WEDNESDAY$ JUNE 28, 196I THE MICHIGAN DAIT.V .... , WEDNESDAYav aJUNE [28, a1961 t PAGE FIVE Redlegs Edge Cubs, 10-8' *i By The Associated Press CHICAGO - Four Cincinnati pinch batters produced two singles, a walk, and a base-cleaning triple as the Reds, came from behind to defeat the Chicago Cubs 10-8 yes- terday. It was the league-leaders' 11th victory in the past 13 games. The Reds had two on and two out in the seventh when veteran Gus Bell blasted a run-making pinch single. Gordy Coleman also stroked a pinch single good for the second run. Rookie catcher John Edwards, recalled from Indianapolis of the American Association, was a guest swinger for Jerry Zimmerman and drew a base-filling walk. Jerry Lynch then batted for Jay Hook, second of Cincinnati's three pitchers, and tripled to the foot of the right field foul line to clear the bases. It was Lynch's fourth extra base hit good for 11 runs batted in in six pinch hitting as- signments against the Cubs this season. 4' * * Dodgers 9, Pirates 5 PITTSBURGH - The Los An- geles Dodgers and the Pittsburgh Pirates pounded out a total of 30 hits last night and the Dodgers emerged from the free-swinging contest with a 9-5 victory. John Roseboro sparked the Dod- gers' 16-hit attack with three singles, a sacrifice fly and three runs-batted-in. Jim Gilliam also singled three times. The Pirates collected 14 hits, but couldn't catch the Dodgers in the run department. Roberto Cle- mente batted out four singles for the Buccos. Dick Farrell, the second of three Dodger pitchers, was credited with the victory, his sixth against five defeats. Pirate starter Bob Friend was charged with the loss and is now 8-8. The Dodgers got two runs off Friend in the first inning and chased him in the third when they scored four runs on five hits, in- cluding Norm Larker's two-run double. . The Dodger added single tallies in the fourth, seventh and ninth. * * * Braves 3, Cards 0 ST. LOUIS - Bob Buhl pitched a six-hit shutout and Eddie Ma- thews hit a two-run home run, giving the Milwaukee Braves a 3-0 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals last night. Buhl, in fine form, registered his first whitewash of the season to make his record 5-5. About the only bright spot ir the Redbirds' limp showing was the performance of Star Musial, who celebrated hih 10,000th time at bat by hitting a double to cen- ter field. Only four players in history, Ty Cobb, Tris Speaker, Honus Wag- ner and Walter (Rabbit) Maran- ville have gone over the 10,000. mark in at bats. Curt Simmons, the Card's hard- luck left-hander, took the loss, his seventh against only two vic- tories. Simmons had two hits, both of the infield variety, as he tried to do something in his own behalf for the punchless Cards. Giants 12, Phils 5 PHILADELPHIA - The San Francisco Giants overwhelmed the Philadelphia Phillies 12-5 last night as young Juan Marichal held NO UPSETS: 14 Men, Four Women Score IAt Wimbledon Championships CLASSIFIEDSJ N them to four hits and no runs through eight innings. The Phils knocked him out of the game with a five run ninth inning rally. The Giants scored a run in the first inning off John Buzharct and then kept piling it on as Marchi- chal handcuffed the Phillies un- til the ninth when he tired and needed help from Stu Miller. It was Marichal's fifth win in nine decisions." Orlando Cepeda had two singles and a double to pace the Giants' 13-hit attack while Tom Haller JERRY LYNCH . . Redleg clutch hitter It was the high-flying Sox' 18th victory in 19 games. Minoso's rightfield shot came in the eighth off Paul Foytack after the Tiger pitcher had sent Detroit ahead 5-4 in the sixth with a homerun. Chicago jumped to a 4-0 lead, but the Tigers tied it in the fifth on Rocky Colavito's three-run homer. It was Colavito's 20th. * * * Twins 6, Red Sox 5 ST. PAUL - MINNEAPOLIS - Zorro Versalles blooped a single into center field with the bases loaded last night to give the Min- nesota Twins a 6-5 victory over the Boston Red Sox in the first game of a doubleheader. Versalles' two-run single with two out in the eighth inning erased a 5-4 Red Sox lead built in 'he top of the frame on a run-scoring single by reliew pitcher Mike For- nieles, his first hit of the, season. After the Red Sox took a 4-1 lead with a four-run sixth, the Twins tied the score on pinch- hitter Julio Becquer's two run homer. It was his second home and seventh safety in 12 pinch- hitting appearances this season. Danny McDevitt (2-2) picKed up the victory in relief for the Twins while Fornieles (5-4) took the loss. * * * Orioles 5, A's 3 KANSAS CITY - Baltimoic's Mary Throneberry blasted a pair of homers and a run scoring single against his former Kansas City teammates last night as thie Or- ioles beat the Athletics 5-3 in the first game of a double bill Milt Pappas (4-3) was the win- ning pitcher. He survived a three- run rally by the A's in the second inning but was replaced by Hoyt Wilhelm in the eighth. The d6- feat was charged to Ed Rakow who relieved starter Norm Bass in the second and struck out Thine- berry with the bases loaded. Major League Stlandings AMERICAN LEAGUE (Not including Tuesday's games) WV L Pct. GB Detroit 45 24 .652 - New York 44 25 .638 1 Cleveland 41 30 .577 5 Boston 36 33 .522 9 Baltimore 36 34 .514 9 Chicago 36 34 .514 9 Kansas City 29 38 .433 15 Washington 30 40 .42915% Minnesota 26 43 .377 19 Los Angeles 25 47 .347 21 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 6, Detroit 5 (1st game, 2nd inc..) Minnesota 6, Boston 5 (1st game, 2nd inc.) Baltimore 5, Kansas City 3 (1st game, 2nd Inc.) Washington 8, Cleveland 5 New York at Los Angeles (inc.) TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Detroit New York at Los Angeles Baltimore at Kansas City Washington at Cleveland (2) Boston at Minnesota NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Cincinnati 44 25 .638 - Los Angeles 42 29 .592 3 San Francisco 39 30 .565 5 Pittsburgh 33 31 .516 $%2 Milwaukee 32 32 .500 9 St. Louis 30 37 .448 13 Chicago 25 41 .379 17 Philadelphia 22 42 .344192 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 9, Pittsburgh 5 Milwaukee 3, St. Louis 0 San Francisco 12, Philadelphia 5 Cincinnati 10, Chicago 8 TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at Pittsburgh (n) Milwaukee at St. Louis (n) San Francisco at Philadelphia (n) Cincinnati at Chicago (2) CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING drove in three runs with a double and single and Chuck Hiller, Willie Mays and Willie McCovey all help- ed themseves to a pair of safeties. McCovey also scored three runs. * * * Senators 8, Indians 5 CLEVELAND - Catcher Gene Green drove in five runs with two homers and a single last night to lead Washington to an 8-5 vic- tory over the Cleveland Indians, which snapped a 10-game losing streak for the Senators. Washington hammered three consecutive homers in the first inning to tie an American League record. The clouts were by Green, Willie Tasby and Dale Long. Chuck Hinton, who reached first on a fielder's choice, scored on Green's blast into the upper left field stands. Green's second home run in the seventh inning also scored Hinton, who had walked. The Washington catcher drove in his fifth run with a single in the ninth inning. Rookie right hander- Ed Ho- baugh celebrated his 27th birthday by picking up his fifth victory in eight decisions. He was relieved by Dave Sisled with out out in the eighth after the Indians had scor- ed three runs on three singles and a double. * * * White Sox 6, Tigers 5 DETROIT - Minnie Minoso's two-run homer, brought the Chi- cago White Sox from behind for their 11th straight victory last night, a 6-5 decision over the Detroit Tigers in the opener of a twi-night doubleheader. By The Associated Press WIMBLEDON. England-Four- teen American men and four women yesterday advanced into the second round .of the Wimble- don Lawn Tennis championships on a sunny day highlighted by the fighting play of little Nancy Richey. Miss Richey, a tiny 19-year-old Texan with a heart nearly as big as the state, went on the center court against second-seeded Aus- tralian, Margaret Smith. She lost her match but won Wimbledon's heart. The sellout crowd of 14,000 'Offer Full I-MPro grain A full schedule of activities will be available for the sports-lover during the summer session, Earl Riskey, the University's intramur- al director, announces. Several softball leagues, com- plete with playoffs, singles tour- naments in several sports, open swimming and a co-recreational night each week will be featured during the busy summer. Riskey expects about 28 team entries for the 1961 softball pro- gram, about half of which will be made up of faculty members. Ac- tion will start the day after the July 4 holiday and continue through the, seventh week of school-a total of six weeks of ac- tion. However, Riskey points out that entries must be turned into the I-M building by June 30. These may be made either appearing at the I-M building or calling NO 3-4181. Gaines Every Day The games will be held each weekday except Friday at South Ferry Field, starting at 6:30 p.n,. When entering, teams should indicate a preference as to play- ing days, and a schedule will be drawn up to accommodate prefer- ences as closely as possible. Umpires are urgently needed for the softball league, Riskey adds. Any interested persons should contact the I-M building. Riskey plans an extensive tour- nament program for individuals desiring competition in some of the minor sports. Included in the projected program are singles tourneys in golf, tennis, handball, squash, badminton, and horse- shoes. Dates for these tourneys will not be announced until later in the summer, but interested par- ticipants are encouraged to con- tact the I-M building. Pool Open For the water lover, the I-M swimming pool will be reserved for male students from 4-5:30 each weekday. Faculty members will get a chance to take a dip from 11:45-1 daily except Satur- day and Sunday. The I-M building will be open for all to enjoy from 8 a.m. until 6 p.m., Monday through Friday. The co-recreational program will be held every Wednesday eve- ning from 7:30-10 p.m. and will include various activities for both male and female participants, some of which will be badminton, volleyball, swimming, and paddle- ball. The first co-rec night is sched- uled for tomorrow. basking in the sun rose to the two girls, both making their first appearance at Wimbledon. Nan- cy, poker-faced and wearing a long-peaked eyeshade, took the first set-and an upset looked in the making. But the strong Australian girl pulled the match around, leveled it at one set all and prevailed 3-6, 6-3, 6-4, as she pinned the girl from San Angelo to the baseline. A roar of cheers for both girls went up from the packed galleries at the end of the match. Miss Richey's match was the one that had the crowds roaring the loudest and- longest at this tennis factory on the outskirts of London where play went on non- stop for seven hours. The last matches were completed as twi- light began to fall. Charles (Chuck) McKinley and Karen Hantze, the only two seed- ed Americans, breezed through their matches to spearhead the American challenge. McKinley, a muscular 20-year- old from St. Louis used all his power and strength to defeat Ital- ian Davis Cupper Sergei Tacchini 6-2, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4. The aggressive young Yank, with a booming service, overhead smash and light- ning volleys, never played a safe shot. All the time it was power, power and more power. Miss Hantze, the 18-year-old No. 2 ranked American from Chu- la Vista, Calif., coasted to a 6-2, 6-2 victory over Mrs. Rosa Dar- mon of Mexico. McKinley and Miss Hantze both are seeded eighth. All the seeds in the singles got through their opening matches without being extended. Once again, for his 14th Wim- bledon. 47-year-old Gardnar Mul- loy drew the crowds for his match against John Ward of Eng- land. Mulloy, of Coral Gables, Fla., defeated his 27-year-old op- ponent 6-2, 6-8, 1-6, 6-4, 6-4 to the delight of Wimbledon fans who have been watching him for years. All of America's top men got, through to the next round on a shock-free day. Among the win- ners were Jon Douglas of Santa Monica, Calif.; Whitney Reed of Alameda, Calif., Donald Dell of Bethesda, Md., and Chris Craw- ford, Piedmont, Calif. LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY .80 S .96 1.12 Figvre 5 average words to a line. Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. and 9:00 and 11 :30 Saturday - Phone NO 2-4786 FOR RENT ON CAMPUS furnished apartments for rent. NO 2-1443. C17 PARKING SPACE behind Campus The- atre. $5.50/month. NO 3-4322. C7 CAMPUS-furnished three-room apart- ment, private bath. Call NO 2-7365. C2 CAMPUS 4-room furnished apartment for summer, suitable for 2 or 3 boys. NO 3-4322. 06 3-ROOM furnished apartment with pri- vate bath and washing facilities. NO 3-8458. C13 WANTED-female roommate to share apartment for summer. Near campus. NO 5-4574. 018 ON CAMPUS garage and lot parking available for summer and fall semes- ters. NO 2-1443. C16 GRAD GIRLS-,Double rooms in attrac- tive apt. 718 Lawrence. Full use kit- chen and living room. $35/month per girl. Call NO 5-5125 or NO 3-0787. C5 CAMPUS-2 blocks. Two-bedroom apt. suitable for 4 adults. First floor at reduced rate for summer. NO 3-4062. C11 VERY PLEASANT ROOM 2 blocks from campus, 1 block from eating places. Cross ventilation, quiet shadystreet. Phone 3-4685. 1320 Forest Court. C8 NOW AVAILABLE - Across from East Quad: 2 parking spaces, part of an exciting apartment, and a small duck. Call NO 5-7892. 09 CAMPUS - Attractive apartment fur- nished for one adult. No garage. $75 a month. Prefer year-around occu- pancy. NO 2-7395. C1 MEN-Share a house located on the finest beach on Whitmore Lake. Water skiing Included. YOU HAVE TO SEE IT TO BELIEVE IT. Call HI 92387 after 7 p.m. 015 FURNISHED University-operated apart- ments available to married students and married faculty for summer session. Leases available on short term basis. Call NO 2-3169 or apply University Apartments Office, 2364 Bishop St. Office open Mon. through Sat. C14 CAMPUS APTS. Summer occupancy. Efficiency $55, 1-bedroom $65-$70, 2-bedroom $85- $90. NO 5-9405. 012 BUSINESS SERVICES BARGAIN CORNER ENGLISH BIKE - Boy's Lightweii Centaur. Like new, with brand n tires. $25. Call NO 2-4736. SUMMER SPECIALS: Men's Wear: sh sleeve sport shirts 99c & $1.50; k sport shirts $1.99; wash-n-wear sla $2.77; many other big buys-Sarl Store, 122 E. Washington. CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORI FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and model of Foreign and Sports Cars. Lubrication $1.50 Nye Motor Sale. 514 E. Washington Phone NO 3-4858 C-TED STANDARD SERVIC Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessorl Complete Automotive Service-Al1 products and services guaranteed. Road Service "You expect more from Standard and you get it." 1220 South University NO 8-9168 PERSONAL THERE'S NO PLACE like the Schwab Inn for a Schwabenburger! 215 Ashl MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS A-1 New and Used Instruments BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOE Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington NO.2-183 Preview of Grinnell's PIANO FESTIVAL SALE Come in-any day and see these tremendous values from $399 up. GRINNELL'S FUN AND RELAXATION--That's what Sailing Club members have when they take their fleet of sloops out on Base Line Lake on weekends. The club will hold an open weekend this Saturday and Sunday for all interested persons and prospective members. INTRODUCTORY MEETING: SailingClub Plans 'Open Weekend' PECIAL EN-DAY RATE .39 .47 .54 ght ew ort nit cks ails W2 ES a S 87 les. 81 en ey. F; S 4 X3 37 Os X2 in na- Hi om :3 t. H2 ho- ur. een 911 / 'A' CAMPUS OPTICIANS Most frames replaced while you wait. Broken lenses duplicated FAST service on all repairs. 323 S. Main NO 2-56E U U New Shipments of USED and NEW Summer Session. TEXTBOOKS arriving daily! Lund Pilots Huron Nine In Basin League A ction Coach Don Lund, who piloted the Wolverine baseball team to a Big Ten championship and a Dis- trict Four NCAA playoff berth, and Moby Benedict, his able as- sistant, will be battling each other this summer as they assume roles of rival managers in the NCAA- approved Basin League in South Dakota. Lund wil manage Huron, while Benedict will act as player-man- ager of Winner. Accompanying Lund to Huron will be several members of his championship team, including pitchers Mike Joyce and Fritz Fisher, second baseman Joe Jones, and third baseman Joe Merullo. Merullo is expected to return to his first love-catching-since Bill Freehan, originally counted upon by Lund to handle the receiving duties, has turned pro. Roebuck Also Going Ed Roebuck, a fireballing pitch- er, will also make the trip. Roe- buck is a transfer from Wheaton, and is being counted on to add depth to the Wolverine pitching staff next year. Benedict will have no Wolverines with him, but he will be taking along a couple of stars from De- troit, including Frank Corej, an One of the nicest features of summertime living in Ann Arbor is the informality and easy-going pacewhich everyone, from lowly student on up to lordly faculty- administration, seems to fall into at the end of the spring semester. Proof of this can be found al- most any day out at Base Line Lake, headquarters for the Uni- versity of Michigan Sailing Club. With facilities for sailing, swim- ming. ,picnicking and just loaf- ing around, the Club is popular with both University community and Ann Arbor townsfolk. To get the summer session offi- cially under way, the Club will offer an introductory program to- night at 7:30 in the Union Ball- room, highlighted by a series of slides depicting its year-round ac- tivities. The club owns a fleet of eight Jet 14 sloops and an MIT dinghy; and, since many who sail are not seasoned salts, there is a motor- powered crash boat to aid cap- sized or swamped boats. For those who feel they are somewhat less than expert sailors, the club offers both a "boat school" and a "shore school." The latter is held Thursday evenings, and includes general sailing theory and basic seamanship. To put in- to practice what he learns at a shore school, the novice will go out on Saturday morning with an ex- perienced skipper and put a boat through the basic maneuvers, gradually building up enough skill and confidence to take a boat out by himself. For those who have mastered the elementary skills, the Sunday morning racing series offers a challenge-as either skipper or crew, the more experienced sailors As a sample of what the club offers, this Saturday and Sunday will be "open weekend" at the lake-anyone interested may come out; during the rest of the sum- mer, the club facilities are re- stricted to members and their guests. Anyone with no transportation wishing to take advantage of the open weekend can consult the Sailing Club poster by theUnion grill aftertoday; rides are listed for the entire week, and all leave from the north door of the Union. 240 NICKELS ARCADE NO 2-9116 NO 8-6019 J3 VARIETY IS THE SPICE OF RALPH'S MARKET Picnic supplies Party foods Kitchen utensils Kosher foods 709 Packard-open till midnightJ J2 WANTED WANTED TO BUY OR RENT, cash terms, 16mm. movie camera. NO. 3-2069. BBI the home of Steinway plan HELP WANE ED STUDENT TEACHER interested helping child with muscle coordir tion. NO 3-5065. DIXIELAND DRUMMER-Contact T Lough, NO 3-0807 or University E 421W days. MALE SUBJECTS wanted for psycY logical experiment. Pay $1.25/ho Call Susan Karp, NO 3-8283 betwe 5 and 7 p m. or University Ext. 2 between 9 a.m. and noon. Read Daily Classified ' : .:::3:.. ........:. >::%fC..,.....:::'s ! .:r;}S ..::.*..}..^: '%.'' ''4 C':.. ' '" "';" # z''' .'i:44f. . ATTENTION rzPHOTOGRAPHERS! An opportunity to con- tribute to one of the country's most outstand- ing publications. Mone- tary incentive too! :.:t.: {v: i :< % "" < .".".:< M for those hard-to-f ind TEXT BOOKS nli.A/nvch liv nti- DON LUND ... goes to Huron Benedict, who played shortstop here under Ray Fisher, will prob- ably return to his old position at Winner. Fisher rated Benedict as I , k