PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JULY 1,190 PAGE P01311 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JULY 1.1961 ___ _._ _, Ford Pitches Yanks to 5-1.Victory SUCCEEDS WILSON: Reed Takes Over ew Big Ten Post CLASSIFIEDS I By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Whitey Ford, backed by a tremendous, inside- the-park home run by Mickey Mantle, collected his 14th victory and eighth in a row with a five- hitter as the New York Yankees came from behind and beat the Washington Senators 5-1. Ford; the majors' top winner, thus became the eighth major league pitcher to win eight games in one month-and first left- hander to do it since Rube Mar- quard of the 1912 New York Gi- ants. Marquard also did it in June, while running up a modern record of 19 straight victories. The Yankees, down 1-0 after Washington scored an unearned run in the first inning, were blank- ed' on two hits by right-hander Dick Donovan until the sixth in- ning. Then they busted loose for three runs in a rally capped by Mantle's 25th homer-a tie-break- ing, 440-foot shot off the center field wall that was hit so high and far that Mick scored standing up, without a play at the plate. * * * Reds 4, Braves 0 MILWAUKEE -- Cincinnati righthander Joey Jay registered his 10th victory with the ninth inning assistance of Bill Henry as the first-place Reds blanked the Milwaukee Braves 4-0. Jay, a former Milwaukee bonus player traded to the Reds last win- ter, was tagged for 11 hits but bore down in the tight spots in checking his former teammates. Bonus Group' NEW YORK UP) - Baseball Commissioner Ford Frick yester- day named six officials to a com- mittee which will try to work out some solution to the bonus prob- lem that has alarmed most club owners by huge payments to un- tried rookies. The three representatives of the National League are Bob Carpen- ter, president of the Philadelphia Phillies; Joe Brown, Pittsburgh general manager, and Bing De- vine, St. Louis general manager. From the American League Frick named John Fetzer, presi- dent of the Detroit Tigers; Lee MacPhail, president and. general manager of the Baltimore Orioles and Roy Hamey, general manager of the New York Yankees. .1 The Reds, who maintained their 21 game lead over San Francisco and Los Angeles, jumped on Mil- waukee starter Warren Spahn for three runs in the fifth and added their final tally in the ninth against reliever Claude Raymond. * , , Tigers 6, Orioles 5 BALTIMORE - Charlie well's 12th inning pinch knocked in the winning run first-place Detroit Tigers the Baltimore Orioles 6-5. Max- single as the edged The victory left the Tigers two games ahead. of the New York Yankees and cooled off the surg- ing Orioles who had won five in a row. Hoyt Wilhelm, who pitched sev- en innings in his longest relief stint of the season, was tagged lies to regain second place in the National League. The Dodgers endowed San Wil- liams with an 8-1 lead as Daryl Spencer clouted a home run, Wil- lie Davis hit two triples and Mau- ry Wills three singles. The right- hander, wilting in the 90-degree heat, was chased in the sixth in- ning when the Phillies rallied for five runs. Dick Farrell, who came in as relief for Williams, also got in- volved in the five-run ruckus but he settled down and held his for- mer teammates scoreless the rest of the game to preserve Williams' seventh mound victory in 14 de- cisions. Indians 10, Red Sox 2 BOSTON-Surprise starter Mike De La Hoz and Woody Held bat- ted in three Cleveland runs each as the faltering Indians walloped Boston 10-2. Infielder De La Hoz contribut- ed a three-run homer and Held Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Detroit 48 26 .649 - NewYork 45 27 .625 2 Cleveland 43 33 .566 .6 Baltimore 40 35 .533 82/2 Boston 38 36 .514 10 x-Chicago 38 36 .514 10 Washington 33 42 .440 1522 Kansas City 29 43 .403 18 Minnesota 29 45 .392 19 x-Los Angeles 27 47 .365 21 x-Playing night game. YESTERDAY'S GAMES Detroit 6, Baltimore 5 (12 inn.) New York 5, Washington 1 Cleveland 10, Boston 2 Minnesota 8, Kansas City 2 Chicago at Los Angeles (inc.) TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Baltimore Washington at New York Chicago at Los Angeles (n) Minnesota at Kansas City Cleveland at Boston four straight singles to right hand- er Gary Bell's fifth victory made easy by the 13-hit attack behind him. It was only the third Cleve- land triumph in 13 starts. Bell, able to complete only four of his previous 16 starts, struck out 8 en route to his 6-hitter. The latter responded with a pop- up double when Chuck Schilling lost the ball in the lights in the third inning. The blow sent Bell to third whence he scored the first run of the game on loser Billy Muffett's wild pitch. De La Hoz homered to cap a 5- run fourth. Held and Bell had sin- gled in runs ahead of the four- run belt. CHICAGO (P) - A World War' II navy officer with a background in Washington politics will take over today as new Commissioner of the Big Ten Conference with this goal uppermost: "To see the Big Ten retain its position of leadership and prestige in intercollegiate athletics." He is Bill Reed, 45, Assistant Big Ten Commissioner who will move up into the top post on the retirement of Kenneth L. (Tug) Wilson at age 65. "I don't see any real threat to Jessen Ties Prentice for National Open Golf Lead Big Ten prestige at this time," Reed said. "We're on pretty sound footing. I think we have made very definite strides consistent with the tradition of the con- ference in setting up eligibility and other standards which will integrate athletics wth the edu- cational program." The adoption of tougher eligibil- ity standards by Big Ten schools and a new Rose Bowl contract with west coast universities both appear imminent in the early part of Reed's tenure. The Big Ten currently operates without a contractual link with west coast schools for the Rose Bowl. Big Ten teams may play at Pasadena, as they have for the past two years, if they accept in- dividual invitations. The Pacific Coast schools still are seeking a new contract tieup, with the Big Ten and the Western Conference is expected to approve the arrangement at its December meeting. A change of policy at Minne- sota indicates the Big Ten will vote 6-1 in favor of such a con- tract. Program Revised Big Ten athletic officials at their spring meeting sharply re- vised the aid-to-athletes program, tieing it in with more stringent academic entrance and classroom progress requirements. The program, still to be ap- proved by individual schools, per- mits the granting of tuition, fees, room and board if the student maintains a high scholastic rat- ings. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY .70 .85 1.00 Figure 5 overage words to Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3: Phone NO 2-4786 a line 00 Mon. thru Fri. SPECIAL SIX-DAY RATE .58 .70 .83 I SPRINGFIELD, N.J. (P) - Dark horse JoAnn Prentice played steadily and blonde Ruth Jessen played sensationally in the heat and wind at Baltursol yesterday to share the lead at the halfway point in the Women's National Open Golf championship. Miss Prentice, a dark-haired 28- year-old pro from Birmingham, Ala., got the benefit of an early starting time when the air was calm, and added a solid 76 to her opening round of 72 for a 36-hole total of 148. Miss Jessen, of Seattle, fired a one-over-par 73 on a hot, breezy afternoon after an opening 75 for the same total. Par for the rolling 6,372-yard Baltursol course is 36-36-72 and no one could match it yesterday. Miss Jessen and another Wash- ington girl, Shirley Englehorn, a 20-year-old pro from Spokane, had 73's for the best rounds of the day. Shirley had an 80 on her first round and was five strokes back after 36 holes. Mickey Wright, two-time win- ner of the Women's Open, yielded to tension and tournament pres- sure after sharing the first round lead with Miss Prentice and skied to an 80. "I was tense and couldn't sleep, last night," Mickey said. "I knew this morning I was going to have a real great round or a real bad one." She had the bad one but still wound up in a tie with Louise Suggs at 152, four strokes off the pace. She still has a chance to make up that much in tomorrow's 36-hole final. BARGAIN CORNER BLONDE TABLES, Danish dining set Haywood-Wakefield birch, Oriental rugs, gentleman's desk, awaiting you at the Treasure Mart, 529 Detroit, NO 2-1363. Open Mon. & Fri. nites 'til 9. W1 ENGLISH BIKE - Boy's Lightweight Centaur. Like new, with brand new tires. $25. Call NO 2-4736., SUMMER SPECIALS: Men's Wear: short sleeve sport shirts 99c & $1.50; knit sport shirts $1.99; wasb-n-wear slacks $2.77; many other big buys-Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. W2 FOR SALE JAGUAR XK-120 M Coupe, wire wheels, 22,000 miles. NO 3-9821. Bi FINEST CAMPING TENT-9'4" square draw-tight Holiday. 29 pounds com- plete, stakeless outside frame. Unused, 40 per cent discount. NO 3.6653: B2 LOST AND FOUND LOST-Woman's blue billfold. Valuable papers. Alberta Cohan, NO 2-6889. REWARD. A2 LOST-Florentine gold circle pin with bow and pearl. BetweenCatherine St. and Undergrad Lib. or Union. NO 5-5143. A3 HELP WANTED MALE SUBJECTS wanted for psycho- logical experiment: Pay $1.25/hour. Call Susan Karp, NO 3-8283 between 5 and 7 p.m. or University Ext. 2911 between 9 a.m. and noon. H3 5-MEN-5 FULL OR PART TIME SUMMER EMPLOYMENT SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM FOR THOSE WHO QUALIFY BUSINESS SERVICES STUDENTS: Neat, expert typing of your papers, etc., pickup and delivery in Ann Arbor. Electric typewriter. Call GL 3-6258. J6 IF YOU plan to LEARN TO FLY this summer, it will pay to compare costs. $7.90 per hour solo. No dues or membership fees. NO, 8-6373. JS HAVE A PICNIC! BEAT THE HEAT! cold watermelons cold pop fresh fruit hot barbequed chickens hot barbequed ribs at RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard Open every night (July 4th too) 'til 12 J11 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars. '4 Lubrication $1.50 Nye Motor Sales WHITEY FORD handcuffs Nats with the loss. Maxwell's bouncer to right folowed a double by Steve Bpros and a walk to Jake Wood. The winner was Terry Fox, the third Tiger pitcher who came on to stop a Baltimore threat in the eighth inning and allowed two hits the rest of the way. * * * - Dodgers 10, Phillies 6 PHILADELPHIA-The Los An- geles Dodgers, hitting early and often, built up a commanding lead and made it stand up for a 10-6 victory over the Philadelphia Phil- .. 140'S AT MIDWAY MARK: Three Tied in Flint Open 514 E. Washington Phone NO 3-4858 S7, Cincinn Los Ang San Fra Pittsbu Milwauk St. Lou Chicago Philade NATIONAL LEAGUE W L P iati 45 28 .6 geles 43 31.5 ncisco 41 31 . rgh 36 31 .5 kee 33 33 . is 31 38 .4 28 42 . lphia 22 45 . ct. .16 .581 569 .537 500 449 400 328 GB 2 / 31/2 6 8f 12 15/2 20 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 10, Philadelphia 6 Pittsburgh 4, San Francisco 3 St. Louis 11, Chicago 5 Cincinnati 4, Milwaukee 0 TODAY'S GAMES Cincinnati at Milwaukee San Francisco at Pittsburgh St. Louis at Chicago Los Angeles at Philadelphia (n) BLI A R DS and SWIMMING daily except Sun. at the MICHIGAN UN ION FLINT (A)-Billy Casper, Dave Ragan and Johnny Pott-golfers who haven't won this year-rock- eted into a deadlock lead at the halfway point of the Flint Open yesterday with sizzling second rounds. Each totaled 4-under-par 140 after 36 holes of the $53,000 event for a one-stroke lead. Casper, winless since rattling off three straight victories last fall, shot a 4-under-par 68 on the par-72 Warwick Hills' 7,280-yard layout. Casper, winner of the first Flint Open in 1958, shot a 72 Thursday. Ragan, a 25-year-old Floridian whose only major pro victory was in the Eastern Open two years ago, had a 69 to go with Thurs- day's 71. Pott, also 25, had a 68 after a ZINDELL OLDSMOBILE Ann Arbor, NO 3-0507 II I "" """ C OMll I I 06'tO1 r H CHURJ i-Ir \ 3ABl AT FIRST METHODIST CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDATION State and Huron Streets. Tel. NO 8-6881 Dr. Hoover Rupert, Minister Rev. Gene Ransom, Campus Minister 9:00 and 11:15 A.M. Morning Worship. "'This Nation under God?" Sermon by Dr. Rupert. 10:15 Discussion Group and Coffee in the Pine Room. 2:00 P.M. Picnic: Meet in Wesley lounge. Wednesdays- 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion, Chapel, followed by breakfast in the Pine Room. (Over in time for 8:00 classes). NORTH SIDE PRESBYTERIAN CHAPEL 2250 Fuller Road (Opposite V.A. Hospital) NOrmandy 3-2969 9:30 A.M. Summer Worship. Child Care pro- vided. Minister: Dr. William S. Baker. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL REFORMED United Church of Christ 423 South Fourth Avenue Rev. Ernest Klaudt, Pastor Orville H. Schroer, Parish Minister. 9:30 and 10:45 A.M. Worship Service blistering back nine which he completed with a 4-under-par 32. The Louisianian, who won two crowns last year, had four straight birdies. Rugged Par remained a rugged task- master for most of the other pros on lengthy Warwick Hills as tem- peratures soared into the 90's. The leading trio was trailed by Don January, Al Balding and Lee Raymond at 141. Joe Campbell, first round lead- er with a 68; sagged to a 75 yes- terday for a 143. Ragan had a good chance to take the lead, but failed to break par on the back nine, coming in with a 36. The hefty Casper, troubled by a sprained back since Sunday, al- most withdrew from the tourna- ment. A Wednesday practice round forced his decision to stay in the running for the $10,000 top prize. Steady Putting Steady putting and finesse out of the traps saved Casper's day. "I hit real good trap shots, got WILD A Summer Seer is Always Cooler in Seersucker " r . . Every gentleman can become a wise summer prophet by predicting days of heat made up close and made putts for pars on the first nine," said the 30- year-old pro from Apple Valley, Calif. A birdie on the par-5 first hole that stretches 587 yards featured Ragan's round. His second shot put him on the green. "It was the best shot I made all day," said Ragan. "I used a driver on nry second shot 'and then put it in with two putts." 'Got Hot' "I got hot with birdies on 12, 13, 14, and 15," said Pott. "Then I missed one from about two feet on 16." Tommy Aaron and Jackie Burke were deadlocked for sev- enth place at 142. M' .Athlete Signs Pact DETROIT OP) - The Detroit Tigers yesterday signed former University of Michigan football end and baseball outfielder John Halstead to a minor league con- tract for the second time in 10 days. The Tigers' original contract was voided in a dispute over the interpretation of major league rules relating to the signing of college students. Halstead was a senior last season. He will report to the Mont- gomery, Ala., team in the class D Alabama-Florida League. NCAA Probes U-D Program Collegiate Athletic Association will investigate the athletic set- up at the University of Detroit, where two athletes admitted ac- cepting money from a basketball "fixer," the Detroit Free Press reported yesterday. Special NCAA agents will ex- amine records of alumni activi- ties in connection with U-D sports, the Free Press said. The inquiry was prompted, ac- cording to the newspaper, by cir- cumstances surrounding the, ex- pulsion of basketball stars Char- lie North and John Morgan after both admitted complicity in the nationwide college basketball bet- ting scandals. The NCAA was reported to be interested in statements by North and Morgan that twice a month while they were enrolled at De- troit they each received an en- velope containing $20 from "the alumni." Walter Byers, executive secre- tary of the NCAA, refused to con- firm or deny that the investiga- tion was underway, the Free Press said. Byers, whose office is in Kan- sas City, was quoted as saying: CALL MR. NEUMAN FOR APPOINTMENT NO 3-6003 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. Hxx FOR RENT AVAILABLE for 2 male students-cool basement apartment near campus. 716 South Division. C16 ON CAMPUS furnished apartments for rent. NO 2-1443. C17 PARKING SPACE behind Campus The- atre. $5.50/month. NO 3-4322. C7 REDUCED TO $65 - Campus 4-room furnished apartment. Newly painted. Summer only. NO 3-4322. C15 ON CAMPUS, 1021 E. Huron-One 1-rm. apartment, $50; one 3-rm. apartment $65. Call at back basement door. C18 3-ROOM furnished apartment with pri- vate bath and washing facilities. NO 3-8458. C13 ON CAMPUS garage and lot parking available for summer and fall semes- ters. NO 2-1443. C16 CAMPUS-2 blocks. Two-bedroom apt. suitable for 4 adults. First floor at reduced rate for summer. NO 3-4062. C11 NOW AVAILABLE - Across from East Quad: 2 parking spaces, part of an exciting apartment, and a small duck. Call NO 5-7892. C9 LARGE ROOM with private bath, $50 per month, for instructor, teaching fellow, or intern with transportation. Use of lovely grounds. 2107 Hill. Phone NO 8-7240 before calling. C14 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. C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessories. Complete Automotive Service-All products and services guaranteed. Road Service "You expect more from Standard and you get it." 1220 South University NO 8-9168 81 WANTED WANTED TO BUY OR RENT, cash terms, 16mm. movie camera. NO. 3-2069. BB1 PERSONAL M.-Thanks for the swimming suit. It didn't fit. E. and N. Ps GET-ACQUAINTED MIXER on the lawn, B'nai B'rith Hillel Foundation, Thursday, July 6th, 7:30 P.M. F4 Don't miss summer entertainment! SUBSCRIBE NOW TO THE MICHIGAN DAILY Call NO 2-3241 It's only $2 00 away from your door every morning. F2 THERE'S NO PLACE like the Schwaben Inn for a Schwabenburgerl 215 Ashley. Fl 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 ATTENTION SUMMER STUDENTS! CLEARANCE ON ALL HI FI PORTABLES IN STOCK -UP TO 20% OFF- SERVICE AND REPAIRS FAST, EFFICIENT, GUARANTEED DIAMOND NEEDLES FROM $2.95 ANN ARBOR HI FI & TV CENTER 304 South Thayer ACROSS FROM HILL AUDITORIUM ASK FOR BIG JIM X1 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 If p' i FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH AND BAPTIST STUDENT CENTER 512 and 502 E. Huron Rev. James Middleton, Minister Rev. Paul W. Light, Minister of Education SUNDAY- 10:00 A.M. Morning Worship-"Communion meditation." Rev. Middleton preaching. 9:00 and 10:00 A.M. Church School Classes. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH Corner State & Huron Streets William C. Bennett, Pastor 9:00 Morning Worship. "The Christian and Self-Denial." 10:15 Sunday School. 5:45 Youth Groups. 7:00 Evening Service. "God's Social Register." The Lord's Table. Wednesday 7:30 Prayer Meeting. LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER and CHAPEL National Lutheran Council H ilI St.at S. Forest Ave. Henry 0. Yoder, Pastor. Sunday- 9:30 A.M. Bible Study. 10:30 A.M. Worship Service. 7:00 P.M. Prof. Gerhard Lenski, Sociology Dept., Speaker: "The Church: Institu- tion or Movement?" Friday- 8:15 P.M. Seminar on The Lutheran Lit- urgy. ST. ANDREWS CHURCH and the EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION 306 North Division SUNDAYS-- 8:00 a.m. Holy Communion 9:00 a.m. Holy Communion followed by breakfast at the Canterbury House. (Morning prayer on first Sunday of month.) 11:00 a.m. Morning prayer and sermon 7:00 p.m. Evening prayer. (Holy Communion on first Sunday of month.) TUESDAYS- 9:15 a.m. Holy Communion WEDNESDAYS- 7:00 a.m. Holy Communion followed by breakfasft at the Canterbury House (over in time for 8:00 classes) FRIDAYS- 12:10 p.m. Holy Communion followed by lunch at the Canterbury House. WEEKDAYS- 5:15 p.m. Daily evening prayer. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Ave. 11:00 a.m. Sunday Services. 8:00 p.m. Wednesday Services. 9:30 a.m. Sunday School (up to 20 years of age.) 11:00 a m Sunday School (for children 2 to 6 years of age.) A free reading room is maintained at 306 East Liberty St. Hours are Monday through Sat- ~riv 0n m to 5 . . xe m S nv "4 4I Summer occupancy. Efficiency 1-bedroom $65-$70, 2-bedroom $90. NO 5-9405. $55, $85- $12 Ann Arbor's FINEST Apa rtments at Moderate Rentals Schedule of Rentals: Studio ................$ 98 to 126 THE CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 W. Stadium at Edgwood John G. Makin Phone NO 2-2756 For RESULTS i I i _ - - I