THE MICHIGAN DAIIA SATUIRDAY. A ~IcKinley Wins Wimbledon Title, 9-7, 6-1, 6-4 CLASSIFIEDS G WIMBMLEDON, England (A) -- Charles (Chuck) McKinley, a compact tennis missile, brought the Wimbledon men's singles crown back to the United States after an eight-year absence Fri- day with a 9-7, 6-1, 6-4 victory in the finals over Fred Stolle, a tall, blond bank clerk from Sydney, Australia. McKinley, a St. Louis boy who calls Texas his home now, also broke a three-year Australian stranglehold on the title, the most glittering prize in amateur tennis. Endurance And before he swept to victory he had to endure 35 minutes of battering from the power-stroking Stolle that would have wilted a lesser tennis player. . Tony Trabert, the Cincinnati sailor, was the last American-born star to capture the title, although Peruvian. Alex Olmedo - who played for the U. S. in the Davis Cup - won it in 1959., Trabert, now the chief spokes- man for the touring pro tennis players, promptly offered McKin- ley $50,000 for the first year to turn pro - and McKinley just as promptly turned it down. He said he wanted to finish his mathe- matics course at Trinity Univer- sity, San Antonio, Tex. Davis Cup Next McKinley returns to school in September and will not finish un- til January. His next assignment is with the U. S. Davis Cup team. The 6-foot-3 Stolle had seven inches on his American rival, and for the first 14 games of the match he reeled off a succession of hammer blows. The Australian had the more powerful serve and he poured it in, rushed the net behind it and hit volleys with authority. It seemed only a matter of time be- fore McKinley crumbled under the strain. But Chuck, 155 pounds of bounce and acrobatic agility, held on, retrieving impossible shots and salvaging his service games after falling behind again and again. Then, so suddenly that it took the 18,000 crowd by surprise, it was Stolle who cracked. Double Fault At 7-7 and 40-15 on his serve, Stolle double faulted - as he was to do six times in the match. Then McKinley lofted a lob just inches inside the corner that caught Stolle charging in. He scuttled back and fluffed it, for duece. McKinley hit Stolle's serve right back at him for one point and the Australian double-faulted for the game. In the tradition of great play- ers, the 22-year-old McKinley pounced. He poured over four straight serves that Stolle never had a chance to return, to take the set. The second set was a proces- sion. McKinley broke the tall Aus- tralian, now looking tired and dispirited, in the first game, and won the next three as well. The whole set took only 20 minutes, only a little more than half the length of the first. Last Gasp Stolle pulled his game together in the third set. He got to deuce twice on Mc- Kinley's serve in the third game, but the American pulled, it out. Stolle turned on the power again in the fifth and got to advantage despite some great retrieving by McKinley. Chuck turned on some great serves to save that game. Games went with serve to 5-4, and then McKinley charged right in for the kill. He poured one re- turn back that Stolle couldn't handle, had two kills at the net- one after throwing himself half- way across the court - and then poured across another service re- turn that Stolle backhanded into the net. McKinley threw his racket into the air and leaped the net. Princess Marina, mother of the Duke of Kent and president of the Lawn Tennis Association, pre- sented McKinley with the cham- pionship cup while the gallery stood and applauded what the ex- perts called the best final in four years. McKinley, seeded fourth, never lost a set in the tournament. Stolle, 24, was unseeded and had never before even reached the Semifinals. He was the second Australian in a row to reach the final from the unseeded ranks. It was the seventh time the two had played each other, and Mc- Kinley's first victory on grass. He had beaten Stolle twice on other surfaces and lost four matches. McKinley said a large part of his success secret was the fact he had learned to relax. He said he was so tense before the 1961 final against Laver that he had a stiff arm, and the same thing hap- pened last year, when Mike Hann of Britain put him out in an early round. Something Extra "Chuck pulled out something extra today," Stolle said. "He was even faster around the court than usual, if that is pos- sible, and he varied his service more. He used one that kicked to my backhand and I couldn't do anything with it." Stolle added, "I was serving well, but by the end of the match he was just sending everything back down my throat." McKinley said of the pro offer that he plans to go into business in Texas, which he now considers his home. He said, however, it would be foolish to say that he definitely will turn down the pro offer. -Associated Press A WINNER'S SMILE-Chuck McKinley of St. Louis, Mo., holds his trophy high after winning the men's singles tennis title at Wimbledon, England, yesterday. The Trinity University, San An- tonio, Texas, student beat Fred Stolle of Australia 9-7, 6-1, 6-4 to become the first U.S. player to take the title since 1955. STILL CRITICAL: Chance of Paralysis ~High'for Vaulter U. S.'s Year at Wimbledon WIMBLEDON, England (') -_ Billie Jean Moffit, a 5-foot-6 chatterbox in horned rim glasses, gets a chance to make it an American Wimbledon sweep to- day, when she battles top-seeded Margaret Smith of Australia, who stands four inches taller. It is the first time in history that both finals were American- Australian affairs, since Miss Smith is the first Australian lass ever to make the last match. Uncle Sam also has a shot at a share of the women's doubles. and mixed doubles titles. Darlene Hard, who comes from Long Beach, Calif., as does Miss Mof- fitt, is teamed with Maria Bueno of Brazil in the finals today against the top seeded pair of Miss Smith and Robyn Ebbern of Australia. The Bueno-Hard combination won in 1960. Miss Moffitt won the last two years teamed with Karen Hantz Susman of San Antonio, Tex., who was the singles winner in 1962. Mrs. Susman, expecting a baby, did not defend her crown. It was only the second time since 1950 that an Australian team did not make the doubles final. In mixed doubles, Miss Hard and Bob Jewitt of Australia meet Australian Ken Fletcher and Miss Smith in the final. The Hard-Hewitt team elimin- ated the defenders, Stolle and Lesley Turner of Australia 5-7, 6-2, 6-2. Fletcher and Miss Smith beat Dennis Ralston, of Bakersfield, Calif., and Mrs. Ann Haydon Jones of Britain 6-1, 7-5, in yes- terday's other semifinal. VISEL HURT: Unlimiteds Crack Up DETROIT (W - The second accident in preliminaries of the Gold Cup Race yesterday knocked veteran racer Morlan Visel and his hydroplane Miss Madison out of contention. Visel, 46, of Lake Tahoe, Nev., suffered head cuts, a, broken leg and a possible shoulder injury when the left side of the unlinit- ed class Miss Madison was torn off in a qualifying run turn in the Detroit River. It was the second accident in Gold Cup trials this week. Danny Foster escaped uninjured when Gale VII threw a propeller and sank. FOR RENT NEED AN APT. for the fall? We've got all sizes, styles, and prices. Cal 663- 0511 or 668-8723 9 a.m. till midnight. Cis 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 NO2-2625. C NEW 2 BDRM. APTS. for fall-Furn'd., carpeted, balconies. For 3 or 4. Call 663-0511 or 668-8723 9 a.m' till mid- night. C19 2-BEDROOM Furn'd. Apt. for summer. All utilities. $100/mo. NO 2-0879. 012 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 SUMMER-Furnished apartment $50 Mo. Close to I-M Bldg. One room and kitchen, private bath. Call NO 2-7274. 013 SUMMER ONLY Block from campus. Spacious newly decorated apartment to sublet. 2 bedrooms, jalousied porch. $110/mo. (another for $70/mo.) NO 3-7268. Cl HURON TOWERS APARTMENTS 2260 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 $-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 Call Kelly Newton, 3-2260, eves. 2-0110 C13 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. USED CARS TRIUMPH - TR-3 body and engine excellent. $1275. Call NO 3-9176. N4 1960 FIAT Sports Convertible. Excel- lent Cond. Call NO 2-9227. N2 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 Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington Xl Drive Yourself ... AND SAVE pickups, panels, stakes MOVING VANS SEATTLE (P)--Doctors attend- ing world champion pole vaulter Brian Sternberg said yesterday the probability of permanent pa- ralysis is very high." MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISINb RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DA 2 .70 1.95 3.45 3 .85 2.4C 4.2( 4 1.00 2.85 4.95 Figure 5 overage words tc a lir Classified deadline, 3 P.M. da Phone NO 2-4786 TRANSPORTATION MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Washington, Detroit Take Fourth Wins in Cellar Revolt. CLEVELAND (P) -- V e t e r a n ght-hander Dick Donovan fired six-hitter and chipped in with ro key hits as the Cleveland In- ans beat the American League- ading New York Yankees, 4-1 st night. Hector Lopez' homer in the venth inning ruined Donovan's iutout bid. all-star hurler Jim Bouton. Bou- ton, who was relieved by Marshall Bridges after six innings, suf- fered his fourth loss. He has won 10. The Tribe scored a run in the third inning on a walk. Donovan's double and Tito Francona's sac- rifice fly. Cleveland added a pair of runs in the fifth. Al Luplow beat out a slow roller, Donovan movan, in1 >ry against gaining his sixth five losses, bested Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GIB New York 48 30 .615 Chicago 46 37 .554 4p, x-Minnesota 44 36 .550 5 Boston 43 35 .544 59, x-Baltimore 45 39 .536 6 Cleveland 43 38 .532 0 Los Angeles 41 43 .488 10 Kansas City 35 44 .443 139, Detroit 33 46 .418159, Washington 27 56 .325 233, x--Playing night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cleveland 4, New York ' Washington 5, Los Angeles 1 Baltimore 4, Minnesota 3 (2nd inc) Boston, 8, Chicago 3 Detroit 4, Kansas City 3 TODAY'S GAMES Kansas City at Detroit New York at Cleveland Los Angeles at Washington Minnesota at Baltimore Chicago at Boston .B 2 NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. x-Los Angeles 48 29 .595 x-St. Louis 45 35 .563 Chicago 45 35 .563 x-San Francisco 45 36 .556 x-Cincinnati 44 37 .543 x-Milwaukee 40 39 .506 Pittsburgh 38 42 .481 Philadelphia 38 44 .463: x-Houston 32 51 .386 New York 29 53 .354 x-Playing night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cincinnati at Los Angeles (Inc) St. Louis at San Francisco (inc) Milwaukee at Houston (Inc) Chicago 3, Philadelphia 2 New York 3, Pittsburgh 1 TODAV'S GAMES Pittsburgh at New York (n) Philadelphia at Chicago Milwaukee at Houston (2, t-n) Cincinnati at Los Angeles St. Louis at San Francisco GB 2f 2/ 3 4 7 9 10f 17 1912 singled and Luplow romped home on Mike de la Eoz' double. Dono- van scored when Clete Boyer fumbled Willie Kirkland's ground- er to third. * * * Bad Week DETROIT (R) - Detroit added to the woes of mistake-plagued John Wyatt last night, pushing around the deciding run when he made two wild throws in the Tigers' 4-3 victory over the Kan- sas City Athletics. Wyatt, who balked and walked across winning runs in a double- header defeat by Washington Thursday, let the Tigers break a 3-3 tie in the seventh on an un- earned run produced without a hit. The ace A's reliever walked Bill Freehan and let himn advance to second when he threw wide to second on a bunt attempt. Free- han went to third on a sacrifice and scored when Wyatt threw high and wide to the plate on Dick McAuliffe s tapper. The throw home appeared' to have Freehan beaten, but Wyatt was not charged with an error. * * * fcr four runs before a man was out in the first inning and held on to defeat the faltering; Minne- sota Twins 4-3 last night in the first game of a twi-night double- header. The Twins scored two runs off Oriole reliever Dick Hall before a man was retired in the ninth on doubles by Earl Battey and Zorro Versalles and a single by John Coryl. With the score 4-3, reliever Stu Miller came on and retired the side by striking out pinch hitter Harmon Killebrew and getting two me non force p'ays. Senators Fourth WASHINGTON OP)-Don Zim- mer stroked a tie-breaking single in a three-run seventh inning up- rising as the Washington Sena- tors won their fourth straight, whipping the Los Angeles Angels 5-1. The loss was the fifth straight for the Angels. Don Rudolph won his first game since May 8 and his fourth in the last two seasons over the Angels. He pitched a seven-hitter, giving up a run in the seventh on Lee Thomas' single, a sacrifice, and Albie Pearson's single. Sternberg was injured Tuesday night when he fell 14 feet while performing a difficult double som- mersault and twist during gym- nastic practice on a trampoline. He used gymnastics as an aid to the pole vaulting technique which saw him twice break the world record and establish a new stand- ard of 16 feet, 8 inches, now up for recognition as a world mark.' The latest medical bulletin on Sternberg issued by Dr. William Robertson, medical director for the University Hospital, said: "Brian Sternberg is still in criti-' cal condition. Respiratory prob- lems have stabilized. No fever.- Traction may be increased. "Probability of permanent pa- ralysis is very high. No further! condition reports will be made un- less the aforementioned condition changes." The doctor's report was issued at a news conference in which Sternberg's parents discussed his future. They said he had told them: "Watch the motion in my hand. I am working on it now. Watch- my fingers. I'm sending impulses for them to move. I really believe I'm going to make it." Whit's Rent-A-Truck HU 2-4434 50 Ecorse Road, Ypsilanti, Michigan GI FOR SALE 600 CC BMW Like new $450. Call NO 3-2331 B7 HI FI-Garrard Rr-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 FOR SALE-Antique four-poster bed. Call HU 3-5973. WANTED TO RENT WOULD LIKE TO RENT a house- or apt from Jan 1-July 1, 1964, while attending the U of M as a Post-Doc- toral Fellow in College Administra- tion. Have three daughters. Ref- erences furn'd. Write, Robert A. Bohannon, 1015 N. Juliette, Man- hattan, Kansas. L PERSONAL My darling Cy, I can't wait any longer. I have this uncontrollable urge to hit you. I anm waiting for an explanation. Therapeutically, Birch F4 DEAR LADY FERG, Lord Wug misses your endearing communiques which used to appear in this column... -Friends- of Lord Wug F5 Dear therapeutic ch, BEWARE MR. O SHALL RETURN ... YOU HAVE ONLY 57 DAYS LEFT. More friends of Lord Wug F6 Question for the day DO YOU KNOW WHO SUBSCRIBES TO THE SUMMER MICHIGAN DAILY? campus.) Answer: The Daily staff members (in addition to all other notable figures on campus.) Therefore, if You want to be known as a notable, SUBSCRIBE now at $1.50 for the rest of the summer. Phone 2-3241. F3 THE RESIDENTS of 706 E. University proudly announce the birth at 4:15 a.m. July 5 of one pure white kitten. Write Box 105 Michigan Daily with suggestions for kitten's name. TO A SELECT GROUP OF MEDICAL STUDENTS: It has been brought to the atten- tion of this staff that a number of bruised egos have resulted from the lack of coverage ofrsports events in which the "famed" Nu Sig fraternity participates. We (I think) sincerely regret this gross oversight. Medicinally yours, ch F BIKES AND SCOOTERS '63 VESPA BS-1000 ml., luggage rack, crash bars, per. cond. NO 50869. Z2 HONDA of Ann Arbor 1906 Packard Road 665-9281 Z2' HENLEY REGATTA: Cornell Eight Wins Semi; Amlongs Face Tough Finale' Reverse Streak BALTIMORE (P) - The more Orioles clubbed Ray Balti- Moore ":::::::::. :. ::r.:.:" .:::.:.. ...,..:":: .. ............r..rrrr:r........ ........... rh:".'.'r: r. r.... """" rYYr ::v:r"rrr: "1:. """":4'fi: is iy{i":C':-::':: °i : : }::4:"i::w: r ri::vi:"::.":ti'"tiv::"'".:"' :: rrr. .. ....... ....1'r.'r.Y."h.' ... :..r .. . r. iifi .. .....:i. . .r.r:::"t:."r :::........... . ...........5....\..t''l*.' .:': } "":::1fF."r:: «.{tii:.. .}:. f t ., :: % ." .: r . ," / ""S s;fie^]19 !' /r ° ;: But Dear, Everyone Do Why don't you order your summer subscription the Michigar eS!! r to N!r HENLEY, England (-) - Cor- nell's national champion crew overcame a spell of overconfidence yesterday and rowed into the fi- nals of the Grand Challenge Cup of the Henley Royal Regatta. The Philadelphia Amlong brothers, Joe and Tom, also stroked their way into the finals of the Silver Goblets for paired oars, and a Rollins College crew, surprising themselves most of all, made it to the semifinals in the Thames Cup for lightweight eights. Cornell's lightweights, the East- ern Sprint Champions, fell by the wayside in the Thames Cup com- petition, losing by nearly two lengths to a Queen's College crew from Cambridge. Mile Distance The finals, all rowed at the Henley distance of one mile, 550 yards on the River Thames, will be today. Cornell's big boat came off the river grumbling after they were nearly caught flat-footed in the semifinals by a squad from the London Rowing Club. The Big Red eight trailed for the first mile Fleck Leads Third Round of Canadian Open TORONTO (R) - Jack Fleck of Los Angeles, the 1955 U. S. Open champion, shot an even par 71 yesterday to take the early third round lead in the Canadian Open Golf Championship with a 54-hole total of 212. Dan Keefe of Wayland, Mass., shot 69 for a 213, to move into second place among the early finishers. and only scratched out a three- quarter length victory. "The kids weren't happy," said coach Stork Sanford. "I guess they were a bit overconfident aft- er beating the Germans yester- day." London in Finals Cornell will face a rugged Lon- don University crew in the finals. The Amlong boys will meet Chris Davidge and Stuart Mac- kenzie of the British Leander Club in the final. They have won all their races by big margins but should have a tough time in the finals. Australian-born Macken- zie won the Diamond singles sculls here six straight years. The Rollins crew went flat out to win by one-quarter length from another Cambridge boat, and promptly called the whole trip a success, regardless of how they fare today. "We frankly didn't expect to get this far," said the Rollins cap- tain, Edward Rudd. HI FI & STEREO HI FI & STEREO PICKTP & DELIVERY SERVICE & REPAIRS THE MUSIC CENTER NO 5-8607 NO 2-1335 Guaranteed Diamond Needles $5.95 r 304S. THAYER ST. 13045S. 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