aA O' THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JULY 10 Came e Lgroiherj " eSALE We feel confident that this is a sale that, you will not want to miss . . . all items on sale are from our unusual and distinctive stock of only the very finest of domestic and imported merchandise. CLOTHING ,_ I Summer Weight Suits :. and' -Associated Press WILLIE STEALS SECOND-American League all-star second baseman Nellie Fox looks at the base- ball as Willie Mays of the National League turns to get the word and sign from Umpire Al Smith after stealing second base in the second inning yesterday. Mays got to first on a walk. He scored two runs, batted in two and stole another base besides this one in leading the Nationals to a 5-3 victory. MAYS HAS BIG DAY: Nn-aAll-Stars Wi Regular Weight Suits, values to 125.00 NOW 20% OFF Regular and Summer Weight Sport Coats Values to 85.00 NOW 20% OFF SLACKS, SELECTED SPORT COATS, SPECIAL FEW TOPCOATS ... 20 to 50% OFF FURNISHINGS 11 CLEVELAND (/P) - Wonderful Willie Mays drove in two runs, scored two and stole two bases yes- terday for' the favored National League in a 5-3 victory over the American League in the 34th All- Star baseball game. A crowd of 44,160 amused them- selves by booing the New York Yankee contingent on the frus- trated American League squad that collected 11 hits to only six singles for the winners. dress Shirtsr 5.95 to 6.95 4.95 ea. 3 for 14.45 Manager Al Dark of the San Francisco Giants stuck with his National League starters most of the way %while Ralph Houk of theI Yankees substituted freely, using 21 of his 25 men. Nationals Pull Close The victory enabled the Nation-1 al League to cut the American's lead in the series to 17-16-1. It was the National's fifth triumph in the last seven games and one of the others was a tie. Bobby Richardson of the Yanks grounded into two rally-killing. double plays and first baseman Joe Pepitone of the Yanks chose to make an unassisted out at first base in the fifth while Tommy Davis of Los Angeles scored from third with the tie-breaking run. Mays, who has been slumber- ing in a season-long slump, helped rewrite the All-Star record book by topping two of his own marks with the two runs and the,/two stolen bases. He also tied Stan Musial's high of 20 hits over a 20- year span. Bunning's Streak Broken Jim Bunning of Detroit, unscor- ed on in nine consecutive innings of All-Star play, saw his streak broken by an unearned run in the fifth that made him the losing pitcher. Bunning had walked Tommy Davis of Los Angeles, first man up in the inning, with the score tied at 3-3. After 'Hank Aaron of Milwaukee flied out, Bill White of the All-St. Louis Cardinal infield hit a slow hopper to third. Frank Malzone of Boston hesitated mo- mentarily and then threw to sec- ond to try for the force play. Richardson dropped the ball as he sped past the bag and Davis con- tinued to third base. Easy Way Out When Mays grounded to Pepi- tone, the Yankee first baseman played it safe by running to first for the, unassisted out. Many in the stands thought he had a chance to get Davis at the plate. After pounding out seven hits and three runs in the first three innings, the Americans went quietly the rest of the way while the National added an insurance run in the eighth when White sin- gled, stole second and scored on a single by Ron Santo of the Chi- cago Cubs. - Dick Radatz, the jumbo - sized Boston relief man, then settled down and struck out five men in his two-inning relief stretch. 7.95 to 8.95 5.95 ea. 10.95 7.95 ea. (Whites- Included) Sport Shirts RALPH HOUK . go ahead; boo me." Were 4.50 to 4.95 5.95 to 6.95 Now 3.70 4.95 5.95 6.95 7.95 7.95 8.95 Yankees Get Biggest Boos By The Associated Press CLEVELAND-The New York Yankees are still the team every- body loves to hate, and the Yanks say they don't mind it much, themselves. Neither first baseman Joe Pepi- tone nbr manager Ralph Houk would admit that he was bothered by the booing showered down on the Yanks in the All-Star game here yesterday. "We get that booing in all the American League parks," said the Yankee manager. "As soon as they see the pinstripes they start it. But that's why we draw people into the park." "It doesn't bother me when they boo," said Pepitone. "It just makes you try a little harder." From the third to the eighth the National did not manage to get a hit off Bunning, Jim Bouton of New York and Juan Pizarro of Chicago. The proud Yankees, who are pulling away from the pack in the American League race, did little to enhance their image in this contest. Richardson's error, the two double plays he hit into and Pepitone's debatable decision not to try for the man at the plate helped the Nationals. Giant Star Stubs Toe CLEVELAND (P) - Willie Mays laughed off an incident when he stubbed his toe on the bottom of the wire fence while making a catch on Joe Pepitone in the eighth inning' of yesterday's All- Star game. Mays insisted there was noth- ing wrong with him in the club- house after the game. He said the toe on his right foot wasn't even bruised. "I can't hurt myself," said the San Francisco Giants' star center fielder. "I got to play tomorrow. I play every day." Alvin Dark, manager of the Giants and manager of the Na- tional League All-Stars, said, "When I see Willie limp I know he's okay. If he really gets hurt he never wants anyone to know about it." Colleges Adopt Letter of Intent HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (IP) - A government professor believes he has succeeded in curing one of college football's major headaches -the recruiting of star players. Dr. William Davis, a professor at Texas Tech, devised a "letter- of-intent" agreement which has been accepted by most athletic conferences and several major in- dependent football powers. The program has been "surpris- ingly successful," Dr. Davis said last Friday. He was heresto attend the annual meeting of the Na- tional Association of Collegiate Commissioners. Under the program, any athlete who signs a letter-of-intent with one school may not enroll in an- other school which is party to the agreement, without in effect los- ing two years of collegiate eligi- bility. Six major conferences agreed at the NCAA meeting in January to give the idea a try. Volunteers by the April 1 deadline included the Atlantic Coast, Southeastern, Southwest, Big Eight, Missouri Valley and Big Ten conferences. "The Southern Conference will definitely join the agreement next year and the Western Conference has expressed interest," he said. Many college coaches, particu- larly those in smaller eastern schools, opposed a national letter- of-intent at the last NCAA meet- ing. Several felt, Davis said, that. since their schools do not give grants-in-aid, signing of any com- mitment made the athlete a pro- fessional. Others felt that the pro- gram would be unenforceable. Oakland May Get Franchi Se OAKLAND, Calif. (P) - This city of 370,000 across the bay from San Francisco mixed surprise and hope over reports an American League baseball team might move to Oakland. The report Monday that the owner of the Kansas City Athletics might move his club west grew yesterday. Robert T. Nahas, president of a corporation which will build an all-sports coliseum in Oakland, told the Oakland Tribune in a tel- ephone interview from Cleveland he has been negotiating "with a number of major league clubs." 'Prime Prospect' "The American League owners I've talked with all agree the East Bay area is a prime prospect for a major league baseball club," Nahas added. More than anything else, in case the Athletics should transfer to Oakland, the boosters of this East Bay center of a two-county population of 1.5 million would like to erase the notion that Oak- land is a poor sports center. The notion has been longin the building. The old Oakland Acorns faded out of the Pacific 'Coast League before the National League's Giants pushed the PCL out of the bay area by moving from New York's Polo Grounds to San Francisco in 1958. The notion was promoted also by failure of the Oakland Jets in professional basketball. Pro Football Fails And pro football has run into tough sledding under circumstan- ces striking similar to what the Athletics would encounter if they came to Oakland. When the Oakland Raiders be- came a part of the American Football League three years ago, there was no place in Oakland for them to play. And a rival, the San Francisco 49ers of the Na- tional Football League, already was well established. If the Athletics came to Oak- land, they first would have to try to find a temporary hole, per- haps in the Giants' Candlestick Park. 'Usual Fee' "We'd be happy to accept the Athletics for the usual fee," said San Francisco's Mayor George Christopher, referring to the re- ported wish of the Athletics to use Candlestick Park when the Giants are out of town. He touched on a sticky prob- lem. The City of San Francisco built the park and has a contract with the Giants' for its use. Palmer Fires Open' Tuneup ST. ANNES, England (P) - Ar- nold Palmer shot a four-under par 66 yesterday in his final prac- tice round for the British Open golf championship with an exhi- bition of driving that left most of his .119 rivals gasping "his drives were marvellous," The 33-year-old Latrobe, Pa., pro sets out today as the 2-1 favorite to take hi third straight British Open crown. Peter Thomson of Australia is the only golfer who has won the Open three straight times in mod- ern history. "Arnold missed only one fair- way," Phil Rodgers of La Jolla, Calif., said. "His driving was mar- vellous. He missed the fairway at the 15th-and then only by about 10 feet." Palmer, Rodgers, Jack Nicklaus, the U.S. Masters champion from Columbus; and Gary Player, the South African who is fifth in the money standings in. the United States, played together. Nicklaus and Rodgers defeated Palmer and Player up in a best- ball foursome. Rodgers shot a 67, Player a 71 and Nicklaus a 73. For the first time since practice started the wind kicked up over the 6,757-yard Royal Lytham and St. Annes links. It has a par of 34-36-70. HELP WANTED PART TIME EMPLOYMENT FOR MALE STUDENT - Duties involve care and feeding of lab. animals, weekends and holidays only. Experience with animals helpful but not necessary. Apply in person - Parke-Davis and Co., 9 a.m.-3 p.m., 2800 Plymouth Rd., Ann Arbor. An equal opportun- ity employer. H3 USED CARS '58 VW, Deluxe Sedan-Black with red interior, sharp condition, radio. Only $695. Call NO 2-8458. B8 TRIUMPH - TR-3, body and engine excellent. $1275. Call NO 3-9176. N4 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS HI, FI,.TV, RADIO, and PHONO SER- VICE. TV rentals, speaker reconing. Free pick-upand deliversy service. CAMPUS RADIO & TV, NO 5-6644, 325 E. Hoover. X A-1 NEW AND USED INSTRUMENTS BANJOS, GUITARS ANfl BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington" X1 MISCELLANEOUS VERY RELIABLE WOMAN who cleans and helps with care of children or invalids. Desires regular day, % day or evenings. Mrs. Modica, BU 2-0454. M12 FOR ALL your shopping needs ask for Ralph at RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard Food Specialties Kitchen Utensils Open every night till 12 M2 TRANSPORTATION Drive Yourself ... AND SAVE pickups, panels, stakes MOVING VANS Whit's Rent-A-Truck HU 2-4434 50 Ecorse Road, Ypsilanti, Michigan 01 RENT-a-CAR Call. NO 3-4156 Special weekend rates from 5 p.m. Friday till, 9 a m. Monday $10.00 plus Sc a mile. Rates include gas, oil, insurance. 514 E. WASHINGTON ST. G1 MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 AYS$ 6 DAYS 2 .70 1.95 3.45 3 .85 2 40 4.20 4 1.00 285 4.95 Figure 5 average words tc a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. doily Phone NO 2-4786 FOR SALE NICE FURNITURE, dishes, objects d'art are waiting for you at the Darwin's House of Values-2930 S.,State. B9 HI FI--Garrard RO-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-DoO- toral Fellow in College Administra- tion. Havethree daughters. Ref- erences furn'd. Write, Robert A. Bohannon, 1015 N. Juliette, Man- hattan, Kansas. L PERSONAL LOST-One DAT and Strong aptitude test. If found and completed, please return to owner, or owner will flunk 0557 and you wouldn't want that to happen, would you. (I hope) Searchingly, the owner Fe' 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. IT IS NOT A FACT that 42% of the people in the U.S. have blue eyes or any related shades. The tendency to- ward particular coloration is a rela- tively unexplored field, and is there- fore, unknown. (According to re- search done by the Medical and Gen- eral Libraries' staff). F9 DEAR 3-WEEK-OLD festering Cy, If we continue like this, the con-. sequences may be premature. Besides, Just think what might happen if Jon finds outs Furtively, ch F11 IN RESPONSE to the "Kitten-Naming Contest"-the following entries hve been made: 1) Call her anything, but don't call her late for dinner. (Note: there is an assumption here that the "it" is a she.) 2) Call her/him Puss-the cat in "Puss and Boots" was white. 3) If she's a girl, call her "Kitty Co-ed"-after all, she was born on E. University St. (whatever that's supposed to mean.) 4) If you're one who likes oppo- sites, call it Blackie-that would be hard to figure out. , 5) Or call him/her "Guess." Then when people asked the cat's name, just ,say "Guess". and you'll have more fun listening to their replies. Incidently, we eagerly await further responses so that we will be able to make reasonably objective choice. ch PF BIKES AND SCOOTERS '63 VESPA BS-1000 mi., luggage rack,' crash bars, per.cond. NO 5-0869.Z2 HONDA of Ann Arbor 1906 Packard Road 665-9281 Z2 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 FOR RENT NEED AN APT, for the fall? We've got al sizes, styles, and prices. Call 663- 0511 or 668-8723 9 a.m. till midnight. C18 ATTRACTIVE-Furnished, 4-rooms and bath. 2nd floor of duplex. Clean and reasonable. Phone NO 2-2625.n 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. 019 GIRL TO SHARE campus-two bed- room, nicely furnished. 721 S. Forest. Call NO 2-9188. C2 BETWEEN hospitals and Rckham, ef ficiency with separate kitchen and bath. Summer and fall. $75. NO 2- 0070. 07 SUMMER ONLY Block from campus. Spacipus newly decorated apartment to sublet 2 bedrooms, jalousied porch. $110/mo. (another for $70/mo.) NO 3-7268. C11 HURON TOWERS APARTMENTS 2200 FULLER ROAD One, two and three bedroom apts. Mod- erate rentdls 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. C4 CAMPUS APTS. REDUCED SUMMER RENTS Remodeled and completely furn'd. for 1, 2. 3, 4 persons. $50-90/mo. Few still available for fal. Single student only. NO 5-9405.G BARGAIN CORNER CLASSIFIEDS f d I =:,1 10.00 to 16.50 RENT A CAR $5.00/24 hr. day Plus 5c per mile For info call NO 5-3112 NORTH BROS. LEASING INC. 3250 Washtenow Aver (Inn America)' Bermudas Order Your Subscription Today" NO 2-34 Were 8.50 to 8.95 9.50 to 10.95 11.95 to 13.95 15.95 Now 6.95 7.95 9.95 11.95 Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL Neckwear New York Chicago Boston Minnesota Baltimore Cleveland Los Angeles Kansas City Detroit Washington w 50 47 44 45 47 44 41 36 35 30 L 31 38 37 38 40 40 46 44 47 56 Pct. .617 .553 .543 .542 .540 .524 .471 .439 .427 .349 GB 5 6 6 6 7 12 14 ?/2 151f 2212 Los Angeles San Francisco Chicago St. Louis Cincinnati Milwaukee Pittsburgh Philadelphia Houston New York LEAGUE W L Pet. 50 33 .602 48 37 .565 45 37 .549 46 38 .548 45 40 .529 43 40 .518 41 42 .494 40 44 .476 33 54 .379 29 55 .345 GB 3 4% 414 6 7 9 10% 19 21Y2 Were 2.50 3.50 to 4.50 5.00 6.50 to 7.50 Now 1.64 2.64 3.64 4.64 this sale YESTERDAY'S RESULTS (No games scheduled) TODAY'S GAMES Boston at Minnesota (n) (Only game scheduled) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS (No games scheduled) . TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at New York (n) Houston at Pittsburgh (n) San Francisco at Philadelphia (n) Chicago at Cincinnati (Only games scheduled) i U, Other furnishings itenis on include robes, hose, jackets, pajamas, underwear, etc., reduced 25% to 50% RENT A TV THIS SUMMER Special Offer! Ptcihr ,hCVLxT (!l hr" 10 l I Reserve Yours Now ! : I 11 11 I 11