THE MICHIGAN DAILY FOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP Yanliee's Ford Shut sout Baltimore, 2-0 For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone NO 2-4786 from 1:00 to 2:30 P.M Monday threugh Friday, and Saturday 9:30 'til 11:30 A.M. I By The Associated Press YORK --- Whitey Ford his 41st shutout of his at the slumping Baltimore yesterday, beating the .A the White Sox. * * * e victory was the second in sion over .the Orioles and ased therYankees' winning kt to six straight. The three- series will be concluded to- vith right-hander Jim Bouton he Yankees opposing Oriole paw Steve Barber. rd treated the crowd of 26,476 ie of his finest pitching per- ances of the year. He struck lve to take over the league's eout leadership with 110. ey did not issue a walk as utpitched his rival, Dave Mc- ', and recorded his 12th iph of the campaign against two losses. * * * )STON-Dick Stuart belted three-run homers and Arnold v scattered four hits, leading Boston Red Sox to an 11-2 ry over the Chicago White last night. e victory broke an eight-game g streak for Boston against KANSAS CITY-Relief pitcher Wes Stock scored the winning run and gained his 13th straight vic- tory as Kansas City defeated Cleveland 5-3 in the first game of a twi-night doubleheader yester- day. Stock, who hasn't lost since July, 1962, relieved Orlando Pena in the sixth inning after Bob Chance singled across two runs with two out. Stock struck out Chicago Cubs to defeat the New York Mets 3-2. The Mets, going down to their second straight defeat since their surprising doubleheader sweep of the Cincinnati Reds Sunday, help- Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE 11 Tito Francona for the final out. PITTSBURGH - Jerry Lynch slammed a three-run homer and Bob Friend scattered seven singles as Pittsburgh defeated Philadel- phia 3-0 last night, handing the second place Phillies their sixth loss in the last seven games.. Lynch, a left-handed swinger, hit a Jim Bunning pitch far over the left center field wall with Manny Mota and Roberto Clemen- te on base in the fourth inning. * * * CHICAGO-Lew Burdette, who earns his living on the mound, paid extra dividends yesterday with a home ,run that enabled the W New York 51 Baltimore 52 Chicago 50 x-Minnesota 46 x-Detroit 44 Boston 42 x-Los Angeles 42 x-Cleveland 37 x-Kansas City 33 x-Washington 34 x-Game incomplete. L 31 33 34 40 42 46 47 46 54 56 Pct. GB .622 - .614 i2 .596 2 .535 7 .512 9 .478 12, .472 12Y .465 14Y2' .376 201f .379 21 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 5, Detroit 4 (2nd inc) Kansas City 5, Cleveland 3 (2nd inc) New York 2, Baltimore 0 Boston 11, Chicago 2 Washington at Minnesota (inc) TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at New York (n) Cleveland at Kansas City Washington at Minnesota Chicago at Boston Only games scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE ed the Chicago cause with some shoddy fielding. * *. * LOS ANGELES - Lou Clinton and Felix Torres lashed home runs yesterday and led the Los Angeles to a 5-4 victory over De- troit in the first game of a twi- night doubleheader. CINCINNATI-Marty Keough's two-run homer in the sixth inning carried Cincinnati to a 2-1 tri- umph over Houston last night. Keough connected off Dick Far- rell after Pete Rose led off the inning with a single. * * * ST. LOUIS-Ron Fairly slam- med two homers and drove in five runs, powering the Los Angeles Dodgers to a 13-3 walloping of St. Louis that ended the Cardinals' winning streak at five. Willie Davis and Tommy Davis also homered for the Dodgers in support of rookie Larry Miller, who posted his first major league victory. Nclaus Takes PGC A Drive Title COLUMBUS, Ohio (P) - Jack Nicklaus has taken his first step toward retaining his PGA cham- pionship. The 24-year-old belter kept his PGA. driving champion- ship yesterday. Nicklaus, who last year won the pre-PGA tournament contest with a record drive of 341 yards, 1 foot, 5 inches and went on to win the PGA title in Dallas, topped 21 pros with a blast of 320 yards, 1 foot, 111/2 inches. FOR RENT GRADUATE WOMAN wants roommate for furnished apt. Call 668-6866. C30 IMMEDIATE occupancy for a clean, quiet room in private home. Near the bus line. Call 8-6551. C25 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 CAMPUS-AUG.20 Several remodeled one or two bed- room furnished apts. available for Fall occupancy. NO 5-0234.a C29 FURNISHED ROOMS For men students, near campus. Lobby with TV and snack facilities. $6 and $8. 8-9593. C6 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.m. to 8 p.m. only. CIO RENT APTS. NOW Now is the time to rent that apartment for the fall semester. By Aug. 1, vacancies will be very limited. We have apts. available for 1, 2, 3, 4, & 5 persons. Modern buildings, close to campus, reasonable rates. Call APARTMENTS LIMITED 663-0511 or 663-1926 C31 N. THAYER One and two bedroom large modern furnished apartments for August. Recently re-modeled, less than one block from Rackham and Frieze Buildings. ICK PROBLEMS )'Hara Withdraws From .S.-USSR Track Meet x-San Francisco Philadelphia Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Louis x-Milwaukee Los Angeles Chicago Houston New York' W 52 49 46 44 44 43 42 41 40 26 L 34 34 39 39 42 42 43 43 47 62 Pct. .605 .592 .542 .530 .512 .506 .494 ..488 .459 .293 t GB 5lY 6Y2 8 S% 2 10 13 Y 27 ROOM AND BOARD 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 NEW CARS SUMMER SALE! MG-B'S, MG SPORTS SEDANS, ALPHA-ROMEO'S & JAGUAR 3.8'S We now have a very nice selection of all these cars in stock and we can provide quick delivery on all models. Stop in soon and talk with us and see how much you can save at Ann Arbor's largest quality sports car center. We have full service facilities, parts and factory trained mechanics. Stop in soon and check our values. OVERSEAS IMPORTED CARS, INC. 331 S. 4th Avenue Ann Arbor, Michigan 662-2541 USED CARS 1960 WHITE MG-A convert., $1,000. First offer accepted. 482-0511 after 6. N17 SIMCA - 1959 Aronde Super Delux- 34,000 miles. Call eves. 665-5266. N16 '62 BUICK Special, white conv., buck. slats. Best offer. NO 5-6811. N15 190 MG-A white convertible. NO 5- 3373. Best offer accepted. N1o '61 OR '56 RAMBLER Classic, 4 door sedans. Both excel. cond. Best offer. Call Debora at Univ. X 86-461 or HA 6-8171. N9 BUSINESS SERVICES TYPING - Theses and manuscripts. 668-8354. J3 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 ANN ARBOR PROFESSIONAL' SERVICE ASSOCIATES 334 Catherine E J PER SONAL TO SIGMA-BETA-SQUARED: Thanx for the comestibles. The dish- washing offer stands. Signed Beta-Beta & Lambda-Gamma WANTED-Street cleaners to sweep up old parking tickets from University parking lots. Meter Maids need not apply. Want to make us happy? LOST AND FOUND $25 REWARD for recovery of lost man- uscript. Topic: Bowen, Welty, and Croce, Collingwood. Approximately 200 pages on legal bond. Call Daily, 2-3241. A2 FOR SALE FOR SALE -1962 Van Dyke mobile home, 10x50 ft., with 9-18 screened-in porch. Reasonable. 438-4359. B6 TRAVEL TRAILER -- 8x26, useful as home.:NO 3-5324. B5 NINROD RIVERIA--1964 Demonstrators, like new-$5.95. We also rent campers. A to Z Rentals, 1007 Wayne Rd. Phone Wayne-PArk 2-0591. B7 FOR SALE-One Rek-o-kut K33H turn- table, in good condition, reasonably priced. Call NO 3-6211 after 6. B4 TWO GREEN army officer uniforms, size 40L-used, in fine condition. Call NO 3-9106. B3 HOUSEHOLD GOODS Carpets, rocking chair, antique hutch, desk, coffee table, baby equipment, flute, kitchen cabinet, jig saw, grill, dishmaster, other items and furnish- ings. 524 3rd St. Sat, and Sun. 10-5 only. B8 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars. Lubrication $1.50 Nye Motor Sales 514 X. Washington By The Associated Press W YORK--Tom O'Hara, the y little redhead from Chica- ho captured the track fan- f the nation with his suc-, ul but unorthodox running at the premier distance of aile, has withdrawn from the team that will meet Russia 's n Los Angeles July 25-26. iara, who set an indoor rec- 3:56.4 during the winter and an American record 3:38.1 vinning the National AAU pionship at New Brunswick, three weeks ago, was quoted an Ferris as saying he pre- I to stay in Chicago where ather suffered a heart attack weeks ago., Kara, along with lean Dryol son of Oregon, qualified for D.8. team that will face\ the t Union's top track and field tes in this Olympic year. lara, a 135-pounder who says rains on "Mom's Irish cook- was unbeaten during the r season, but won only one Lght outdoof meetings with 'son. gether they formed probably, est one-two punch the Unit- tates ever has had in the, meters, the so-called metric' going into the Olympic com- ions. ey were expected to sweep the two places against the Rus-! sians. O'Hara will be replaced on the U.S. team against Russia by Jim Grelle, said Ferris, secretary emeritus of the Amateur Ath- letic tinion. O'Hara said he has taken a job. x-Game incomplete. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 3, Philadelphia 0 Chicago 3, New York 2 Cincinnati 2, Houston 1 Los Angeles 13, St. Louis 3 San Francisco at Milwaukee (inc) TODAY'S GAMES Houston at Cincinnati (n) San Franciscoat Milwaukee Philadelphia at Pittsburgh (n) New York at Chicago Los Angeles at St. Louis (n) ANNOUNCING Whit's Truck Rental 202 W. Washington St. Ann Arbor call NO 5-6875 Pick-ups Panels Smal Vans Gopher Golfer Outs Publinx Medalist Also other studio, room furnished apartments close campus for fall. one and two bed- and unfurnished to hospitals and i 1 MINNEAPOLIS ;(R) -- In two great rallies, 19-year-old Jim Carl- son of Hopkins, MInn., knocked off the medalist and Hawaii's No. 1 player yesterday to advance to the third round in the Na- tional Public Links Golf Tourna- ment. The bespectacled University of Minnesota sophomore, who won the Minnesota state junior ama- teur title last year, elimnated Steve Oppermann of San Fran- cisco in a 19-hole first-round, thriller. Then he defeated Gregory Di- kilato of Kailua Oahu, Hawaii 1 up in the afternoon. Oppermann, the current West- ern amateur and California state champion, and public links run- ner-up last year, won medalist honors with 70-65-135 over the 6,593-yard par 35-35--70 Francis Gross course. Carlson, an economics major, was two down after the first nine against Oppermann and one down after winning the 15th with a seven-foot birdie putt. He gained a one up lead on the 17th when Oppermann was trapped and bo- gied. But the 22-year-old San Fran- ciscan pulled even at 18 with a par four when Carlson hit the sand and three-putted from 45 feet for a double-bogey six. On the 356-yard 19th, Opper- mann's pitch from the rough was short and his chip was 15 feet from the cup. Carlson was on in two, after coming out of the rough, and cinched his par while his opponent missed his putt and took a five, ending the match. Carlson was one up on ]iki- lato with a first nine 35, but traps cost him the next two holes. The Islander went two up with a five- [cKinley Advances into Quarterfinals 'f Clay Courts Tennis Championships Foot birdie putt on 12. Carlson won 14 with a birdie but Dikilato again went two up with a stand- ard four at 15 while Carlson three- putted. I Rally Carlson then rallied to win the last three holes with a 13-foot birdie putt on 16, a regulation three on 17 and an 18-foot birdie tap on 18, closing with 35 for a 70. Dikilato had 72. "My driver was my big weap- on," said the broad-shouldered blond Carlson. "I had been push- ing my shots. But last night pro Lies Bolstad changed my grip slightly and my movement on the downswing. I got back in the groove just in time." The double round yesterday trimmed the field to 16 survivors. Iwo more rounds today will set up the 36-hole semifinals tomor- -ow leading to the 36-hole cham- pionship match Saturday. There were' no other double upsets during the double round although defending champion 3obby Lunn of San Francisco came close to tasting defeat near sun- down. He was carried to the 19th hole before defeating a seven- foot putt after chipping on the 19th green but rammed in the butt for a par four. Arakawa's chip was nine feet away and he nissed, taking a five. Extra Holes There were extra hole match- ?s during the day, the longest the ?4-hole battle, one short of the meet record, before. Bob Hawkins f Tacoma Park, Md., defeated Hubert Farmer of Toledo in the first round. The biggest victory margins were registered by Foster Bradley of Santa Monica, Calif., with a 7 and 6 decision over Gary Boback of Erie, Pa., in the first round, md by Pfc. Dennis Murphy of Anchorage, Alaska, with a 7 and 6 triumph over Tom Balliet of Pontiac, Mich., in the . second round. Bradley was eliminated in the second session by Clarence Yee of Honolulu. Thirteen other matches were not :decided until the final green. Campus Management NO 2-7787 days NO 3-9064 eves. GIRL WANTS ROOMMATE to share campus apt. for fall. NO 2-7075 after 5. C19 TWO BDRM. APARTMENTS FOR FALL Large, luxurious, modern RENT-A-CAR $8 For 24 Hours Plus 8c per mile All rates include gas; oil and necessary insurance SPECIAL Week-End Rate IVER FOREST, Ill. (P)-Fa- d Chuck McKinley easily pt into the quarter-finals but iur Ashe, Negro star from GA, was upset in third-round i of the National Clay Courts nis Tournament yesterday. she, sixth-seeded in this tour- and also sixth-ranked nation- was eliminated by South Af- 's Abe Segal, 6-1, 6-4. he 36-year-old Segal, spotting ears in age, took advantage of e's mistakes against his south- play and wrapped up the ch by breaking Ashe's serves e in the second set." nother Davis Cupper, Frank ehling of Miami, Fla., also ad- cpd to today's quarter-finals ' a 7-5, 6-3 victory over Ron- Fischer, Houston, Tex., and e University star. Ralston Wins Too ennis Ralston of Bakersfield, ., No. 2 seed who teamed with Cinley to wrest the Davis Cup from Australia last year, gained the quarter-finals with a 6-1, 6-3 triumph over Chicago's Grant Golden. Young Charles Pasarell of Puerto Rico, sixth seeded, staged a fine comeback to win his third- round match. Pasarell, defeated Chile's No. 1 player, Patricia Rodriquez, 10-8, 6-2. Down five games to two in the first set, Pasarell, No. 1 on the junior Davis Cup team last year, rallied by winning four straight games in his eventual 10-8 deci- sion. Top-seeded McKinley, from San Antonio, Tex., and favored to cap- ture his third straight clay courts crown, toyed with William Bond, University of Arizona star from La Jolla, Calif., for a 6-2, 6-0 triumph. Serve Wins McKinley's powerful serve and devastating forehand kept Bond off balance i'epeatedly. Today McKinley meets Pasarell in a key quarter-final match of the upper bracket. Fourth-seeded Martin Riessen, Northwestern University D a v i s Cupper, won his third round match from Herbert Fitzgibbon, Princeton star from Garden City, N.Y., 6-2, 6-4. India's Prmjit Lall, No. 2 for- eign seeded entry, eliminated young George Sokol of Bryn Mawr, Pa., 6-3, 6-2, to gain the upper bracket quarter-final round. Reaching the lower bracket quarterfinals, Mike Belkin of Miami, Fla., a junior Davis Cup- per, ousted seventh-ranked James McManus, University of California player from Berkeley, 6-1, 6-4, in a mild upset. SOFTBALL SCORES Eng. Mech. 1, Conger House 0 (forfeit) Misfits 11, Psychology "C" 3 Gashers 17, Education 5 AFIT 14, Economics 6 keep rim S ARCADE BARBERS NICKELS ARCADE 4 COUPON SALE-Thru Sat., July 18 Cotton Casuals-lvy or Continental: Reg. $4.99 to $7.99 COUPON GOOD FOR $1.00 ANN ARBOR CLOTHING 113 S. Main St. 662-5187 U ~ - m m s "w.U wr w -- i1wwwwa~~w s w~tw® w wow w choice of comers u selection. I 111 m i Foreign Car spoken here" Ai IDAS has 111FFi FRC InrI -PIpr AR w ilf e%t*ti r I IrIf% I m) 11 I