GE FOUR THlE MICHIGAN D JAILYV a a.v aura i an raaua 5 SATURDAY, JUN MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Twins Sweep 'Home Run' Baker Dies;i CLASSIFIEDS Doubleheader itamea in 'i91 aeries U.-- - I I By The Associated Press WASHINGTON -- Earl Battey and Harmon Killebrew each clouted his 17th home run, power- ing Minnesota to its fifth straight victory, an 11-4 walloping of. Washington in the first game of a twi-night doubleheader Friday night. In the second game Vic Wertz and John Goryl hit homers on' consecutive pitches off Tom Che- ney in the second inning, and the Twins tore into the Senators' leading pitcher for four more runs in the sixth and seventh, and an eventual 10-3 score. In the first game Bill Pleis, who had pitched only 21 innings this year without a decision, scored his first victory. The runs off. Pleis came on Marv Breeding's double and Minnie Minoso's single in the fourth inning and a three-run homer by Don Lock in the ninth. The Twins knocked Jim Duck- worth out in the fifth with Kille- brew's two-run double the dam- aging hit. Battey hit a leadoff homer in the sixth off Jim Bron- stad, and Killebrew connected off Bronstad in the next inning. Win with Bunt CHICAGO - Willie Kirkland's two-out squeeze bunt in the ninth inning chased home the winning run as Cleveland edged the Chi- cago White Sox 4-3 Friday night after the Indians' Early Wynn had lost another opportunity to win his 300th game. The loss kept the White Sox from taking over first place in the American League from the New York Yankees, who were beaten 4-3 by Boston. Wynn, 43-year-old veteran, left after six innings, trailing 3-2. It marked the second Friday night in succession the White Sox had stopped him in his bid to become the 14th major league pitcher to hit the 300-victory level. Santo's Homer Wins for Cubs PHILADELPHIA - Ron Santo hammered a home run into the left field seats in the 11th inning Friday night, giving the Chicago Cubs a 4-3 victory over the Phila- delphia Phillies. Left-hander Dick Ellsworth went all the way for the Cubs, gaining his 10th victory with a 10-hitter. Ellsworth, who has lost six, checked the Phillies without a run after the second inning and struck- out 11. The Cubs scored three runs in the first inning off Ryne Duren, who went nine innings before be- ing lifted for a pinch hitter. Two infield singles and Ernie Banks' double accounted for two, and Dick Bertell singled home Banks. * * * Tigers, Angels Split DETROIT -- Leon Wagner smacked two homers and two singles, driving in four rus as the surging Los Angeles Angels thumped the slumping Detroit Ti- gers 8-3 in the opener of a twi- night doubleheader Friday, watch- ed by a special excursion of Uni- versity staff members and their families. In the second game Rocky Cola- vito's homer-his second of the game-highlighted a seven-run outburst in the eighth inning that lifted the downtrodden Detroit Tigers to an 8-3 victory over the Los Angeles Angels and a split of their Friday night doubleheader. The Tigers went into the eighth inning of the second game headed for another loss, but quickly wiped out a 3-1 deficit. Al Kaline, hitless his first eight at bats in the twinbill, singled in one run and Colavito followed with his long three-run smash off losing reliever Julio Navarro. In the first game the Angels picked up their 11th triumph in 14 games with a quick-striking at- tack that produced three runs be- fore a batter was out in the first inning. Art Fowler was the win- ner. Spahn Retires 19 Straight Warren Spahn retired the first 19 batters in order, finished with a three-hitter and broke a 15- year jinx last night as the Mil- waukee Braves defeated the Los Angeles Dodgers 1-0. It was the first time since Aug. 21, 1948, that Spahn had beaten the Dodgers in their park. He had dropped 14 decisions on Dodger home fields since then. The shutout was his third this season and the 58th of his 19-year major league career. The Braves got the only run of the game in the first inning. Lee Maye opened with a single, Ed Mathews walked and Henry Aaron singled, loading the bases. Maye came home on a long sac- rifice fly by Joe Torre. Milwaukee Manager Bobby Bra- gan was ejected for the first time this season when he made a sweeping bow to plate umpire Ed Vargo after an argument over a called strike in the eight. TRAPPE, Md. (/P) - John Franklin (Home Run) Baker, one of baseball's greats, died Friday afternoon at his home in this little Eastern Shore community where he was born. The 77-year-old Maryland farm boy rose to fame with the Phila- delphia Athletics and the New York Yankees from 1910 to 1922. Baker had suffered a series of strokes since 1961, the most re- cent earlier this month. WIMBLEDON TENNIS: McKinley Keeps Set Streak Unbroken; Fales, Moffitt, Hard Pass Fourth Test i I I Major League Standings I AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. New York 41 28 .594 Chicago 44 31 .587 Minnesota 42 32 .568 Boston 40 30 .572 Cleveland 38 35 .521 Los Angeles 40 38 .513 x-Baltimore 38 37 .507 x-Kansas City 33 37 .471 Detroit 28 44 .389 Washington 23 55 .295 x-Played night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cleveland 4, Chicago 3 Minnesota 10, Washington 3 Minesota 11, Washington 4 Detroit 8, Los Angeles 3 Los Angeles 8, Detroit 5 Boston 4, New York 3 Kansas City at Baltimore (Inc) TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at Chicago Los Angeles at Detroit Kansas City at Baltimore Boston at New York Minnesota at Washington (n) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB 1 1% 5 6 7 9% 15 22 G St. Louis 44 30 .594 Los Angeles 42 31 .576 x-San Francisco '42 32 .5682 x-Cincinnati 40 33 .5483 Chicago 40 34 .540 4 Milwaukee 37.36 .506 Philadelphia 34 41 .547 10 x-Pittsburgh 33 39 .458 1 x-New York 29 45 .392 15 Houston 28 48 .368 1 x-Played night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 4, Philadelphia 3 St. Louis 9, Houston 2 Milwaukee 1, Los Angeles 0 New York at Pittsburgh (inc) Cincinnati at San Francisco (inc) TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Philadelphia New York at Pittsburgh St. Louis at Houston Milwaukee at Los Angeles Cincinnati at San Francisco 2 6% .0Y2 0 .5 74 WIMBLEDON, England () - Chuck McKinley, who has yet to lose a set, pounded his way into the quarter-finals of the Wimble- don tennis tournament Friday de- spite rain and a slippery court that slowed his normal bounce to a lope. McKinley, 22, from St. Louis, clipped 21-year-old Jaidip Mur- W es t Needs Big .Breaks For Victoryli BUFFALO, N. Y. (P) - Coach John McKay will count on a couple of long runs and passes for a victory by the West over the favored East Saturday night in the third annual All-America foot- ball game at War Memorial Sta- dium. A crowd of 30,000 is expected. The game will start at 7:30 p.m., EST, and will be telecast nation- ally at 9 p.m., EST, by ABC-TV, Channel 7, Detroit. McKay, who coached Southern California to the National Foot- ball championship last fall, seem- ed concerned over whether the West could penerate the East's heavier line. "We certainly aren't going to be able to push the East around," he said. "They're too big. "We have to figure on shaking Kermit Alexander (UCLA) or Ronnie Goodwin (Baylor) or someone else loose for long runs, and have Bill Nelsen (Southern California) connect on some long passes. "Bill will have to have an out- standing night for us to win. Coach Milt Bruhn and his staff decided to start Penn State's Rog- er Kochman at fullback for the East instead of John MacKey of Syracuse. Working with Kochman in the starting backfield will be quarter- back Ron Vanderkelen of South- ern California and South Caro- lina's Billy Gambrell and Michi- gan State's George Saimes. The West backfield will com- prise Nelsen, Alexander, Goodwin and Nebraska's Bill (Thunder) Thornton. McKay's probable starters in the line will be ends, Hugh Camp- bell, Washington State, and Con- rad Hitchler, Missouri; tackles, Bobby Lee Bell, Minnesota, and Ron Snidow; guards, Tom Hertz, Missouri, and Dwain Carlson, Ne- braska; and center, Jerry Hopkins, Texas A&M. The East ends were expected to be Pat Richter, Wisconsin, and Tom Hutchinson, Kentucky. In the line will be Bob Vogel, Ohio State, and Art Gregory, Duke, at tackles; Daryle Sanders, Ohio State, and Dave Watson, Georgia Tech, at guards, and Dennis Gau- batz, Louisiana State, at center. Pauly Leads Decathalon SPORTS SHORTS: Wininger, Player, Aaron Tie For Cleveland Open Lead, 135 kerjea, the Indian No. 2 entry, 6-3, 8-6, 6-3, in the fourth round. The only other American sur- vivor of the 20 Yanks who start- ed, Frank Froehling of Coral Ga- 'bles, Fla., is scheduled to playj Roger Taylor of Britain in a fourth round match Saturday. Quarterfinalist Fred Stolle of Australia, Manuel Santana, the No. 2 seed from Spain, and Christian Kuhnke of Germany won their way into the* round of eight. Kuhnke knocked out No. 7 seed Jan Eric Lundquist of Sweden, 6-4, 6-3, 6-2. Lundquist was the fourth of the eight seeded players to be eliminated. Stolle whipped Antonio Palafox of Mexico 7-5, 6-3, 6-3 and San- tana won out over Adrian Bey of Rhodesia 6-3, 6-1, 11-13, 6-3. McKinley will meet either Mar- tin Mulligan, last year's losing finalist and No. 5 seed, or Bobbie Wilson, British Davis Cupper, in the quarter-finals. The American, No. 1 U. S. player, is seeded fourth. Mrs. Donna Floyd Fales of New York joined two other American girls-Darlene Hard and Billie Jean Moffitt of Long Beach, Cal. -in the fourth round-the last 16. Mrs. Fales advanced when Mrs.l Vera Sukova of Czechoslovakia, No. 6 seed, pulled out because of1 a knee injury. Beaten Two Americans were beaten. Mrs. Dorothy Head Knode of Ca- nal Zone, Panama, mother of two, was defeated by Mrs. Lorna Caw- thorn of England, mother of three, 6-3, 7-5. Fifth-seeded Jan Lehane of Aus- tralia trimmed Tory Ann FretzI of Harrisburg, Pa., 8-6, 6-4. 9 Next opponents for the Ameri- cans are Christine Truman ofI Britain for Miss Hard, Mrs. Caw- thorn for Mrs. Fales, and Lesley Turner of Australia, No. 2 seed, for Miss Moffitt.+ Rain halted play twice and left1 the courts so slippery that Mc-I Kinley was forced to abandon his normal gymnastic manner. Besides the Froehling-Taylor+ and Mulligan-Wilson matches, two other fourth round tests remain. Top-seeded Roy Emerson of Australia meets Ramanathan: Krishnan of India and Wilhelm Bungert of Germany plans Jose1 Arilla of Spain.I Although Baker led the Ameri- can league in home runs for four consecutive years, 1911 through 1914, with totals of 9, 10, 12 and 8, he earned his nickname in the 1911 World Series. Clutch Hits He won the second game of the series from the New York Giants with a sixth inning, two-run hom- the score at 1-1 in the ninth in- er off Rube Marquard and tied ning of the third game with a homer off Christy Mathewson. "Thousands of fans on their feet, hands waving, hats in the air, and shouting as you rounded second base is something a man never forgets," Baker said in de- scribing the homer off Marquard. When he was named to base- ball's Hall of Fame in 1955, Baker remarked that, "this is something you can't find words to express what's in your heart." A left-handed batter and a third baseman, Baker used a 52-ounce bat, some 20 ounces heavier than those used today. His highest bat- ting average was only .347 in 1912, but he hit when it counted most. His average for six World Series was .363. He twice led the American League in runs batted in, with 133 in 1912 and 126 in 1913. $100,000 Infield Baker was a member of Connie Mack's "$100,000 Infield" which included first baseman Stuffy Mc- Innis, second baseman Eddie Col- lins and shortstop Jack Barry. Baker retired in 1922, but he never forgot baseball. He man- aged Easton, Md. in the old East- ern Shore League and it was there he discovered Jimmy Foxx and launched his career by sell- ing him to Connie Mack for $2000. When he was named to the Hall of Fame, Baker said: "I heard a fellow say once he'd rather have a rosebud when he's alive than to have a whole rose garden thrown his way after he's gone. It looks like they've thrown the roses my way while I'm still here." FOR RENT 310 N. STATE-Double bedrooms, fur- nished kitchen facilities. Summer rental-cut rate-2 garages. Call NO 3-1460. C17 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 3-4322. C6 CAMPUS AREA-Entire 1st floor, 4 rms. and bath, newly remodeled and furn'd. Summer only $80/mo. 665- 7323 after 5 p.m. C14 2-BEDROOM furnished apt. for sum- mer. All utilities, $100/mo. NO 2-0879. 012 ROOMS FOR MEN, close to campus, kitchen. Call HTJ 2-726 or NO 2-7667. A3 CAMPUS-DOWNTOWN AREA 1 Furnished efficiensy apt. and two room newly furnished apt. NO 3-4325. C8 GIRL TO SHARE campus-two bed- room, nicely furnished. 721 S. Forest. Call NO 2-9188. C2 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. C 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. 2 bedrooms, jalousied porch. $110/mo. (another for $70/mo.) NO 3-7268. oil 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. 04 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. C6 FOXCROFT APARTMENTS I South State near Hill. Designed and furnished for 4, 5, or 6 student occupants; 2 bedrooms each. e Most spacious avalable 9. Separate dining Loom * Air conditioning " Heat furnished " Extra storage space Call Kelly Newton, 3-2260, eves. 2-0110- C13 USED CARS 1960 FIAT Sports Convertible. Excel- 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 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. J 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 BARGAIN CORNER SAM'S STORE I 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 hi-- ---- M9 +GOLF ON STATE. STREET? Yes! TEE and SKI 2455 South State 1 mile South of Campus on State Ann Arbor's New Golf Range and 18-Hole Miniature NO 2-7307 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 a line. Clossified deadline, 3 P.M. daily Phone NO 2-4786 r I LOST AND FOUND LOST-Wedding ring lost in the Wash- tenaw-Geddes area. Call Lisa Hale, 2-4757. REWARD. A2 LOST - BELIEVED STOLEN - Black Humber man's bicycle, dyno-hub. REWARD. NO 3-7817, Ser. No. 7506 FH. Al FOR SALE DEACON'S BENCH - Early American maple, excellent condition. 662-0937. B3 HI FI-Garrard RC-88 changer, Picker- ing U-388T cartridge, Electro-Voice 12TRXB speaker in Argos enclosure, KnightB30 W Mono. integrated Amp- Pre-Amp. Will sell together or sepa- rately. Sacrifice. Leave message for Jim at NO 2-98$0. B4 TRANSPORTATION Drive Yourself_. AND SAVE pickups, panels, stakes MOVING VANS Whit's Rent-A-Truck HU 2-4434 50 Ecorse Road, Ypsilanti, Michigan 01 MISCELLANEOUS At The RUBAIOAT CONTINENTAL DINING We have everything For the party goer: Martini filled Mexican jumping beans .~~1 By The Associated Press CLEVELAND - Three tourna- ment tested hotshots shared the early lead yesterday with 7-under par totals of 135 at the halfway mark in the $110,000 Cleveland Open Golf Tournament. Bo Wininger of Oklahoma City and Gary Player of South Africa added 69s to their opening 66s to move into the top row alongside 26-year-old Tommy Aaron of Gainesville, Ga., who had a 66 yesterday after a first round 69. With about half the field in, in- dications were that a score of around 144, or two over par, would make the cutoff after yesterday's play. The low 75 and ties will compete through tomorrow. Win- inger had four birdies and two bogies yesterday and Player five birdies and three bogies. * * * No Crash Diets LAKE PLACID, N. Y. - The National Federation of State High School Athletic Associations moved Friday to end weight cheating in 'high school wrestling. John Roberts, wrestling chair- man an dsecretary of the Wiscon- sin state association, said: "This is the fastest-growing high school sport. We've had a lot of criticism because of the weight- control problem. These rules are being established to protect the sport and the kids." He said wrestlers would have to remain the entire season in the weight class in which they were placed at the season's start. This should eliminate crash-dieting, Roberts said. * * * Grandpa Contest NEW YORK - Julius Boros,' widely advertised as the oldest man ever to win the U. S. golf Open, isn't. It turns out, ona recheck by Bill English of the Daily Okla- homan, that Boros was the vic- tim of some hasty calculations1 at The Country Club in Brookline, Mass., where he won the Open last Sunday in a three-man play-t off with Arnold Palmer and Jacky Cupit. When Boros holed out his final putt Sunday he was 43 years, three months and 20 days old. Ted Ray, the big-hitting Eng- lishman who won the 1920 OpenJ at Inverness in Toledo, was 43 years, four months and 16 days old-nearly a month older than- Boros. Boros was born March 3. 1920. He won on June 23. Oddly enough, Ray was one of the two Englishmen-the other was the fabled Harry Vardon- who lost in another thrte-man playoff for the 1913 Open to Francis Ouimet on the same Brookline course where Boros won 50 years later. And Boros was exactly five months and 10 days old when Ray won at Toledo. * * * Laver Downs Segura FOREST HILLS, N. Y.-Rod. Laver, who won the final leg of his amateur grand slam here last year, crushed 42-year-old Pancho Segura of Ecuador and Beverly Hills 6-2, 1-6, 6-2, 6-3 Friday in a first round match of the U. S. pro tennis championship. Top-seeded Ken Rosewall romp- ed past Tony Trabert 6-2, 6-2, 6-2 in another first round match. Laver meets Alex Olmedo, first round conqueror of former pro king Pancho Gonzalez, in a semi- final today. Rosewall, like Layer an Australian, plays Earl (Butch) Buchholz of St. Louis, in the other. Red Tape NEW ORLEANS-The Kenny Lane-Paulie Armstead fight in Michigan next August probably will not include the lightweight crown among its prizes. Emile Bruneau, ailing chairman of the World Boxing Association's championship committee, said WBA rules call for an elimination series where a title is vacant. "The four top ranked men are matched in two fights with the survivors fighting for the title," he said. "No final decision has been made yet. I've been too sick to keep up with things." The WBA withdrew recognition of Carlos Ortiz of New York re- cently when he failed to sign for a fight against Lane, the division's No. 1 challenger. Lane, of Muskegon, Mich., and Armstead, who hails from Los Angeles, will tangle in Saginaw, Mich. Football Trades ST. LOUIS-The St. Louis Card- inals of the National Football League completed their second trade of the week yesterday by sending veteran fullback Mal for an undisclosed draft choice. Hammack, 30, had been with the Cardinals since 1955. and aver- aged 4.0-yards a carry for seven seasons. He was a third draft choice from the University of Florida. The Cardinals earlier traded tackle Frank Fuller to Philadel- phia for guard John Wittenborn. * * * Next, 50-Mile Skip? STAMFORD, Conn-The physi- cal fitness kick started with a 50-mile walk. Now, there's the 50- mile swim. In the swim are Indiana, Con- necticut and Utah, and three U. S. senators. Probably because he was secre- tary of health, education and wel- fare in President Kennedy's origi- nal Cabinet, Sen. Abraham A. Rib- icoff (D-Conn) finds himself in the middle. Sens. Vance Hartke (D-Indiana) and Wallace F. Bennett (R-Utah) offer the best times recorded by swimmers in their states, and have challenged Ribicoff to do as good or better in Connecticut. Unlike the 50-mile hike which was an individual grind, the 50- mile swim, as suggested by In- diana and Utah, is a gruelling team test. The team consists of 10 young- sters, Who split into five pairs, and each pair alternates in swim- ming two miles for a total of 50 miles. *, * * Central Casting BUFFALO, N. Y.-Coaches and general managers of the eight American Football League teams discussed yesterday the possible institution of a central scouting system. Lamar Hunt, owner of the Kan- sas City Chiefs, supported a cen- tral system.He said it would eliminate much duplication. BEFORE GOING TOITHE BEACH stop at RALPH'S MARKET PicnicSupplies Party Foods, We have everything you need. 709 Packard-Open till Midnight. M5 BIKES AND SCOOTERS HONDA of Ann Arbor 1906 Packard Road 665-9281 MUSICAL MDSE. RADIOS, REPAIRS IMPORTED BONGO DRUMS, ,adjust- able heads. $35 value-$15. NO 3-6258 Eve. X4 A-1 NEW AND USED INSTRUMENTS BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington H I F1 & STEREO PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE & REPAIRS. THE MUSIC CENTER NO 5-8607 NO 2-1335 Guaranteed Diamond Needle. $5.95 304S. THAYER ST. 1304 S. UNIVERSITY :f i I !l CORVALLIS, Ore. (.,P) -- Ore- gon State senior Steve Pauly com- bined four of his best career per- formances yesterday and took the first day lead in the 45th annual AAU Decathlon Championships with 4,045 points. Charles Mosely of the Univer- sity of Alabama was second with 4,013 points. Top-seeded Paul Herman fell hopelessly behind. Following the leaders on a day of unpredictable weather were Dick Emberger of the Camp Pen- dleton Marines, 3,990, and two representatives of Oxnard Air 'Force Base, Calif., Russ Hodge, 3,977, and Dave Edstrom, 3,937. 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