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July 18, 1961 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1961-07-18

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

GE Foult

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

TUESDAY, JULY" 18, 1961

E FOUR T HE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JULY 18, 1961

--

Major League Standings

Tigers Retain Slim Lead

NATIONAL LEAGUE

AMERICAN LEAGU
W L

Cincinnati
Los Angeles
San Francisco
Pittsburgh,
Milwaukee
St. Louis
Chilcago
Philadelphia

w
56
51
47
43
39
38
38
26

L
32
37
41
38
42
45
46
57

Pct. GB
.636 -
.580 5
.534 9
.531 'J !
.481 13t
.458 15?
.452 16
.313 27'Iz

Detroit
New York
Baltinmore
Cleveland
Chicago
Boston
Washington
Minnesota
Los Angeles
Kansas City

59
57
49
49
45
43
40
37
37
33

31
30
41
42
47
48
49
52
53
56

E
Pet. GB
.656 -
.655 %
.544 10
.538 10%2
.489 15
.473 16 2
.449 181
.416 21 f
.411 22
.371 25f2

FOR RENT IF

With 7-4 Victory over A

S

f

SMen's S'hoe Sale
Our semi-annual clearance of various
styles and colors of our high-grade
footwear by -
Johnston & Murphy, French Shriner
G. H. Bass, Wright Arch-Preservers
English Imports §
Year-'round styles in black and brown
as well as summer shoes are included.
For your shopping convenience the styles §
are grouped in (3) prices . . . ....
$795 $ 595
These shoes are all from our
regular stocks and range in
va lue from $11I.95 to $24.95.
No Returns-No Exchanges
VAN BOVEN SHOES
. . 17 Nickels Arcade

Acount records
Ann Arbor's Largest Store Specializing
in LP Records, Hi-Fi and Stereo

By The Associated Press
DETROIT-Norm Cash belted
a grand slam home run in the
first inning last night and made
Paul Foytack's first start in near-
ly two months a rousing success
as Detroit beat Kansis City 7-4
and clung to first place by half
a game.
Cash's bases-loaded smash was
his second grand slam of the year
and his 26th home run. It came
off Joe Nuxhall, who loaded the
bases on two singles and a walk.
Foytack lost his pob as a start-
er when he ran up a string of
early season flops and earned his
chance last night with some fine
relief work. He had not started
since May 30 when the Athletics
knocked him out in the third in-
ning.
BALTIMORE-Whitey Ford of
the New York Yankees blanked
the Baltimore Orioles 5-0 for his
17th victory, but rain washed out
the second game of a scheduled
doubleheader and cancelled hom-
ers by Yankees Roger Maris and
Mickey Mantle.
Mantle hit his 33rd homer of
the season in the first game to
help Ford to his 11th consecutive
victory.
SAN FRANCISCO-The Phila-
delphia Phillies beat the San
Francisco Giants 10-7 in a 25-hit
slugfest with a three-run ninth
and clutch relief hurling by Jack
Baldschun.
Tony Gonzales' double after a
walk broke a 7-7 tie and handed
Bob Bolin his first defeat against
two victories.
CHICAGO - Veteran Early
Wynn recorded his 292nd major
league victory, pitching the Chi-
cago White sox to a 4-1 triumph
over Boston on a yield of three
hits.
The 41-year-old righthander
boosted his record to 8-2 but lost
his shutout when he walked in a
run during a streak of wildness in
the third inning.
* *
CINCINNATI-Warren Spahn,
ageless Milwaukee southpaw, scat-
tered 11 hits and chipped in on a
barrage of slugging that sank
league-leading Cincinnati, 13-4.
In early innings it looked like
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

the Reds might rough up Spahn
freely, but he shut then out on
five hits after the third,
ST. LOUIS - The St. Louis
Cardinals roared from behind a
6-0 deficit scoring four runs in
the seventh and six in the eighth
inning to defeat the Chicago Cubs
10-6 in the first game of a twi-
night doubleheader.
In the second game St. Louis

led Chicago 4-3 at
third inning.

the end of theI

* * *
LOS ANGELES-The Los An-
geles Dodgers led the Pittsburgh
Pirates by a score of 2-0 at the
end of the fifth inning.
The Pirates tied the score at
two-all in the seventh as Walt
Moryn singled to right center and
Dick Stuart lined his 13th homer
over the left field screen.

1
ONE 2-ROOM APT. with bath, private
parking, and automatic washer and
dryer available July 19. 1-room effi-
ciency apt, completely furnished. 2
other furnished apts. available for
fall. 1921 E. Huron. Call at back
basement door. NO 5-4767. C24
CAMPUS Furnished Apartment. $50 per
month, summer only. NO 3-4322. C19
ON CAMPUS furnished apartments for
rent. NO 2-1443. 017
CAMPUS-HOSPITAL-Lovely furnished
apartment suitable for four girls.
Parking. Call 2-0671. C66
3-ROOM furnished apt. near Packard
and State. $70 for summer months.
NO 3-8458. C20
ON CAMPUS garage and lot parking
available for summer and fall semes-

LINES
2
3
4

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING

ONE-DAY
.70
.85
1.00

SPECIAL
SIX-DAY
RATE
.58
.70
.83
to a line
3:00 Mon. thru Fri.

i

A

Baseball Great Ty Cobb
Dies in Georgia Hospital

Figure 5 average words
Call Classified between 1 :00 and

Phone NO 2-4786

ters. NO 2-1443.

C161

THIS, W
featuri
ALL
BACH-C
* POPULAR
s CLASSICAL
* HI-FI
o STEREO
includes: Bernstein, Ormandy,
Mathis, Brubeck, Miles Davis,
Alfred Deller, Joan Baez.
65 33
reg. 3.98 4 re

EEK
ing
UILD
JARD

BARGAIN
SALE

I

iI

MEN'S WEAR

11

II

Short Sleeve
SPORT SHIRTS
9 9c and I5
Assorted Colors

ATLANTA ()-Ty Cobb, the
choice of countless fans as the
greatest player of all time, died
yesterday of concer.
Death claimed the fabulous
Georgia Peach at 74 years of age
in Emory University Hospital
His physician, Dr. Hugh Wood,
disclosed Cobb had been under
treatment for cancer of the pros-
trate gland since December, 1959.
The malignancy had spread to the
pelvic bones and the, vertebrae.
"He died peacefully and without
pain," Wood reported. The doctor
said Cobb also "had diabetes and
chronic heart disease. While his
general condition had deteriorated
during the past two weeks, the
end came rather suddenly."
Assaults Record Book
Cobb retired from baseball in
1928 after 24 years of successful
assault on almost every record in
the books. He broke into the ma-
jor leagues at Detroit in 1905 and
batted only .240, but that was his
first-and last-season of medioc-
rity.
For 23 consecutive years he
batted over .300 and compiledha
Germans Set
To Meet U.S.
STUTTGART (iP)-Fresh from
its victory over Russia, the Unit-
ed States track team takes on
West Germany - probably the
strongest outfit this side of the
Iron Curtain-today and tomor-
row.
The 20-event meet gets under
way at 6:30 p.m. (1:30 p.m., EST)
in the Neckar Stadium. The meet
will follow the pattern of the one
in Russia except that there will
be no decathlon and no walking
event.
While the Americans were hurt-
ing somewhat when they arrived
here by a chartered Polish airlin-
er (the Russians wouldn't permit
the Finnish airline, which the
team intended to use, to leave
Moscow yesterday), they didn't
figure to have much trouble with
the Germans.
"I don't really know anything
about the German team," said
head United States Coach Jumbo
Jim Elliott, "so it's practically im-
possible to tell how we'll do."
Wostenholme
Leads Golfers
At Versailles
VERSAILLES (P)-Britain's Guy
Wolstenholme shot a sizzling 67
over a rain-swept course to lead
the first round of the French Open
golf tournament yesterday.
Wolstenholme, who turned pro
last year, was closely pursued on
the par 72 course by four others
who carded 68's.
They were Len Woodward of
Australia, Gene Garaialde of
France, and Kel Nagle and Peter
Thomson, both of Australia.
A field of 81 teed off yesterday
morning in a rainstorm that made
the greens tricky. Scores of the
early starters soared because of
the miserable conditions.
Liston Faces
Second Arrest
PHILADELPHIA ()-Dist. Atty.
James C. Crumlish Jr. said yester-
day he will arrest Charles (Sonny)
Liston, boxing's No. 1 heavyweight
contender, on two of four charges
originally dropped by a magis-

trate.
Crumlish said warrants charging
Liston and IsaacCooper with re-
sisting arrest will be issued be-
fore Aug. 2. Liston will also be
charged with turning off car lights
to avoid identification.
oth men were arrested in June
after they allegedly forced a wo-

lifetime average of .367. He played
all except two of his 24 seasons
with Detroit and managed the
Tigers for six years. He spent his
last two seasons with Connie
Mack's Philadelphia Athletics.
Leading Hitter
He led the American League in
hitting for 12 seasons, nine of
them consecutive, and three times
he broke the .400 barrier. His .420
average in 1911 still stands as the
highest in the history of the Amer-
ican League. He led the league
that year in 12 categories.
Always fiery, always aggressive,
Cobb was never rated high in pop-
ularity with his fellow players,
and many fans detested the sight
of the Georgian's flashing spikes,
weapons he kept honed to razor
sharpness, and which carried him
to base-stealing records.
Cobb's base-running tactics led
to frequent fights with opponents,
and on occasion he would even
dash into the stands after heck-
ling fans.
When baseball people balloted
in 1936 for the first group to be
enshrined in baseball'sHall of
Fame, 'Cobb polled 222 of a possi-
ble 226 votes and drew more ac-
claim than Babe Ruth, Hans Wag-
ner and Christy Mathewson-his
chief rivals for the "greatest of
all-time" label.
I-M Notes
Tennis, badminton and paddle-
ball tournaments wil begin at 4:00
p.m. today at the Inter-Mural
Sports Bldg., I-M director Earl
Riskey announced last night. En-
tries for next week's golf tourna-
ment may also be filed now.
ZINDELL
OLDSMOBILE
Ann Arbor, NO 3-0507

PERSONAL
ACADEMIC-MINDED MOTHERS (pets
and spouses prohibited, but offspring
prerequisite) interested in co-op hous-
ing for fall, please write P.O. Box 466.
SF9
DISPOSING of my large library at pri,
vate sale. Rare opportunity for stu-
dents to build up a library of good
books at low prices. Special low prices
on sets of books. Showingsrat 617
Packard St. (near State) from 12
P.M. to 4 P.M. every day except Sun-
day. F8

NOW AVAILABLE - Across from East
Quad, 2 parking spaces, part of an
exciting apartment, anda small duck.
Call NO 5-7892. 09
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, Frigi-
daire range and refrigerator,
swimming pool)
Models open 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily
and Sunday. Immediate occupancy.
2200 Fuller Road.

Preview of Grinnell's
PIANO FESTIVAL SALE
Come in any day
and see these tremendous
values from $399 up.
GRINNELLS
.3 . Main NO 2-5667

1.
2.
3.

Must be neat-appearing
Above-average intelligence
Able to converse intelligently

WAGES TO BE DISCUSSED
AT INTERVIEW
CALL MR. NEUMANN
NO 3-6003 9 A.M.-2 P.M.

I

CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES 132

C-TED STANDARD SERVICE
Friendly service is our business.
Atlas tires, batteries and accessories.
Co plete 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

the home of Steinway pianos
X2
TRANSPORTATION
RIDE WANTED to Columbus. Ohio this
Friday, return Sunday. Call Rosalie
Brum, NO 3-0536. G3
DRIVING TO DENVER July 28. Can take
riders, share expenses and driving.
Call NO 3-4522 after 6 p.m. G2

A s.Y15'B-a

MISCELLANEOUS
STUDENTSI
For Summertime Breaks Visit the
SCHWABEN
INN
215 Ashley
We feature the largest burger in town
also
the Poor Boy Sandwich
M2

BUSINESS SERVICES
TUTORING IN SPANISH-M.A., college
teaching experience. NO 2-1716. J14
STUDENTS: Neat, expert typing of your
papers, etc., pickup and delivery in
Ann Arbor. Electric typewriter. Call
GL 3-6258. J6
RIDING LESSONS
Horseback riding. English equipment.
Horses boarded and trained. Herbell
Farm, 4715 E. Joy Road. Phone NO
3-7708. Lloyd Givens, manager-trainer.
J16i
SWEET CHERRIES
By the quart or by the pound, pitted.
Also starting the 17th, Montmorency
cherries, washed, pitted and sugared.
HURON FARMS
4674 E. Huron River Dr. NO 8-7808
J15

LOST AND FOUND
FOUND: Woman's watch, vicinity of ;
Burton Tower. Call 3-2544. A50
LOST-35 mm. colored slides in yellow
envelope, Ann St., Hospital area.
Please call NO 3-5381. Reward. A5
FOR SALE
157 METROPOLITAN convertible. Excel-
.lent condition. $595. 906 E. Ann St.
B10
EAST OF WASHTENAW - Vine Wood
area. Excellent location, near elemen-
tary school, junior high school, and
campus. Three large bedrooms, living
room with fireplace, sun room, gra-
cious separate kdining room, large
kitchen with breakfast area. Base-
ment recreation room. Wall-to-wall
carpeting and drapes. Recently re-
decorated. Garage. Immediate occu-
pancy if desired. Under $30,000. Call
NO 3-8221. Bl
HELP WAN ED
HAVE SOME FUN, earn some money.
Dancers, singers, acrobats, and so
forth. Phone Mr. Green, VFW Club,
NO 2-3972. 112
FULL AND PART-TIME WORK-Tele-
phone operators needed to do tele-
phone work for local Dry Cleaners.
Experience not necessary. Must have
good voice and personality. For inter-
view call 2-9546. H10
MEN
SUMMER EMPLOYMENT
AFTERNOONS & EVENINGS

A

GOOD FOOD IS A MUST AT
BLUEBOOK TIME. DON'T MISS
Watermelon
Hot barbequed ribs
Hot barbequed chicken
Pepitas and other snacks
at
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard
Open till midnight every night

JO

HURON
TOWERS
NO 3-0800
NO 5-9161

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.

1f

C10

BARGAIN CORNER

I

OFF
LIST
PRICE
2 99
g. 4.98 reg. 5.98

THE MOST INTERESTING, friendliest
store in town-come and see us! The
Treasure Mart, 529 Detroit Street, NO
2-1363. Open Monday and Friday
nights till 9:00. Wi
BARGAIN SALE - Men's wear. Short
sleeve sport shirts 99c and $1.50; wash
'n wear slacks $3.95; knit sport shirts
$1.44 and $2.59; wash 'n wear cord
pants $2.77; many other big buys.
Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington St. W3

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.
eTRUCKS AVAILABLE
G1
Read the Classifieds

Wash n Wear
DRESS SLACKS
$,395o
Assorted Colors

A
MIDAS
MUFFLER
FITS LI KE

SAL&
(9 74 riee f 7

I

I

I

EXTRA SPECIAL
Thousands of Records

reg. 3.98

and
reg. 4.98

EXTRA SPECIAL
from our
BOOK DEPARTMENT

Knit
SPORT SHIRTS
$1"4 and s259
All Colors
Canvas Casual
OXFORDS
$ 49
Discount Prices
on all
Camp Supplies
CORD PANTS
Wash 'n Wear
$77
Variety of Colors

you always
get the right
muffler for
your make
and model of
car at your
Midas
Muffler Shop

TRY Varsity
~'"ALL DRY" Laundry Service
5 POUNDS OF LAUNDRY
Washed, Dried, Folded $1.00
Only I Ceach added POUND '
All of your LAUNDRY, white and colors,
clothing and flat work, or just clothing
WASHED, DRIED and NEATLY FOLDED.
REGULAR SHIRTS FINISHED UPON REQUEST.
23c EACH ADDITIONAL

YOUR

4
*1
4

NEW BEST SELLERS
REG.
Mila 18 . . Uris ........4.95
Advise and Consent .......5.75
The Listener . . Caldwell ...3.95
Pomp and Circumstance
Cowa rd .............4.50

A

NOW
3.30
3.84
2.64
3.00

and many more
A LL T '/ OFFreg. price

Corner

_A123wI

I

1 -.1 - P I

4V 1 e4

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