PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JULY 7, 1961 PAGE roun THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. JULY 7.1961 a a«.a a~z y ,.ui " avv Reds Edge Giants for Sixth Straight Win By The Associated Press Young Bill Stafford blanked Cleveland on two hits in a near- perfect pitching performance as the New York Yankees beat the Indians 4-0 last night and stayed within a half-game of first place Detroit In the American League race. The Tigers defeated Boston 3-0 behind the eight-hit pitching of Phil Regan and Terry Fox. Baltimore missed snatching third place from Cleveland when Wash- ington knocked off the Orioles 1-0 on a four-hitter by Dick Donovan. Stafford (7-4), a 22-year-old right-hander, permitted only two base runners. He had retired 20 in a row before- Mike De La Hoz smashed a single to third leading off the ninth inning. Willie Kirk- land's ground-rule double in the second inning was the only other hit by the Indians, who now have lost four in a row and have failed to score in 23 innings. Elston Howard hit a pair of solo homers for the Yankees. His ,first led off a three-run fifth inning against loser Dick Stigman (2-2). In the National League, first place Cincinnati defeated San Francisco 3-2. It was the Reds' ±> 'NO HARD FEELINGS!': Hemus Relaced by Keane As Cardinal Field Manager sixth straight success and the third loss in a row-all by 3-2 counts- for the third place Giants. Night Game The second place Los Angeles Dodgers played a night game at home against St. Louis. The Car- dinals were operating under John- ny Keane after Solly Hemus was fired as manager early in the day. Fourth place Pittsburgh split a doubleheader at Chicago, romping 15-3 in the opener before the Cubs came back for 5-1 decision in the second game, Milwaukee, after los- ing four in a row, swept a three- game series from Philadelphia by beating the last place Phils 7-6. Wynn Victor I the other AL games, Early Wynn hung up his 291st victory as the Chicago White Sox beat Kan- sas City 4-3, and the Los Angeles Angels moved past Minnesota into eighth place by out-slugging the twins 12-11 for their sixth straight victory. The Tigers got the big run off loser Galen Cisco (1-3) in the first inning on a sacrifice fly by Rocky Colavito-the Rock's seventh RBI in the three-game set. Fox nailed it by getting Chuck Schilling on three pitches for the final out with two men on base in the ninth. Pete Runnels had four of the eight hits off Regan (8-4). Miller Bombed A triple by Frank Robinson and Gus Bell's single, both off relief ace Stu Miller, gave the Reds the de- ciding run in the eighth inning. Loser Juan Marichal (6-6) gave up Cincinnati's first two runs, one a homer by Gordy Coleman. Southpaw Jim O'Toole (7-7) was the winner, allowing seven hits, but fanning six. The Giants, who now trail by 72 games, were blanked on three hits until the seventh, when they scored on three' singles. Ex-Red Ed Bailey homered in the ninth. Roberto Clemente, upping his average 14 points to .351 in the doubleheader with seven hits in nine trips, drove in five runs for the Bucs in the first game with five hits, one, a two-run homer. Bob Friend (9-9) was the win- ner, although giving up 11 hits. Loser Dick Ellsworth °(3-6) al- lowed eight of Pittsburgh's 20 hits. The Cubs then handed south- paw Wilmer Mizell (4-7), a one- time nemesis, his sixth straight loss, scoring four runs in the sec- ond inning on homers by Dick Bertell and Al Heist. Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE LOS ANGELES (P) - Solly Hemus was fired yesterday as manager of the slumping St. Louis Cardinals and replaced by his No. 1 aide Johnny Keane. Hemus, 37, said he had no plans for a new job. Keane, 50, has been in the Cardinal system for 20 yearscashminor league manager and coach. The Cardinals, who finished third last year, have been second division fixtures this year and were 141% names off thn Said Keane: "The way we've Hemus was the first National been losing makes it apparent that League manager to get the ax w¢ h n. mnrnl l B t this season. Two American League wnave a Morale pruuen em. UL it's not serious, nothing that win- ning a few games won't cure. I'm going to bring a few older players back into the lineup for a few nights to take the pressure off the youngsters." New Coaches The Cardinals also made vet- eran second baseman Red Schoen- pilots have been fired: Joe Gor- don at Kansas City and Cookie Lavagetto at Minneapolis. Hemus was owner Gussie Busch's personal choice when he was nam- ed in 1958, succeeding Fred Hutch- inson. The Cards finished seventh in 1959, but after 1960's surge to third place, hopes were high for 1961. But things started badly- Cincinnati x-Los Angeles San Francisco Pittsburgh Milwaukee x-St. Louis Chicago Philadelphia x-Playing night W L Pet. GB 51 29 .6384 47 32 .595 31l 43 36 .544 71/2 39 35 .527 9 37 37 .500 11 33 41 .446 15 32 44 .421 17 23 51 .311 25 game. it I i Laver 2-1 Favorite To Whip McKinley YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 15-1, Chicago 3-5 Cincinnati 3, San Francisco 2 Milwaukee 7, Philadelphia 6 St. Louis at Los Angeles (inc.) TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at Chicago Cincinnati at Los Angeles (2) Pittsburgh at Milwaukee (n) St. Louis at San Francisco (n) AMERICAN LEAGUE EARLY WYNN nine to go WIMBLEDON, England M P) - London bookies have made Charles ("Chuck") McKinley, 20-year-old tennis star from St. Louis, a 2-1 underdog in today's Wimbledon Tournament final against Rod (The Rocket) Layer of Australia. Such odds would not have been offered two weeks ago. But the rambunctious, fair-haired Ameri- can has become the No. 1 person- ality of the tournament by his incredible energy and breakneck speed around the court. Third Attempt Laver, beaten finalist for the last two years, remains favorite to win the title in his third at- tempt. He lost to Neale Fraser of Australia last year and to Alex Olmedo of Peru in 1959. McKinley aims at becoming the first native-born Americanto win the Wimbledon Men's crown since Tony Trabert did it in 1955. If he pulls it off, he will be the young- est Wimbledon champion for 30 years. McKinley, knocked out of the men's doubles event with his part- ner, Dennis Ralston of Bakers- field, Calif., had no matches yes- terday. He relaxed and watched the two semifinals of the women's singles. A British First With the partisan crowd shriek- ing in delight, two British girls made the final-for the first time in living memory. Christine Truman downed Re- nee Schuurman of South Africa 6-4, 6-4. Angela Mortimer upset the other South African star, Sandra Reynolds, top-seed and last year's defeated finalist, 10- 9, 6-3. The 15,000 crowd on Wimble- don's famed ivy-surrounded cen- ter court always cheers for the British players-and the under- dog. So McKinley can expect the Piek Gillman For Award Mike Gillman, Daily Associate Sports Editor last year, was re- cently named winner of the third annual Bernie Swanson award for sports writing. He will receive a cash award of $250. Gillman, who graduated in June from the College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, was given the award on the basis of the over- all quality of all the stories he sub- mitted for judging rather than one specific article. The student from Bay City, who was in charge of personnel while a senior editor at The Daily, will return to Ann Arbor in the fall as a freshman in the Law School. The award is given to an under- graduate from a Big Ten school or Notre Dame who submits "the best example of sports writing during the school year." It is named after the late Bernie Swanson, sports editor of the Min- neapolis Star, who died in 1957. Six Tie for St. Paul Lead ST. PAUL, Minn. ()-Six play- ers stroked their way into a tie for the first round lead in the $30,000 St. Paul Open golf tournament at Keller Course yesterday by shoot- ing six-under-par 66s. Tom Nieporte, Bronxville, N.Y., got the first one early in the day and then came in order Don Jan- backing of the crowd when he faces Laver today. It was different in the semifinal Wednesday. The fans groaned as McKinley whipped Mike Sangster, the last British hope. "But they gave me a good hand at the end," McKinley said. "It's only natural that they would cheer the British guy. But when the match was over, and they realized I had won, I got as good a recep- tion as I'd have had anywhere in the world." Detroit New York Cleveland Baltimore Chicago Boston Washington Los Angeles Minnesota Kansas City W L Pct. GB 52 29 .642- 50 28 .641 45 37 .549 71. 44 37 .549 8 40 42 .488 12/ 39 42 .481 13 36 45 .444 16 34 48 .415 18f2 33 48 .407 19 31 48 .392 20 Harvard, Henley CIi HENLEY ON THAMES, England (MP-Rowing eights of Kent School of Connecticut and Eliot House of Harvard University emerged yes- terday as American hopes in the Thames Challenge Cup Event of the Royal Henley Regatta. They will meet in a quarter- final heat of the competition to- day, and one of them will carry on to fight for the trophy which Harvard University's lightweights won the last three years but did not defend. Impressive Win The schoolboys of Kent dispos- ed of the eight of the University 2idienst a coach as well as player, with the loss of 16 of the first 19 when General Manager Bing De- vine made the announcement at a and added Vern Benson to the games-and got no better. news conference yesterday morn- coaching staff. Benson, manager Hemus had a one-year con- ing, of the Card's Portland, Ore., Pa- tract at about $37,500. 'Change Called For' cific Coast League club, replaces Keane's contract, for the rest "We feel a change is called for Darrel Johnson, who will be re- of 1961 and all of 1962, was not og ~~assigned. dslsd before an extended losing patternadisclosed. becomes fixed," Devine said. Said Hemus: "If you don't win, you don't stay. I have no hard feelings. It's just the way baseball is. I have no baseball job in sight, but I would like to return to man- H IF I aging." * TV RENTALS *Gain TAPE RECORDER RENTALS te*0CITATION KITS Fin also SERVICE-pickup and delivery s AIR-CONDITIONER RENTALS p F inals ANa NL The defeat by Eliot was a heart- breaker for Cornell, outweighed eight pounds per man. Cornell 1319 South University - near Washtenaw seemed to have a chance when NO 8-7942 Eliot House got off to a ragged start. "That was due to tension and nervousness," said the Rev. Jo- HENRY H. seph Brown, Eliot coach. "But I predict they won't be nervous to-E, mro. It was a ding-dong race whichSVS I saw the lead change twice before , ONG the Harvard boys put on a tre- DISTANCE mendous spurt in the final 100 MOVING yards to win by one-third of a length. j YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Washington 1, Baltimore 0 New York 4, Cleveland 0 Detroit 3, Boston 0 Chicago 4, Kansas City 3 LosAngeles 12, Minnesota 11 TODAY'S GAMES Kansas City at BaltimoreS(2, t-n) Boston at New York (n) Chicago at Cleveland (n) Minnesota at Washington (n) Los Angeles at Detroit (n) ROBERTO CLEMENTE ... hot bat AT CANDLESTICK PARK: Ford, Koufax Probable Starters for American, National League All-Stars By The Associated Press A southpaw pitching duel ap- peared to be in prospect for next Tuesday's fajor league All-Star game at San Francisco,. judging from the pitching selections made by managers Danny Murtaugh of the National League and Paul Richards of the American. It will be the first mastermind- ing assignment for both pilots in this 30th mid-summer baseball spectacle. Although the National has won nine of the last 13, the American holds the overall edge. 16-13. The San Francisco clash will be the first of two All-Star games this year, a custom which began in 1959. The second game will be played in Boston, July 31. Ford To Start It's almost a certainty that Whitey Ford, the redoubtable left- hander of the New York Yankees, will pitch the first three innings for the American Leaguers. No official word has been given but the Yankee manager Ralph Houk, convinced that his fan will be picked, has juggled Ford's pitch- ing rotation so that he could work three days before and four days after the game. Not as sure but a good possibil- ity is that Sandy Koufax, the fire- ball left-hander of the Los An- geles Dodgers, will start for tie National Leaguers. Koufax, one of the three left-handers among the eight pitchers named yes- terday by Murtaugh, was slated to pitch Friday, which would put him in a perfect spot for the All-Star clash. Other hurlers named by Mur- taugh include lefthanders Mike McCormick of San Francisco and the veteran Warren Spahn of Mil- waukee. The right-handers are Joey Jay and Bob Purkey, Cincinnati: Art Mahaffey, Philadelphia; Elroy Face, Pittsburgh- and Stu Miller, San Francisco. Only Three Vets Of the eight, only Spahn, Mc- Cormick and Face have seen pre- vious All-Star action. The Braves' soon-to-be 300 game-winner has worked in six All-Star games and has a 1-0 record. McCormick and Face are the only repeaters from last year. Face also pitched in both 1959 All-Star games. The American League All-Star pitchers, named last Monday, number nine. The only left- hander besides Ford is veteran Billy Pierce of the Chicago White Sox. The right-handers are Frank Lary and Jim Bunning, Detroit; Ryne Duren, Los Angeles; Dick Donovan, Washington; Jim Perry, Cleveland; and Mike Fornieles, Boston. Musial Picked Murtaugh completed his 25-man squad by selecting four alternate outfielders including Stan Musial, four extra infielders and a second catcher. The starting eight, of course, had been selected pre- viously by player vote. The reserves included, besides Musial, outfielders Frank Robin- son, Cincinnati; Henry Aaron, Mil- waukee; George Altman, Chicago; Eddie Kasko, Cincinnati; third baseman Kenny Boyer, St. Louis and catcher John Roseboro, Los Angeles. College of Dublin rather impress- No Chance Here ively although the margin of vic- Eliot House is one of Harva tory was only three-quarters of a intramural crews. In the U leng h. ents t me ver the one States, it would not get a chf mile, 550-yard course was 7 min- to race against a group like( utes, 3 seconds. nell, an intercollegiate comr Eliot House, eliminating the tor. Cornell University's lightweight Four other young Americ eight in another heat, did it in 6 representing South Kent Scho4 minutes, 52 seconds. So arithme- Connecticut, also kept U.S. c tic seems to be on the side of the flying by winning their hea more mature Eliot House crew, the four-oar Wyfold challenge Figures meant something on the event. Thames River yesterday because Rowing confidently over conditions remained constant. placid waters, they came h There was little wind, the river four lengths in front of Birm was placid and the sun warmed ham University in 7 minutes things pleasantly, seconds. Another U.S. representativE " the big rowing spectacle on Beatty Wins Thames-Martin McNair of Beach, Calif. - was elimin when he and Edward Fariean 10 MeBirmingham, England, lost in paired oars to a tandem from British Quentin Boat Club. HELSINKI k)-Jim Beatty of San Jose, Calif., won the 1,500 meter race at yesterday's Inter- national Track and Field Meet with a breath-taking 200-meter sprint finish. He left the field ofP- European top runners behind, clocking 3:42.4. Finland's Olavi Salonen finish-G&FCOURSE ed second in 3:44.4 and Istvan ' Rozsavoelgyi of Hungary third in 3:44.6. ard's nited Lance Cor- .eti- cans, ol of olors t in cup the ome ing- s, 43 e in the Long ated y of the the ' --"r\,3Flint 6, Michigan oi Sti Phone Collect4-L Flint CEdar 4-1686 M For Lower Free Estinates Interstate Rates Every Friday We own, operate, schedule and dispatch our own fleet of vans for better direct service without transfer. k. .A2 . A . ~ .. « . ygi >v,, < 'I lill tevens t. '40 anagei i.. =- a _ I I 1 NEXT WEEK 8 p.m. WEDNESDAY thru SATURDAY Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre UNIVERSITY PLAYERS Dept. of Speech present -S Sam B~"ea Spwak I Where to line M k L® The CHUCK WAGON LUNCHES and DINNERS FINE SALADS and SANDWICHES Specializing in Roost Beef Serving Wines and Beers from all over the world QUICK LUNCH SERVICE recommended by Duncan Hines and Gourmet CATERING SERVICE AVAILABLE OPEN 7 DAYS 2045 Packard Hours 11 A.M.-9 P.M. NO 2-1661 LARRY DAVIS, Proprietor Good food ... expertly served, in pleasant surroundings, to the most exacting taste. Luncheons, 11:30 to 2:00 Dinners, 5:30 to 7:30 Sunday: Dinners, 12:00 to 3:00 Closed Mondays We suggest that you telephone for reservations. a VUhe Corner Jlouae , S. Thayer at Washington in Ann Arbor A block west of Rackham Bldg.-NO 8-6056 .. '4 I I I I Dine and penal colony Relax . . . - . .4 :?: : :; . %:1 .4 /4~a/9a r to the music of Paul Tompkins / comedy zovii0oglal 4 P hlimi A i. 341 SOUTH MAIN STREET ... NO 3-2701 EVENINGS i