FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1963 FflTITL THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1963 Georgia Coach, Griffith, Claims Notes Included All Formations Built for Speed AO-00= IEEDSt 4. ATLANTA VP)-Georgia football Coach Johnny Griffith testified yesterday that information alleg- edly passed to a rival coach- dis- closed the only two playing for- mations employed by his squad in their 1962 opener against Ala- bama. Griffith took the stand as a wit- ness for Curtis Publishing Co., in its defense against a $10 million libel suit by Wally Butts, former Georgia athletic director. The Sat- urday Evening Post, published by Curtis, has charged thatrButts gave Georgia football secrets to Coach Paul Bryant to Alabama. Griffith was questioned about notes allegedly taken by an insur- ance salesman who said he over- heard Butts give information to Bryant in a telephone conversa- tion last September. Buttsonian Some of the terminology in the notes was that used by Butts dur- ing his coaching career at Geor- gia, Griffith said. However, on cross-examination the coach said a description for one of the plays involved was used during his first year as head coach in 1961. He also testified that neither of the two formations were new but that both had been employed in previous seasons. Griffith said in his opinion it would be helpful to an opponent to know that Georgia would use only the two formations described in the notes. Unprepared Butts' Schroder testimony that the prepared Alabama. attorney, William H. Jr., attacked Griffith's in an attempt to show Georgia team was not for the game against Going over the scoring plays- Alabama won 35-0-Griffith ad- mitted that the first three touch- downs were scored because of er- rors or weakness on the part of Georgia players. "I didn't think we played well,' Griffith said. Griffith testified that some of the notes meant nothing to him some of them were not important and others were not true. He also denied several quotations attribut- ed to him in the magazine article. Add Lines "I made the statement that I figured somebody had been giving information to Alabama," Griffith said. But he denied a quote from the Post which said: "We had no idea it was Wally Butts." During the game, Griffith said some of his players said the Ala- bama men knew what plays Geor- gia was running and "were even calling out our plays and what we're going to do." However, he said Georgia did not have a play called "88-pop" which the Post said was yelled out by Alabama players. Plays Not Set He said the final game plan for the Alabama game was not de- cided on until Sept. 17, five days after the allegedly intercepted Butts-Bryant call. Griffith said that if Alabama scouted Georgia, then Bryant would know Georgia had used the two formations. He said 80 per cent of the plays during the game were called by the Georgia coaching staff. Earlier, Welborn B. Cody, At- lanta attorney for Curtis, said he could prove that Butts made nu- merous calls to persons engaged in gambling. Griffith said, under questioning by Schroder, who went into detail about formations and plays, that any number of plays could be run from his two formations. -Associated Press NEW WORLD LAND SPEED RECORD HOLDER-Here is "The Spirit of America" going through a test run under the helmsman- ship of Craig Breedlove, its driver. The three-ton, jet-powered, streamlined tricyle became the fastest thing on wheels Monday with a two-way average speed of 407.45 miles per hour through a measured mile on the Bonneville Salt Flats of Utah. PERSONAL WANTED-Someone to drive '63 Ram- bler to Houston or Brownsville, Texas, within the next week. Call Mrs. Castle at 5-0897. F44 DO YOU KNOW what it means if you don't pay for your Daily within the next .2 days? (Place an X in front of the correct answer.) a. The Daily will change its editor- ial policy. b. The Hatchers will invite you to yea. Xc. Your credits will be withheld. d. You will not pass go, but go directly to jail. e. It is impossible to tell from the given information. ch F45 ATTENTION ALL DAILY STAFF-The fall Daily begins operations Monday, Aug. 26. Please be here on that date as a 30-40 page paper must be put out by Friday of that week. If you can- not be here for all or part of that week, please write and let us know. F41 WANTED-Ride to New York City this weekend between Thursday and Sun- day. Call Carol Buchene at NO 2- 7554. F39 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 DEAR CH, Is there any type of insurance program at the U of M? Dear Charlie, Yes, there'is an optional Student Health Insurance program. IN addi- tion, no alcoholic beverages are sold East of Division Street, and cigarette manufacturers have recently dropped all advertising from college newspap- ers. So consider yourself protected from all eventualities. READY FOR TIGER: Fuilm1er Finishes Heavy Preparation THE 76ERS: .Name New NBA Entry PHILADELPHIA (P) - The new Philadelphia team in the National Basketball Association will be known as the Philadelphia 76ers. Irv Kosloff, club president, said the nickname was selected from 4,000 entries Walter Stalberg, a quality con- trol statistician, was the contest winner, earning an all-expense paid trip for two to San Francisco. Stalberg said his reason for 76ers was: "No athletic team has ever paid tribute to the gallant men who forged this country's independ- ence, and certainly, Philadelphia, Shrine of Liberty, should do so." Han'num Will Head arriors SAN FRANCISCO (P)-The San Francisco Warriors named Alex Hannum yesterday as head coach. Hannum coached the Syracuse Nationals in the National Basket- ball Association the past three seasons. Hannum replaces Bob Feerick, who becomes general manager. Hannum, a 1955 Southern Cali- fornia graduate, played with a number of NBA teams and won the Western Division title as player-coach with the St. Louis Hawks in 1956-57. IBADAN, Nigeria (R) - Brawny Gene Fullmer finished h e a v y training yesterday for his title fight with middleweight champion Dick Tiger Saturday by boxing three spirited rounds with Milo Savage, his Utah sparring partner. Some 300 fans cheered the Ameri- can challenger after the workout. The former champion from West Jordan, Utah, and Tiger, the pride and joy of Nigeria, will meet for the third time in a 15-rounder at Ibadan's Liberty Stadium. "What's impressed me most about Nigeria is the hospitality and friendliness of the people," said Fullmer after the drill in the Ibadan University gym. He said a partisan crowd would not upset him, adding: "But from what I have seen I Jones Leads Trackmen 1 t j Ith ouble STOCKHOLM, Sweden (R) - Hayes Jones, the American hurdl- ing champion from Detroit, scored a sprint and hurdling double yes- terday in pacing the touring Yanks to five victories in an international track and field meet in the Olym- pic Stadium. Jones won the 100-meter dash in 10.5 seconds and then captured his specialty, the 110-meter hur- dles, in 14.1. Other United States triumphs were scored by Harold Connolly of Boston in the hammer throw, 220 feet; by his wife, Olympian Olga Fitkatova Connolly, in the discus, 155'3"; and by Ron Morris of Los Angeles in the pole vault, 16'4". Jeff Fishback of San Jose State was fourth in the 3,000-meter steeplechase which was won by Belgian Gaston Roelants in the fast time of 8:31.2. Fishback's time was 8:55.4. Jim Allen of Seattle took fourth in the 400-meter run with a time of 47.5 seconds. The event was won by Belgium's Jacques Penne- waert in 47.2 seconds. think there is going to be a lot of people pulling for me Satur- day. "Nigerians have been clamoring for this fight and I think they are going all out to make it a good show," said Fullmer. "Their rules are slightly differ- ent, but I do not think they will make them too tough for me to follow." Ch F45 MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 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 tine. Clossified deadline, 3 P.M. doily Phone NO 2-4786 WANTED TO RENT ONE MAN cheap room or apt. for fall. Call Stephanie, 3-2471. L5 MISCELLANEOUS FOR ALL your shopping needs ask for Ralph at RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard Food Specialties Kitchen Utensils Open every night till 12 M2 LOST AND FOUND LOST-In the vicinity of Forest and S. Univ.-A Brown cardboard packette containing 3x5 cards. Inscribed Lud- low 0615. Reward. Call 3-4464 or 2- 7312. A FOUND-Keys; one apt. key and two car keys. License ND-4332. Contact Michigan Daily. A 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 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 665-8184 Manuscript typing, transcription, medi- cal, legal, technical conferences. mim- eographing, off-set. Quick-Accurate- Experienced. Ann Arbor Professional Service Associates 334 Catherine J2 REAL ESTATE $550 DOWN on 3 bdrm. home-Moving to Stanford Sat. Drive by 1212 Morn- ingside or call owner at 2-5866. R3 MUST SELL -- Leaving state. 3 bdrm. ranch with basement and screened porch. 13,000 ft. lot, Ann Arbor. 665- 3203. R2 TRANSPORTATION RENT-a-CAR Call NO 3-4156 Special weekend rates from 5 p.m. Friday till 9 a.m. Monday $10.00 plus 8c a mile. Rates include gas, oil, insurance. 514 E. WASHINGTON ST. 01 Days 662-7787 MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Tigers Set Record, 11 Errorless Games FOR RENT DOUBLE AVAIL. Aug. 15. Furn'd. One block from campus. $100/mo. 621 S. Forest. C42 GIRL WANTED to share apt. for fall. Call 5-4828. C41 GRADUATE. BUSINESS or professional. quiet home. Call NO 2-4738. C36 310 NORTH STATE 2 rm. apt. Also 2 double and 1 single bedrooms, furnished kitchen facili- ties, heat, gas provided. Newly deco- rated. Also 3 garages. Telephone 3- 1460. C38 CLOSE TO State Theatre-Furn'd. apt. $85 and $110/mo. 603 Z. Ann. C34 3-MAN APT. Completely furn'd. All utilities paid. $50/man. 912 Mary. NO 3- 1237. C30 MADISON AVE. APT. 2 bdrm. furn'd. apt., central air condi- tioning, special hi-fi and TV outlets. 3-6357. C39 FALL VACANCI ES APARTMENTS on campus from $95. Duplex. unfurnished, on campus, $120. Call for locations and descriptions. I CAMPUS MANAGEMENT Eves. 663-9064 C29 By The Associated Press DETROIT-George Smith, play- ing his second major league game, banged out two doubles and a triple and drove in three runs as the Detroit Tigers walloped the Boston Red Sox 10-1 last night and set an American League rec- ord of 11 straight errorless games. Veteran Frank Lary, in trouble in nearly every inning, labored to his second victory since returning from the minors last month. The Tigers also tied a major league record by playing their 11th consecutive game without an er- ror. The Baltimore Orioles set the former American League mark of 10 straight errorless games in 1962 and Cincinnati Reds estab- lished the National Record in 1953. The Tigers hanged out 16 hits off loser Earl Wilson and two suc- cessors. Rocky Colavito drove in three runs with- a single in the first and a two-run homer in the eighth. Lary helped himsel- with two singles and a perfect squeeze bunt, driving in two runs. Bill Freehan had three singles. * * * Dodgers and Ducks CHICAGO - Shortstop Maury Wills stroked four straight hits in powering the league-leading Los Angeles Dodgers and Don Drys- dale to a 4-1 rain-spattered vic- tory over the Chicago Cubs yes- terday.. Drysdale won his 14th with a six-hitter as Larry Jackson went down to his 10th defeat. Wills was the batting star with three singles and a double in the Dodgers' 10-hit attack. He opened the game with a single, scored the first run and knocked in the last run with a seventh-inning single. * * * Yanks Split WASHINGTON-Stan Williams tossed a brilliant one-hit, 1-0 shutout at the Washington Sen- ators last night, enabling the New York Yankees to split a double- header after the Senators had bombed Whitey Ford with four home runs and handed him his third straight loss in the opener, 8-5. Williams, who last went the dis- tance April 14 in his first start with the Yankees, struck out 11 and walked one. The lone hit off the hulking, former Los Angeles Dodger was Don Blasingame's double down the left field line in the third inning. He was the only Senator to go as far as second. Williams, who retired the last 19 to face him after Blasingame doubled, now has a 5-3 record. Daniels is 3-8. In the opener, light-hitting Chuck Cottier hit two homers off Ford and drove in four runs as the Senators extended their win- ning string to four straight. * * * Seventh Inning Stretch PITTSBURGH - Pittsburgh broke up a scoreless pitching duel between the Pirates' Don Card- well and Denny Lemaster of Mil- waukee with a three-run outburst in the seventh inning and beat the Braves 3-0 last night. Cardwell, who had checked the Braves on three hits going into the ninth, needed relief help from Al McBean after Hank Aaron led off with a single and walked Joe Torre. Major League Standings McBean tossed two doubleplay pitches, one to Gene Oliver that the Pirates muffed and one to Denis Menke that ended the game. * * * Gentile Ungentle BALTIMORE-Jim Gentile, de- posed Baltimore clean-up hitter, knocked in four runs with a pair of homers and powered the Orioles to a 6-4 victory over the Cleve- land Indians last night. The big first baseman's three- run homer capped a five-run first inning rally as Cleveland starter Barry Latman failed to retire any of the five batters he faced. Gen- tile's leadoff homer in the sixth off Pete Ramos was the only other hit allowed by three Indian relief pitchers. * *; * Jay Jolted PHILADELPHIA - The Phila- delphia Phillies hammered Cin- cinnati's Joey Jay for six doubles and a triple in a 7-1 victory over the Reds last night in the second game of a doubleheader. The Reds won the opener 6-4 when an error and a wild pitch by ace Philadelphia reliever Jack Baldschun led to two runs in the 10th inning. Lefty Dennis Bennett won the second game, pitching his first complete game since coming off the injured list Johnny Callison, with three doubles; Tony Taylor, with a tri- ple, double and single, and Wes Covington with a double and sin- gle and two runs batted in lower- ed the boom on Jay as the Phil- lies remained one game behind the Reds in the battle for fifth place in the National League. * . . Counts Anyway NEW YORK - The St. Louis Cardinals, making the most of some scratch hits, Met mental lapses and sacrifice flies, built up a three-run edge and then held off the scrambling New Yorkers 4-3: last night. The Cards, who banged out 11 hits,. got their first run on a fielder's choice when Stan Musial beat a throw to first on a poten- tial double play grounder and their second on a wild pitch. The third was set up on a wild pitch and the fourth was moved into scoring position by a base on balls. Frank Thomas singled in a Met run in the first, Ron Hunt drove in the fifth inning run with a sacrifice fly and Duke Carmel singled in another in the sixth. s : Attention Triandos KANSAS CITY - Pinch-hitter George Alusik rapped a ninth in- ning single, giving Kansas City a 4-3 victory over Chicago last night after the tie-breaking run had reached first on a dropped third strike. With knuckleball specialist Hoyt Wilhelm pitching for the White Sox and his regular catcher, J. C. Martin on the bench, Camilo Car- reon was unable to hold a third strike on Gino Cimoli and the A's outfielder raced to first base on the passed ball. A wild pitch got him to second and Alusik brought him home with a single off Jim Brosnan. A HAIRCUT IN A HURRY?? * 4 Master Barbers " Air-Conditioned Welcome to U-M BARBERS near Kresge's USED CARS '56 CHEVY Bel Air, 4d, 8, good condi- tion, heater, radio. $350 or best offer. 662-3540 after 6 p.m. N15 '52 CHEVY, very good condition, no rust. Call 5-8701. N14 VW '56-Good condition. $495. 665-0012 after 6 p.m. N '62 CORVAIR Monza, Black, 4 sp. Very good condition. Ph. Dave at 5-4111, Ext. 233. N11 '58 FORD Wagon, 6 cylinder, standard trans. $500. 2-2695. N12 '57 V-W. Low mileage. R. & H. Reason- able. 213 Glen. N8 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. Call HU 3-5973. 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. R A-1 NEW AND USED INSTRUMENTS BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W.,Washington X1 H ELP,WANTED COLLEGE MEN to arrange for Hi-Fi and stereo demonstrations for re- mainder of summer. Call Livonia 425- 3560. H8 WANTED - GHOST WRITER. Contact Michigan Daily, Box 6. H7 OVERBECK'S Headquarters for Medical Books 1216 S. University CAMPUS APTS. Remodeled and completely furn'd. for 3 or 4 persons. Some including elec- tricity. $135-$185/mo. NO 5-9569. WANT SOMETHING REALLY DIFFERENT? Check the 1000 OAKLAND APTS. " New deluxe 2 and 3 bedroom apartments " 1100 sq. ft. of floor space " Giant-size closets s Large double bath with vanity " Private balconies and courts " Fully carpeted * Completely furnished in Danish Modern " Beautifully landscaped " Ideal for 3, 4 or 5 persons Finest location, 3 blocks from campus in. QUIET RESIDENTIAL SETTING Ready for your inspection now-drive by or Phone 453-3287. 1000 Oakland Avenue 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. C25 LOOKING FOR APT.? Campus loca- tions f or fall. Wide selection of new and redecorated bidge. Call 3-0511 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Aptes. Ltd., 530 S. Forest. 020 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, parkingr 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 aptes. 04 FOXCROFT APARTMENTS South State near Hill. DesignedF and furnished for 4, 5, or 6 stuaent occupants. 2 bedrooms each. Drive Yourself ..-- AND SAVE pickups, panels, stakes MOVING VANS Whit's Rent-A-Truck HU 2-4434 50 Encorse Road, Ypsilanti, Mich. Gi OVERBECK'S Headquarters for LAW BOOKS 1216 S. University AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. NewYork 69 40 .633 Chicago 61 48 .560 Baltimore 63 51 .552 x-Minnesota 59 50 .541 Boston 54 55 .496: Cleveland 54 59 .478: x-Los Angeles 54 60 .474 Kansas City 50 59 .459 Detroit 47 60 .439 Washington 41 70 .369 x-Played night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 1, Washington 0 Washington 8, New York 5 Baltimore 6, Cleveland 4 Detroit 10, Boston 1 Kansas City 4, Chicago 3 Minnesota at Los Angeles (Inc) TODAY'S GAMES New York at Washington (n) Chicago at Kansas City (n) Cleveland at Baltimore (n) Boston at Detroit Minnesota at Los Angeles (n) NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 8 8g 10 15 17 171 19 21 29 GB 5? 9 91 10 12 13f 25 34 RENT A CAR $5.00/24 hr. day Plus 5c per mile For info call NO 5-3112 NORTH BROS. LEASING INC. 3250 Washtenow Ave. (inn America) " " i " ." Most spacious available Separate dining room Air conditioning Heat furnished Extra storgae space Call Kelly Newton, 3-2260, eves. 2-0110 013 m MEET THE MOST INTERESTING £ Los Angeles x-San Francisco St. Louis Cincinnati Chicago Philadelphia Milwaukee Pittsburgh x-Houston New York w 68 62 63 61 58 59 57 54 43 34 L 43 49 49 54 52 54 56 56 69 77 Pct. .612 .559 .562 .530 .527 .522 .504 .491 .384 .306 (4 I x-Played night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 4, Chicago 1 St. Louis 4, New York 1 Pittsburgh 3, Milwaukee 0 San Francisco at Houston (inc) Cincinnati 6, Philadelphia 4 Philadelphia 7, Cincinnati 1 TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at Chicago San Francisco at Houston (n) Cincinnati at Philadelphia (n) Milwaukee at Pittsburgh (n) St. Louis at New York ... r er 3$ " ; . 1 ,1 PEOPLE!1 Be a 'Route Carrier for M-1 AM * E-1e 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 032 BIKES AND SCOOTERS HONDA of Ann Arbor 1906 Packard Road 665-9281 Z2 WANTED TO BUY WANTED-Scooter or Motor bike. Cheap, Call Stephanie; 3-2471. K! BARGAIN CORNER Elastic Conditioning and Training Weights I II I