100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

June 28, 1963 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1963-06-28

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

rt" THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FRIDAY, JUNE 2

,..

AJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP:
Herbert Pitches White Sox Nearer Top
nIm -------------

Only Two of Six Yanks
Still Alive in Wimbledon

CLASSIFIEDS

this year, got little help yester-
CHICAGO-The Chicago White day from the flashy Bouton, who
x jolted New York's 10-game had won his three starts, eight of
nner, Jim Bouton, for 10 hits in nine previous decisions and lost
ve innings en route to a 6-0 only two.
ctory yesterday which swept the * * *
x into a virtual first-place tie Luplow Takes Dive
th the Yankees. BOSTON-Outfielder Al Luplow
Hurling the Sox to their third dived into the bullpen in right,
umph in this windup of a four- center field to take Dick Wil-
me set was Ray Herbert, whose liams' bid for a three-run homer
eady five-hit job gave him an in the eighth inning and preserved
4 season mark and sixth shut- a 6-4 Cleveland victory over Bos-
t of the year. ton yesterday.
The Yanks, who have won only The catch, possibly one of the
ie of six starts against the Sox greatest ever in baseball, resulted

Major League Standings,
AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB W L Pct. GB
York 41 27 .603 - St. Louis 43 30 .589 -
go 44 30 .595 - Los Angeles 42 30 .583 2
n 39 30 .565 2% San Francisco 42 32 .568 1x/
esota 40 32 556 3 Cincinnati 40 33 .548 3
land 37 35 .514 6 Chicago 39 34 .534 4
ngeles 39 37 .513 6 Milwaukee 36 36 .500 6Y2
more 38 37 .507 6/ Philadelphia 34 40 .460 91/2
as City 33 37 .471 9 Pittsburgh 33 39 .458 9Y2
it 27 43 .386 15 New York 29 45 .392 14,'
lngton 23 53 .303 22 Houston 28 47 .373 16
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
land 6, Boston 4 Philadelphia 13, Pittsburgh 4
go 6, New York 0 (Only game scheduled)

I

in Red Sox Manager Johnny Pes-
ky finishing the game under offi-
cial protest.
Pesky argued that the drive
should have been a home run.
Umpire Joe Paparellahruled it
merely a sacrifice fly, scoring Lu
Clinton from third base.
Nats Make It 3-14
KANSAS CITY-The Washing-
ton Senators clubbed three home
runs. yesterday-one of them Don
Zimmer's first in the American
League-and defeated the Kan-
sas City Athletics, 4-2, to end a
17-game road trip on which they
scored three victories.
Jim King "opened the Washing-
ton scoring in the first inning
with his 13th homer. Zimmer, who
joined the Senators last Tuesday,
homered in the fourth to make the
score 2-0.
* * *
Twins Keep Winning
ST. PAUL-MINNESOTA-Min-
nesota's surging Twins cracked a
4-4 tie with a six-run explosion in
the sixth inning yesterday and
buried Detroit, 10-6, to sweep a
three-game series.
The triumph, the Twins' fourth
in a row and eighth in their last
11 games, pulled Minnesota with-
in one-half game of third-place
Boston and within three games of
first place in the American
League.
Bill Freehan (former Michigan
catcher) hit a two-run homer for

Detroit in the eighth.
Minnesota's Vic Power was
ejected from the game in the
fifth when he took a swing at Re-
gan after the pair exchanged words
at first base.
Rookie Wins 10th
PITTSBURGH - Rookie sensa-
tion Ray Culp gained his 10th
victory and John Callison hit for
the cycle last night as the Phila-
delphia Phillies walloped the Pitts-
burgh Pirates, 13-4.
Culp, loser of five games, al-
lowed only two hits in the first
six innings.
Other Clay
Has Lip, Too
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (K') - Ru-
dolph Valentino Clay, brother of
heavyweight poet Cassius, wants
to fight Raymond Patterson,
brother of dethroned heavyweight
champion Floyd, the night Cas-
sius meets Sonny Liston.
Rudy said yesterday that he will
turn professional on the Clay-
Liston card if a match is arrang-
ed between the heavyweight cham-
pion and the Louisville Lip.
He is a heavyweight and has
an impressive record as an ama-
teur.

WIMBLEDON, England R) -v
Chuck McKinley and Fr a nk
Froehling, America's one - two
punch, made the round of 16 in
men's singles at the Wimbledon
Tennis Championships yesterday
as Arthur Ashe, Jack Frost, Tom
Edlefsen and Herbie Flam were
'beaten.
McKinley, the 22-year-old top-
ranked American from St. Louis
who is seeded fourth, needed only
50 minutes in a 6-3, 6-3, 6-2 rout
of Ashe, the first American Ne-
gro to compete in the Wimbledon.
Froehling, rated right behind
McKinley in the United States but
not seeded at Wimbledon, won his
third round on the retirement of
37-year-old Bob Howe of Austral-
ia. The 6'3" player from Coral
Gables, Fla., led 6-3, 6-4, 3-2 when
Howe called it off due to an in-
jured right forearm.
"Froehling was serving well,"

said Howe. "I couldn't break and
I couldn't hold my own service.
So there was nothing to do but
retire."
The match that set Wimbledon
afire, however, was the struggle
between Spain's Manuel Santana,
seeded second, and Rafael Osuna
of Mexico and Southern Calif or-
nia.
Santana finally won 2-6, 0-6, 6-
1, 6-3, 6-4 in a center court match
before a sellout crowd of 17,000.
The crowd roared its apprecia-
tion. The players applauded each
other. Even the hardened news-
men in the press stand stood and
cheered.
In women's singles, Darlene
Hard of Long Beach, Calif., won
her third round match from Helga
Schultze of Germany 6-3, 6-0 but
Carol Hanks of St. Louis was elim-
inated by Margaret Hunt of South
Africa who won 4-6, 6-2, 8-6.

SPORTS SHORTS:
First Comeback Try
Failure for Gonzales

TODAY'S GAMES TODAY'S GAMES]
leveland at Chicago (n) Chicago at Philadelphia (n)j
,ansas City at Baltimore (n) New York at Pittsburgh (n)
oston at New York (n) St. Louis at Houston (n)
os Angeles at Detroit (2, t-n) Milwaukee at Los Angeles (n)
innesota at Washington (2, t-n) Cincinnati at San Francisco (n)

I

fl

to

l

'C

ut

.is

[Ce

.e

d

By The Associated Press
NEW YORK-Richard (Pancho)
Gonzales, the 35-year-old long-
time king of pro tennis, failed
sadly on a comeback attempt yes-
terday, as Alex Olmedo of Peru
demolished him in the first round
of the U. S. Pro Tennis Cham-
pionship at Forest Hills, 10-8, 2-6,
6-0, 6-1
Funny Man
Sinks Tee Shot
For His Three
TORONTO (M) - Comedian
Frank 'Shuster fired a hole-in-one
yesterday, but had to settle for a
par three.
Shuster's first tee-shot on Oak-
dale Golf Club's 225-yard fifth
hole flew out of bounds.
Taking a stroke and distance
penalty, he hit another four-wood
shot off the tee right into the cap
for par.

OLD HEIDELBERG
211-213 N. Main St. NO 8-9590

Gonzalez showed the form that
made him the king of the rackets
for nearly 15 years only in the
first two sets.
*' * *

9h TYRGINMRl

Player Tied for Lead
CLEVELAND - Two veterans
and one unknown ripped five.
strokes off par yesterday, with
scores of 66 to lead the birdie-
filled first round of the $110,000
Cleveland Open Golf Tournament.
Heading the pack over Beech-
mont Country Club's 6,618-yard
par, 71 layout were Gary Player,
the dapper South African who was
garbed in white from head to toe
instead of his usual black; Bo
Winninger, the blond, big-game
hunter from Oklahoma City; and
30-year-old Bill Eggers of Hender-
son, Nev.
.' * *
East, West To Play
BUFFALO, N. Y.-Lee Roy Jor-
dan, 210-pound Alabama lineman,
will captain the East team in the
All-America football game tomor-
row but the West team will have
three captains.
The West players had difficulty
trying to pick a captain, and the
voting ended in a tie for quarter-
back Bill Nelsen of Southern Cali-
fornia, linebacker John Treadwell
of Texas and halfback Kermit
Alexander of UCLA.
* * *
Hull Raps Federations
SAN FRANCISCO - CoL Don
Hull, executive secretary of the
AUU, called on university ,presi-
dents and top administrators yes-
terday to make a study of facts
behind the nation's raging athletic
controversy.
"Ifnenough leaders of educa-
tional institutions learn the truth
and learn the facts of the situa-
tion, they'll call a halt to the'
federations," Hull said at a news
conference.

PERSONAL
SUE' BOODER - Boy wants date with
you, good looks, good personality,
good references. Call 662-3241, E. 31.
F1
HELP WANTED
BLIND STUDENT needs combination
reader-typist from July 1 to Sept. .
Preferably applicant not in summer
school.- Payment, salary. Call NO 8-
8156, only from 6-7 p.m. Hi
FOR RENT
ATTRACTIVE-Furnished, 4-rooms and
bath. 2nd floor of duplex. Clean and
reasonable. Phone NO 2-2625. C
FURN'D. APT.-Sub-let, four men. Call
NO 5-9678. C15
CAMPUS 3 rms. furnished apt. Reduced
for the summer. $55 up. NO 34322.06
CAMPUS AREA-Entire 1st floor, 4
rms. and bath, newly remodeled and
furn'd. Summer only $80/mo. 665-
7323 after 5 p.m. 014
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
CAMPUS-DOWNTOWN AREA
Furnished efficiensy apt. and tworoom
newly furnished apt. NO 3-4325. C8
GIRL TO SHARE campus-two bed-
room, nicely furnished. 721 S. Forest.
Call NO 2-9188. 02
BETWEEN hospitals and Rackham, ef-
ficiency with separate kitchen and
bath. Summer and fall. $75. NO 2-
0070. C7
FURN'D APT. on Hill St. for 2 or 3.
All utilities pd. Call 8-9538 after 8
p.m. 2-3512. C5
SUMMER--Furnished apartment, $50/
mo. Close to I-M Bldg. One room and
kitchen, private bath. Call NO 2-7274.
C13
SUMMER ONLY
Block from campus. Spacious newly
decorated apartment to sublet. $
bedrooms, jalousied porch. $110/mo.
(another for $70/mo.) NO 3-7268.
ili
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.
4
CAMPUS APTS.
REDUCED
SUMMER RENTS
Remodeled and completely furn'd. for
1, 2, 3, 4 persons. $50-90/mo. Few still
available for fall. Single student only.
NO 5-9405.
Cie
FOXCROFT
APARTMENTS
South State near Hill. Designed and
furnished for 4, 5, or 6 student
occupants. 2 bedrooms each.
" Most spacious available
" Separate dining Loom
" Air conditioning
" Heat furnished
: Extra storage space
Call Kelly Newton, 3-2260, eves. 2-0110
013
USED CARS
1960 FIAT Sports Convertible. Exce-
lent Cond. Call NO 2-9227. N2
'61 VW."Like new," R&H, luggage car-
rier. No rust, low mileage. Call 665-
9681 after 6. N3
BARGAIN CORNER
SAM'S STORE
Has Genuine LEVI's Galore!
"WHITE LEVI'S"
SLIM-FITS

$4.49
FOR "GUYS AND DOLLS"
Black, brown, loden,
"white,' cactus, light blue.
SAM'S STORE
122 E. Washington

MICHIGAN DAILY
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
RATES
LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS
2 .70 1.95 3.45
3 .85 2.40 4.20G
4 1.00 2.85 4.95
Figure 5 overage words to a line.
Classiied deadline, 3 P.M. dily
Phone NO 2-4786
LOST AND FOUND
LOST - BELIEVED STOLEN - Black
Humber man's bicycle, dyno-hub.
REWARD. NO 3-7817, Ser. No 7506
PH. Al
FOR SALE
HALF-PRICE - Must sell Stratford
Shakespeare Festival Tickets (2 each)
for matinee and evening, Sat. June
29-yalso, goodhotel reservations. Call
0865-0990 Friday. 80
EXCELLENT TV-$80, excellent type-
writer-$50. Call NO 5-7908. BS
DEACON'S BENCH - Early American
maple, excellent condition. 682-0937.
.B'
HI FI-Jarrard RC-88 changer, Picker-
ing U-388T cartridge, Electro-Voice
12TRXB speaker in Argos enclosure,
Knight 30 W Mono. integrated Amp-
Pre-Amp. Will sell together or sepa-
rately. Sacrifice. Leave message for
Jim at NO 2-9890. B4
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.
Drive Yourself .
AND SAVE
pickups, panels, stakes
MOVING VANS
Whit's Rent-A-Truck
HU112-4434
50 Ecorse Road, Ypsilanti, Michigan
01
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
MISCELLANEOUS
At The RUBAIYAT CONTINENTAL
DINING
For the light drinker: gin
We have everything
saturated licking corks
Ma
HAVE A PICNIC I
BEAT THE HEAT!
Cold Watermelons
Cold Pop
Fresh Fruit
Hot Barbequed Chickens
Hot Barbequed Ribs
at
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard
Open every night 'til 12 M4
BIKES AND SCOOTERS
HONDA of Ann Arbor
1906 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

1

.}

i

RESTAURANT
State Street on Campus

Phone NO 3-3441

Specializing in GERMAN FOOD,.
FINE BEER, WINE, LIQUOR
PARKING ON ASHLEY ST.
Daily 11 A.M.-2 A.M. Closed Mondays

FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY SPECIAL DINNER
Cold Baked Virginia Ham

11

Served with homemade potato salad,
tomato wedges, roll and butter, iced tea.
A delicious hot weather treat ............

$135

7
Cocktail lounge . . .Restaurant
Featuring

Hours: 7 A.M. 'til 8 P.M. Daily and Sunday

THOMP11SON'S RESTAURANT
9,atrnu4(op 9iite 9,00W
offers you a taste treat
of a traditional Italian dish
IPIZZAj1
will be served doily from
12 Noon to 2 P.M. and 5 P.M. to 2 A.M.
FREE DELIVERY
from 5 P.M. to 2 A.M.
INCLUDING NORTH CAMPUS
TAKE-OUT SERVICE AVAILABLE
OPEN 24 HOURS Open 7 days a week
221 N. Main St.-Opposite the Post Office
Phone NO 8-9550 or NO 3-3857

GRAD MIXER
VFW-314 E. Liberty
Friday, June 28
9 to 12 p.m. @ Stag or Drag
Refreshments $1 Donation
ARDEN MIESEN'S BAND
Courtesy of Don Gillis
Sponsored by
Graduate Student Council

Seafood
Entertaini
. U U

. Steaks
ment
. . . by Paul Tompkins

3050 Jackson Rd.

665-3636

"SAMS STORE
Has Levi's Galore"~
for men, ladies and boys
GENUINE LEVI'S SLIM FITS
* ALL COLORS - white, cocoa brown,

4 A.
Enjoy the FinestO
CANTONESEY
O FOOD 0
0 Take-out Orders Anytime
Open Daily
from 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
d -Closed Monday- ----

05 Church

NO 5-6607

III

.1

11

,Conlinn/a/l ffl9ra

black,

loden

green,

cactus

green, light

blue and levi dungarees ....

'4.49

Subscribe
to
The
Michigan
Daily

MUSICAL MDSE.
RADIOS, REPAIRS
IMPORTED BONGO DRUMS, adjust-
able heads. $35 value-415. NO 3-6258
Eve. X4
TROMBONE-Good Condition. Reason-
able. Call T. Eyrick, 662-2906. X3
A-1 NEW AND USED INSTRUMENtS
BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS
Rental Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
"19 W. Washington
X1

ALSO

314 S. MAIN

NO 3-2401

" WHITE" LEVI'S JACKETS .
* BLUE DENIM LEVI JACKETS

Excellent Food
American and Internationail Cuisine
Cocktails, Wines, Champagne

* BERMUDA SHORTS ...
" LEVI SLIM FIT SHORTS

. *..
*. .

.
.

. $5.98
. $5.49
. $3.98
. $3.99

GOLF ON STATE STREET?
Yes!f

11

I I --

.._... _
rrrr

_ -_ - - i

i

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan