OM THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, AUGUST 2, 1963 FOUR TUE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, AUGUST 2,1963 rackmen Blast Germans First Negro Named To Davis Cup Team HANOVER, Germany (P) - A power-packed United States teams completed the rout of the young West German national track squad here yesterday, 141-82, win- ning all but three of the 21 events on the two-day program. It was the secondepost-war meeting of the two teams, and by far the most decisive Yankee victory. The Americans won, 120- 91, at Stuttgart, Germany, in 1961. The Americans, foaming mad over their press reviews in Mos- cow and Warsaw, won everything but the 10,000 meters on the final day, and all but. the hammer throw and the 5,000 meters Wednesday. It was the third European meet for the U.S. team, narrow victors in Russia and runaway winners in Poland. A meet next Saturday and Monday in London winds up the tour. Hayes Doubles in 200 Bob Hayes, the Jacksonville, Fla., sprinter who runs like an angry bear, added the 200 meters to the 100 he won Wednesday, bulling the distance in :20.6. The 'American 1,600-meter re- lay team, aiming for a world mark, fell a shade short with a 3:02.8 clocking, despite a :44.3 anchor leg by Henry Carr, the greatest 400 relay leg ever run. It was still the world's top 1,600 meter relay effort this year. Les- ter Milburn of Houston, Tex., leading off, ran :46 flat, followed by Arizona State's Ulis Williams with :46.4. Rex Cawley of Pasa- dena added a :46.1 effort, which left Carr an impossible task-but he almost did it. The German team was without its great record holders of recent years, but the Americans also per- formed without four men who won events in Moscow and have since left the team. Five More Slams The Americans, who scored five one-two sweeps Wednesday and rolled up a 63-32 point margin, added five more sweeps in the 200 meters, 400 meter hurdles, 1,500 meters, shot put and triple jump. Paul Drayton of Villanova trail- ed Hayes to the line by about a yard in the200 meters, and was timed in :20.7. Alfred Hebauf, the classy young German sprinter who has seen some of the most illustrious backs in the world the last two days, was third in :20.8, his best ever. Hebauf alsotrailed Hayes in the 100 Wednesday, and was the victim of the fantastic anchor leg uncorked by Hayes in the 400 meter relay. In that one, Hayes took the baton five yards behind Hebauf and blew right past him. Cawley Wins Hurdles Cawley nipped lanky Jim Allen of Seattle at the tape in the hur- dles. Both were timed in :50.1. Morgan Groth of Oregon State hung behind U.S. Marine Cary Weisiger for most of the 1,500 meters and then overhauled his teammate in the stretch in 3:42.4, a shade under a four-minute mile pace. Another marine, Dave Davis, held off Randy Matson of Pampa, Tex., in the shot, although both were below form. Davis won with 58' 81." Ralph Boston of Los Angeles; and Darrel Horn of Pilot Rock, Ore., who finished one-two in the broad jump Wednesday, landed in the same spots in the triple jump. Boston's winning leap was 51' 8%." More U.S. Victories In addition to the relay, the Americans added victories in the high jump, javelin, 3,000 meter steeplechase and 10,000 meter walk. Paul Stuber of Eugene, Ore., took the high jump on fewer miss- es at a sub-par 6' 7." Frank Covelli of Lakewood, Calif., got the javelin honors with a specatcular toss of 264' 9%." Pat Traynor, of Villanova, took the.3,000 meter steeplechase in a' photo-finish from Ludwig Mueller of Germany, a great favorite with the crowd of about 30,000 since he beat the Russians in both the 5,000 and 10,000 meters five years ago. U.S. Wins Walk Ronald Zinn of the U.S. Army captured the, walk in the first event of the day,a surprise that proved the Americans were out to take everything in the modern stadium that was not nailed down. That turned out to be the 10,000 meters, won by Peter Kubicki of Germany in the swift time of 29:26.6, over Jim Keefe of Darby. SOUTH ORANGE, N.J. VP) -- Arthur Ashe, a 20-year-old UCLA junior, became the first Negro ever named to a U.S. Davis Cup tennis team when he was picked along with three other collegians yesterday to face Mexico in the American Zone semifinals at Los Angeles Aug. 16-18. Named along with Ashe were Wimbledon champion Chuck Mc- Kinley, 22, of San Antonio, Tex.; Dennis Ralston, 20, of Bakers- Report Liston Set for Fight PHILADELPHIA (R) - Heavy- weight champion Sonny Liston re- portedly has agreed to withdraw, as the promoter of a proposed fight with Cassius Clay and will fight the poetry-quoting challeng- er Sept. 30 in Philadelphia Sta- dium.j The Pennsylvania Athletic Com- mission Wednesday rejected an application from Intercontinental Promotions, Inc., to stage the fight because Liston is a 47 per cent stockholder. It was learned, prior to a news conference called by Commission- er Alfred M. Klein, that Liston would withdraw from the promo- tional setup and accept a larger share of the purse. field, Calif.; and Marty Riessen, 21, of Hinsdale, Ill., the Big Ten champion from Northwestern. It's one of the youngest squads Uncle Sam ever sent into a Davis Cup battle. Selection of Ashe, a willowy stylist who hails from Richmond, Va., over such higher ranked players as Frank Froehling, Ham Richardson, Allen Fox, and Gene Scott came as a big surprise. The .Negro star is ranked 18th nationally. McKinley is number one, Riessen number nine and Ralston unranked because of in- sufficient data. Ralston was out with a leg injury most of last year. The Mexicans will use the same two-man team of Rafael Osuna and Antonio Palafox, winners of the Wimbledon doubles crown this year. Pick 'Pack' 14 Points Over Stars CHICAGO (A) - The College All-Stars and the favored Green Bay Packers, two-time cham- pions of the National Football League, will clash in Soldier Field tonight before a crowd of 75,000. The game will be broadcast and televised, starting at 8:45 p.m. EST. Green Bay, a 42-20 winner over the 1962 All-Stars, is favored by 14% points. Reports of injuries to linebacker Ray Nitschke and full- back Jim Taylor caused a drop in the odds. Nitschke has a twisted back and probably will miss the game en- tirely. Coach Vince Lombardi in- sists Taylor is in shape and will start although reports persist he has trouble with his knee and will not see much action. 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 SALS--Antique four-poster bed. Call HlU 3-5973. FOR RENT GRADUATE, BUSINESS or professional. quiet home. Call NO 2-4738. C36 CLOSE TO State Theatre-Furn'd, apt. $85 and $110/mo. 603 E. Ann. C34 3-MAN APT. Completely furn'd. All utilities paid. $50/man. 912 Mary. NO 3- 1237. C30 FALL VACANCIES APARTMENTS on campus from $95. Duplex. unfurnished, on campus, $120. Call for locations and descriptions. CAMPUS MANAGEMENT CLASSIFIEDS MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Simmons Edges Jay As Cards Gain 3-2 Win Days 582-778 Eves. 663-9064 C29 .41 IIU STI PT'S U18-HOLE PAR-3 GOLF COURSE ANN ARBOR'S KLH DEALER PRACTICE RANGErWoods ERVICs SERVICE18HOLE MINATURE COURSE Fast-Competent-Reasonable Lctd 4 Miles East of Ann Aror Used Hi Fi-TV ... all guaranteedLocaen( 1319 So. University Ave.-North Side, Near Washtenaw ..r"., 0SOU H .. . By The Associated Press ST. LOUIS - George Altman's fifth-inning home run settled a pitching duel and gave Curt Sim- mons and the St. Louis Cardinals a 3-2 victory over the Cincinnati Reds in the rubber game of a three-game series yesterday. Joey Jay was the hard-luck loser. The Cards had to put down a ninth-inning uprising before Sim- mons could gain credit for his 10th victory of the season. * *, Poor Man's Mantle MILWAUKEE-Ellis Burton be- came the fifth player in National League history to hit home runs batting right and lefthhanded in the same gamef as the Chicago Cubs bombed t h e Milwaukee Braves, 10-2, last night. Steve Boros and Jim Schaffer' also hit homers while Larry Jack- son scattered eight hits for his 12th victory. The switch-hitting Burton, a ZINDELL OLDSMOBILE For. Complete Collision and Body Shop Seivice Call Ann Arbor NO 3-0507 -Free Estimates- All Makes of Cars Braves farm hand last year at Toronto and Louisville, hit his first home run off left-hander Denny LeMaster in the first inning and his second off right-hander Ron Piche in the seventh. 'Actually the feat had been achieved five times before-twice by Jim Russell of Boston and Brooklyn and once each by Augie Galan of Chicago, Red Schoen- dienst of St. Louis and Maury Wills of Los Angeles. Major League Standings,' AMERICAN LEAGUE your guide to New York Chicago Baltimore Minnesota Boston Cleveland Los Angeles Kansas City Detroit Washington 66 59 60 57 53 53 53 48, 43 37 L 37. 46 49 49 51 55 58 57 59 68 Pct. .641 .562 ' .550 .538 .510 .491 .477 .457 .422 .352 GB 8 9 102/ 13/ 151,E 17 19 221 30 ;eatikl gO I .AarIPF mmmmw YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Boston at Baltimore (ppd) (Only game scheduled) TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Los Angeles (n) Minnesota at Kansas City (n) Cleveland at'Detroit (n) Baltimore at New York (n) Boston at Washington (2, t-n) NATIONAL LEAGUE CAMPUS APTS. Remodeled and completely fuln'd. for 3 or 4 persons. Some including elec- tricity. $135-$185/mo. NO 5-9569. FOR RENT at 11315 E. Shore Drive, Whitemore Lake - Furnished home with 3 bdrms. Write or call: Mr. John Gritinas 19343 Dwyer Detroit 34, Mich. Phone F0 6-0712 at all times. Will be at Whitmore Lake Aug. 24 to Sept. 7. C25 LOOKING FOR APT.? Campus loca- tions for fall. Wide selection of new and redecorated bidgs. Call 3-0511 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Apts. Ltd., 530 S. Forest. C20 1000 OAKLAND APARTMENTS New, contemporary 1, 2, and 3 bedroom apartments, furnished and unfurnish- ed. Full carpeted, private balconies and courts, lanudry room, off-street parking. Finest location, 3 blocks from QUIET RESIDENTIAL SETTING campus in$I From $130 up Phone 453-3287 C35 STATE STREET MANOR 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 C32 Campus-2 Blocks Several spacious one bedroom or 2 bed- room furnished apts. Available Aug. 20 and after. NO 3-7268. C24 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 FOXCROFT APARTMENTS South State near Hill. Designed and furnished for 4, 5, or 6 student occupants. 2 bedrooms each. " Most spacious available " Separate dining room " Air conditioning " Heat furnished . Extra storgae space 605 Church HELP WANTED COLLEGE MEN to arrange for Hi-Fi and stereo demonstrations for re- mainder of summer. Call Livonia 425- 3560. H8 WANTED - GHOST WRITER. Con pact Michigan Daily, Box 6. H7 LOS T 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 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 WANTED TO RENT VISITING COUPLE desires apt, for weekend of Aug. 9-11. Call 665-3409. ti L4 BIKES AND SCOOTERS HONDA of Ann Arbor 1x06 Packard Road 665-9281 Z2 A Bike is a Necessity Michigan's campus becomes Accessible with a BEAVER BIKE Save your feet and enjoy summer rides through the Arb. We Have EVERYTHING in bike accessories. Beaver Bike Shop NO 5-6607 OLD HEIEBR Fi M Los Angeles San Francisco St. Louis Chicago Cincinnati Philadelphia Milwaukee Pittsburgh Houston New York 64 42 60 47 66 47 57 48 57 52 56 51 54 54 52 53 41 67 33 73 .604 .561 .561 .543 .523 .523 .500 .495 .380 .311 GB 4Y2 4i/ 612 8Y2 812 11 111 24 31 PERSONAL 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 pim. with re- turn on Saturday morning. Call Gloria Bowles, NO 2-7554. P29 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 Play PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 211-213 N. Main St. OPEN JULY 4th NO 8-9590 u ai a , an in¢n ra Qinang Specializing in GERMAN FOOD, FINE BEER, WINE, LIQUOR PARKING ON ASHLEY ST. Hours: Daily 1 1 A.M.-2 A.M. Closed Mondays, 314 S. MAIN NO 3-2401 ovTE X:-o To the beach or to Sthe market-it's than newest idea in low- cost, high-fun trans- portation. Worth its weight In pleasure and eas- ier to ride than a bicycle. HONDA of Ann Arbor YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis. 3, Cincinnati 2 Chicago 10, Milwaukee 2 (Only games scheduled) TODAY'S GAMES New York at Milwaukee (2, t-n) Philadelphia at St. Louis (n) Los Angeles at Houston (n) San Francisco at Chicago Pittsburgh at Cincinnati (n) 119 w Washington xt I Excellent Food American and Internationait Cuisine Cocktails, Wines. Champagne Art Devaney and His Trio Thursday, Friday, and Saturday Good Haircuts l I come from Un-M BARBERS near Kresge's '' I 1906 Packard Road 665-9281 11 91 featuring Maine Live Lobster, and Champagne Cocktails We honor Diners Club, American Express, Carte Blanche credit cards 3050 JACKSON AVE. NO 5-3636 THOMPSON'S RESTAURANT 1 (if you love an intimate atmosphere, good food, and refreshing beverages, The Rubaivat is what your looking for.) A fabulous SMORGASBORD every Wed. night 1 I I, 9apOWu 9rhne 900 offers you a taste treat of a traditional Italian dish J PIZZA will hbe servedr daily from o> >C Enjoy the Finest CANTONESE FOOD Take-out Orders Anytime Open Daily from 11 a.m.to 10 p.m.. Closed Monday- STUDENTS!! FACULTY!! SCHOOL'S OUT! TIME FOR VACATION! MAKE: AIR & SHIP RESERVATIONS VACATION PLANS , 5TH RUS Call Kelly Newton, 3-2260, eves. 2-0110 C13 Drive Yourself . AND SAVE pickups, panels, stakes MOVING VANS Whit's Rent-A-Truck HU 2-4434 50 Encorse Road, Ypsilanti, Mich. Gi RENT-a-CAR Call NO 3-4156 Special weekend rates from 5 p.m. Friday till 9 am. Monday $10.00 plus 8c a mile. Rates include gas, oil, insurance. 514 E. WASHINGTON ST. Gl TRANSPQRTATION HI F1 & STEREO HI FI & STEREO PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE & REPAIRS THE MUSIC CENTER NO 5-8607 NO 2-1335 Guaranteed Diamond Needles $5.95 304 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 '57 V-W. Low mileage. R. & H. Reason- able. 213 Glen. N8 BUSINESS SERVICES STUDENT AVAILABLE for typing. Call 663-5536. J4 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 MISCELLANEOUS HAVE A PICNICI BEAT THE HEAT! Cold Watermelons Cold Pop1 Fresh Fruit Hot Barbequed Chickens Hot Barbequed Ribs at RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard Open every night 'til 12 M4 BARGAIN CORNER r I