor- phology." AIM-Office hours Mon. through Thurs., 4-5 p.m., Room 3C, Union. Sociedad Hispanica: Social Hour, Mon. 4-6 p.m. in the Internation- al Center. Refreshments. Graduate History Club: get ac- quainted meeting, League, Mon., Mar. 20, 4 p.m. Graduate history students and faculty members are invited. Actuarial Club. Meeting Mon., March 20, 4 p.m., Rm. 1018, Angell Hall. Discussion on review pre- paration for Part II of the actu- arial exams. Mr. C. R. Simms of the Wyatt Company will talk on various aspects of the consulting actuarial field. All are invited. CED Special Meeting, Mon. Mar. 20, Union, 4:15 p.m. Seminar on Aspects of Living Religions, Lane Hall, Mon., March 20, 5:30 p.m. Topic for discussion; Position of the Atheist. Ballet Club: Meeting, Mon., 7 p.m., Dance Studio, 2nd floor, Barbour Gym. Enrollment for membership open to men and wo- men. Regular classes for beginners and intermediates. On Monday evening, March 20, the U. of M. Baha'i Group will join with the Ann Arbor Baha'i com- munity in celebrating the Baha'i New York at the home of the Wil- liam Parkers, 1601 Pontiac. The Baha'is throughout the world cele- brate their New Year on March 21. The U. of M. Sociological Society is having a discussion Tues., 3 p.m., in Rm. 307, Haven Hall by Drs. Hawley, Freedman, and Wood on the subject of job opportuni- ties for sociologists and social work students with the BA de- gree. Coffee hour after the dis- cussion. Michigan Forum: Open meeting for students and faculty to plan next public forum on topic "Should Federal Aid Be Given Only to Public Schools." Union, 3:30 p.m., Tues., March 21. The Women of the University Faculty will meet for dinner in the Hussey Room, Michigan League, Tues., March 21, 6:15 p.m. 'Dr. Valeria F. Juracsek and Miss ith G. Morgan will describe their work with patients at the Neuro- Psychiatric Institute. I.S.A. regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. Tues., 21 March, at International Center. Open to all interested. Craft Shop will open at Lane Hall, Tues., March 21. Instruction in Leather work, Bead and Shell Craft and others, 7:30-9:30 p.m. UNESCO Council: Meeting Tues. 7:45 p.m., Lane Hall.. Semester Election of Officers. Cercle Francais, meeting Tues., March 21, 8 p.m., Hussey Room, League. Scene from Les Femmes Savantes, two French films, coffee in Coffee Bar. Faculty and stu- dent members warmly invited. Michigan Education Club. Init- iation Party, Wed., March 22, 3:15- 5 p.m., Michigan Union. Refresh- ments and program. Inter-Racial Association: Open meeting, Tues., March 21, 7:30 p.m., Union. Discussion of pres- ent and future role of IRA. N O d At our fountain BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER State Drug Company Packard at State --- _ - I I{1 Is the Union Opera going your way? THE MICHIGAN UNION OPERA ANNOUNCES ITS 1950 ROAD TOUR for ACE T U ]I BUFFALO. April 19 ERLANGER THEATRE DETROIT April 11 & 12 MUSIC HALL TOLEDO April 13 RIVOLI THEATRE I Choose with care the diamond that tokens your love The quality of a diamond is very important to you because it is quality that assures both beauty and value. It is therefore wise to see a skillful and reputable jeweler in selecting the diamond for her. Come into Bay's and choose your diamond with the aid of our diamondscope which clearly exposes any flaw that would affect i/s quality. II ---------------Send Mail Orders To------------- University of Michigan Club of Buffalo 510 Erie Co. Bank Bldg. Buffalo 2, N.Y. University of Michigan Club of Detroit 60 Farnsworth Ave. Detroit 2, Michigan Lace It Up of Michigan Rivoli Theatre T6ledo, Ohio I IMA N qv n k -v w I