VR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WED INESDAY. M 4JOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: 'Monster' Saves Red Sox {.'-. By The Associated Press BOSTON-Dick (The Monster) Radatz, making dramatic relief appearances, saved victories for cranky-armed Boston right-hand- ers Bill Monbouquette and Earl Wilson in a 4-1, 3-2 doubleheader sweep over Cleveland last night. The 245-pound giant fired two fastballs to save Monbouquette- winning his ninth straight-from a bases-loaded jam when the lat- ter got a hitch in his pitching arm late in the opener. Wilson had a three-hit shutout going through six innings of the night-cap until he was forced out after a collision at first base. His first relief, Arnold Earley, ran afoul of two runs in the eighth, and the call for Radatz was sounded again. Cards Take First ST. LOUIS-The St. Louis Card- inals regained first place in the National League last night and dropped San Francisco from the top spot into third by beating the Giants 6-5 on Orlando Cepeda's ninth inning throwing error. * * * Robinson Lifts White Sox CHICAGO - Floyd Robinson's tie-breaking home run in the sev- enth inning powered the Chicago White Sox to a 2-1 victory over New York last night that lifted them into a virtual tie with the American League leading Yankees. Robinson's homer, his seventh of the season arid his first hit in 11 times at bat, brought the tre- mendous crowd of 46,177 to its feet and gave the White Sox their fourth victory without defeat over the Yankees this season. * * * Koufax Outduels O'Toole CINCINNATI - Sandy Koufax bested Jim O'Toole in a duel be- tween two of the National. League's premier left-handers last night, pitching the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 4-1 triumph over the. I-M Sportlight Jack Rashleigh, Sigma Phi Epsilon's 12-sport athlete, has won his second straight Athlete of the Year award, Intramural Director Earl Riskey announced yesterday. Named to the all-star teams in both basketball and softball, the Flint senior-to-be was far ahead of any of the other I-M competitors, according to Riskey. Upon his return to school in the fall, Rashleigh will receive a trophy presented annually by The Daily to the winner. Riskey said he expects more than 20 teams to enter the I-M sum- mer softball league before the deadline this Friday. Play starts Mon- day and continues for six weeks, and games will be played at 6:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday. He said that individuals as well as teams can apply for the competition, and that umpiring jobs are still open. Riskey also announced that tentative tournaments have been set for July in tennis, golf, squash, handball, paddleball and horseshoes. As in softball, the only requisite is that entrants must be summer school students at the University. A small basketball league is another possibility for the summer I-M program, Riskey said, if four teams apply for play. The Sports Bldg., 606 Hoover near State, will be open from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday. The pool is open for general swimming from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, and a co- recreation program for students and faculty members will be held from 7:30 to 10 p.m. on Wednesdays. Among the activities are swim- ming, Trampoline, volleyball, badminton, squash, paddleball and handball. Cincinnati Reds. Jim Gilliam struck the key blow for the Dodgers with a double that snapped a 1-1 tie in the eighth inning. * * 0 Bunning Loses Two-Hitter ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS - Lee Stange scattered five Detroit singles last night as Minnesota edged the Tigers 1-0 on Harmon Killebrew's long home run over the center field fence in the third inning. Stange, up for another trial from the minors, gained his sec- ond straight victory and bested Detroit's Jim Bunning. Bunning only gave up a single to Rich Rol- lins in the seventh after Kille- brew's homer. * * * Jackson Tames Mets NEW YORK -- Larry Jackson continued his mastery over New York last night, pitching the Chi- cago Cubs to a 4-1 victory over the Mets with a four-hit perform- ance. The Cubs broke a 1-1 tie in the seventh inning when they cracked through Jay Hook for three runs on two hits, two walks and an error. Braves Roll On MILWAUKEE - The Milwaukee Braves continued their hot streak by defeating Houston, 4-0, last night as righthander Tony Clon- inger fired a four-hitter in hand- ing the punchless Colts their 10th straight defeat. Given all the margin he needed when Lee Mayo hit Houston start- er Ken Johnson's first pitch of the game for a homer, Cloninger breezed to his third triumph in seven decisions. He struck out five and walked one. Demeter Blasts Phillies PITTSBURGH-Don Demeter's leadoff home run in the top of the 10th inning powered the Philadel- phia Phillies to a 5-4 victory over. the Pittsburgh Pirates last night. Demeter's homer, his 15th, came off Harvey Haddix, the sixth Pirate pitcher. * * *0 KC Has Big Inning KANSAS CITY - The Kansas City Athletics, equalled their big- gest. scoring inning of the year with a six-run sixth inning last night and went- on to an 8-4, vic- tory over the Washington Sen- ators. The Senators are nearing the end of a road trip on which they have lost 14 of 16 games. Clay Drives Points Rise License Dies FRANKFORT, Ky. (,)-Ground- ed yesterday was Cassius Clay. The fighter's no driver, his home state is sad to relate. This bit of doggerel, along the lines the heavyweight boxed is fond of creating, describes the latest traffic predicament of the 21-year-old Louisville resident. Two belated traffic conviction reports from Florida have sent clay's point rating to the forbid- den 12, which in Kentucky is equivalent to the 10-count in the boxing ring. Last March 29, the talkative tussler regained his license after a previous suspension, on grounds that convictions in Indiana and Georgia violated his constitutional rights. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Top Two Americans Pass First Round at Wimbledon I CLASSIFIEDS BIKES AND SCOOTERS MICHIGAN DAILY New York Chicago Boston Minnesota Cleveland x-Baltimore x-Los Angeles Kansas City Detroit Washington x-Played nightI W L 40 26 43 29 38 29 38 32 36 34 37 35 37 36 33 36 27 41 22 53 game. Pct. GB .606 - .597 -- .567 3 .543 4 .514 5;/z .514 6 .507 6% .478 8Y2 .397 14 .293 22Y2 WIMBLEDON, Eng. (P)-Chuck Mckinley and Frank Froehling, the' two top-ranking Americans, ad- vanced to the second round of the Wimbledon Tennis Championships yesterday. They were joined by Arthur Ashe of Richmond, Va., the first American Negro male ever to play at Wimbledon, young Charles Pa- sarell of Santurce, Puerto Rico, and Bob Siska of San Francisco. But Donald Dell of Bethesda, Md., who lost a strenuous five- setter, 1-6, 6-8, 6-3,3-6, 6-3 to Froehling; Eugene Scott, of St. James, N. Y.; and Cliff Buchholz of St. Louis were among those eliminated on the rain-delayed program. McKinley Clowns, Wins McKinley, the number-one Yank from St. Louis, clowned around at times in beating Cliff Drysdale of South Africa 6-3, 6-3, 8-6. Ashe, after dropping the first two sets, made a brilliant recovery and defeated Carlos Fernandez of Brazil 3-6, 4-6, 6-4, 6-4, 6-1. Ashe broke his opponent's service three times in the final set. Pasarell, 19-year-old Davis Cup prospect, conquered Franz Hainka of Austria 6-3, 6-3, 7-5. Siska, of San Francisco, beat Ion Tiriac of Romania, 6-4, 6-2, 7-5. Aussie Whips Scott Dwen Davidson, a left-handed Australian, whipped Eugene Scott, eighth ranking American from St. James, N. Y., 9-7, 6-4, 9-7. Scott had trouble with his service while Davidson won all his services. The Froehling-Dell duel lasted three hours. Froehling, of Coral Gables, Fla., got his booming ser- vice going in the fifth set and romped to a 5-2 lead. Nicola Pietrangeli, the lanky Italian David Cup veteran, ousted Buchholz 6-3, 3-6, 4-6, 6-3, 6-3 in the completion of a match halted by darkness and rain Monday. Australia's Margaret Smith, who lost her bid for a women's grand slam in 1962 when she was upset in the first round at Wimbledon by Billie' Jean Moffitt of Long beach, Calif., got by her first match easily, Gets Past Second Match The tall, husky Aussie who is top-seeded, trounced Mrs. Louise Brown of Canada, 6-1, 6-1, in a second round match. Other women's winners included Carole Caldwell of Santa Monica, Calif., Brazil's Maria Bueno, the 1959 and 1960 Wimbledon queen, in second round matches, and Mrs. Vera Sukova of Cnechoslovakia and Mrs. Dorothy Head Knode of the Canal Zone, Panama, in firs; round contests. Miss Caldwell, ranked fourth in the United States but unseeded here, downed Christiane Mercelis of Belgium, 6-1, 6-2. Miss Bueno tumbled Mrs. Paveen Ahmed of Pakistan, 6-0, 6-0. McKinley, sometimes brilliant and sometimes erratic, brought plenty of life and energy to the first court with a display of at- tacking tennis. Double Standard Once he turned to a line judge and cracked: "How come I'm foot- faulted at this end and never at the other." Another time he took a soccer kick at the ball after a poor shot. But throughout the match the crowd had plenty to keep them entertained. The day produced a mixed bag of tennis with men's singles matches rained off Monday in- cluded on the same program as women's singles. B~eatty Of f OWnRecord TORONTO (R)- Barrel-chested Jim Beatty of Los Angeles raced to a 3:56.0 mile in the Toronto International Games yesterday, just a half second off his Ameri- can Citizen's record. Beatty, an insurance company public relations officer, had turned in his best career mark and the fastest ever by an American June 7 when he was caught in 3:55.5 in the Compton Relays, but still lost the race to New Zealand's world record-holder, Peter Snell. Beatty was pushed to his Cana- dian record by Jim Grelle, also running for the Los Angeles Track Club, who timed 3:56.1. Ulis Williams of Arizona State, who is competing for the Los An- geles Track Club, won the 440- yard run in a modest :46 3. His arch rival, Adolph Plummer of New Mexico, was second in :46.6. The mark, far off the best per- formance by either, also set a Canadian record. Dave Steen of Burnby, B.C., also set a Canadian record with a toss of 60'1" in the shot put. Other winners were Hayes Jones in the hurdles, John Uelses in the pole vault and Bob Humphreys in the discus. HONDA of Ann Arbor 1906 Packard Road 665-9281 Z MUSICAL MDSE. RADIOS, REPAIRS TROMBONE-Good Condition. Reason- able. Call T. Eyrick, 662-2906. X3 A-i NEW AND USED INSTRUMENTS BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington Xi HELP WANTED WANTED: Someone with shorthand ability for part-time work. Call Rom Paul, NO 3-4894, 5-7. H FOR RENT $5 SUMMER PARKING near SAB. NO 8-8732. CIO CAMPUS 3 rms. furnished apt. Reduced for the summer. $55 up. NO 3-4322. C6 2-BEDROOM furnished apt. for sum- mer. All utilities, $100/mo. NO 2-0879. C12 ROOMS FOR MEN, close to campus, kitchen. Call HU 2-7026 or NO 2-7667. A3 SUMMER ONLY-room in frat house. $35/mo. All utilities and maid service. NO 5-6115. C1 ATTRACTIVE ROOM for women stu- dent off Geddes, past Arb. NO 2-2612. C9 CAMPUS-DOWNTOWN AREA Furnished efficiensy apt. and two room newly furnished apt. 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GB .583 - .575 l .577 '2 .555 2 .542 3 .507 5Y2 .471 8 .444 10 .384 14 .365 16 Whit's Rent-A-Truck HU 2-4434 50 Ecorse Road, Ypsilanti, Michigan G1 FOR SALE DEACON'S BENCH - Early American maple, excellent condition. 662-0937. 13 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. J1 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 6, San Francisco 5 Los Angeles 4, Cincinnati 1 Chicago 4, New York 1: Milwaukee 4, Houston 0 Philadelphia 5, Pittsburgh 4 TODAY'S GAMES San Francisco at St. Louis (n) Los Angeles at Cincinnati (n) Philadelphia at Pittsburgh (n) Chicago at New York (n) Houston at Milwaukee (n) MISCELLANEOJS MEETING THIS FALL: Criler Predicts Aid Cutback t' BE HAPPY GO HONDA Every outing is happier when you ride the fabulous Honda "50"...the light and lively two-wheel compact everyone's talking about, everyone's ridingI Safer, easier to ride than a bike... more fun than anything. up to 225 miles per gallon. electric starter optional. . cruises at 45 mph. automatic clutch-3-speed transmission. * choice of models and colors. CONVENIENT TERMS FROM p245 FRIENDLY SERVICE plus destination and set-up charge HONDA of Ann Arbor 1906 Packard Road 665-9281 By DAVE GOOD Co-sports Editor Hardly a month goes by.with- out some dignitary somewhere starting a commotion about in- creased "professionalism" in col- legiate sports-athletes competing for pay under the colors of an in- stitution of higher learning. University Athletic D i r e c to r H. O. (Fritz) Crisler, who would like to see American colleges stop all special financial aid to ath- letes, says the Western Conference (Big Ten) may soon decide to make cutbacks - but not for his reasons. "I stand pretty much alone on this, but I'd just as soon see col- lege athletics conducted on the proposition that competitors be eligible only for general aid given to other students -- on the basis of scholarship and need," Crisler explained. 'Pros' In to Stay "My idea is to have prospective athletes-without recruiting pres- sure - choose the school where they would like to get a degree, and then have these people play each other," he added. "But this idea 'is outmoded today and doesn't have a chance of accept- ance. "Recruiting has become part of our way of life. It's become con- sistent with our whole attitude." At a less extreme position, Cris- ler has been backing a new Big Ten proposal to limit the number of complete athletic scholarships distributed by each school. At the annual spring business meetings May 17, the conference athletic directors and faculty representa- tives heard a committee report on the advisability of reducing each school's total from 80 to 55 full athletic scholarships or "tenders." Partial tenders were to be in- creased to 40. The result was that administra- tors have planned a special meet- ing early in the fall to decide on the matter. Costs Rising The impetus to the move for cutbacks, however, has stemmed from cold practicality of rising costs and not, as Crisler puts it, from "a situation which does not correspond with my general phil- osophy." Other policy-makers around the conference have become alerted to costs which Crisler estimates have risen to an average of $250,000 a year on aid alone. "Costs are getting so high that it's inevitable they're going to be cut back," Crisler points out. "But you can't single out aid; salaries, equipment and travel costs are just as important." Crisler says he looks for the conference directors to accept cut- backs in aid in the fall, although he cannot predict what form they will take. Partial Tenders Rise Some close to the situation have guessed that tenders in sports oth- er than football and basketball may eventually be reduced to a partial status, covering only tui- tion, or tuition and books. Crisler says he favors only a slight reduction in football and basketball scholarships, "where the most vicious recruiting goes on and the biggest expense is in- curred," and would agree to cut- backs in the so-called minor sports only because most athletic conferences do not compete very energetically in these areas, so that the Big Ten would not be placed at a recruiting disadvan- tage. In fact, Crisler says he can fore- see increased cooperation among the Big Ten, long the most infiu- ential collegiate conference in the country, and the others. The eventual result, he adds, could be a nationwide agreement for reduction in financial aid to athletes. The basis for such op- timism is the interconference let- ter of intent, designed to prevent_ one league from "stealing" an ath- lete already signed with a school in another league. This letter of intent was ap- proved at this spring's Big Ten business meeting and was made the basis for cooperation among the Big Ten, Big Eight, Atlantic Coast, Missouri Valley, South- eastern and Southwest confer- ences as well as four independents -Penn State, Syracuse, Pitts- burgh and West Virginia. "If this proves workable, other conferences may join in," Crisler explains. "Several have shown sympathy to the move even though they haven't joined. As fir as interconference aid cut- backs go, there is a committee in the NCAA (National Collegiate Athletic Association) working on that. Advancements may be made there, too." i ON A HOT DAY STAY COOL! Cold Watermelons Cold Pop Fresh Fruit RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard Always open 'til Midnight M6 LOST AND FOUND LOST-Believed stolen; Black Humber man's bicycle, 3-speed, dyno-hub. Reward, NO 3-7817. Al BARGAIN CORNER SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI's Galore! 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