-1 FOTR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY,,At j.s. Track Men Open 22-Point Lead ,HANNOVER, Germany (P)-The United States track and field team, catapaulted by an astounding re- lay anchor run by Robert Hayes, rolled to a 64-42 margin over the West German national team yes- terday in the opener of their two- day meet. The American team, smarting under what some members con- sider unfortunate press criticism of their behavior in Moscow, pour- ed on the power against the young German squad. The Yankees won eight of the 10 events on the program, includ- ing five one-two sweeps. Two for Germans 4 sweeping both one-two. Eleven events will be run today. Hayes, from Jacksonville, Fla., breezed to victory in the 100 me- ters in 10.2 seconds before he un- corked his relay leg. In the 400-meter relay he took the baton five yards behind Ger- man anchor man Alfred Hebauff, who ran :10.3 in the 100 for a sec- ond, and steamrollered past him to win by a hand. The American team was timed in 39.7 seconds. Hayes Jones and John Moon on the first two legs opened a narrow lead on the Ger- man team. But Paul Drayton lost the lead and then made a poor ~pass to Hayes. The burst down the stretch by Hayes roused the crowd of about' 40,000 in this northern German city. n Germany's 19-year-old Harald Norpoth was much too good in the 5,000 meters and led a one-two German sweep in 14:04.2. Hans Fahsl led the other Ger- man sweep in the hammer throw with a toss of 195 feet. George Frenn of North Hollywood, Calif., was third and Humphreys, who only entered the event to pick up the one point for fourth place, fin- ished last with a throw of 119- 61/. Humphreys obviously k n e w nothing about throwing the ham- mer. But the German crowd en- joyed his efforts and cheered him loudly. He waved back happily each time. Harold Connolly, the world rec- ord holder, left the team after winning the event in Moscow. Right Foot The powerful American team poured it on from the start. Jones, a Detroit school teacher, burst off the starting blocks in the 110-meter high hurdles and stretched out to a four-yard vic- tory over American teammate Braine Lindgren of Pasadena. Jones was timed in :13.6. John Pennel and John Uelses added a one-two in the pole vault. Pennel, from Miami, Fla., went 16-4%. Berlin-born Uelses jumped 15 feet for second place. Henry Carr, the Arizona State sprinter who holds the world rec- ord for 200 meters, stepped up to the 400 meters and won in :45.4. It was announced as the best time in the world this year and only one-half a second off the world mark. Ralph Boston, who went 25-11% and Darrell Horn, who went 25-9 added a one-two in the broad jump. Al-S tars Prepared for Green Bay Wayne Plans Gym, Pools Construction DETROIT-Wayne State Uni- versity is proceeding with plans for an All-Sports Building to be built by late 1965, the Detroit News reported last night. ". . . This building will be the finest of its kind for the price in the country," the News quoted Dr. Richard Havel, director of the di- vision of health and physical edu- cation at Wayne, as saying. One Story High The building will be one story high and will have a total floor space of 93,600 feet. Inside Wayne plans to house a basketball arena with temporary seating for 3000, two competitive size pools large enough for water polo (45 by 60 feet) and two smaller gyms. The building is expected to have a total cost of $2.2 million of which $1.8 million is for the actual con- struction cost and the remaining amount for the cost of site acquisi- tion, planning, etc. Students Pay Financing for the building is not unlike that proposed for Michi- gan's projected basketball arena. Wayne will float bonds which will be retired by the revenue from special student fees. This fall Michigan students who wish to attend football games will have to pay a similar fee of $12 to be put in a building fund. The building should be complet- ed in plenty of time for the 1968 Olympics for which Detroit is ac- tively bidding. Wayne is also pro- -jecting other projects in line with Detroit's bid. They are an Olympic Village which will later be con- verted to dormitories and a velo- drome which would be converted into a 10,000 seat football stadium. LOST AND FOUND TAKEN BY ERROR from Carrell 616 or 620 Main Library Tues., 3 p.m.-Black clip-binder containing art history thesis, with brown notebook. Return. urgent, reward. 663-7772. A7 STOLEN - Vespa scooter Grand Sport, License 9917. Reward for information. Phone VE 5-0687 collect or Ann Arbor Police. A6 FOR SALE $1200 COMPONENT music system for approx. $850. Call Jerry, 8-6375. B17 MOBILE HOME-1960 model, 10x50 ft., side aisle, front kitchen, awning. Call HU 2-4312, B18 VW LUGGAGE Rack, tarpaulin, $20. Call NO 5-5162 evenings. B16 FOR SALE-Antique four-poster bed. Cali HU 3-5973. HELP WANTED WANTED - GHOST WRITER. Contact Michigan Daily, Box 6. H7 FOR RENT CLOSE TO State Theatre-Furn'd. apt. $85 and $110/mo. 603 E. Ann. C34 NEAR Mary Markley Hall--5 rm. furn'd. apt. Suitable for 3. Phone NO 2- 1873. C31 3-MAN APT. Completely furn'd. All utilities paid. $50/man. 912 Mary. NO 3- 1237.- 30 FALL VACANCIES APARTMENTS on campus from $95. Duplex, unfurnished, on campus, $120. Call for locations and descriptions. CAMPUS MANAGEMENT CLASSIFIEDS were doing and we didn't. We were caught in such mental errors as going the wrong way. "But we have a fighting chance and an all-out effort can make us dangerous." Tighter Defense The All-Stars hope to have a better umbrella against any show- er of Packer Bart Starr passes than they had with undersized de- fensive backs last season. The collegiate secondary will in- clude 6-foot-4 Tommy Janik of Texas A&I and 6-2 Larry Glueck of Villanova at defensive backs and 6-2 Lonnie Sanders, a Michi- gan State end, and swift Kermit Alexander, 5-11 UCLA halfbacks, at the safeties. The All-Stars came through their three week drill in surpris- ingly good" physical shape. End Willie Richardson of Jackson State and guard Don Chuy, 260- pounder from Clemson, have leg ailments, but should be able to face the Packers. As the All-Stars moved in from t h e i r Northwestern University base in Evanston, Ill., for the Sol- dier Field workout, it was guessed the starting collegiate offensive backfield might include Rose Bowl star Ron VanderKelen of Wiscon- sin at quarterback; Larry Fergu- son of Iowa at running halfback; Northwestern's great pass receiver, Paul Flatley, at flanker back; and Nebraska's 212-pound Bill Thun- der Thornton at fullback. However, Heisman Trophy win- ner Terry Baker of Oregon State, Mississippi's able Glynn Griffing, and 6' 7%" Sonny Gibbs of Texas Christian are ready to handle the important quarterback post. The unsung heroes of a possible upset may come from such defen- sive collegiate stalwarts as 222- pound Don Brumm of Purdue, 235-pound Fred Miller of Loui- siana State, 254-pound Jim Dun- away of Mississippi and 255-pound Chuck Sieminski of Penn State, playing a four-man "pro line." MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES I DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .70 1.95 3.45 3 .85 2.40 4.20 4 1.00 2.85 4.95 Figure 5 overage words to o ine. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily Phone NO 2-4786 REAL ESTATE MUST SELL - Leaving state. 3 bdrm. ranch with basement and screened porch. 13,000 ft. lot, Ann Arbor. 665- 3203. R2 CALIFORNIA BOUND One block from Haisley School. Large lot, 10 large shade trees. Excellent three bedroom home, study in full basement, dishwasher. By owner. NO' 3-0719. R BIKES AND SCOOTERS HONDA of Ann Arbor 1s06 Packard Road 665-9281 PERSONAL HELLO TO YOU, MALINDA. F UNIVERSITY STUDENT can baby-sit evenings, week-days or week-ends, and during the day .or Saturday or Sunday. Experienced. Dependable. Phone 5-8130. F32 WANTED-Ride to Grosse Pointe Thurs- day afternoon after 2 p.m. with re- turn on Saturday, morning. Call Gloria Bowles, NO 2-7554. F29 DEAR CHr I've been wondering about the weather in Ann Arbor. Does Ann Arbor have a tropic, temperate, coas- tal desert or polar climate? Yours, Charlton W. Wimble . dear Charlie, Yes, but not always in that order. ch F38 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS HI, FI, TV, RADIO, and PHONO SER- VICE. TV rentals, speaker reconing. Free pick-up and deliversy service. CAMPUS RADIO & TV, NO 5-6644, 325 E. Hoover. X A-1 NEW AND USED INSTRUMENTS BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plait PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington X1 Days 662-7787 Eves. 663-9064 C29 MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Indians Set Slugging Records CAMPUS APTS. Remodeled and completely furn'd. for 3 or 4 persons. Some including elec- tricity. $135-$185/mo. NO 5-9569. FOR RENT at 11315 E. Shore Drive, Whitemore Lake - Furnished home with 3 bdrms. Write or call: Mr. John Gritinas 19343 Dwyer Detroit 34, Mich. Phone FO 6-0712 at all times. Will be at Whitmore Lake Aug. 24 to Sept. 7. 025 LOOKING FOR APT.? Campus loca- tions for fall. Wide selection of new and redecorated bldgs. Call 3-0511 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Apts. Ltd., 530 S. For t. A20 STATE STREET MANOR MR, By The Associated Press CLEVELAND -- The Cleveland Indians hit seven home runs last night, setting an American League record and tying a major league mark with four in a row, as theyL pounded Los Angeles 1-0 and 9-5 in a twinight doubleheader. Fred Whitfield slammed one in each game, the winner in the eighth inning of the opener and a grand slam in the nightcap. Pitcher Pete Ramos, winner of the second game as he struck out 15 for the AL's season high, also hit two homers. The Cuban right- hander was tagged for 11 hits and finally was replaced by Gary Bell with one out and two on in the ninth. The four homers in succession came in the sixth inning by Wood- ie Held, Ramos, Tito Francona and Larry Brown. The victim was Paul Foytack, the third Angels pitcher. After Brown's first m a j o r league homer sailed over the left field fence, Los Angeles Manager Bill Rigney walked out to the Philadelphia Puts Mahaf fey Oan In jury List PHILADELPHIA (R) - The Philadelphia Phillies placed pitch- er Art Mahaffey on the disabled list yesterday. The big righthand- er, out with a dislocated ankle, is expected to be sidelined about four to six weeks. Mahaffey, a 19-game winner last year, flew in yesterday from San Francisco where he hurt himself while on the mound in the seventh inning of Tuesday night's game with the Giants. He has a 6-10 season record. The Phillies reportedly plan to replace Mahaffey with pitcher Bobby Locke of their Little Rock farm in the International League. mound shaking his head and sent Foytack to the showers. * * * Better Late Than . . NEW YORK - Tommy Tresh smashed a home run with two out in the bottom of the ninth inning to give the New York Yankees a 3-2 victory yesterday and the rub- ber of their three game series with the Kansas City Athletics. TedaBowsfield, ahleft-hander, was on the mound for the Ath- letics. He had replaced starter Di- ego Segui in the sixth inning and. had held the Yankees scoreless until Tresh's game-winning blow. Pleis Stars in Relief BOSTON-Minnesota backed up a fine relief effort by Bill Pleis with a five-run outburst in the seventh inning and grabbed a 9-5 decision over Boston yesterday. Pleis took over for Bob Strange in the fourth after the /Red Sox had gone ahead 4-3. The 24-year- old left-hander held Boston to three hits the rest of the way, running his record to 3-1. Cousins and Then Some BALTIMORE - The Baltimore Orioles continued their -mastery of the Detroit 'Tigers last night as Steve Barber won his 14th game, outpitching Frank Lary for a 2-1 victory. The victory gave Baltimore a sweep of the three-game series and 10 out of 12 against Detroit over-all. White Sox Win WASHINGTON - Jim Landis' two-run triple highlighted a four- run fifth inning that powered the Chicago White Sox to a 5-2 vic- tory over the Washington Senators last night. Callison Breaks It Up SAN FRANCISCO-Johnny Cal- lison crashed a two-run homer in the 14th inning after pitcher Bob Bolin let in two runs on a throw- ing error as Philadelphia stopped San Francisco's nine-game win- ning streak with a 7-3 victory. The Phils had fought from be- hind with two runĀ§ in the ninth against 17-game winner 'Juan Marichal and rode through extra innings on the strong relief of Jack Baldschun. Streaks Stopped ST. LOUIS - Left-hander Jim O'Toole checked his six-game los- ing streak and the Cincinnati Reds snapped Bob Gibson's five-game winning string last night with a 9-2 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. s s Crowd Displeasers MILWAUKEE-Ron Santo belt- ed a two-run homer in the third and contributed a decisive sacri- fice fly in the ninth in boosting the Chicago Cubs to a 3-2 victory over the Milwaukee Braves last night before a crowd of 27,919. It was the second largest paid turn- out at County Stadium this sea- son. Comeback HOUSTON-The Pittsburgh Pi- rates, blanked for six innings and trailing 3-0, struck for four runs in the seventh against Don Notte- bart and reliever Hal Woodeshick last night and went on to a 6-3 victory over the Houston Colts. Major League Standings Modern furnishings Wall to wall carpeting Air-conditioning, 35 feet of closet space Garbage disposal Private balcony Laundry facilities Two bedroom $210-230/mo. Ph. NO 5-9569 C321 THE MUSIC CENTER NO 5-8607 NO 2-1335 Guaranteed Diamond Needles $5.95 Compus-2 Blocks Several spacious studio, one bedrm., or 2 bedrm. furnished apts. Available Aug. 20 and after. NO 3-7268. 024 NEW 2 BDRM. APTS. for fall-Furn'd., carpeted, balconies. For 3 or 4. Call 663-0511 9 a.m. till 5 p.m. APT'S. LTD., 530 S. Forest. 019 HURON TOWERS APARTMENTS 2200 FULLER ROAD' One, two and three bedroom apts. Mod- erate rentals include large rooms, air conditioning, swimming pool, parking and many other fine features. Low per person cost for multiple occupants. Call NO 3-0800 or stop by our rental office, on premises, to see model apts. C4 H I F I & STEREO HI Fl & STEREO PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE & REPAIRS 304 S. THAYER ST. 1304 S. UNIVERSITY USED CARS '62 CORVAIR Monza, Black, 4 sp. Very good condition. Ph. Dave at 5-4111, Ext. 233. Nil '58 FORD Wagon, 6 cylinder, standard trans. $500. 2-2695. N12 VW '56, sunroof, R & H, WSW. Must sell. 5-0012 after 6 p.m. on weekdays. N9 '57 V-W. Low mileage. R. & H. Reason- able. 213 Glen. N8 1960 FIAT-In good condition, less than 10,000 miles. Phone NO 2-2625. N10 BUSINESS SERVICES SALESMEN to make loans to college students with which to buy life in- surance. 25-35 married, 2 yrs. college credit. No experience preferred. Write Box 2, Michigan Daily. Ji FOXCROFT APARTMENTS AMERICAN LEAGUE South State near Hill. Designed and furnished for 4, 5, or 6 student occupants. 2 bedrooms each. New York Chicago Baltimore Minnesota Boston Cleveland Los Angeles Kansas City Detroit Washington W 66 59 60 57 53 53 53 48 43 37 L 37 46 49 49 51 55 58 57 59 68 Pct. GB .641 - .561 8 .550 9 .538 101/ .510 13/2 .492 15 .477 17 .457 18 .421 22 .352 29Y2 " " " Most spacious available Separate dining room Air conditioning Heat furnished Extra storgae space 665-8184 Call Kelly Newton, 3-2260, eves. 2-01r0 C13 HIHSTUDIO ANN ARBOR'S KLH DEALER SERVICE Fast-Competent-Reasonable Used Hi Fi-TV . . . all guaranteed 1319 So. University Ave.-North Side, Near Washtenaw , YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 3, Kansas City 2 Minnesota 9, Boston 5 Chicago 5, Washington 2 Baltimore 2, Detroit 1 Cleveland 1, Los Angeles 0 Cleveland 9, Los Angeles 5 TODAY'S GAMES Boston at Baltimore (n) Only game scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. x-Los Angeles 63 42 .600 St. Louis 59 47 .557 San Francisco 60 48 .556 Chicago 56 48 .538 Cincinnati 57 51 .527 Philadelphia 57 51 .527 Milwaukee 54 53 .503 Pittsburgh 52 53 A495 Houston 41 67 .380 x-New York 33 72 .314 x-Played night games. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York at Los Angeles (inc) Philadelphia 7, San Francisco 3 Cincinnati 9, St. Louis 2 Pittsburgh 6, Houston 3 Chicago 3, Milwaukee 2 TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Milwaukee (n) Cincinnati at St. Louis Onlygames scheduled WANTED TO RENT" VISITING COUPLE desires apt. for weekend of Aug. Al11. Cali 665-3409. L4 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES BONDED BRAKE LINING $23.95 Fords, Chevys, some Plymouths Always a good price on new tires and batteries. HICKEY'S SERVICE STATION Main at Catherine NO 8-7717 Si Manuscript typing, transcription, medi- cal, legal, technical conferences, mim- eographing, off-set. Quick-Accurate- Experienced. Ann Arbor Professional Service Associates 334 Catherine J2 MISCELLANEOUS Variety is the SPICE OF RALPH'S MARKET Picnic Supplies Party Foods Kitchen Supplies Kosher Foods 709 PACKARD-OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT M3 TRANSPORTATION GB 4 4Y2 61,4 7V2 734 1 0 l23Y2 30 Drive Yourself .. AND SAVE FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars. pickups, panels, stakes MOVING VANS ....... Lubrication $1.50 RENT A TV THIS SUMMER Nye Motor Sales 514 E. Washington Whit's Rent-A-Truck HE 2-4434 50 Encorse Road, Ypsilanti, Mich. 01 Reserve Yours Now . 11 I 4 I a 4 i BARGAIN CORNER