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July 19, 1963 - Image 4

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1963-07-19

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THE MICIGA N DAILY FRIDAY, JULY19,

LA Tops Pirates; Holds Lead

pectant father, Dick Hart of Palmer and Gary Player, dropped drove in four runs and Wally Reliever Jim Owens was needed
insdale, Ill., fired a dramatic well off the pace. Moon, Johnny Podres and Tommy to rescue starter Bob Purkey from
re-under-par 66, including a Golf's great money winner, Davis batted in two apiece as the a bases-loaded threat in the sev-
>1e-in-one, and swept three shots Palmer, looking battle weary and front-running Los Angeles Dod- enth.
iead of the glamorous field yes- disgusted, and the little defend- gers clobbered the Pittsburgh Pi- Freese, recalled from San Diego
rday in the opening round of ing titleholder .from South Africa, rates 10-5 last night. last Friday, also drove in a run
e 45th Professional Golfers As- Player, both fell eight shots back The victory maintained the in the Reds' two-run third as
ciation Championship. with 74's. Dodger's National League lead they took a 5-0 lead before St.
Three of the world's ruling Palmer three-putted four greens over second-place Chicago at 61/2 Louis put over a run in the fourth,
iampions--Jack Nicklaus, left- and commented dourly afterward: games. on two singles and Dick Groat's
anded Bob Charles and Julius "I couldn't putt a lick-I was aw- The Dodgers hammered Pirate sacrifice fly. ,
ros-were among a small cor- ful." Player, experimenting with pitching for 14 hits and sent five
3n breathing down the obscure a new grip designed to improve. unearned runs over in a big sixth Giants Continue Sag
ont runner's neck with 69's, but distance off the tee, had trouble inning, when 10 men went to the NEW YORK-The sagging San
wo prime favorites, Arnold with his drives and said, "I was plate. Francisco Giants squandered an
lucky to get the score I did-I was Podres, who drove in the first early 4-0 lead but came from be-
miserable." Dodger run with a double in the hind with two runs in the eighth
PORTS SHORTS: Keeping one eye on the stork fifth-only his third hit of the inning on run-scoring singles by
and the other on the more practi- year-chalked up his ninth victory Felipe Alou and Harvey Kuenn to
/, H urcal type of birdies, Hart, a 27- against six defeats. nip the New York Mets 6-5 last
0 eyear-old assistant club profession- * * * night.
al, flashed around the 7,046-yard, Rookie Helps Phils The Mets, battling uphill all the
par 71 Dallas Athletic Club course PHILADELPHIA-Rookie John way, scored their first run off
In Accictent
in 34-32, sinking his tee shot on Boozer of the Philadelphia Phil- right-hander Jim Duffalo in the
the 216-yard 16th hole. It was the lies pitched his first major league sixth inning and then sent the
By The Associated Press second hole-in-one in modern PGA victory last night a 5-1 decision 24,462 Met fans into near hysteria
DENVER-Professional gridder tournament history. over the Houston Colts. with a rousing four-run rally in
. C. Owens and his wife and in- "Gosh, I was numb" the shy The Phils put away their ninth the seventh to go ahead 5-4.
ant son were brought to Presby- handsome six-footer said after victory in their last 12 games * *
arian Hospital yesterday with in- watching his 4-iron shot on the with a run in the second inning Cubs Keep Pace
iries suffered in an automobile water hole hit to the right of the and a pair of two-run homers, by CHICAGO-The second place
rash in which Owens' daughter, pin and curve into the cup. Don Demeter in the third and by Chicago Cubs blended a walk with
'amela, 4, was killed. The brilliant round eclipsed the Don Hoak in the eighth. a triple, double and single to
* * * efforts of the rest of the field. * * * score three runs in the sixth inn-
LOS ANGELES-"He's a gentle- Palmer was one of the late Freese Comes Back ing and defeat the Milwaukee
ian. He understands our prob- starters and faced the task of try- CINCINNATI-Gene Freese hit Braves, 3-2, before 15,231 yester-
em," said General Manager Fred ing to get the ball down on greens his first home run since 1961 with day.
[aney in announcing that veteran pocked with cleat marks from two on in the first inning and the The Cub's 17th victory in the
itcher Bob Turley is being drop- the heavy traffic of the game's Cincinnati Reds went on to a 6-3 past 25 home games, gave Larry
ed from the Los Angeles Angeles. leading professionals. victory over St. Louis. Jackson his 11th triumph among

18 decisions. Starter Tony Clo-
ninger took the loss, his sixth of
the season-and second to Chi-
cago without a victory.
* * *
Tigers Keep Losing
DETROIT-Joe Gaines deliver-
ed a pinch-hit two-run double in
the 11th inning as the Baltimore
Orioles overcame an early five-
run deficit and edged the Detroit
Tigers 8-6.
Gaines' liner into the left field
corner made Stu Miller the win-
ner after the Oriole slowballer
came through with another spark-
ling relief stint.
Yanks Fall to Twins
MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL -
Rich Rollins drove in five runs
with a two-run homer and bases-
clearing double in the seventh
and eighth innings yesterday as
Minnesota erupted to crush the
New York Yankees 9-3 and gain
a split in a rain-shortened series.
* * *
Red Sox Win
KANSAS CITY -- The Boston
Red Sox jolted Kansas City for
four runs in the first inning last
night, scored three more in the
fourth with only one hit, and
closed out with a pair of homers
in a 10-6 victory over the Ath-
letics.
Major League
Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
New York 55 34 .618 -
Chicago 51 41 .554 5Y2
Boston 50 41 .550 6
Minnesota 50 42 .543 6%
Baltimore 52 44 .542 62
Cleveland 46 47 .495 11
Los Angeles 46 50 .479 12%
Kansas City 40 51 .439 16
Detroit 37 57 .420 17V
Washington .33 59 .359 23Y2
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS'
Minnesota 9, New York 3
Baltimore 8, Detroit 6 (11 inn.)
Boston 10, Kansas City 6
TODAY'S GAMES
Cleveland at New York (n)
Baltimore at Kansas City (n)
Washington at Minnesota (n)
Boston at Chicago (n)
Detroit at Los Angeles (n)
NATIONAL LEAGUE

U.S. Team,
Beatty, Set
For Russia
MOSCOW () - The United
States track team "is so powerful
it frightens you sometimes, when
you think of what it could really
do if everything clicks."
That was Coach Payton Jor-
dan's description of the U.S. squad
that meets the Soviet Union here
tomorrow and Sunday before an
anticipated 100,000 fans each day
in the fifth renewal of what the
Russians call the Battle of the
Giants.
All the U.S. athletes are ready,
including Jim Beatty, the premier
distance man who is favored in
the 5,000 but had a muscle pull
in a workout Wednesday.
"He rested and he looks ready
and definitely will start," Jordan
said.
The coach added: "We have no
injuries, no illnesses. We are ready,
and this team may well explode."
If it does, the Russian men's
team could well be in for its
worst defeat of the series. Addi-
tionally, the American girls are
aiming for their best even point
total, although they have little
hope of beating the Soviet women.
The big scoreboard at Lenin
Stadium on the banks of the Mos-
cow River will carry the men's
total and the women's totals sep-
arately but the eyes of the Soviet
fans will be on the combined to-
tals.
"That's all right with me," said
Jordan. "If we win, it will be a
team victory, men and women."
Hard, Moffitt
Upset on Clay
RIVER FOREST, Ill. (IP)-Dar-
lene Hard and Billy Jean Moffitt,
seeded No. 1 and 2, respectively,
were upset yesterday in the Na-
tional Clay Court tennis tourna-
ment while Wimbledon champion
Chuck McKinley nearly got the
same treatment.
The soon-to-be-married Miss
Hard was swamped by Judy Al-
varez, 20-year-old Tampa Univer-
sity physical education major,
8-6, 6-2, in the quarter-finals.
Miss Moffitt, finalist In the re-
cent Wimbledon, was spilled 6-1,
3-6, 6-4, by 18-year-old Victoria
Palmer of Phoenix, a University
of Arizona freshman. Miss Palm-
er, ranked seventh nationally, de-
feated the little Long Beach, Calif.
star for the third time this year.
McKinley, down two sets to one,
rallied with powerful serves to
down Trinity University, Tex.
teammate Edgard (Butch) New-
man in the quarter-finals. New-
man gained the upper hand with
base line tactics then suddenly
changed strategy and rushed the
net starting with the fourth set.

HELP WANTED
ASSISTANT LIBRARIAN-CATALOGER
Parke, Davis and Company
Ann Arbor, Michigan
MLS or Bachelor's Degree with train-
ing and experience in cataloging and
classification. Basic courses in science
and a foreign language desirable. Ex-
cellent opportunity for person able
to work independently. Send resume
to Personnel Manager, Parke, Davis
and Co., Ann Arbor, Mich. H3
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 REPAI R
119 W. Washington
R1
USED CARS
1956 FORD Fairlane, excellent condi-
tion. Radio, heater. Must sell immed-
iately. $375. NO 5-0086. N6
1960 FIAT-In good condition, less than
10.000 miles. Phone NO 2-2625. N10
1958 AUSTIN HEALEY 3000, wire
wheels, overdrive, white w/blk. in-
terior, excellent condition. Call days
FI 9-1180, after 6 p.m. call 685-1741.
N5
BIKES AND SCOOTERS
HONDA of Ann Arbor

CLASSIFIEDS

LOST AND FOUND
LOST -- One tri-colored very friendly,
not yet house broken, 10 wk. old,
hairy Beagle puppy. Call prodigal
owner at 3-6051. AS
LOST-Diamond ring on July 16 near
N.. Univ. and State. Finder notify HU
2-5760. A4
FOR RENT
510 LAWRENCE 2 bdrm. apt. available
for fall. Newly carpeted. Ideal for 3
or 4. Call 665-8825. C23
1336 GEDDES
4-man apt. available for fall. Air-condi-
tioned, dishwasher, carpeted, balcony
and many other fine features. Call
665-8825 for appointment to see. C21
LOOKING FOR APT.? Campus loca-
tions for fall. Wide selection of new
and redecorated bldgs. Call 3-0511
9 a.m.-5 p.m. Apts. Ltd., 530 S. Forest.
C20
ATTRACTIVE-Furnished, 4-rooms and
bath. 2nd floor of duplex. Clean and
reasonable. Phone NO 2-2625. O
Compus-2 Blocks
Several spacious studio, one bedrm., or
2 bedrm. furnished apts. Available
Aug. 20 and after. NO 3-7268. C24
NEW 2 BDRM. APTS. for fall-Furn'd.,
carpeted, balconies. For 3 or 4 Call
663-0511 9 a.m. till 5 p.m. APT'S. LTD.,
$30 S. Forest. C19
GIRL 'TO SHARE campus-two bed-
room, nicely furnished. 721 S. Forest.
Call NO 2-9188. C2
HURON TOWERS APARTMENTS
2200 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 3-0800 or stop by our rental
office, on premises, to see model apts.
04
CAMPUS APTS.
REDUCED
SUMMER RENTS
Remodeled and completely furn'd. for
2, 3, 4 persons. $50-90/mo. Few still
available for fall. Single student only.
NO 5-9405.
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

4

1906 Packard Road
665-9281

A Bike is a Necessi
Michigan's canpus becomes
Accessible with a

ty

Street on Compus! Phone NO 3-3441
FRIDAY, SATURDAY, SUNDAY SPECIAL DINNER

Los Angeles
Chicago
St. Louis
San Francisco
Cincinnati
Pittsburgh
Milwaukee
Philadelphia
Houston
New York

w
58
51
51
51
50
47
47
47
36
32

L
35
41
43
44
45
46
46
47
61
62

Pct. GB
.624 -
.554 6/
.543 7/Y
.537 8
.526 9
.505 11
.505 11
.500 11Y2
.371 24
.340 26Y2

BEAVER BIKE
Save your feet and enjoy
summer rides through the Arb.
We Have EVERYTHING in
bike accessories.
Beaver Bike Shop
605 Church NO 5-6807
TRANSPORTATION
RENT-a-CAR
Call NO 3-4156
Special weekend rates from 5 p.m.
Friday till 9 a.m. Monday
$10.00 plus 8c a mile. Rates include
gas, oil, insurance.

,:X,,

$1

35

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Chicago 3, Milwaukee 2
San Francisco 6, New York 5
Philadelphia 5, Houston 1
Los Angeles 10, Pittsburgh 5
Cincinnati 6, St. Louis 3
TODAY'S GAMES
New York at Philadelphia (n)
Chicago at Pittsburgh (n)
Houston at St. Louis (n)
Los Angeles at Milwaukee (n)
San Francisco at Cincinnati (n)

Call Kelly Newton, 3-2260, eves.

2-0110
c13

Summer Hours: 7 A.M. to 8 P.M. Daily-Sun. 7 A.M. to 3 P.M.

Fighters Rest for Bout;
Liston Remains Favorite

514 E. WASHINGTON ST.

G1

MISCELLANEOUS
HAVE A PICNIC!
BEAT THE HEAT!
Cold Watermelons
Cold Pop
Fresh Fruit
Hot Barbequed Chickens
Hot Barbequed Ribs
at
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard
Open every night 'til 12 M4
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. J1
665-8184
Manuscript typing, transcription, medi-
cal, legal, technical conferences, mim-
eographing, off-set. Quick-Accurate-
Experienced.
Ann Arbor Professional Service
Associates 334 Catherine
J2
FOR SALE
2 BDRM. MOBILE Home, 5 miles from
campus. $1995. Call 5-8265. B14

n I

LAS VEGAS (M)-Sonny Liston
remained a prohibitive 4-1 favor-
ite yesterday in this city of legal
gambling for Monday's heavy-
weight title rematch with Floyd
Patterson as both fighters began
the waiting-out period.
Liston, the bulking champ who
needed only two minutes and six
seconds to knock Patterson loose
from his title last Sept. 25 in Chi-
cago, loosened up at his hotel.
Earlier he received the Ring
Magazine championship belt from
editor Nat Fleischer.
Patterson did his road work
and then rested at his isolated
desert retreat six miles from "The
Strip" where the wheels spin and
dice click 24 hours a day.
The 28-year-old former cham-
pion may get a break under the
Nevada boxing rules that call for
a mandatory eight-count in all
knockdowns. A similar r u le
helped Patterson in his third
match with Ingemar Johansson at
Miami Beach March 13, 1961.

Jim Deskin, executive secretary
of the Nevada commission, said
the group would meet this morn-
ing to act on the three-knockdown
rule. The rule usually has been
waived for heavyweight title fights
but it may be in effect this time
because of the recent emphasis on
safety regulations. Under this rule,
a boxer knocked down three times
in the same round cannot con-
tinue.
There is a strong possibility an
out-of-state referee will be chosen
as has been the case in most of
the nine title fights staged in Las
Vegas in the past three years.
Deskin said the identity of the
referee and the two judges will
remain secret until ring time.
Among the out-of-state referees
who have worked here are: Vern
Bybee and Frankie Carter of San
Francisco; Tommy Hart; Jimmy
Wilson and Franie Van of Los
Angeles, and Ken Shulsen of Salt
Lake City.

I

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
$5.00/24 hr. day
Plus 5c per mile
For info call NO 5-3112
NORTH BROS.
LEASING INC.
3250 Washtenow Ave.
(Inn America)

'59 BMW '250; $275. Call 5-5266.

314

TAKE-OUT SERVICE AVAILABLE
24 HOURS Open 7 days a week
N. Main St.-Opposite the Post Office
Phone NO 8-9550 or NO 3-3857

r'------

DID YOU KNOW?
THERE'S A
SALVATION ARMY
RED SHIELD STORE
in ANN ARBOR

W Whenever you have
usable articles to give
away, give them to the
Salvation Army. A Sal-
vation Army Red Shield
truck will pick them up
when you telephone 663-
$491.

20 MINUTES from campus, year round
log cabin, 2 bdrm. screened porch,
fireplace, picture window views hill-
side-and river. Approx. 3 acred fenced
wooded lot. Fruit trees, etc. Lake priv-
ileges. $9000, liberal financing. Call
Mrs. Burnstein, University extension.
200 N. Campus. B13
NICE FURNITURE, dishes, objects d'art
are waiting for you at the Darwin's
House of Val'ues-2930- S. State. 39
FOR SALE-Antique four-poster bed.
Call HU 3-5973.
CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
BONDED BRAKE LINING
$23.95 Fords, Cbevys, some Plymouths.
Always a good price on new tires and
batteries.
HICKEY'S SERVICE STATION
Main at Catherine NO 8-7717
S1
FOREIGN CAR SERVICE
We service all makes and models
of Foreign and Sports' Cars.
Lubrication $1.50
Nye Motor Sales
514 E. Washington
A2
BARGAIN CORNER.

11

SERVICES RENDERED by Salvation Army Red Shield Stores
The Red Shield identifies ALL services of The Salvation Army.
The Red Shield Stores play a most important part in The Salvation
Army's Men's Social Service program. Red Shield Stores are the
outlets for the restored gifts of usable articles of clothing, shoes,
furniture, appliances, housewares, refrigerators, stoves, TV sets,
rnine bri--hrna r han noks- nnnr mnnrzine .t .donated to

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