PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY '11-1URSDAY, JULY 6, 1961 PAGE FOTJR TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY 'VJUJRSDAY, JULY 6,1961 Bengals' Lead Shrinks with Sput AT WIMBLEDON: McKinley Qualifies By The Associated Press BOSTON-Boston shaved De- troit's American League lead to a half game over New York last night with catcher Jim Pagliar- oni's homer and single providing the difference in the 8-3 victory. The Tigers clung to first place by defeating the Red Sox 6-2 in the afternoon half of the split doubleheader on the strength of a three run homeraand two run single by Rocky Colavito. Pagliaroni, smashing his third homer in as many days, connected in the seventh inning after Carl Yastrzemski beat out an infield hit. Pagliaroni's chopper toward third in the first inning account- ed for the first Sox run. Gary Geiger contributed an- other two run homer for insur- ance in the eighth inning. All star pitcher Mike Fornieles retired 10 men in order while preserving Bill Monbouquette's eighth victory. The two pitchers limited the Tigers to five hits. Rookies Chuck Schilling of the Red Sox and Dick McAuliffe add- ed solo home runs to their re- spective causes. Monbouquette got the deciding 9 I run for Boston in the two run fourth with a squeeze bunt-the same weapons by which Detroit salvaged a doubleheader split at New York Tuesday. It came fol- lowing a Jackie Jensen single and Pete fIunnels' triple. Colavito hit his22nd homer, good for RBI No. 60, leading off the Detroit sixth. He also turned an apparent extra base hit into a double play with a sparkling piece of fielding but couldn't pre- vent the split singlehanded., His rash of RBI in the opener enabled righthander Jim Bunning to weather shaky late innings and regain his mastery of the Red Sox with a seven hitter. S* * * Yankees 6, Indians 0 NEW YORK-Roger Maris hit his 32nd home run and young Roland Sheldon pitched a four- hit shutout yesterday as the New York Yankees thumped Cleveland 6-0 before 24,377 fans. Sheldon, the rookie right-hand- er against whom Chico Fernandez had stolen home in Tuesday's second game with Detroit, bounced back with a complete game. He worked only one inning Tuesday. Maris' homer into the lower right field stands came with no- body on in the seventh. It put him 17 games ahead of Babe Ruth's pace of 1927 when the Bambino set the record with 60. Ruth hit No. 32 and No. 33 in the 95th game. This was the Yanks' 78th, counting one tie. Maris has hit five in the last five games, all in July. Tony Kubek, who had two of the nine Yankee hits, led the way to a New York score in the first when he singled, took second as Mickey Mantle walked and scored on Yogi Berra's single. Kubek started it off again in the third as he struck out but reached first when catcher John- ny Romano missed the third strike. Maris singled and when It was the fifth victory for the former Kansas City pitcher and his third against Washington. He beat the Senators previously on a two-hitter and in a relief stint. l' "1 1 ul GI t Hall struck out nine and walked WIMBLEDON (P) - Charles nobody. Only two Senators reach- (Chuck) McKinley, the bouncing ed second base. 20-year-old from Missouri who Bennie Daniels pitched well for plays tennis with the verve of an the Senators in losing his fourth All-America football player, yes- against four losses. He allowed terday routed Britain's Mike Sang- only one earned run and six hits ster 6-4, 6-4, 8-6 and qualified through eight innings. He was for the men's singles final at the relieved in the eighth for a pinch- Wimbledon Championships. hitter and John Klippstein fin- The fiery collegian from St. ished the game. Louis will play red-haired Rod * * Laver, the all-court specialist Braves 5, Phillies 4 from Australia, in the final to- MILWAUKEE-Reserve infield- morrow. Laver, 22 next month, er Felix Mantilla lined a double coasted to a 6-2, 8-6, 6-2 victory to deep center to score Al Spang- over touch artist Ramanathan ler in the 12th inning and boost Krishnan of India in the other the Milwaukee Braves to a 5-4 semifinal. victory over Philadelphia in the First Yank Since '55 opener of a twi-night doublehead- The chunky McKinley, built like er. a middleweight fighter at 5 feet Mantilla, who entered the game 8 inches and weighing 155 pounds, in the seventh inning when third became the first American to baseman Eddie Mathews' gashed reach the final of the men's sin- knee stiffened, cracked a pitch off gles since Tony Trabert won the Center Fielder Johnny Callison's title in 1955. glove to end the 3 hour and 58 The second-seeded Laver has minute marathon. Spangler had an edge in experience and style opened the inning with a walk but if aggressiveness and sheer and moved to second on a sacri- doggedness of purpose are a fac- fice. tor it is hard to discount the chub- The victory was credited to Don McMahon, the Braves' hard- throwing relief specialist, making" his sixth appearance since June P iersall R i 26th. McMahon, now 4-0 for the season, came on in the eleventh after starter Warren Spahn was An ta lifted for a pinch hitter in the tenth. by Yank, seeded eighth in the tournament. His deportment here hasbeen most, circumspect. His tennis has been tremendous. McKinley threw Sangster, the 20-year-old with one of the most powerful volley and serve games in the amateur ranks, off his stride by his incredible ability to retrieve what looked like match-winning shots and also his speed around the court. The American chased, volleyed, retrieved, smashed and whipped over backhands that sizzled over the net. The match started with the first six games going with service. Then McKinley, always ready to try for a winner, scuttled across court to smash back a Sangster lob. The ball smacked against the net cord-and then toppled over on Sangster's side simply by force of power. That gave McKinley the break at 4-3-and from then on the Briton's game never quite looked up to the standard he had set early in the first set. CLASSIFIEDS 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 '' Y3i v u". F 1 s t' --. 1' ,; , . R ROGER MARIS ... number 32 Bubba Phillips threw wildly after cutting off Willie Kirkland's throw, Kubek scored. Mantle's single drove in Maris. Clete Boyer's single, a sacri- fice and Bobby Richardson's sin- gle added the first of two runs in the fourth. Richardson stole second and scored on Maris' sec- ond single. Gary Bell, lifted for a pinch hitter in the fifth, lost his ninth of the year. It was Sheldon's fifth victory. * * * Orioles 2, Senators 0 WASHINGTON-The Baltimore Orioles whipped the Washington Senators 2-0 behind the four-hit pitching of Dick Hall-their 12th win in their last 15 starts.' Ma e Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. Detroit 52 29 .642 New York 50 28 .641 Baltimore 44 36 .550 Cleveland 45 37 .549 x-Chicago 39 41 .488 Boston 39 42 .481 Washington 35 45 .439 Minnesota 33 47 .413 Los Angeles 33 48 .407 x-Kansas City 30 47 .390 x-Playing night game. YESTERDAY'S GAMES Detroit 6-3, Boston 2-8 New York 6, Cleveland 0 Baltimore 2, Washington 0 Los Angeles 6, Minnesota 2 Chicago at Kansas City (inc.) TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at New York (n) Detroit at Boston Chicago at Kansas City Baltimoreaat Washington (n) Los Angeles at Minnesota NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. 11 GB 712 71., 12/ 13 18% 19 20 GB 2 5% 8 11 14% 16 18 NEW YORK (i)-Angry and bit- ter at not being selected on the American League All-Star team, volatile Jimmy Piersall yesterday charged Manager Paul Richards of Baltimore with favoritism and per- sonal prejudice. The fiery center fielder of the Cleveland Indians, one of the league's leading hitters all season, not only failed to receive the necessary votes from his fellow players for the first team, but was passed by Richards, who selected three other outfielders as alter- nates., 'Want To Cry' "It's tough enough to make you want to cry," said Piersall, "be- cause a manager doesn't like you and because he favors somebody else. "I know it sounds like sour grapes when you complain, but even Richards knows in his own heart that I belong on the All-Star team. "I had my heart set on making the team this year. I know I'm having the best year of my life. I don't consider myself in a class with Mickey Mantle but I think I can get the ball as well as any outfielder in the league." Piersall, one of the finest de- fensive outfielders in the game, is enjoying his best year at the plate, leading his team with a .341 average. As usual, he has been brilliant in center field. Jimmy suited up for yesterday's game with the Yankees but did not play. He is still nursing a sore wrist sustained when hit by a Jim Bunning pitch last week. x-Cincinnati 49 29 x-Los Angeles 47 37 x-San Francisco 43 34 Pittsburgh 38 34 Milwaukee 35 37 x-St. Louis 32 41 Chicago 31 43 Philadelphia 23 49 x-Playing night game. .628 .603 .558 .528 .486 .438 .419 .319 itter Over 'ikj ection In the player ballot, Piersall fin- ished second to Mantle of the Yankees for the center field post,' but Richards selected Jackie Brandt of Baltimore, Yogi Berra of New York and Al Kaline of De- troit as his outfield alternates. At first, Piersall shrugged off his omission on the All-Star team but the more he thought about it the angrier he became. Thirty Points Higher "I'm not trying to belittle the guys Richards picked over me, but I am hitting 30 points higher than any one of them. Maybe I haven't * driven in as many runs as some of those guys but what can you ex- pect when I'm hitting second in the lineup? Richards just doesn't like me because I once said what I thought about him as a manager. I-M SCORES Education 14, Social Psychology 10 Newman 15, Misfits 6 Pharmacology 10, Theta Delta Chi 5 Bio-Chemistry 12, TV 3 Chemical Engineers 27, Botany 3 Yankees Win Two Events at Helsinki Games HELSINKI ()--Americans won two events and finished 2-3 in another in the Helsinki Interna- tional Track and Field games last night. Jay Silvester took the shot put with a heave of 50'10" and Bob Avant, who defeated world record holder John Thomas in the re- cent National AAU meet in New York, won the high jump with a leap of 6111". Ulis Williams took second place and Adolph Plummer third in the 400-meter run as Briton Robert Brightwell won in :46.6. Both Williams and Plummer, from the University of New Mex- ico, were timed in :46.7. Max Truex of the United States was fourth in the 5,000-meter run in 14:06.8 as Murray Halberg of New Zealand finished first in 13:57.4. Halberg, Olympic gold medal winner, never was threat- ened although he stopped running one lap short of the finish and lost about seven seconds before he discovered his mistake. Antoa of Kenya took the 100 meter dash final in :10.6 after a :10.4 trial heat. The Americans are the advance guard of an AAU team which will shortly tour Europe, WANTED WANTED TO BUY OR RENT, cash terms, 16mm. movie camera. NO. 3-2069. BB1 RIDERS WANTED to Grand Rapids. Leave Friday 5 P.M., return Sunday evening. Ken Somers, NO 3-1511, Ext. 2047. BB2 GIRL to share modern campus apart- ment. NO 3-6030. BB3 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. Wi 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; wash-n-wear slacks $2.77; many other big buys-Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. W2 FOR SALE 1959 VW Sun-roof, all extras -sharp Call NO 3-0434 B7 2-BEDROOM HOME in City. Shady, fenced-in yard, 2-car garage. $800 down to assume FHIA mortgage. $90 per month includes all taxes and in- surance. NO 5-8485. B4 MARTIN GUITAR and banjo. David Portman, NO 2-6422. B5 '59 FIAT BIANCHINA SPECIAL. 45 MPG, 65 MPH, cruises 58. Excellent running condition, brand new tires. Best of- fer over $550. 219 Packard, rear apt., after 6:30 P.M. B6 LLOYD 600-sun-roof, white sidewalls, excellent condition. Call NO 3-8818 or see at 708 Arch St. B3 JAGUAR XK-120 M Coupe, wire wheels, 22,000 miles. NO 3-9821. Bi LOST AND FOUND FOUND: on N. Campus around Wed - 1 pr. dark-framed glasses. Call John Cowden, NO 3-7352. A4 LOST-Woman's blue billfold. Valuable papers. Alberta Cohan, NO 2-6889. REWARD. A2 LOST-Florentine gold circle pin with bow and pearl. Between Catherine St. and Undergrad Lib. or Union. NO 5-5143. A3 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 CALL MR. NEUMAN FOA. APPOINTMENT NO 3-6003 9 a.m. - 1 p.m. HELP WANTlED MALE SUBJECTS wanted for psycho- logical experiment. Pay $1.25/hour. Call Susan Karp. NO 3-8283between 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 TRANSPORTATION Call NO 3-4156 Special weekend rates from 5 p.m. Friday till 9 a.m. Monday .. . $12.00 plus 8c a mile. Rates include gas, oil, insurance. 514 E. WASHINGTON ST. * TRUCKS AVAILABLE GI BUSINESS SERVICES Food for thought at RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard fr'esh bread fresh fruit mteat specialties Ralph's is open- till midnight daily J12 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. J5 FOR RENT CAMPUS Furnished Apartment. $50 per month, summer only. NO 3-4322. 019 AVAILABLE for 2 male students-cool basement apartment near campus. 716 South Division. C16 ON CAMPUS furnished apartments for rent. NO 2-1443. C17 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. 013 ON CAMPUS garage and lot parking available for summer and fall semes- ters. NO 2-1443. C16 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- mentsavailable 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. 014 i Hxx J t l YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Milwaukee 5, Philadelphia 4 (12 inn.) (second game inc.) Pittsburgh at Chicago (rain) St. Louis at Los Angeles (inc.) Cincinnati at San Francisco (inc.) TODAY'S GAMES Cincinnati at San Francisco St. Louis at Los Angeles Philadelphia at Milwaukee Pittshurgh at Chicago (2) I JULY SHOE SALE FOUR CREWS SCORE: U.S. Crews Sweep to Opening-heatVictories DRASTIC DISCOUNTS on men's & women's shoes. Many styles suitable for year 'round wear. FOR MEN FLORSH ElMS $1680_ $880 Reg. to $24.95 (All Summer Shoes-Discontinued Styles.) 500 PAIRS $790 .$990 __$1190 Vents, Nylons-Sport Oxfords, Loafers, Slip-ons by Weyenberg, Mansfield SAVE $ FOR WOMEN Entire Stock Spring and Summer Dress Styles and $790 Reg. to $12.95 Black Patent - Black, Blue, Red, Bone, White Calf Spectators, Pastels Hi & Mid Heels - Pumps, Sandals CASUAL-SPORT Styles $390 $490 to $690 Wedge & Barefoot Sandals - Flats - Loafers - Sport Ties WASHABLE CASUALS HENLEY-ON-THAMES, England (JP)-Four American crews swept to opening heat victories on the Thames yesterday in the famed Royal Henley Regatta. Cornell University's lightweight eight, Kent School of Connecticut and Eliot House of Harvard won tests in the challenge cup event for eight-oar crews. The South Kent School of Connecticut made it an American slam by winning its race for fours. In perfect racing conditions with sky overcast and virtually no wind, Cornell's lightweights defeated the Tideway Scullers School of London in one of the most exciting events of the day. Behind at the start, the Cornell oarsmen drew even at the half- mile point and steadily surged ahead to win by three-quarters of a length. The time was 6 minutes; 59 seconds for one mile, 550-yard course. The Tideway School is one of the best of the British crews, vir- tually the same eight which gave Harvard University such a tough race last year. Today, Conrell goes against an- other U.S. entry, Eliot House of Harvard, which won a slender tri- umph over the Valkeakosken Vesi- veitkot Club of Finland, making its first Henley appearance. I Ann Arbor's 323 S. Main NO 2-5667 I the home of Steinway pianos ' X2 FINEST Apartments at Moderate Rentals * * Read Daily Classifieds Schedule of Rentals: Studio .,................$ 98 to 126 1-Bedroom ...... .....120 to 180 2-Bedroom...............225 to 270 3-Bedroom...............270 to 330 (Including heat, water, Frigi- daire range and refrigerator, swimming pool) Models open 11 a m. to 8 p.m. daily and Sunday. Immediate occupancy. 2200 Fuller Road. HURON TOWERS NO 3-0800 NO 5-9161 . $790 * * CREPE SOLE CASUALS CIO i ,I I III 1I. 09l Ukk I I I I 1