PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY WFVFRA Vt A TfTCTQTI> 1091flE vri1V' t AXA~Lil. AULXUM1J . Z~, AIDUZ Miller: I'm Not a Pitcher BOSTON (R) - Stu Miller, a little guy with a monstrous curve, turned to baseball by default. Fans continued today to buzz' about that right-handed pitcher from the San Francisco Giantsj who for both 1961 All-Star games sent American League batters away from the plate talking to them- selves. In Monday's rain-stopped 1-1 tie, the 165-pounder struck out Mickey Mantle, Elston Howard and pinch hitter Roy Sievers in order with the potential winning run on base. Miller, 33, currently is a resident of San Mateo, Calif., though he grew up in Northhampton, Mass. Stu says his entry into baseball "is almost like a fairy tale."., "I didn't play high school base- ball, just on the sandlots," Miller says. "I was mostly a catcher. But I could throw a curve." Miller said when he came home after . service in 1949, "I didn't have any idea of playing ball for a living." "I read where the St. Louis Cardinals were goiny to have a tryout camp in Northhampton," Miller explains. "I didn't have a job. So I decided to go for the heck of it." "I pitched for two or three days and this scout came over and asked me if I'd like to play pro ball. So I said okay. I didn't have ABL Heads Set Games CHICAGO (M)-Officials of all eight clubs of the American Bas- ketball League will open three days of meetings today to draw up schedules and rules for the new professional league. Presiding as commissioner of the meetings will be Abe Saper- stein, who also owns the league's Chicago Majors entry. The other teams in the league are the Pitts- burgh Rens, Washington (D.C.) Caps, Cleveland Pipers, Kansas City Steers, Los Angeles Jets, San Francisco Saints and Hawaii Chiefs. The owners, coaches and busi- ness managers hope to draft the league schedule, adopt playing rules which reportedly include several innovations, name a chief referee, name playing sites and ratify each team's contract list of players. anything better to do. They ship- pedme to Salisbury in the Eastern, Shore League and I've been in baseball ever since. "My best pitch is a changeup on the curve. Vedie Himsl, the Chi- cago Cubs' coach who managed, me in class D in 1950, taught it to me. I've known how to throw a half-baked curve since I was 16. But changing speeds gave me what success I have now." { In his first All-Star appearance at San Francisco July 11, Miller# wound up the winning pitcher. His All-Star totals read 4% innings,+ 1 unearned run, 1 hit, 1 walk, 9 strikeouts and an earned run ave- earge of 0.00.j For the season, Miller has ap-1 peared in 39 games strickly in re- lief, has worked 73 innings, given' up 53 hits, walked 19, struck out 54 with an 8-3 record and a 2.71 ERA. He led the National LeagueI with a 2.47 ERA in 1958 despite a 6-9 record., Miller's catcher, Ed Bailey, says of Stu: "He has control and vary- ing speeds, none fast. He drives those sluggers wild." "I'm probably more effective against guys trying to hit the ball out of the park," Miller agrees. After watching Miller work here Monday, Boston coach Rudy York made this observation: "Miller throws the ball slow and his body fast. So the batters swing at the delivery and not at the ball. -He's the first to do it so effectively since Schoolboy Rowe." Mantle said after the game he had been warned of the slow curve facing Miller "but I never ex- pected anything that slow. It felt, like I waited an hour for it and was still way out in front." "Let 'em laugh at the junk Miller throws," said Milwaukee third baseman Eddie Mathews. "It just happens that nobody in our league likes to hit against him." DODGERS ON TOP: Alston Wary in NL Race; Honk Suspended with Fine 4- ---- A Douglas Leads Netmen; Glasgow Wins by Upset DODGER POWER-In spite of having very good players like Norm Larker (above,sliding), Frank Howard (signaling), Maury Wills, and Wally Moon, Walt Alston is still not ready to take over complete control of the pennant race. PGA CHAMP: Wall Stays waFrom_ Golf Open _ PITTSBURGH ,P) -- Los An-I geles manager Walter Alston, a veteran of tight National League races, doesn't plan any pennant-r winning celebrations just yet. "We feel good about being in! first place, but nobody knows if we'll stay up there," Alston said after the Dodgers whipped Pitts- burgh Sunday for their eighth straight victory. The triumph, coupled with aI Cincinnati-Chicago split of a doubleheader, gave the Dodgers a half-game lead over the second- place Reds. "I've never made any predic- tions, and this is a bad time to4 start making them," Alston said.- "We'll just go along as we have been doing. We'll play them one atS a time." Alston even foresees a closer1 race than the one currently be- ing waged in the league. He said: "I think it can get tighter than it is. The Giants and Braves have been playing good ball. They're further out, but it may get tight- er as we go along." The Dodger skipper went so far as to say the defending world champion Pirates still could cause trouble The Pirates are 13%/ games out. "We caught them in a little1 slump," Alston said. "They hit the ball well in this series but right at somebody most of the time. When a team's in a slump, it has some bad luck." Discussing the recent perform- ance that shot the 1959 cham- pions into first place, Alston said no one player can be cited as the star. "This is the best streak we've had in a long time," he said, "but it's been a team effort. One day it's (Duke) Snider; the next day it's (Wally) Moon. Then Tommy Davis. It's been spread around. (Norm) Larker hit a grand slam home run the other day. Then (Gil) Hodges went four for' four. Everyone on the team has had a part in it." * * * Houk Suspended BOSTON QP)--Manager Ralph Houk of the New York Yankees received a five-day suspension and a $250 fine yesterday for a ruckus with the umpires during a doubleheader with Baltimore last sunday. The fine and suspension were imposed by American League pres- ident Joe Cronin. Houk's suspen- sion will start today when the Yankees play a doubleheader with Kansas City in New York and wil continue through Aug. 6. Houk, reached in New York, had only this terse comment: "I think it is a very tough pen- alty for what I did " Houk was ordered by Cronin not to be in uniform once a ball game begins and not to participate in directing his team either directly or indirectly while a game is in progress. During Sunday's doubleheader, Houk was accused of brushing umpire Ed Hurley in a dispute over a called strike on a pitch which retired Cletus Boyer. Hurley said Houk "definitely bumped me. I'll have to report it ito the league." Both Houk and Boyer thought the pitch in question was low. Boyer was called out on strikes. At the time, the Yankees had the bases loaded and nobody out. All four umpires submitted re- ports on the incident, Cronin said. There have been two other ma- jor suspensions in major league baseball during the current sea- son. In April. Los Angeles Dodger coach Leo Durocher was suspend- ed for three days for a shin-kick- ing hassle with an umpire, Jocko Conlan, during a game with the Pittsburgh Pirates. At that time, National League president Warren Giles wired Du- rocher: "I am sure you understand that any kind of intentional body con- tact with an umpire during an argument is cause for suspension. For such an offense during your argument with umpire Conlan in your game in Los Angeles, April 16 you are suspended three days, April 17-19." In a dispute over whether a ball was foul or fair, the shin-kicking episode resulted. Los 'Angeles pitcher Don Drys- dale was suspended five days and fined $100 in July for throwing at a batter The bean-ball contro- versy involved Frank .Robinson of the Cincinnati Reds during a game in Los Angeles July 9. SOUTHAMPTON, N.Y. (A') - Top-seeded Jack Douglas, the handsome Marine corporal from Santa Monica, Calif., led the eight seeded U.S. players yesterday in- to the third round of the Meadow Club Invitation Tennis Tourna- ment. Douglas, who won last week's Pennsylvania Grass Court Cham- pionships, rallied to oust Eugene Scott of St. James, N.Y., 7-5, 6-2. Douglas trailed 3-5 in the first set, 0-2 in the second. Second-seeded Jack Frost from Monterrey, Calif., disposed of John Hammill, South Africa, 3-6, 6-1, 6-1, and third - seeded Frank Froehling the 19-year-old sensa- tion from Coral Gables, Fla., stop- ped John Karabasz, Miami, 7-5, 6-2 Dennis Ralston, the fourth- seeded U.S. Davis Cupper from Bakersfield, Calif., advanced, 6-4, 6-4 over Alphonse Ochoa, Mexi- co. Fifth-seeded Ron Holmberg, Brooklyn, N.Y., breezed by Roger Werksman, Los Angeles, 6-1, 6-1. Whitney Reed, sixth - seeded from Alameda, Calif., survived a 7-5, 8-6 struggle with little George Sokel, Haverford, Pa. Seventh-seeded Ramsey Earn- hart, Ventura, Calif., out-battled Bob Siska, San Francisco, 6-4, 3-6, 6-2 and eight-seeded Chris Craw- ford Piedmont, Calif., ousted Jim McManus, San Francisco, 6-2, 4-6, 6-2. Bob Mark, the top-seeded for- eigner from Australia, won over Ronnie Fisher, Houston, 6-3, 10- 12, 6-2. PASADENA, Calif. () - Carla Glasgow, unheralded 18-year-old from nearby Whittier, upset Na- tional Amateur champion Jo Anne Gunderson of Seattle one up yes- terday in the first round of the Women's Western Golf Cham- pionships. Miss Glasgow, 18 day before yesterday, playing in her first im- portant tournament, was three down at the turn. But she caught the blonde ex-women's Western Golf Association champion with an eagle three on the 14th hole, passed her on the 15th and held on for the remarkable victory. There were few if any other upsets as the field of 64 played the first round of match play at the Annandale Golf Club. Another former national cham- pion from- Seattle, Mrs Anne Quasp Decker, defeated Sandra Palmer of Fort Worth, 2 and 1. BALTIMORE (AP-Art Wall yes- terday withdrew from the $35,000 Eastern Open Golf Tournament to be held Thursday through Sunday at Pine Ridge Course. Wall notified tournament offici- als of his withdrawal by telegram from his home at Honesdale, Pa. At his home, Wall said he was "completely exhausted." "I played two rounds Sunday in the PGA and played in a pro- am early Monday morning," he said. "That's 54 holes in less than 24 hours." Major League Standings AMERICAN New York Detroit Baltimore Cleveland Chicago Boston Washington Minnesota Los Angeles Kansas City LEAGUE W L Pct. GB 65 36 .644 - 64 38 .628 1z1 58 46 .558 8? 55 49 .529 11% 51 53 .490 l51,, 47 58 .448 20 45 56 .446 20 45 56 .446 20 45 57 .441 201A 37 63 .370 2 7'' Wall, who returned to the cir- cuit last week after being laid off a month while he recovered from a groin injury, said his doctor had warned that he might reinjure himself if he became too tired. Wall's withdrawal leaves two members of the newly named Ry- der Cup team in the Eastern Open. They are Bill Collins and Gene Littler. Among the early arrivals, Jackie Burke was injured today during a practice round at the tournament site. Burke was struck in the face with a driver when he walked be- hind Tony Lema as Lema was about to hit a drive off the first tee. Burke - was taken to Union Memorial Hospital where six stitches were needed to close the cut in his chin. He later returned to the course. A $3,500 pro-amateur tourna- ment tomorrow will serve many of the pros as a practice round for the Eastern. Among those due for tomorrow's play are Doug Sanders, Julius Boros, Bob Goalby, Ken Venturi, Dave Ragan, Pete Cooper, Jacke Burke, Ted Kroll, Lionel Hebert, Doug Ford, Johnny Pott and Bob Rosburg. BILLIARDS and SWIMMING daily except Sunday at the MICHIGAN UNION Read the Classifieds cp A RALPH HOUK . ... suspended Eagles Favored by 1 In Tilt wth College, CHICAGO ) - The heavy work is over but the tough job is ahead for the college All-Stars who meet the Philadelphia Eagles Friday night in the annual All- Star football game in Soldier Field. - The National Football League champions are two touchdown favorites over the collegians but many believe this Ali-Star team, which plans to employ a pro-type attack, has an excellent chance to defeat the Eagles. Speed, size and talent is plent- iful in the All-Star camp. But experience is the professionals' forte. The pros hold a 17-8 edge in the colorful classic with two games. ending in ties.. The All-Stars, coached by Otto Graham, had their first taste of professional competition last week in a scrimmage against the Chi- cago Bears in Rensselaer, Ind. The All-Stars battled the Bears to a 14-14 tie. George Halas, owner-coach of the Bears, called the collegians the best All-Star squad he has seen in the last 11 years. One factor in the All-Stars' favor is that the Eagles will not be operating with the same quar- tererback who led them to the NFL. title. Norm Van Brocklin, retired at the end of the season and is coaching the Minnesota Vikings. Sonny Jurgensen has been groomed to replace Van Brocklin but reports from the Eagle camp in Hershey, Pa., are that Jurgen- sen has failed to live up to ex- pectations. King Hill, late of the St. Louis Cardinals, might be at the controls for the Eagles Fri- day. Graham has at his disposal three capable quarterbacks in Bill Kilmer of UCLA, Norm Snead of Wake Forest and Tom Matte of Ohio State. This trio will throw passes to a speedy group of ends and halfbacks who include Joe Bellino of Navy, Mike Ditka . of Pitt, John Brewer of Mississippi and El Kimbrough of Northwes- tern. End Ditka of Pitt and Line- backer Emil Holub of Texas Tech were named co-captains. Ditka will lead the offense and Holub the defense. The two were Ditka and Holub are both out- standing professional prospects. Ditka was the Chicago Bears No. 1 draft choice and Holub already has signed to play with the Dallas Texans of the American Football League. The stars, however, will have to provide protection for their of- fense, and Graham has gone all out this year to match the pros in size. Nearly half of the 56-man squad is made up of players weigh- 4 Points All-S tars ing between 230 and 285 pounds. Last year the All-Stars lost to Baltimore, 32-7. In that game, the1 collegians failed to give the passer sufficient protection and the de- fensive linemen were unable to break into the Colts' backfield and upset Johnny Unitas' passing game. Things could be different this year. The game will draw a crowd of around 65,000. It will be televised nationally via ABC at 9 p.m. EST. NATIONAL Los Angeles Cincinnati San Francisco Milwaukee Pittsburgh St. Louis Chicago Philadelphia TODAY'S LEAGUE W L Pct. 62 38-.620 63 40 .612 54 46 .540 50 48 .510 45 48 .484 47 52 .475 43 56 .434 30 66 .313 GAMES TODAY'S GAMES Washington at Detroit (2-TN) Kansas City at New York (2) Minnesota at Baltimore (2-TN) Chicago at Cleveland (2-TN) Los Angeles at Boston (2) GB ~1 8 it 13?- 141 1811 30 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessories.I Complete A'ltomotive Service-All products and services guaranteed. Road Service "You expect more from Standard and you get it." 1220 South University NO 8-9168 81 FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars. Lubrication $1.50 Nye Motor Sales 514 E. Washington Phone NO 3-4858 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING SPECIAL SIX-DAY LINES ONE-DAY RATE 2 .70 .58 3 .85 .70 4 1.00 .83 Figure 5 average words to a line Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. Phone NO 2-4786 San Francisco at Los Angeles (N) Milwaukee at Chicago (2) Pittsburgh at St. Louis (N) Philadelphia at Cincinnati (2-TN) SLACK PANTS SPECIAL GROUP one low price 1 HENRY H. STEVENS, Inc. LONG DISTANCE MOVING 1273 Broadway Bill Flint 6, Michigan Stevens one Collect Lit. '40 nt CEdar 4-1686 Managei WASH 'N WEAR IVYS, DACS CORDS, PIN CORDS *A" c 77 our reg. $4.95 SPORT 99c and $150 SHIRTS I Pha FHim For Lower Free Estimates 1.) Interstate Rates Every Friday We own, operate, schedule and dispatch our own fleet of vans for better direct service without transfer. SAMES STORE 122 E. Washington St. HaIm S7 EMPLOYMENT WANTED WANTED-Baby-sitting jobs. Reliable woman with own transportation. Call NO 3-0338. FOR SALE WIDE-ANGLE and telephoto lenses for a Contaflex II camera. GR 9-3702, toll free. B14 1956 SPORTSMAN mobile home, 33 ft. by 8 ft. $1600. Ideal for couple. Full bath. Clean. NO 3-4016 or HIckory 9- 2306. B13 BY OWNER, will sacrifice: 2-bedroom ranch, oak floors, storms and screens, garage, fenced yard. Located at 1126 Hawthorne, Ypsilanti. Key at 1040 Olivia, Ann Arbor. Terms available. No reasonable offer will be refused. Reply Box 104, Michigan Daily. B12 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS A-1 New and Used Instruments} BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington NO 2-1834 X3 Preview of Grinnell's PIANO FESTIVAL SALE Come in any day and see these tremendous values from $399 up. GRINNELL'S 323 S. Main NO 2-5667 the home of Steinway pianos X2 BARGAIN CORNER SUMMER SPECIALS: Men's Wear: short sleeve sport shirts 99c & $1.50; knit sport shirts $1.44; wash-n-wear slacks 2.77; many other big buys-Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. W2 BUSINESS SERVICES SUSTERKA LAKE Private swimming parties Hall rental Hayride and pizzaride Horseback riding daily Call DON BASTEDO, HU 3-5010, CAMPUS OPTICIANS Most frames replaced while you wait. Brokenlenses duplicated FAST service on all repairs. J19 TRANSPORTATION RIDE WANTED to Atlanta, Georgia, on August 17. Will share driving and gas costs. Phone 663-7024. G5 HELP WAN]ED TWO WOMEN NEEDED for telephone work in downtown office of local dry cleaners. Interesting work. Guaran- teed salary. Two shifts available. Tel. NO 2-9546. H16 TYPIST two afternoons per week. In- dependent real estate office. $1.75 per hour. Sales people also needed. Com- mission only. Prefer experienced per- son. Call NO 3-9373. H14 STUDENTS: Here's an opportunity to turn your sales ability into money. Taking subscriptions for the Ann Ar- bar Digest is profitable-very profit- able Miss Dean will tell you all about it. Phone NO 3-8838. H15 BIKES and SCOOTERS BOY'S BIKE-J. C. Higgins Ingl&fl- built. $20. Call NO 2-4736. FOR RENT Ann Arbor's FINEST Apartments at Moderate Rentals Schedule of Rentals: Studio................$ 98 to 126 1-Bedroom .............. 120 to 180 2-Bedroom..............225 to 270 3-Bedroom..............270 to 330 (including heat, water, Prigi- daire range and refrigerator, swimming pool) Modes open 11 am. to 8 p.m. daily and Sunday. Immediate occupancy. 2200 Fuller Road. HURON TOWERS r 240 NICKELS ARCADE NO 2-9116 NO 8-6019 J3 Shopping at RALPH'S MARKET is never rained out- Ralph's is open every night till 12! MEATS SPECIALTIES KITCHEN UTENSILS Ralph has a roof over his head- £ at 709 Packard JOa DATA PROCESSING of all kinds per- formed. Programming, statistical an- alysis, and consulting. Call NO 5-6713. J18 STUDENTS: Neat, expert typing of your papers, etc., pickup and delivery in Ann Arbor. Electric typewriter. Call GL 3-6258. J6 USED CARS JIM WHITE CHEVROLET USED CARS 1960 CADILLAC, 62 two-door coupe, full power. ' beige with rmatch- I