THE MICHIGAN DAILY wo Tie for 'Open' Lead WESTERN OPEN: NU's Riessen Tops Semifinalist Field MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Koufax Tosses Ninth Shutout ST. ANNE'S, England (P)- Phil Rodgers, a pudgy ex-Marine from La Jolla, Calif., and Bob Charles of New Zealand, the only top- flight left-handed pro golfer in the world, shot steady par fours on the final hole yesterday and tied for the British Open Golf Championship. They will play off over 36 holes of the 6,757-yard Royal Lytham and St. Anne's course today. Rodgers and Charles finished with 72-hole totals of 277, one Palmer May Take Layoff ST. ANNE'S, England (P - Ar- nold Palmer, dethroned in the British Open, said yesterday he might take another layoff from golf after next week's PGA Championship at Dallas..f "I'm tired," he said, after he shot a final round 76, for a 294 total, which tied for 26th place. "I may take a rest again." Palmer even intimated he might not return for the British Open next year. Reminded that he had promised "always" to play in the British championship so long as he was competing, he' said: "I don't know whether I'll play next year. There is some ques- stroke over the Open record 276 posted by Arnold Palmer at Troon last year. Palmer skied to a final round 76 and finished at 294-17 strokes back-in his try for his third straight championship. Nicklaus Blows rinish But it was Jack Nicklaus, the Ohio strong boy and U. S. Masters champion, who let the tournament slip from his grasp during the wild three-man charge down the stretch. Nicklaus faltered on the last two holes and finished with 278, a stroke behind the co-lead- ers. Nicklaus, playing ahead of Rodgers and Charles, knocked in a 17-foot putt for a birdie three at the 16th hole and seehed to have his first British Open firmly in hand. However,, he knocked a two- iron over the green at the par four 17th, fluffed his first ap- proach and settled for a five. He hit his drive into a bunker on the 18th and got another five. Both Finish Strong That left it up to Rodgers and Charles. They matched Nicklaus' three at the 16th, got fours on the 17th, and while the crowd of 5,000 gathered around the home green both reached it in two. Charles was about 35 feet away, Rodgers only 15. Charles putted some 30 inches past and Rodgers left his putt nine inches short. The 25-year-old ex-Marine put- ted out, although the ball wobbled on the edge for a fraction of a second. Then Charles calmly canned his to force the playoff. It is the first playoff in the British Open since 1958, when Peter Thomson of Australia won his fourth championship over D. C. Thomas of England. Rodgers had rounds of 67-69-71 and a final 69.- Hits Course Record Charles shot 68-72-66 and 71. His third round 66 was listed as a course record, since the links has been lengthened and toughened since Thomson shot a 63 in 1958.. Nicklaus had 71-67-70 and a final 70 for his 278. Kel Nagle of Australia, who defeated Palmer by one stroke in the 1960 Open, finished with 283 for fourth place. Thomson, only a stroke off the pace set by Charles after 54 holes, skied to a 78 and finished fifth with 285. Player Finishes 10 Back Gary Player of South Africa,, the 1959 winner, finished with 287 -10 strokes off the leaders. Rodgers was highly pleased with his play. The perky, porky ex-Marine who won the Texas Open earlier this year, said no matter what happens in the play- off, "I want to come back and play in the British Open again." He said he figured at the 15th hole, where Nicklaus three-putted from 12 feet for a five, that he had a chance. "I thought if I could finish 3-4-4 I'd catch him, and I did." Charles, who is 27 and won the Houston Open this year, has never threatened in the British Open before. A HAIRCUT IN A HURRY? * 4 Master Barbers " Air-Conditioned Welcome to U-M BARBERS near Kresge's :I -- I By The Associated Press MILWAUKEE - The top four seeded entries, led by Big Ten champion Marty Riessen of Evan- ston, Ill., advanced through the quarter-finals yesterday in the 73rd Western Open Tennis Tour- nament. Moving into the semifinals with the top-rated star from Northwest- ern were Bill Lenoir of Tucson, Ariz., Larry Nagler of North Hol- lywood, Calif. and Andy Lloyd of Shreveport, La. Riessen, the NCAA runnerup, ousted Gary Rose of Orinda, Calif., 6-2, 6-0. Lenoir, Arizona standout seeded second; eliminat- ed Eduardo Zulueta of Ecuador, 6-4, 6-1. Nagler, seened number three, rallied to defeat Brazil Davis Cup- per Ronald Barnes, 6-2, 3-6, 6-4. Lloyd, seeded fourth, scrambled to a 6-2, 3-6, 6-3 triumph over Clark Graebner of Shaker Heights, Ohio. Graebner held a 4-2 lead in the third set, but pulled a thigh muscle and was unable to hold off Lloyd. The women duplicated the men in sending the four seeded en-L tries into the semifinals today.' Top-ranked Nancy Richey of Dal- las, Tex. and third-seeded Gwyn- eth Thomas of Shaker Heights joined Vicky Palmer and Justina Thomas, who won quarter-final tests Thursday. * *,* McKinley Makes Semi's BAASTAD, Sweden--Chuck Mc- Kinley, newly-crowned Wimbledon champion from San Antonio, Tex., advanced to the semifinals of the Baastad tennis tournament yester- day with a 6-3, 4-6, 6-3, 10-8 vic- tory over Joergen Ulrich of Den- mark. McKinley will meet Boro Jova- novic of Yugoslavia. Jovanovic romped over Mexico's Antonio Palafox, 6-2, 6-1, 8-6, yesterday. DUBLIN - Carole Caldwell of Santa Monica, Calif., made it an All-American women's final in the Irish Tennis Championships yes- terday by defeating Judy Alvarez of Tampa, Fla., 6-3, 6-2. In today's final Miss Caldwell will meet Billie Jean Moffitt of Long Beach, Calif., who won her semifinal Thursday. * * * Osuna Meets Emerson BIRMINGHAM, England-Raf- ael Osuna, Mexican Davis Cup star, avenged his Wimbledon de- feat yesterday by beating Manuel Santana of Spain, 6-3, 3-6, 6-4, and gaining the final round of the English Midlands tennis cham- pionships. In today's final he will meet Roy Emerson of Australia, who de- feated Mike-Sangster of Great Britain 4-6, 6-3, 7-5. * * * 'Peaches' Still Tops CHATTANOOGA - Three de- fending champions had little trou- ble yesterday in defending their titles against three California threats in the USLTA boys and girls championships. Jane (Peaches) Bartkowicz of Hamtramck retained the girls 14- under title by defeating Lynne Abbes of Orinda, Calif., 6-3, 6-2. The boys 12-under champion- ship was taken, again by Dickie Stockton of Riverdale, N.Y., who put down fourth-seeded Erik Van Dillien of San Mateo, Calif., 6-1, 6-2. * * -* McKinley Favored on Clay CHICAGO -- Chuck McKinley, the first American to win the Wim- bledon crown since 1955, is strong- ly favored to repeat as National Clay Court champion in the week- long meet at the River Forest Ten- nis Club opening Monday. By The Associated Press NEW YORK-Sandy Koufax gave another dazzling pitching performance last night, firing his third straight shutout and ninth of the season with a three-hitter as the Los Angeles Dodgers beat New York's stumbling Mets, 6-0. Koufax led the National League leaders to their fifth successive victory and pinned the last-place Mets with their 13th loss in a row. The young left-hander, winning for the eighth straight time, be- came the first 15-game winner in the majors. * * * Kolb Helps Cards ST. LOUIS-Gary Kolb's first major league home run with a man on climaxed a four-run third inning that gave the St. Louis Cardinals a 5-3 victory over the Milwaukee Braves last night. Bob Gibson scattered nine hits in 7% innings but needed relief Major LeaEue Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE help from Barney Schultz to gain his ninth victory in 13 decisions. Solo homers by Gene Oliver in the second inning and Mack Jones in the ninth and a pinch-hit dou- ble by Don Dillard in the seventh gave Milwaukee its runs. * * * Cubs Beat Cinci CINCINNATI .- The Chicago Cubs scrambled to a 4-1 victory over Cincinnati last night, hand- ing the Reds' ace left-hander Jim O'Toole his fourth straight loss. The Cubs tagged O'Toole for 10 hits and three of their runs in his seven innings. He now has lost seven and won 13. * * * Schofield's Homer Downs Houston PITTSBURGH-Dick Schofield's homer and three straight sixth inning singles gave the Pittsburgh Pirates a 2-1 victory over Hous- ton last night. Schofield hit his third into the lower right field off starter and loser Bob with one out in the sixth. homer stands Bruce powered the Boston Red Sox to a 3-2 victory over slumping Minne- sota. The left-handed hitting out- fielder, the American League's leading hitter, stroke his eighth homer of the season over the left centerfield fence and tagged the Twins with their fifth straight loss. ** * Freehan's Hit Wins CHICAGO - Rocky Colavito's leadoff double in the 12th inning and a run-scoring single by Bill Freehan lifted the Detroit Tigers to a 7-6 victory over the Chicago White Sox last night. The White Sox scored four runs in the first inning, capped by Ron Hansen's two-run homer, and wiped out a 2-0 Detroit lead, but the Tigers battled back and tied it in the fifth with a pair of runs on Bubba Phillips' sacrifice fly and Freehan's run-scoring single. Freehan is a former Michigan catcher. Mars Beter After Surgery NEW YORK (M)-Roger Maris, slugging right fielder of the New York Yankees, was operated on yesterday afternoon and was re- ported feeling fine after brief sur- gery. Maris is expected to remain in the hospital until Tuesday or Wed- nesday and rejoin the Yankees in a week. The Yankees open a se- ries at home against Cleveland next Friday. The operation for a rectal fis- sure took only 30 minutes and was completely successful. The other half of the slugging Yankee combo, Mickey Mantle, was reinstated on the active list. Los Angeles San Francisco St. Louis Chicago Cincinnati Milwaukee Pittsburgh Philadelphia. Houston New York W 53 49 48 47 47 44 43 42 34 29 L 33 39 39 39 42 42 43 45 56 58 Pct. .6x6 .557 .552 .547 .528 .512 .500 .483 .378 .333 i 2 2 A YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 6, New York 0 Philadelphia 7, San Francisco 5 Pittsburgh 2, Houston 1 St. Louis 5, Milwaukee 3 Chicago 4, Cincinnati 1 TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at New York San Francisco at Philadelphia Houston at Pittsburgh Chicago at Cincinnati Milwaukee at St. Louis AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. x-New York 51 31 .617 Boston 47 37 .563; Chicago 48 39 .552 Baltimore 49 40 .552 Cleveland 45 40 .529 Minnesota 45 41 .5261 x-Los Angeles 41 47 .466 1 Kansas City 36 47 .434 1 Detroit 36 48 .432 1 Washington 30 58 .342 24 x-Playednight game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore 4, Washington 3 Detroit 7, Chicago 6 Boston 3, Minnesota 2 New York at Los Angeles (inc) Cleveland at Kansas City (ppd), TODAY'S GAMES New York at Los Angeles Detroit at Chicago Cleveland at Kansas City Boston at Minneapolis Baltimore at Washington Edelen Beats GB 5~~ 6 72/ 9 0 11Y2 1 24f2 GB 5 522 3 16 24 Phillies Rally PHILADELPHIA - Doubles by Roy Sivers, Don Demeter and Clay Dalrymple sparked two big Phila- delphia rallies last night and drove in all the runs as the Phillies de- feated San Francisco, 7-5, despite three Giant homers. * * * Orsino'sBlast Beats Nats WASHINGTON - John Orsino blasted a two-run homer in the ninth inning last night and brought the streaking Baltimore Orioles their eighth victory in nine games, a 4-3 triumph over the Washington Senators. * * * Red Sox Edge Twins MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL - Carl Yastrzemski lashed an oppo- site field home run in the top of the 12th inning last night and VAN BOVEN SEMI-ANNUAL SALE ALL ITEMS of clothing and furnishings offered in this sale represent excellent values in only the finest of imported and domestic goods. Every article is from regular stock and reduced for quick clearance. CLOTHING SUITS TO PCOATSSpr os U S33V% to 50% offpo Coats SPECIAL GROUP SPECIAL GROUP 33% to 50% off SPECIAL GROUP SPECIAL GROUP 3 PANTS...20%1io 50% off 3 SPECIAL GROUP SPECIAL GROUP § 20 oJACKETS ..... Now off ~~Were $15 2oof Swiss Cotton, Zipper Front FURNISHINGS BERMUDA DRESS SHIRTS SPORT SHIRTS SHORTS (Short and Long Sleeves) (Including Knits) Were Now i Were 7.95..... NOW 5.95 Were 6.50 to 8.95 § Were 8.95....NOW 6.95 NOW575(3for1650) 4.95 to 5.95 . . . .. 39 Were 10.00 ..... NOW 7.95 6x95 Were 10.95 ......NOW 8.50 .50 to 6.95.. BERMUDA HOSE .. 50% off S L7.50 to 8.95 . . . . . 650 Robes 333%% off This Sale represents a fine selection 9.50 to 10.00 . . . 795 BELTS of our specially designed man-tailored .BELTS Ladies' Shrts, Sirt Were 3.50.....,NOW 2.65 and Bermudas Were 3.50.....NOW 2.65 Were 2.50..... NOW 1.65Reutosfm Were 2.50..... NOW 1.65 § Reductions from Were 3.50 . . . .NOW 2.65 § Straw Hats. 50% off 20% to 50% Were 5.00 to 7.50 NOW 3.65 U.S. Record LONDON (RP) - America's Bud Edelen was pushed to a U.S. rec- ord in the six-mile run and Cali- fornia's Davie Weill won the dis- cus in the British AAA Track and Field Championshipslast night. A former Big Ten champion from Minnesota and now a school teacher in England, Edelen re- corded the fastest six-mile time ever produced by an American while finishing fourth behind Britain's durable Ronnie Hill in the final. Hill's time of, 27:49.8 was only six seconds off the listed world mark. Edelen came home 70 yards behind the leader but in 28:00.8-well inside the 28:26 U.S. record he set last year. West Coast Slams Publinx SACRAMENTO (MP)-Long hit- ters Steve Oppermann and Bob Lunn turned the National Public Links Golf Championship into an all-San Francisco final following semifinal victories in.36-hole matches yesterday.' Oppermann, 21, who has been playing 3% years, ousted the tour- nament upset king, 49-year-old Dante Vicini of Ottawa, Ill., 4 and 3. Lunn, 18, who graduated only last month from high school, broke a 30-hole tie and beatthe home- town favorite, 20-year-old Jerry Yuke, 3 and 1. II ZINDELL OLDSMOBILE FIND OUT SUNDAY: It May Not Be Baseball But It Sure Is Crieket By CHARLIE TOWLE Co-Sports Editor Ferry Field will be the scene of one of the rarer sporting eventst in the United States this Sunday at 2 p.m.-a cricket match. The Michigan Cricket Club is hosting an aggregation of like inclined gentlemen from Cleveland for the second annual Michigan- Cleveland match. Last year the local club engaged in two matches, winning its Cleveland game but losing to a Windsor squad. Fasten Your Safety Belts In trying to explain the game of cricket to an American, the Eng- lishman usually'starts out by pointing out that cricket is "rather like that game you play here in the Colonies-yfu know the one you see on the tube during the summer." Besides immediately alienating the audience by not knowing the name of baseball, this statement also points out one of the more established facts known on this side of the Atlantic about the sport-Englishmen will never wholly understand baseball and Americans will never fully comprehend cricket. For those who are inclined to attempt? the solution of insoluble puzzles, however, this Sunday's match will offer a fine opportunity to further develop this psychosis. Anyone tempted to visit the Ferry Field confines had better pack a lunch. Cricket matches are able to, and often do, hang on for a matter of days. Bring Cushions Jagdish Saluja, spokesman for the local group, predicts, how- ever, that Sunday's encounter will last four sun-filled hours. In attempting to solve insoluble problems, it is always more frus- trating if there are a few mystifying clues laid out. With this in mind I will draw a few "red herrings" across your path (besides, I can't figure the game out myself). The clues: 1) Forget the term "field." The cricket playing area stretches radially out from the wickets and encompasses all playable surface area in the immediate neighborhood. Six Acres of Field The average cricket field is an area of six acres in a circular shape having a diameter of 180 yards. As a result there is no such thing as a ball being hit in foul territory. 2) The cricket team consists of 11 men. The bowler and wicket keeper correspond to the pitcher and catcher in baseball. The remain- ing nine men are termed the point, cover point, mid off, mid on, deep mid off, deep mid on, short slip, third man, and the square leg. As to who or what these men are-well, the last three named are not Bri- gitte Bardot, Michael Rene or Captain Hook. 3) Two men are at bat at the same time, standing at opposite wickets. Each man gets six hits on the ball. If in these six hits he scores six runs, this is termed a home run. There are 11 outs in an inning and two innings in a match. To score a run the hitter and his partner must exchange wickets after the hitter has struck the ball in defending his wickets. It is not necessary that the batters run ,on every hit, however. Hit Wicket 4) The wicket consists of three posts in the ground, 42" apart on top, which are placed to spindle-shaped "bails." The bowler tries to hit the wicket with the ball, which is one of the methods of scoring an out. There are two wickets placed 22 yards apart. 5) Don't bother asking questions at Ferry Field this Sunday. It will be every spectator for himself. The starting eleven (and finishing eleven since there is no sub- stitution) for the Michigan club, which has around 25 members, are Dinesh Kamdar, Datta Kharbas, Push Bindarsingh, Yatish Shah, Raj Nagori, Amar Badhuri, Sudhir Sabkar, Mohan Hede, Prem Pathak, Vilas Mane, and (who let him in?) Ron Palmer. The first 10 players are natives of Indi% which despite some past differences have out-Britished the British in many customs, and the last an intrepid, considering his teammates, Englishman. i r For. Complete Collision and Body Shop Sevice Col Ann Arbor NO 3-0507 -Free Estimates- All Makes of Cars RENT A TV THIS SUMMER ; Reserve Yours Now . NEW 19" G.E. PORTABLES TS r .. JSM I " S I I I