100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

July 10, 1964 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1964-07-10

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

PAGE FOUR

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

!:'Yt'f TTU Y yr w vp 91 " R w s I ::

-AG ---TH ----A D~l

FR'1IDAY, JULY 10, 1964

E

SPORTS SHORTS
Lema Shoots 68;
In Front by Two

IEDS*

By The Associated Press
ST. ANDREWS, Scotland -
Champagne Tony Lema, posting
one of history's great rounds over
the St. Andrews Old Course, which
he saw for the first time four
days ago, scored a four-under par
68 yesterday for the halfway lead
in the British Open Golf Cham-
pionship.
The California pro had a 36-
hole total of 141, two strokes bet-
ter than long-hitting Harry Weet-
man of Britain.
Lema, winner of three U.S.
tournaments last monthrand on
his first trip to Britain, included
an eagle two in his round, fashion-
ed in North Sea gales that almost
blew strong men down for the
second straight day.

major title but this one, had an
awful time on the huge St. An-
drews greens and finished with 74.
It left him at 150, nine strokes
back of Lema.
The field was trimmed to the
low 45 scorers for Friday's final
36 holes, with 153 the cutoff point.
Five of the eight Americans in
the field made it. In addition to
Lema and Nicklaus, Doug Ford of
Yonkers, N.Y., and Doug Sanders
of Ojai, Calif., had 151 and Phil
Rodgers of La Jolla, Calif., who
lost in a playoff last year, was
the last man in with 153.-
Ford added 76 to an. opening
73, Sanders shot 73 after a first
round 78, and Rodgers blew to 79
after a good 74 start.
The three Yanks who missed
were Deane Beman, Bethesda, Md.,
current U.S. amateur and former
British amateur champion, 82-75-
157; Johnny Bulla, the 50-year-
old British Open runner-up iin
1939 and 1946, had 78-81-159,
and Bill Johnston, 77-81-158.
Both Bulla and Johnston are from
Phoenix.
COLORADO SPRINGS - The
NCAA's U n i v e r s i t y Basketball
Tournament Committee an-
nounced yesterday the 1965 NCAA
basketball finals at Portland, Ore.,
will start two hours earlier than
in past years.
The committee action, which
shattered precedent, came at the
close of its four-day meeting here.
The title game tipoff was set for
7:30 p.m., PST, the third place
game for 5:30 p.m., PST.
Bernie Shively of Kentucky, the
committee chairman, said the
starting times of the Friday night
semifinals March 19 haven't been
established because there are still
some details to be worked out.
Five cities are being considered
as sites for the 1966 NCAA cham-
pionships. Representatives of five
cities appeared before the commit-
tee here but Shively said they
weren't necessarily the five under
serious consideration. He said
more proposals will be heard.
The cities, with representatives
here were Buffalo, N.Y., Louisville,
Portland, Kansas City and Omaha.
Gov. Frank Morrison of Nebraska
headed the Omaha delegation.
SOFTBALL SCORES
Nuclear Eng. 9, Chem. Eng. 4
Math 28, Zoology 2
Raygar's Tigers 16, Cooley Lab 7

TONY LEMA

With the wind at his back, the
star from San Leandro pounded
his drive at the 312-yard 12th
hole on the green and sank a 25-
foot putt for an eagle.
Lema had three birdies-at the
sixth, ninth and 14th-and one
bogey, on the fifth, where he drove
into the rough and then three-
putted.
Lema's birdie putt at the 18th
rimmed the cup and stayed out.
It was the first round under 70
since the tournament started.
Big Jack Nicklaus, the Ohio
Golden Bear who has won every

Tigers Edge BoSox 4-3-;
Wickersham Wins 12th

MICHIGAN DAILY
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
RATES
LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS
2 .70 i.95 3.45
3 .85 2.40 4.20
4 1.00 2.85 4.95
Figure 5 average words to a line.
Classified deadline, 2:30 daily.
Phone NO 2-4786
USED CARS
'63 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE Impala 327
cu. in. Standard shift. Aqua with
black top. Whitewalls, radio with dual
speakers and heater. NO 3-0338 after
6 p.m. N
VW-One owner, garaged, 23,000 real
miles. Ex. cond. $950. NO 2-0683. N12
1963 TR-3 with TR-4 engine Excellent
condition. $1695. NO 3-8670. N13
1963 MG-B, 10,000 miles, blue, wire
wheels, great condition, warranty still
effective. $2150. Call 663-0423. N11
1960 MG-A white convertible. NO 5-
3373. Best offer accepted. N10
'61 OR '56 RAMBLER Classic, 4 door
sedans. Both excel. cond. Best offer.
Call Debora at Univ. X 86-461 or
HA 6-8171 N
MERCURY station wagon, 1957, in ex-
cellent condition. Reasonable. Trade
considered. NO 3-9478. N8
FOR RENT
IMMEDIATE occupancy for a clean,
quiet room in private home. Near the
bus line. Call 8-6551. C25
GRADUATE WANTED to share modern
apartment with 3 girls this fall. 404
N. Thayer. 665-4342. C18
NEAR CAMPUS-Furn. House for 3-5.
Grad students preferred. Call 663-
0337. C21
CAMPUS APTS.
AVAILABLE FOR FALL
2, 3, & 4 man apts., modern, fur-
nished, featuring split level design.
Call NO 3-8866. C22
N. THAYER
One and two bedroom large modern
furnished apartments for August,
Recently re-modeled, less than one
block from Rackham and Frieze
Buildings.
Also other studio, one and two bed-
room furnished and unfurnished
apartments close to hospitals and
campus for fall.
Campus Management
NO 2-7787 days NO 3-9064 eves.
GIRL WANTS ROOMMATE to share
campus apt. for fall. NO 2-7075 after
5. C9
TWO BDRM. APARTMENTS
FOR FALL
Large, luxurious, modern
some air-conditioned
start at $185
APARTMENTS LIMITED
530 S. Forest
663-0511
C24
FURNISHED
ROOMS
For men students, near campus.
Lobby with TV and snack facilities.
$6 and $8. 8-9593. C6
GIRL WANTED to share-Large modern
furnished apt, for summer. Only $40
per mo. Call NO 8-8161. C23
FURNISHED 4-bedroom house, Parkard
near Wells. Two baths. Male grad
students preferred. $220/month, avail-
able Aug. 15. NO 3.6528, 017
ARBOR FOREST APARTMENTS
EXCLUSIVE CAMPUS LOCATION
721 S. FOREST
Fall occupancy-1 and 2 bedroom fur-
nished and unfurnished apartments.
Free parking. Apply manager, 9 a.
to 8 p.m. only. C10
THERE'S ALWAY ROOM
FOR ONE MORE
ON THE STAFF OF
THE SUMMER DAILY

ROOM AND BOARD
PAD, OR PAD and GRUB, for weekend
child care, etc. (female). Call 2-7670
after 6. E5
BOARDING FOR MEN-Friends Center
Intn'l. Co-op, 1416 Hill St. Summer
$70. 4 hrs. work required. Call 3-3856
or 2-9890 El
CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
ANNOUNCING
Whit's Truck Rental
202 W. Washington St.
Ann Arbor
Call
NO 5-6875
Pick-ups Panels
Small Vans
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPING IT YOURSELF?
Grad. students inquire about penny
master and our offset process. Pro-
fessional Service Associates, 665-8184.
J
665-8184
MANUSCRIPT typing, transcription,
medical, legal, technical conferences,
mimeographing, offset.
Quick, Accurate, Experienced

LOST AND FOUND
FOUND - "O E Grammar" cards in,
brown paper file. Call Michigan Daily
at 2-3241. A4
$25 REWARD for recovery of lost man-
uscript. Topic: Bowen, Welty, and
Croce, Coilingwood. Approximately
200 pages on legal bond. Call Daily,
2-3241. A2
LOST:
SUMMER DAILY STAFF MEMBER
Can be easily identified by
rapturous look and swinging gait.
Reward: An interesting summer
Please Return to
420 Maynard Street
PHOTO SUPPLIES
OMEGA ENLARGER - Autofocus B3
with 2 Kodak Ektar lenses, neg. car-
riers, easel, condensers. $160. D. Lam-
bert, 548 S. State. D
SPEED GRAPHIC - W/Holders, Nikor
tank rollback, pack adpt., aces., case.
$85. NO 3-1163. D
PERSONAL
REMEMBER the name JEANNE-
You may be glad you did!
RELEIVE SUMMER -School boredom
(among other things), join the GAR-
GOYLE staff and spend many fun
filled days. No talent necessary (we
don't want the rest of the staff to
feel inferior). Apply at the Student
Publications Building, or call NO 3-
7604. F
Meet the Right People
The purpose of our organization, using
established techniques of personality
appraisal and an IBM system, is to
introduce unmarried persons to others
whose background and ideals are
congenial with their own. Interviews
by appointment. Phone after 9 am,,
NO 2-4867,
MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC
INTRODUCTION SERVICE
MISCELLANEOUS
VARIETY IS THE SPICE OF
RALPH'S MARKET-
picnic supplies
party foods
kitchen supplies
kosher foods
709 Packard-open till midnight
MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
A-1 New and Used Instruments
BANJOS, GUITARS, AND BONGOS
Rental Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. Washington

FOR SALE
FOR SALE-2 Heath-kit SS1-1B speaker
systems, one Reko-o-kut K33H turn-
able. In good condition, reasonably
priced. Call NO 3-6211 after 6. Bl
USED FURNITURE - Couches, refrig.,
desk, chairs, tables and many other
household items. NO 8-6494 or NO 3-
3395. B3
HELP WANTED
BABYSITTER FOR FALL-Must be ex-
perienced,2mature. Light housekeep-
ing. 665-3257. H8
EARN MONEY as a subject in psycho-
logical experiments. Pay usually runs
$1.25/hr, Apply Rm. 109 W. Physics
Bldg. H7
20-25 YR. OLD GIRL to live with handi-
capped college student. $50/week. MA
6-5298 or 665-0547. H4
SALES POSITION
AVAILABLE
High starting salary plus commis-
sions, in an industry with a future.
Training program and fringe bene-
fits.
Write C. B. Gould, P. 0. Box 127,
Flint, Michigan.
TRANSPORTATION
RIDE WANTED TO CHICAGO-Week-
end of July 24. Will share driving and
expenses. Call 3-1561, X 545 after 5. G
NOTICE!
For Airport Limousine Service call 663-
8300. To Metropolitan $4.00. To Willow
Run $2.50, Metro round trip $7.00. GI
BARGAIN CORNER
SAM'S- STORE
Has Genuine LEVI's Galore!
"WHITE LEVI'S"'
SLIM FITS
4.49
FOR "GUYS AND DOLLS"
Black, brown, loden,
"white,'" cactus, light blue
SAM'S STORE
122 E. Washington

Sizes
28 to
36

$199

Men's and Boys'
SHORT
SLEEVE
Sport Skirts
$1.49
Men's Sizes S, M, L, XL
Boys' Sizes 14-16-18
Men's
KNIT
Sport Shirts
Assorted Colors
O1 M
Boys'
Nationally Advertised
TWILL
SHORTS
Sizes 8-10-12
$9

0
U

OLD HEIDELBERG

211-213 N. Main St.

NO 8-9753

Specalizing in GERMAN FOOD,
FINE BEER, WINE, LIQUOR
PARKING ON ASHLEY ST.
Hours: Daily 11 A.M.-2 A.M. Closed Mondays
RESTAU RANT

SAM'S STORE
DISCOUNT
DAYS
Men's
Nationally Known
DENIM
SHORTS

D
I
N

I

I

Read
Daily
Classifieds

State St. on Campus

Phone NO 3-3441

~

BAR
PRESENTS
A New Treat in Ann Arbor
MEXICAN
TACOS
A Spicy Snack From
Down Mexico Way
-ALSO-
FINE ITALIAN
PIZZA
AND FOR YOUR
ENTERTAINMENT
Danny Perlongo
at the Piano
Every Tues.-Thurs.
and Sat. Night
122 W. WASHINGTON

By The Associated Press
DETROIT - Detroit's D a v e
Wickersham survived two homers
by Lee Thomas and became the
first American League pitcher to
win 12 games as the Tigers edged
Boston 4-3 last night.
Thomas accounted for all of the
Red Sox runs with a bases-empty
homer in the fourth and a two-
run shot with two out in the ninth
off Wickersham. Larry Sherry
came in and preserved the victory.
Wickersham, who has lost five
games, now has equaled his 1963
victory total. He was, 12-15 last
season with Kansas City.
The Tigers scored twice in the
first inning on a walk, Gates
Brown's single, a double by Norm
Cash and a sacrifice fly by Bill
Freehan.
Brown homered in the third and
the Tigers added another tally in
the sixth on three straight singles,
the last by George Thomas.
* * *
CHICAGO-The San Francisco
Giants spiced a 16-hit attack with
homers by Willie Mays and Willie
McCovey and routed the Chicago
Cubs 9-4 yesterday.
Although t h e second - place
Giants chased Chicago's 11-game
winner Larry Jackson, their own
starter, Jack Sanford, had to quit
in the second inning witha numb-
ed right arm.
One of the Giants' four regular
starters, Sanford was to fly to San
Francisco last night for a thorough!
examination of apparent impaired'
circulation in his pitching arm.
The victory went to Gaylord
Perry, who replaced Sanford with
two out in the second and gave up
seven hits including pinch-hitter
Len Gabrielson's none-on homer
in the fifth Perry needed help,
from Bob Shaw in the ninth after
yielding two more runs.
Jackson, now 11-6, yielded Mays'
25th homer in the first, gave up
two second-inning runs mainly on
shaky Cub throwing, and retreat-
ed in a three-run Giant fifth.
The Giants raked the third Cub
pitcher, Dick Scott, for three runs
in the sixth on five hits, including
McCovey's two-run homer.
Jim Ray Hart, rookie Giant
third baseman, had four hits.
CLEVELAND - The American
League leading Baltimore Orioles

Baltimore came back with a run
in the eighth and had McDowell
on the ropes. Norm Siebern and
John Orsino singled. Bob John-
son, batting for Powell doubled to
bring in Siebern. But McDowell
struck out Jerry Adair and Gino
Cimoli grounded out to end the
inning.
Orioles' starter Milt Pappas, who
was yanked for a pinch hitter in
the eighth, had given up only two
singles until the seventh.
Rookie Wally Bunker was work-
ing on a two-hitter for the Orioles
in the ninth inning of the opener
when Bob Chance tagged him for
a two-run homer. Until then, Vic
Davalillo's double and Leon Wag-
ner's 18th homer, both in the first
inning were Cleveland's only hits.
Chance's blast brought in Stu
Miller, who struck out Tito Fran-
cona to end the game. The victory
was the ninth against two losses
for Bunker, who pitched his second
one-hitter of the season just six
days ago.
Powell slammed his 22nd homer
in the first after Luis Aparicio
singled. He connected again in the
fifth following Jack Brandt's sin-
gle. Starter Dick Donovan, 4-6,
was the victim both times.
Major League
Standings
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct. GB
Baltimore 50 28 .642 -
New York 46 31 .598 3/2
x-Chicago 44 30 .595 4
Minnesota 44 37 .543 7%
Detroit 39 39 .500 11
Boston 38 42 .475 13
x-Los Angeles 37 44 .457 142
Cleveland 34 44 .436 15j
Kansas City 31 48 .391 191/2
Washington 32 52 .380 21
x--Played night game.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Baltimore 4-2, Cleveland 3-1
New York 6, Washington 5
Detroit 4, Boston 3
Minnesota 2, Kansas City I
Chicago at Los Angeles (inc)
TODAY'S GAMES
Chicago at Los Angeles (2, t-n)
Minnesota at Kansas City (n)
Boston at Detroit (2, t-n)
Baltimore at Cleveland (n)
New York at Washington (n)
NATIONAL LEAGUE

Authorized
TRIUMPH Dealer
Soles, Service & Parts
HERB ESTES
AUTOMART
319 W. Huron
665-3688

Zindell Oldsmobile Inc.
907 N. Main St.
Ann Arbor-NO 3-0507

I

I

r

DRIVE-IN
3075 PACKARD

Try Our Coney Dog
and
Creamy Root Beer

I

I

Wash-N-Wear
BERMUDA
SHORTS
Assorted Colors
2on9
Men's
Wash-N-Wear
TROUSERS
$*9
AND
p2.99
Variety of Styles
Nationally Known
Men's
Blue Cord
COTTON
PANTS
$3o39
Wash-N-Wear
OPEN MON. & FRI.
NIGHTS

We don't have the fanciest restaurant in town.
Nor is it the largest.
Ours is not the most exotic food.
The prices are not ridiculously low.
All we do is take the best meats obtainable.
And the freshest vegetables and the ripest fruits.
And modestly prepare them to whet
the most unyielding appetite.
(Incidently, we do make a good cup of fresh, hot coffee.)
TRY US SOON! We hope you'll agree.
Summer Hours: 7 A.M.-5 P.M Daily, Closed Sundays
THERE ARE
BIG PIZZAS
Medium PIZZAS
and even
BABY PIZZAS
at the
Cottaffe )Ynt
512 E. William
Come in by yourself or
bring your friends along
FREE FAST DELIVERY
NO 3-5902

Philadelphia
San Francisco

W
48
49

L
28
32

Pet.
.632
.606

GB
1/2

ANN ARBOR PROFESSIONAL
SERV1ICE ASSO~CIA TES

42 3 _53

12

I

t IL .4( i~

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan