PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1964 PAGE FOUR THE MICHiGAN DAILY WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, 1904 MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Orioles Regain Hold on First Misses Smith, Bueno Pass Wimbledon Test CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING h. V By The Associated Press f BALTIMORE -- The Baltimore Orioles rallied for seven runs with two out in the eighth inning and whipped the New York Yankees 9-8 last night to take over the American League lead. Pinch h i t t e r Charley Lau launched the fantastic rally with a single off relief pitcher Pete Mikkelsen and also doubled for the final and winning run off Ralph Terry. PHILADELPHIA - R i g h t - hander Ray Culp allowed only one hit-Len Gabrielson's single with one out in the sixth-as Phila- delphia trampled Chicago 9-0 and earned a split of their twi-night I doubleheader yesterday. The Cubs won the opener 2-0. * * * CHICAGO-Pete Ward's sixth- inning home run helped rookie Fred Talbot and the staggering Chicago White Sox score a 2-0 victory over the Boston Red Sox last night. ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS -_ Harmon Killebrew hit his 23rd home run and southpaw Jim Kaat pitched a five-hitter, pacing Min- nesota to a 6-2 victory over Cleve- land last night. NEW YORK - Dick Schofield collected three hits and drove in four runs, three on a homer, sparking Pittsburgh to a 5-1 vic- tory over New York last night. The loss was the Mets' 11th in the last 12 games. MILWAUKEE - Hank Aaron's two-out double ignited a three- run rally in the seventh inning last night as the Milwaukee Braves came from behind to de- feat Los Angeles 5-2 and snap their seven-game losing streak. ST. LOUIS - Tim McCarver raced home with the winning run on the second of Rusty Saub's two errors in the seventh inning as the St. Louis Cardinals defeated Houston 5-4 last night. CINCINNATI - Marty Keough, who earlier drove in two runs with a single, led off the 11th inning with a home run, boosting Cin- cinnati to a 5-4 victory over San Francisco in the second game of a twi-night doubleheader yesterday. The Giants won the opener 4-0. WIMBLEDON, England (A) Margaret Smith, the defending women's singles champion, andl Maria Bueno, her No. 1 chal- lenger, cleared their first hurdles with ease Monday before rain halted play at Wimbledon and forced officials to call off most of the remaining tennis matches. The authorities wavered in in- decision after waiting 24 hours for the rains to stop. Only 50 min- utes of play had been possible. "Play is possible," was the an-, nouncement although the outside courts were slippery and danger- ous. Talk of a players' revolt cir- culated. "It's tricky," said an official. "It's tricky. Somebody could break a leg if she's chasing a lob." After another 20-minute wait the authorities did an about face and announced, "No play on the outside courts. We'll play just on the center and No. 1 courts." i Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Baltimore 40 25 .615 - New York 38 24 .613 1/ Chicago 35 26 .514 3 Minnesota 34 31 .523 6 Cleveland 30 31 .492 8 Boston 32 35 .476 9 y-Detroit 28 34 .452 10% x-Los Angeles 30 37 .448 11 x-Washington 29 40 .420 13 y-Kansas City 26 40 .399 14 x-Played night games. y-Played two-night doublehealer. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore 9, New York 8 Kansas City 2, Detroit 1 (2nd inc) Minnesota 6, Cleveland 2 Chicago 2, Boston 0 Washington at Los Angeles (inc) TODAY'S GAMES New York at Baltimore (n) Detroit at Kansas City (n) Cleveland at Minnesota (t-n) Boston at Chicago (n) Washington at Los Angeles (n) NATIONAL LEAGUE WV L Pct. GB Philadelphia 39 24 .619 - y-San Francisco 39 26 .600 1 y-Cincinnati 34 30 .531 5% Pittsburgh 34 29 .541 5 Chicago 31 31 .500 7;/ St. Louis 33 33 .500 7 ,4 Los Angeles 32 34 .485 8Y2 Houston 32 35 .476 9 Milwaukee 31 35 .469 9%, New York 20 48 .294 21%f y-Played twi-night doubleheader. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgs 5, New York 1 Milwaukee 5, Los Angeles 2 St. Louis 5, Houston 4 Philadelphia 0-9, Chicago 2-0 San Francisco 4, Cincinnati 0 (2nd inc) TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Philadelphia San Francisco at Cincinnati Pittsburgh at New York Los Angeles at Milwaukee Houston at St. Louis WILLIAMS ONLY LEFTIE: Giants' Mays Leads Vote For N. L. All-Star Teami Miss Smith, the powerful Aus- tralian, crushed Annette Van Zyl of South Africa 6-2, 6-1. The champion was strong and accur- ate in an all-around exhibition of stroke play and needed only 37 minutes to dispose of her foe. Comeback Miss Bueno, seeded to meet Miss Smith in the final a week from Saturday, also strolled into the third round by defeating Carol Prosen of Orlando, Fla., 6-0, 6-3. The supreme stylist from Brazil showed many of the strokes that made her Wimbledon champion in 1959 and 1960. Both Miss Smith and Miss Bue- no had drawn first-round byes and were playing their second- round matches. Miss Bueno, relaxed and confi- dent, appeared in her best form since she was stricken by hepati- tis three years ago. "This is the first time since 1960 that I really feel I have a chance of winning," said the Brazilian. Tory Ann Fretz of Harrisburg. Pa.. outgunned Helga Schultze of West Germany 6-2, 6-4 in afirst- round match on the slippery sur- face of the No. 1 court. Both girls, playing mainly from the baseline, performed steadily on the wetturf. Break After winning the first set with- out too much trouble, Miss Fretz scored a decisive break in the sev- enth game of the second set by going to the net for a 4-3 edge. The American girl held service the rest of the way. Ann Dmitreiva, the 23-year- old Russian girl, won the first set from Karen Hantze Susman of San Antonio, Tex., 6-4, and then the match -was called off for the day with the second set 2-1 in the Russian's favor. Mrs. Susman, the 1962 champion, fell on the court five times and the match finally was postponed until Wed- nesday when the American fell in the second game of the second set. Mary Ann Eisel of St. Louis moved into the second round by defeating Heather Cheadle of Brit- ain 7-5, 6-1. Vera Sukova, the Czech house- wife who lost to Mrs. Susman in the 1962 final, was beaten by Dei- dre Catt. British Wightman Cup player, 6-4, 6-2. LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY .70 .85 1.00 SPECIAL SIX-DAY RATE 3.48 4.20 4.95 Figure 5 average words to a line Call Classified between 1 :00 and 2:30 Mon. thru Fri. Phone NO 2-4786 USED CARS BIKES AND SCOOTERS rnr rr w NEW YORK (41) - Batting leader Billy Williams of the Chi- cago Cubs was the only left-hand- ed hitter named to the National League All-Star's starting lineup, which included only three repeat- ers. Among those named to this year's squad were San Francisco's Willie Mays and infielders Ken Boyer and Dick Groat of the St. Louis Cardinals. All three started for the 1963 team which defeated the American League 5-3 in Cleve- land. This year's game, 35th in the summer series, will be played July 7 at New York's Shea Stadium. Others chosen on the NL start- ing team in a vote of 270 play- ers, coaches and managers, in- cluded first baseman Orlando Ce- peda of the Giants, second base- man Ron Hunt of the New York Mets, rightfielder Roberto Cle- mente of the Pittsburgh Pirates and catcher Joe Torre of the Mil- waukee Braves. Thus, two Giants, two Cardi- nals and one each of the Mets, Pirates, Cubs and Braves were se- lected. Mays, the Giants' brilliant cen- ter fielder, attracted the most votes. He received 240. Delicious Hamburgers 15c Hot Tasty French Fries 12c Triple Thick Shakes.. 20c 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. FALCON-'63, only 14,000 miles. acri- fice for $1195. Call 5-9296. N 1953 MG-TD NO 3-4467 N1 1958 VOLKSWAGEN in excellent con- dition for sale. Phone NO 8-7492 after 5:00 p.M. N3 FOR RENT DOARDING FOR MEN-Friends Center Intn'l. Co-op. 1416 Hill St. Summer $70. 4 hrs. work required. Call 3-3856 or 2-9890. Cl MALE ROOMMATE wanted to share air-conditioned apt. for summer. Call Lee at X-3037. C2 ON CAMPUS-SUMMER & FALL or SUMMER ONLY-Efficiency and one bedroom. Call 5-8330 after 1 p.m. C5 GIRL WANTED to share large cool apt. this summer. Near campus. Call 2-9277 atfer 5 weekends or Univ. 3- 1511, Ext. 678 Mon.-Fri. C4 HAVE A NICELY furnished 2 rm. apt., formica kitchen, new bath. $90 mo. by the year. Free parking. Call 3- 1937. C3 3 ROOM & bath, $100. 2 room and bath, $85/mo. Utilities inc. Both ?z mile from campus. Call 5-9296. C7 CAMPUS AREA - Single room, newly decorated, mod. furn. 3-6528. C8 FURNISHED ROOMS for men students, near campus. Lobby with TV and snack facilities. $6 and $8. 8-9593. C6 410 Observatory SUMMER OR FALL Two bedroom modern furnished apart- ment. Covered parking. Also other one and two bedroom furnished and unfurnished m o d e r n apartments available for the fall. Some air-condi- tioned. Williams, who flirted with the .400 mark until recently, won the! second highest vote getter withs 237 to outstrip runner-up Will3 Stargell of Pittsburgh for the starting left field position. Star- gell had 17 votes. 'Fess Up Will the culprit-beg, pardon, ball player-who did not vote for, Willie Mays please stand up? 1 Or is he too busy cutting out1 paper dolls? Maybe he has sud- denly gone blind. Or could it be he just can't spell M-A-Y-S. How any major league ball play-, er, sound of mind, devoid of prej - udice, either over or under 21, could pick any center fielder in the United States--or in the world for that matter-over Mays is al- most impossible to imagine. Yet one did just that in the All-Star balloting conducted by Commissioner Ford Frick's office and announced yesterday.t But what excuse did the other non-Mays voter have? This guy voted for Curt Flood of the St. Louis Cardinals. Now Flood is a capable center fielder but it's useless to even try to compare him with Mays. Or compare any other center fielder with Mays. Willie is simply in- comparable. 1963 HONDA 305c.c. dream, black, saddle-bags, windshield. Cost $723- will sacrifice for $475. Call 663-2012. Z3 LAMBRETTA COOTER 125-Like new. 2 seats, windshield. Owner leaving Ann Arbor. $350. Call 663-9954. Zi YOU meet the nicest people on a HONDA! Join the fun at HONDA of Ann Arbor. 1906 Packard Rd. 665- 9281. Z2 HELP WANTED STUDENTS - Part or full time work available with the fatest growing company in Ann Arbor. Some stu- dents earn $100 par week. Call NO 5- 8719 between 3-5 p.m. for appoint- ments. No telephone interviews. H ROOM AND BOARD FOR WOMEN GRAD STUTENTS - Single rooms, pleasant, quiet. Call 663-7690, 6 to 10 p.m. E4 LIVE IN FRAT HOUSE this summer. Call 5-6115 for info. E2 BOARD AND ROOM-Men and women. Call 665-5703, Miss Lane. El BOARD FOR MElt and WOMEN. Phone 665-5703. E3 THERE'S ALWAY ROOM FOR ONE MORE ON THE STAFF OF THE SUMMER DAILY BARGAIN CORNER SAM'S STORE Has Genuine LEVI's Galore! 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Al BUSINESS SERVICES HAVE YOUR PAPERS and reports typed quickly and efficiently by an experienced legal secretary. Phone NO 5-8560. J1 PERSONAL IF YOUR NAME, address, or phone were incorrect at registration, and you wish to make a correction in the Student Directory, come to Stu- dent Publications, 420 Maynard, be- fore Thursday noon. F1 WHY subscribe to the SUMMER DAILY? 1) Apartment not air-conditioned? DAILY makes a great fan! 2) Worried about sun stroke? DAILY makes a good sun shield! 3) No garbage disposal? DAILYmakes good wrapping paper! 4) Worried about grass stains? Sit on the DAILY! 5) Going on a picnic? DAILY is good for starting fires! 6) Want to stay informed? The DAILY is good for that, too! F25 r . - .II wLWILD'SJ State Str..t .n the CamOUs State St. on the Campus Once-a-year [I! NURSING' . _-s BOOKS and SUPPLIES up to 25% ight Lycra ®R OVERBECK BOOKSTORE THE MEDICAL BOOKCENTER 1216 S. University I phone: NO 2-5671 . 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