THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDr WORTS SHORTS: McKinley Passes First Clay Test Rozelle Clears Colt's Owner of Betting Charges; Accusers Withdraw Original Version of Stories By The Associated Press RIVER FOREST, Ill.-Top-seed- ed Chuck McKinley arrived 7A) minutes late for his first-round match at the National Clay Court Tennis tournament yesterday but it didn't take long for the 21- year-old Wimbledon champion to steam past young James Parker of St. Louis. . McKinley eliminated Parker 6- 4, 6-2. The stocky Trinity, Tex., University senior then took time out to sign some 500 autographs' for youngsters at the River For- est Tennis Club., McKinley's Davis Cup teammate, Marty Riessen, Northwestern Uni- versity senior and seeded No. 3, was the first major upset victim. He was defeated by 26-year-old Jim Buck, a high school math teacher from Hollywood, Calif., 8-6, 1-6, 6-4. Riessen's defeat came on the heels of losing Monday's Western finals in Milwaukee to Enoir. Riessen was beaten at River For- et by unranked James Buck, 26- year-old Los Angeles high school mat teacher, 8-6, 1-6, 6-4. Buck lost in the second round to Ray Senkowski of Hamtramck, Mich., 7-5, 2-6, 6-0. Ronald Barnes of Brazil, No. 1 in the men's foreign division, de- feated Richard Williams of Chi- cago 6-3, 6-2. In the women's ranks, Miss Hard had little trouble in dispos- ing of Alice Luthy Tym of Peoria, Ill., 6-2, 6-2. Operate on Sternberg SEATTLE - Brian Sternberg, paralyzed University of Washing- ton pole vaulter', underwent a five hour operation yesterday to remove ZINDELL OLDSMOBILE, For. Complete Collision and Body Shop Service Coll Ann Arbor NO 3-0507 -Free Estimtes- All Makes of Cars a damaged cervical disc from his neck. A medical bulletin from Uni- versity Hospital said Sternberg's overall condition remains critical. Sternberg was paralyzed from the neck down. The 20-year-old vaulter was ser- iously injured two weeks ago while working out on a trampoline. Dr. William Robertson, hospital medical director, said surgeons fused two vertebrae together after removing the damaged cushion be- tween them. The bulletin termed this "sta- bilizing his verterbral bodies" at the level of the injury in his neck. It was the first surgery done on Sternberg since the acgident. Doctors said the athlete's paral- ysis was not expected to be af- fected by the operation. Lonesome Cowboy NEW YORK-Bob Short, owner of the Los Angeles Lakers, is get- ting ready to sell his National Basketball Association franchise to Gene Autry, New York Post columnist Milton Gross reported. Gross, writing in Monday's pa- per,. said the price involved is $3 million, "which is near unbeliev- able for a basketball team." The millionaire cowboy also has an interest in the Los Angeles An- gels of the American League.. Short originally moved his Lak- ers to Los Angeles from Minneapo- lis. * * * Ace Leftie TOKYO-Masaichi Kaneda, 31- year-old southpaw pitcher with the Kokutetsu Swallows of the Japa- nese Central League, won his 20th game of the season last night by defeating the Hanshin Tigers. The score was 7-5. It was the 13th consecutive year that Kaneda has had 20 or more wins in the Japanese big leagues. Best in the West CHICO, Calif.-A college foot- ball game for the championship of 10 Western states will be played Dec. 7 under sponsorship of the National Collegiate Athletic As- sociation. This was announced yesterday by Dr. Don Adee, Chico State Col- lege athletic director and chairman of the Western Sports Committee of the NCAA's college division. The game will be one of four regionals. Others will determine the college titles in the Midwest; Mideast and Atlantic Coast. Adee said a selection committee to choose the two teams will be announced later. The game will be played at the home of one of the teams chosen. The 10 states are California, Oregon, Washington, Nevada, Ida- ho, Arizona, Montana, Utah, Alas- ka and Hawaii. NEW YORK (A')--Carroll Ros- enbloom, owner of the Baltimore Colts, was cleared of charges of betting on pro football games yesterday as Commissioner Pete Rozelle completed his investiga- tion of gambling in the Nation- al Football League. The probe resulted April 17 in the indefinite suspension of Paul Hornung, Green Bay Packer half- back, and Alex Karras, defensive tackle of the Detroit Lions, for betting on games. Five other De- troit players were fined $2,000 each and the Detroit club was fined $4,000. "There is nothing pressing at the present time," said Rozelle. "However, surveillance is a con- tinuing thing." Rozelle said action in the Rosen- bloom case, delayed when the original announcement on the players was made, was held up by private litigation that was dis- missed June 28 and by the com- pleteness of the investigation. Rosenbloom had been accused by three individuals of betting on pro football games during a period eight to 10 years ago. One de- position charged Rosenbloom with betting against the Colts in a 1953 game. Tales Change Rozelle's report said that the three accusers later repudiated or withdrew their charges in new affidavits given the commissioner. The commissioner made public quotes from the affidavit of one of the original accusers. Robert McGarvey, a former Philadelphia detective who lived in Fort Lau- derdale, Fla. last winter. McGarvey's affidavit read in part: ".. ..I did all the betting on the football games usually small and losses. Rosenbloom to my knowl- edge never bet on a pro game. I thought Rosenbloom would seek me out and offer me a job or something, but again failure . I therefore repudiate my affidavit which I gave to you and feel sorry about the whole mess." Rozelle said Rosenbloom had delivered to him an affidavit stating he never bet on a NFL game after becoming an owner in the league in 1953. "He (Rosenbloom) freely ad- mitted that he has bet substantial sums on activities other than pro- fessional football principally golf games," Rozelle's report read. "Mr. Rosenbloom has stated that he has ceased such practices." Rozelle said the league's in- vestigative staff had conducted extensive inquiry into Rosen- bloom's alleged gambling and had found no proof he ever bet on an NFL game since becoming an own- er in the league. "In the light of all available in- formation," the statement con- cluded, "the investigation of Mr. Rosenbloom's case has been com- pleted and the commissioner con- cludes that the charges were un- founded." The league constitution flatly prohibits betting on league games. However, it says nothing about betting on golf, cards, college foot- ball or other sports. Rozelle said he had advised all clubowners that in the future it will be considered detrimental to the league if there is any betting on college football. ip MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Kouf ax's Scoreless String Snapped at 33 .9" PHILADELPHIA (P) - Sandy Koufax, sensational Los Angeles Dodgers' southpaw, pitched his ninth straight victory yesterday, a 5-2 decision over Philadelphia, but the Phillies won the second er 10-2 with outfielder Johnny game of the twi-night doublehead- Callison hammering four hits, in- cluding two home runs. Koufax, who entered the game with three straight shutouts, add- ed six perfect innings before Tony Taylor led off the seventh inning with a double. Taylor scored a few moments later on an infield hit and a sac- rifice fly by Tony Gonzalez to thwart Koufax' bid for his 10th shutout of the season.. His score- less skein ended at 33 innings. Red Sox Ambushed KANSAS CITY (R) - Moe Dra- bowsky won his first game of the season, pitched his first American Major League Standings "Looking for a Good Haircut" . 8 BARBERS " NO WAITING Try THE DASCOLA BARBERS near Michigan Theatre AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. New York 54 33 .621 Boston 49 40 .551 Chicago 50 41 .549 Minnesota 49 41 .544 Baltimore 51 43 .543 x-Cleveland 46 44 .511 x-Los Angeles 43 50 .462 Kansas City 39 50 .438 Detroit 36 50 .418 Washington 33 58 .363; x-Playing night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York at Minnesota (rain) Kansas City11, Boston 0 Cleveland at Los Angeles (ic) Washington 3, Chicago 1 Baltimore 5, Detroit 2 TODAY'S GAMES New York at Minnesota (n) Boston at Kansas City (n) Cleveland at Los Angeles (2-tn) Washington at Chicago (n) Baltimore at Detroit GB 6, 6 6Y2 61/ 9% 2 14 16 17=f 23 Los Angeles Chicago St. Louis San Francisco Cincinnati Pittsburgh Milwaukee Philadelphia Houston New York W 56 50 50 50 49 47 46 45 36 38 L 35 40 42 43 44 44 45 47 59 61 Pct. GB .615 - .556 5 .543 6Y2 .537 7 .527 8 .516 9 .505 10 .489 11Y .379 22 .337 251/ NATIONAL LEAGUE League shutout and hit his first American League homer last night as the Kansas City Athletics jolt- ed the Boston Red Sox for 15 hits and an 11-0 victory. Drabowsky, 1-6, pitched a four- hitter and did some key hitting. He singled home two runs in the second inning when the Ath- letics jumped on loser Dave More- head for five runs. The A's scored another run against Arnold Earley in the third and then tagged him for three runs in the fourth, when Norm Siebern hit a two-run home run. In A Class of Their Own NEW YORK (R) - The New York Mets defeated the Houston Colts 4-3 yesterday on pinch- hitter Norm Sherry's ninth inning single that scored Dave Kanehl from third base. Kanehl opened the ninth with an infield single and scooted to third on pitcher Hal Woodeshick's wild pickoff attempt. After Al Mo- ran walked Sherry slashed a grounder that went over short- stop Jim Wynn's head. Home runs by Joe Hicks and Jim Hickman and Hicks' sixth inning run-producing double car- ried New York to a 3-0 lead. How- ver, the Colts got homers from Rusty Staub in the seventh and Jim Campbell in the eighth. Hous- ton tied it in the ninth on. Johnny Temple's double, a single by Pete Runnels and a double play grounder. * * * . Home Run Barrage DETROIT (P) - The Baltimore Orioles slammed four home runs and Stu Miller came through with another clutch relief performance for a 5-2 victory over the Detroit Tigers Tuesday night. Boog Powell, Jim Gentile, Brooks Robinson and Bob John- son connected in the homer bar- rage that boosted the Orioles one percentage point behind fourth- place Minnesota, which was rained out. Error Hurts CHICAGO (R) - Washington scored three unearned runs in the second inning and southpaw Claude Osteen pitched a four- hitter as the Senators posted a 3-1 victory * * * Symetric Split PITTSBURGH(P) -Don Schwall and Al McBean combined to pitch the Pittsburgh J Pirates to a 3-2 victory over the San Francisco Giants in the second game of a twi-night doubleheader Tuesday despite the hitting of Willie Mc Covey, who gave the Giants a 3-2 triumph in the first game with a towering two-out home run in the ninth inning. 3. PAPERBACKS' Y2 Off BARGAINS in Boo ks-Record s-Statitonery SLATE R S IYour" Colleg e Boktr YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 4, Houston 3 Los Angeles 5, Philadelphia 2 Philadelphia 10, Los Angeles 2 San Francisco 3, Pittsburgh 2 Pittsburgh 3, San Francisco 2 Chicago 1, Milwaukee 0 St. Louis 5, Cincinnati 4 TODAY'S GAMES San Francisco at New York (n) Los Angeles at Pittsburgh (n) St. Louis at Cincinnati (n) Milwaukee at Chicago Houston at Philadelphia i s____ If III II - iF..1 I I 'a II THE SUMMER Only 50