E FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDA itzgerald Named to Coaching Post MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Giants' Errors Give Phils .10-2 windfall CLASSIFIEDS Dennis Fitzgerald, whohas been many things-from the slowest football halfback in the Big Ten in 1960 to the Pan-American wres- tling champion at 177 pounds in 1963-will be the newest addition to Coach Bump Elliott's stable of football assistants. Fitzgerald was recommended to the Board in Control of Intercol- legiate Athletics at Michigan yes- terday, and his official appoint- ment is expected to be routine. A 1961 graduate who won three letters each in football and wres- tling, Fitzgerald will receive the position of freshman football coach. He is also to assist wrestling Coach Cliff Keen in some capacity, although Doug Blubaugh is al- ready the assistant coach as such. Dufek Moves Over Fitzgerald will take over the freshman football squad from Don Dufek, who is moving over to the new position of defensive back- field coach. Hank Fonde will re- main backfield coach in charge of the offense. The appointment will bring the number of Elliott's assistants to six. The others are Jack Fouts, in- terior line; Bob Holloway, line and defense; and Jocko Nelson, ends. This is the first change in Michigan's alignments of football coaches since Elliott was brought in to replace Bennie Oosterbaan as head coach in 1959. Elliott brought Fonde, Fouts and Nelson with him then. It will be up to Fitzgerald to try P1 mer Down Nine in 'Open' As Rodgers,_Thomson Lead to help rebuild Michigan's foot- ball machine, which last year dropped all the way to last place in the Big Ten. Becomes Backfield Regular Fitzgerald's credentials are im- pressive. After working up from the popular "Raiders" defensive unit his sophomore year, he ulti- mately became the starting right halfback as a senior on a team which compiled a 5-4 record. He had enough power as a runner to make up for his lack of speed and size. He was also a two-time Big Ten wrestling champion, at,167 pounds as a junior and at 177 pounds as a senior. Fitzgerald remained ac- tive in wrestling after graduation, winning the Western Hemisphere title at his weight division this year and just completing a Euro- pean tour of seven countries with the United States' Greco-Roman wrestling team. He was originally a product of Ann Arbor St. Thomas High School, where he lettered in three sports but did not wrestle. ST. ANNE'S, England () -- Phil Rodgers, a wise-cracking for- mer United States Marine, and Peter Thomson, a four-time win- ner from Australia, tied for the first-round lead in the "British Open Golf Championship yester- day with three-under-par 67s- nine shots ahead of defending champion Arnold Palmer. Palmer, a 2-1 favorite to grab his third successive title, couldn't control his tee shots and wound up with a frustrating 35-41-76. This means he will be pressed to, survive the second-round cut to- day when the field is'reduced to the low 45 and ties. Jack Nicklaus, the beefy U.S. Masters championhremainedUin contention with 32-39--71, but the other five Americans, like Pal- mer, had trouble staying close to the par 34-36--70 of the 6,757-yard Royal Lytham and St. Anne's course. All in 70s Starting out in rainy, blustery weather and finishing in bright sunshine, Doug Sanders, the tele- phone-boothswinger from Ojai, Calif., and Herman Barron, U.S. seniors champion from White Plains, N.Y., each shot 75. Jack" Isaacs of the Langley Air Force Base in Virginia matched Pal- mer's 76 and Bob Marshall, an outsiderhfrom Huntingdon Beach, Calif., shot a 79. Spectacular putting produced the brilliant pace--setting rounds by Rodgers, a 25-year-old regular of the U.S. tour, and Thomson, a diminutive stylist from Mel- bourne who won four British "? SPORTS SHORTS: Sikes Leads Publinx As Top Medalists Fall' Opens in the space of five years between 1954 and 1958. They had a stroke lead over Tom Haliburton, 48-year-old for- mer English Ryder Cup player, and Bob Charles, a left-handed New Zealander who has won some $18,000 this year on the American tour, tied at 08. Weather Shifts Only two other players were able to beat St. Anne's rugged par on the wild day, which saw the weather switch abruptly from miserable rain and wind to al- most absolute calm. They were Ken Nagle, of Aus- tralia, the florid, husky Aussie who beat out Palmer by a stroke for the championship in 1960 at St. Andrews, and dark horse Ra- mon Sota of Spain, each with 69. Nagle shot 32-37 and Sota 34-35. Frank Phillips of Australia was even par 70 and Sewgolum Sew- sunker of South Africa was close with 71. Gary Player of South Africa also had his problems and fired a scattershot 36-39-75. Driver Balks Palmer Palmer's miseries were caused by a balky driver-the implement which has been principally re- sponsible for projecting him to the pinnacle of the sport and pro- ducing all-time money-winning records. "I couldn't drive a lick," the Latrobe, Pa., golfing capitalist moaned afterward. Two Double Bogeys He had two double bogeys. He took a five at the short 12th, where he dumped his tee shot into a bunker and then, after blasting out, three-putted from 25 feet. He missed his drive at the par four 17th and wound up% with a six. Nicklaus, challenging Palmer for world golf honors, also had trouble with his tee shots. After going out in two-under-par 32, he ran into driving trouble. He three- putted the 10th for a bogey, took a double bogey at the 15th where he sliced his drive into the deep, knotty rough and banged his sec- ond shot across the fairway into a clump of bushes. It took him four to reach the green and then he missed the putt for a fat afid cost- ly six. By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA - The Phila- delphia Phillies, helped by loose San Francisco fielding, walloped the Giants, 10-2, last night for their third straight victory. With Willie McCovey hitting his 23rd homer and Orlando Cepeda his 17th, the Giants led, 2-1, after four innings-but their defense be- gan to fall apart in the fifth. Jose Pagan threw wild on an easy double play ball after a pair of walks, loading the bases. Roy Sievers then singled home two runs and Don Demeter and sin- gled in another, routing left-hand- er Billy O'Dell. Then in the sixth, with two out and runners at first and second, McCovey dropped John Callison's high fly in left for a two-base, two- run error. Tony Gonzalez singled home Callison for a third unearn- ed run off relief pitcher Jack Fisher. * * * Podres Three-Hits Mets NEW YORK - Johnny Podres' three-hit, 11-strikeout pitching performance and an eighth-inning home run by John Roseboro pro- duced a 1-0 victory for the Los Angeles Dodgers last night as the National League leaders handed New York's last-place mets their 11th straight defeat. Roseboro settled the duel be- tween Podres and Carl Willey when he drove one of the Met right- hander's pitches into the lower right field seats at the Polo Grounds with one out in the eighth. Roseboro's homer was his fifth of the season and the fifth and last Dodger hit of the night. * * * Colts Edge Bucs PITTSBURGH - The Houston Colts jumped on Pittsburgh pitch- er Bob Friend for two runs in the first inning last night and went on to defeat the Pirates, 2-0, be- hind the combined pitching of Ken Johnson and Hal Woode- shick. By The Associated Press SACRAMENTO-Favored Dick Sikes romped through the first two rounds of the National Public Links Golf Tournament yesterday with the loss of only one hole, but the tourney's three top medalists all were ousted in a day full of up- sets. Sikes, in quest of his third con- secutive Publinx title, battered Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE - David Hellman of Waukegan, Ill., 6 and 5, then trimmed John Ku- rach of Detroit, 5 and 4. The Ar- kansas golfer shot four under par for the 27 holes he played over the 6,702-yard par 36-36-72 Haggin Oaks golf course. * * * WEST JORDAN, Utah - Ex- middleweight champ Gene Fullmer tried again yesterday to train on his injured right foot, but couldn't, and scheduled another light work- out today. "The foot didn't respond as well jas we had hoped after he worked out a little Tuesday," said Full- mer's manager, Mary Jenson. "But until there is something definite, we still plan to leave for Nigeria Saturday." Fullmer is scheduled to fight middleweight king Dick Tiger in Ibadan, Nigeria, July 27. The fight was postponed once, from' July 13 to July 27, after Fullmer hurt his foot three weeks ago. DENNIS FITZGERALD ... wins coaching job Woodeshick who pitched in the AllStar game Tuesday, relieved Johnson with the bases loaded in the eighth inning and struck out Smoky Burgess to retire the side. Jay Finagy Wins CINCINNATI-Al Worthington and Bill Henry put down a ninth- inning threat with a tight bit of relief last night, preserving the Cincinnati Reds' 3-1 decision over the Chicago Cubs and Joey Jay's first pitching victory in over a month. Worthington replaced Jay with one out in the ninth after a walk and Dick Bertell's double. Andre Rodgers walked, loading the bases, before pinch hitter Leo Burke lin- ed out. Henry then came on and fanned pinch batter Steve Boros for the final out. Stuart's Homer Beats Twins MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL - Dick Stuart's three-run home run in the 10th innink, his second homer of the game, powered Bos- ton to a 7-4 victory over Min- nesota last night. The first baseman drove in five runs with the two blows. Stuart blasted a delivery by Twin relief ace Bill Dailey into the left field bleachers with two out in the 10th. It ended Dailey's string of scoreless innings at 24 and tagged the Twins with their seventh defeat in eight games. Yanks, Lose- Mars Now; Joins Mantle NEW YORK () - Roger Maris, the New York Yankees' prize slug- ger, will undergo rectal surgery later this week and will be out of action for a week to 10 days, Man- ager Ralph Houk said yesterday Maris is scheduled to be oper- ated on tomorrow by Dr. John Donaldson, a specialist, at Lenos Hill Hospital. The star right fielder, who has been credited with carrying the American League leaders' attack in the absence of the injured Mickey Mantle, missed the Yankees, doubleheader at Cleve- land Sunday with what was thought to be a recurrence of a back ailment thatshad sidelined him earlier this season. Flies Back Home Maris flew to his home at In- dependence, Mo., for the All-Star game break but flew back here after telephone consultation with Dr. Sidney Gaynor, the Yankees' team physician. Drs. Gaynor and Donaldson examined the player, and decided on surgery. He has a .294 batting average for the current season, his highest in the majors, with 42 runs batted in and 19 home runs.. With Mantle still recovering from his foot injury, the defend- ing world champion Yankees now have $175,000 worth of outfielders sidelined. Mantle is a $100,000 a year player and Maris reportedly receives $75,000. Mantle Ready Soon Mantle is rejoining the Yankees in Los Angeles but is not expected to be ready to play~ for another week. With Maris out, Houk-will use left-handed hitting reserve John Blanchard in right field against right-handed pitchers and will shift Joe Pepitone to right from first base against left-handers, with Harry Bright taking over at first. If Blanchard's hitting does not pick up, Houk said he would move Tony Kubek from shortstop to the outfield and put Phil Linz at short. I HELP WANTED PART TIME EMPLOYMENT FOR MALE STUDENT - Duties involve care and feeding of lab. animals. 6 a..-l0 a.m. Monday thru Friday. 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 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 BANJOS, GUITARS AND BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington X1 HI F1 & STEREO HI FI & STEREO PICKUP & DELIVERY SERVICE & REPAIRS THE MUSIC CENTER NO 5-8607 NO 2-1335 Guaranteed Diamond Needles $5.95 304S. THAYER ST. 1304 S. UNIVERSITY. MISCELLANEOUS VERY RELIABLE WOMAN who cleans and helps with care of children or invalids. Desires regular day, % day or evenings. Mrs. Modica, HU 2-0454. M12 Variety is the SPICE OF RALPH'S MARKET Picnic Supplies Party Foods Kitchen Supplies Kosher Foods 709 PACKARD-OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT M3 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES: BONDED BRAKE LINING $23.95 Fords, Chevys, some Plymouths. Always a good price on new tires and batteries. HICKEY'S SERVICE STATION Main at Catherine NO 8-7717 81, FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars. Lubrication $1.50 Nye Motor Sales' 514 E. Washington S2 TRANSPORTATION Drive Yourself ... AND SAVE" pickups, panels, stakes MOVING VANS Whit's Rent-A-Truck HU 2-4434 50 Ecorse Road, Ypsilanti, Michigan G1 MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .70 1.95 3.45 3 .85 2.4C 4.20 4 1.00 2.85 4.95 Figure 5 average words te 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 A-1 NEW AND USED INSTRUMENTS FOR SALE-Antique four-poster bed. ICalil RU 3-3973. WANTED TO RENT WOULD; LIKE TO RENT a house or apt fronm JanT -JulyN1, 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 BETH-Really sorry about last night. You could have counted to 10 a thou- sand times and it still wouldnt have done any good. Next time I will spe cify which day, hour and year. Cy F13 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 CHRIS DEAR, I know how upset you must feel about this but really it isn't a big thing . . . they usually aren't. Fur- ' thermore, if Jon does find out we can always blame it on.him. Dodgeingly, ye P12 SPORTS VIEWS: I New York Chicago Boston Baltimore Minnesota Cleveland Los Angeles Kansas City Detroit Washington 50 47 45 47 45 44 41 36 45 30 p L 31 38 37 40 39 40 46 46 47 56 Pct. .617 .553 .549 .540 -.535 .524 .471 .439 .427 .349 GB 5 5. 6 6% 7% z 12 14/ 15 x 22% YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Boston 7, Minnesota 4 (Only game scheduled) TODAY'S GAMES New York at Los Angeles (n) Boston at Minnesota (n) Detroit at Chicago (n) Baltimore at Washington (n) Cleveland at Kansas City (n) NATIONAL LEAGUE Raw Meat, Wood Chopping To Condition 'Different' Clay, Los Angeles San Francisco St. Louis Chicago Cincinnati Milwaukee Pittsburgh Philadelphia Houston ; New York W 51 48 46 45' 46 43 41 41 34 29 L 33 38 38 38 40 40 43 44 54 56 Pet. GB .607 - .558 4 .548 5 .542 5V/ .535 6 .518 7Y .488 10 .482 10V2 .386 19 .341 22% LOUISVILLE M) - Watch for a new Cassius Clay to emerge wvithin a few months. You will see him after Clay goes into a training camp to pre- pare for hist proposed fight with heavyweight champion Sonny Lis- ton. "After eating all that raw meat and chopping wood, I'll be a dif- ferent man," Clay told the Louis- ville KiWanis Club yesterday. "You haven't seen the real Cas- sius Clay yet." Wants Fight in Philadelphia Clay predicted that if the bout is held in Philadelphia it will draw 150,000 fans. He hopes to fight Liston on Sept. 30 if the cham- YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 1, New York 0 Philadelphia 10, San Francisco 2 Houston 2, Pittsburgh 0 Cincinnati 3, Chicago 1 (Only games scheduled) TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at New York (n) San Francisco at Philadelphia (n) Chicago at Cincinnati (2, t-n) Milwaukee at t.sLouis (2, t-n) Houston at.Pittsburgh (n) * '- Stop & Shop at MORRILL'S to take advantage of our PRE.I NVENTORY pion gets by Floyd Patterson this month. "When I fight Liston, I'm going to make 'em bounce the closed circuit television off Telestar all over the world. At $150 a seat all around the world I should quit talking? Ha," He admitted that Liston's "got a little more reach, but my brains will make up for that." Someone asked if Clay didn't think he's fighting Liston before he's ready. Me or Nobody "If I'm not ready, name me a man in the world who is," he re- plied. "As for Patterson, if he even dreamed he'd beat Liston, he'd apologize." Clay also called himself the world's "best boxing promoter. I did all the work on that Doug Jones fight-the real promoter, he didn't have to do a thing." Meanwhile, in Miami, former heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey offered that Clay is no- where near ready for a fight with Liston. "Liston is rugged, and this Clay kid is not," Dempsey said. No Experience "I'd have to say Clay's biggest drawback is his lack of exper- ience. What's he had, 17 fights? I had almost 200 fights before I was ready for my first title bout. "Clay is still a novice, but it's not his fault. Money is the reason managers and promoters push a young kid into the slaughter pen today. "There's simply not enough fighters around any more. In my time, we had 15 to 20 sparring partners, and they were good punchers. "They'd knock you down during a sparring session and if you did not get up, you knew you weren't ready for a live-gate bout." Cut High School Sports if Tax Millage Fails (EDITOR'S NOTE: While Phil Sutin spends most of the time editing the news pages of The Daily, he is still a sports fan. Following The Daily's edi- torial policy, the opinions are his alone.) By PHIL SUTIN Co-Evditor The taxpayer has revolted against local school boards in south- eastern Michigan, but area newspapers have not grasped its full sig- nificance. Instead, they are carrying on a whining campaign to pre- serve high school varsity sports-probably the most expendable ac- tivity offered by the local school board. . Detroit, Highland Park, Ann Arbor and Milan high schools have beeir hit by funds shortages and in all cases the area papers have pleaded, by inference, for high school sports when they really should have been dropped or drastically curtailed. In Highland Park, the board of education suspended varsity sports for, at least a year as an economy measure. The Detroit News replied .by running a weepy story about the demise of the great athletic tra- dition at Highland Park. Basketball-Highland Park being a state power in that sport--was particularly bemoaned. No more epic battles with Grosse Pointe. When the suggestions arose that Detroit eliminate interscholastic sports, the News ran it lead on page one in big black type. The re- sulting furor caused then school board president William D. Merrifield to assure that "I don't think interscholastic sports will be eliminated. We are going to have to make some savingsin the sports program but we won't be able to decide what will be cut until we resolve the en- tire budgetary problem." j Kiddie Classes Cut Detroit voters rejected a 12.8 mill tax increase, knocking out 7.5 existing mills. First, fourth and seventh grade students will only be going to half-day classes next fall. The Ann Arbor News also has been guilty of underhandedly foist- ing expensive athletics on the citizenry. When the school board start- ed to mull cuts in Ann Arbor varsity athletics, the News ran the same type of dire stories its Detroit namesake did. It was even sadder about out-county Milan where the voters' third rejection of a millage boost seems to signal the end of long high school athletic tradition. Athletics are probably the only high school frill. They bring direct benefit to a small group of students and have only a secondary entertainment value to the student body at large. This would be acceptable if the skills derived were of an intellectual nature. But in varsity athletics, intellectual ability is secondary to in- nate physical prowess and trained coordination. While football and basketball pay their own way, other sports do not. The general public pays for varsity sports through subsidizing lesser sports such as golf and by providing release time for coaches so that they need not teach a full class load. Ax Sports First Because of its limited intellectual value, varsity high school sports should be the first thing dropped when millage revenue gets cut. This action would save thousands of dollars spent on equipment and travel for use on preserving the intellectual caliber of the school and pro- viding the best education possible for its students. Physical education should not and need not be dropped. It is an integral part of basic education and almost all students participate and benefit by such physical development. It later provides a neces- sary alternative to adult sedentary jobs and thus prolongs healthful life. But varsity sports are not necessary. It is about time the news- papers stop inferring that they were. . FOR RENT NEED AN APT. for the fall? We've got all 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. Clegn and reasonable. Phone NO .2-2625. O 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 8.Forest. Call NO 2-9188. C2 BETWEEN hospitals and Rackham, ef- ficiency with separate kitchen and bath. Summer and fall. $75. NO 2- 0070. 07 SUMMER ONLY Block from campus. Spacious newly decorated apartment to sublet. 2 bedrooms, jalousied porch. $110/mo. 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