PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 20, PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JULY 20, 1961 _. . Dodgers Close In on Reds with 8-3_Victory' STEALS SHOW: Rudolph Sets Record as U.S. Nips West German Thinc lads By The Associated Press CINCINNATI - The Los An- geles Dodgers whittled Cincinnati's National League lead to 21/2 games last night as they sent the slump- ing Reds down to their fourth straight defeat 8-3. It was only after last Saturday's games that the Reds held a six-game lead. Johnny Podres, holding the Reds to nine hits and 'building his season record to 11-2, pitched his first complete game in Cincinnati since July 28, 1957. Bob Purkey, going in with an 11-4 record, was the losing hurler. Bill Henry and Sherman Jones followed him to the mound. In defeat the Reds showed more signs of coming apart at the seams, particularly defensively. They were guilty of two errors plus another slipshod play that didn't show in the box score. Five of the Dodgers' runs were earned. Norm Larker had.three hits for the Dodgers while Charley Neal drove in two of the Los Angeles runs. The Dodgers wound up with 11 hits off the trio of Cincinnati pitchers. * * * Senators 8-12, Yankees 4-2 WASHINGTON - The Wash- ington Senators, playing before their largest home crowd of the season, lowered the boom on the New York Yankees twice, 8-4 and 12-2, in a twi-night doubleheader. It was the first time this season the Yankees have lost a double- header. It also marked the first time in three weeks that the Yan- kees have lost two in a row. The Yankees, engaged in a neck- and-neck battle with Detroit for the league lead, did not look like champions to the crowd of 27,162. The Yankee pitchers went wild and their defense crumbled. They Eajor League S tanding s AMERICAN LEAGUE committed six errors, three in eachx game.t Mickey Mantle's 36th home run of the year in the sixth inning t of the second game saved the1 Yankees from total embarrass- ment. The mighty Mick thus wentt one up on his teammate, Rogeri Maris, who went 0 for 7 for the two games. Mantle had two hits in eight trips. Home runs by Harry Bright, his third, and Gene Green, his 13th,c led the Senators in the first game.t They capitalized on the wildness1 of Al Downing to push seven runs3 across in the second inning of the1 nightcap as 12 batters went to theI plate. * * * Orioles 4, Tigers 2 DETROIT - Jim Gentile and Hank Foiles turned on the home- run power for the second straight Attract Top Golf Pros To Tourney MILWAUKEE (IP) - A heavy rainfall which soaked most of the metropolitan area skirted the North Hills Country Club yester- day as the nation's top touring golf pros tuned up for the start today of the $30,000 Milwaukee Open. Officials of the seventh annual tournament breathed sighs of re- lief as the dark clouds passed just a short distance away with a $3,100 pro-amateur competition underway. The 6,410-yard course, fairly short but exacting, was pronounc- ed in excellent shape. The layout is dry from lack of rain and the rough shouldn't cause as much trouble as a year ago when Ken Venturi won top money of $4,300 with a 72-hole total of nine under par 271. Barring rain during the four- day test, par 70 may be in for a beating. Venturi predicted a win- ning score a few strokes under his 1960 total. One of the best practice rounds was turned in by Rex Baxter, 1957 runnerup for the U. S. amateur title from Amarillo, Tex. Baxter carded a brilliant 64. Top Winners The field of 145 includes 30 of the top 40 money winners on the pro circuit this year. The "big" names among the missing are Arnold Palmer, aiming for the PGA championship after winning the British Open, Art Wall Jr., Bill Collins, Ted Kroll and Jerry Magee. Gene Littler, the U. S. Open titlist and 1959 Milwaukee win- ner, is also among the missing. However, the field still ranks as one of the best to appear in Milwaukee. Masters champion Gary Player, a tourist from South Africa with more than $55,000 in prize money this year is among the glittering list of entries. Also on hand are former Na- tional Open champions Cary Mid- dlecoff, Tommy Bolt and Bill Cas- per Jr., former PGA kings Bob Rosburg, Doug Ford and Jackie Burke Jr., and such young play- ers as newly-crowned Canadian Open titlist Jackie Cupit and Doug Sanders. night and sparked the Baltimore Orioles to a 4-2 triumph that pre- vented the Detroit Tigers from taking over first place in the American League. Skinny Brown blew down De- troit's effort to extract a late- inning victory when he rescued starter Jack Fisher from a seventh-inning jam and pitched' three perfect innings of relief ball. The Tigers could have taken over first place by beating the Orioles since the New York Yan- kees dropped a twi-night double- header to the Washington Sena- tors. But the loss kept the Tigers' three percentage points behind the Yankees. Foiles, who could have been the goat in both games as the Tigers stole seven bases while he was catching in the two contests, cracked his first homerun of the season Tuesday night as the Orioles battled from behind. He hit his second last night in the seventh inning with the bases empty. Gentile, who won the opening game of the series with a 10th- inning homerun, hit his 24th with a mate aboard in the third in- ning. Both blasts came off Jim Bun- ning, who had won five in a row. Bunning allowed only five hits and struck out 11, but the Orioles made all but one of their hits count. Braves 8-1, Phillies 5-2 PHILADELPHIA - Forty-year- old Elmer Valo touched off a ninth-inning rally as the Phila- delphia Phillies came from behind at the finish to defeat the Mil- waukee Braves, 2-1, in the second game of a twi-night doubleheader. The Braves won the opener, 8-5. The Braves, with Carlton Willey on the mound, went into the ninth inning with a 1-0 lead which came in the seventh on Joe Adcock's 19th home run. But Valo batted for Don Fer- rarese, a lefthander who allowed the Braves only three hits, and singled to right field. Ken Wal- ters ran for him and went to second on Bob Malkmus' sacri- fice bunt. John Callison singled to center, scoring Walters, and tak- ing second on the throw to the plate. Don Demeter walked, and both runners advanced as Tony Gon- zalez grounded out. Charlie Smith was given an intentional walk to load the bases. Lee Walls then singled to right scoring Callison with the deciding run. Cards 3, Giants 2 ST. LOUIS-Bill White - who tied a 49-year-old hitting record Tuesday-belted a 10th inning sin- gle that gave the St. Louis Card- inals a 3-2 victory over the San Francisco Giants here. It was the Cards' fifth straight triumph. Craig Anderson, who tookover for Ray Sadecki in the ninth, pitched brilliantly in relief and started the winning rally with an infield hit. Anderson, now 3-1, came in after Harvey Kuenn hit a game tying home run and Joe Amalfitano walked. He retired six straight hit- ters, striking out three. Stu Miller took the defeat. His record is 7-3 and all his defeats are at the hands of the Redbirds. i Bob Lillis followed Anderson's single in the 10th with a single, setting the stage for White. 4 UNDEFEATED - Unbelievable, but true. With less than half the American League season remaining Cleveland's Barry Latman has still to taste defeat this year. The young right hander scat- tered eight hits last night to notch his ninth win of the season. ohnson-CottonMtc Undecided after Mixup STUTTGART, Germany UP) - Wondrous Wilma Rudolph stole the show away from the men t again last night by speeding to a world record 11.2 seconds in the 100-meter dash as the Ameri- can males defeated West Ger- many, 14-6 and 120-91 in points. The Olympic triple gold medal- ist, competing in a special race on the dual meet program, clipped one-tenth off the world mark of :11.3 she shares with two othersa in beating teammate Willye White1 by two yards. Barbara Brown ofj New York was third. Willowy Wilma of Tennessee{ State University is co-holder of the listed record with Mrs. Shir- ley De La Hunty of Australia and Vera Krepkina of Russia. She tied the :11.3 standard in the' meet against Russia at Moscow last weekend. Pushed Miss White, who excels in the. broad jump, helped push Wilma, her teammate from Tennessee State, to the record. Willye was clocked in :11.5 and Miss Brown in :11.9. Wilma was off the blocks fast but she had to turn on the steam in the last 50 meters to shake off Miss White. There was no noticeable sup- porting wind and officials were confident that Miss Rudolph's record would gain recognition. Just before the start of the twilight meet before 50,000 in Neckar Stadium, Jim Grelle pull- ed out of the 1,500 meters with a sore throat and John Fromm had to withdraw from the javelin throw because of a muscle pull. American Coach Jumbo Jim El- liott pressed his two decathlon men-there was no decathlon competition in this meet - Paul Herman and Dave Edstrom into service. Herman, of Westmount, Calif., finished fourth in the 1,500 meters won by Dyrol Burleson of Oregon in 3:50.2, and Edstrom was fourth in the spear throw won by Germany's Rolf Herings with 245 feet. Prospects Black The U.S. prospects looked black indeed when Germany's Manfred Germar nipped Frank Budd of Villanova in the 200 meters in 20.7 seconds-just one-tenth of a second off the German's European record. Budd also was clocked in :20.7. The large crowd was beginning to believe an upset was possible. But the Americans collected two unexpected firsts to fill the breach. Deacon Jones of Fort Lee, Va., captured the 3,000 meter steeplechase in 8:47.4 and was fol- lowed home by Bob Schul of the Air Force. Then John Gutnecht, a slim New York Athletic Club distance runner from Poland, Ohio, won the 10,000 meters in 29:46.8. This gave the United States another five important points even though Charles Clark of San Jose, Calif., dropped out. Tremendous Ovation The travel-weary Americans, who defeated Russia last weekend, were given a tremendous ovation by the spectators. With no pressure on him, John Thomas of Boston U. relaxed and won the high jump, clearing 7 feet, % inch. World record holder Ralph Boston of Nashville, Tenn., captured the broad jump with a 26-3% leap. The other events went pretty much according to form, although- Cliff Cushman of Grand Forks, N.D., had a king-sized scare thrown into him in the 400-meter hurdles by Helmut Janz, an old rival from the Olympics. Stride for Stride Going into the final turn, Cush- man and Janz were running stride for stride. Down the homestretch they went and it wasn't until the final step that Cushman managed to throw himself across the line in front. Both were caught in 50.4 seconds. Cushman went down in a heap when he broke the tape, but got up grinning. "Whew," said the tall, blond graduate of the University of Kan- sas, "that guy can run." Cushman was second in the Rome Olympics last year and Janz was fifth. Burleson, who couldn't run against, the Russians because of an upset stomach' caused by eat- ing a hero sandwich, passed Klaus Lehman of West Germany in the last 100 yards and won as he pleased. Jay Silvester, an Army lieuten- ant from Trementon, Utah, be- came a double winner by adding the shot put to his discus gold medal. He had a heave of 60 feet, 5 inches, beating Gary Gubner, the New York U. freshman. Gubner, winner against the Russians, had a throw of 59-2%. The Yank 1,600 meter relay team of Adolph Plummer of Brooklyn and New Mexico, Jerry Siebert of Willets, Calif., Earl Young of San Fernando, Calif., and Ulis Williams of Compton, Calif., scored easily in 3:06.1. The German quartet was clocked in 3:12. Vets Garcia, McDermott Sign Contracts Mike Garcia and Maury Mc- Dermott, two veteran American League pitchers, were signed yes- terday by Washington andKansas City, respectively. Garcia, a 37-year old right hander, has spent most of his career with the Cleveland Indians. He wore a Tribe uniform for eleven seasons. Garcia pitched briefly for the Chicago White Sox last year and had been working out with the Senators for several days before inking his pact. McDermott, 33, spent most of his career with Washington (now Minnesota) and Boston. Last year he compiled a 13-11 mark for Little Rock of the Southern As- sociation. The tall right hander was claimed by the A's when he was unconditionally released by the St. Louis Cardinals yesterday, sup- posedly for breaking * too many curfews. His 1961 record with the Red- birds was 1-0 in 27 innings. -4 I New York Detroit Baltimore Cleveland Chicago Boston' Washington Minnesota Los Angeles Kansas City w 58 59 51 51 47 44 42 38 38 33 L 32 33 41 43 47 50 50 53 54 59 Pct. GB .644 - .641 - .554 9 .543 9 .500 13 .469 16 .457 17 .413 20% .418 21 .363 25% PHILADELPHIA OP) - Pat Olivieri, manager of Harold John- son, the National Boxing Associa- tion light heavyweight champion, hesitated yesterday to sign a con- tract for Johnson to meet Eddie Cotton, fifth-ranked contender in a 15-round title fight in Seattle on Aug. 29. Olivieri had said he would sign in the New York offices of match- maker Dewey Fragetta. Later he said he received a tele- gram from Sid Flaherty, manager of Eddie Machen, the No. 2 rank- ed heavyweight whom Johnson de- feated in an unpopular decision July 1 in Atlantic City. Olivieri said he had promised Flaherty he would give Machen a return match within 40 days. The date Flaherty named for the return bout was Aug. 11 in Portland, Ore. That's one day over the 40 days, Olivieri said, and now he doesn't know what he'll do. Pat said he has no contract, no advance money and no $7,500 cash t. .1 in escrow deposited for a Machen- Johnson match as he demanded. Besides, he adds, the Cotton- Johnson match would be a good one. So, he indicated, he's hedging until at least today when he said he might go to New York and talk with Fragetta. Tuesday night Olivieri said the Seattle fight would enable John- son to get a $20,000 guarantee or 40 per cent of the gate plus a cut from television receipts if the bout is televised. The matter of TV remained to be determined. It would be Johnson's second de- fense of the crown since he won it last February by knocking out Jesse Bbwdry. "I don't understand it anymore -people in this business do things crazy," Olivieri commented, add- ing "I don't know if I'm coming or going. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Washington 8-12, New York 4-2 Cleveland 4-9, Boston 1-S Minnesota 6, Los Angeles " (1st game, 2nd inc.) Chicago 6, Kansans City 5 Baltimore 4, Detroit 2 TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore (Barber 10-7) at Detroit (Mossi 10-2) Boston (Delock 5-5) at Cleveland (Bell 6-9) (n) Only games scheduled I NATIONAL Cincinnati Los Angeles San Francisco Pittsburgh Milwaukee St. Louis . Chicago Philadelphia LEAGUE W L Pct. 56 35 .615 53 37 .589 47 42 .528 43 39 .524 42 43 .494 43 45 .489 38 50 .432 27 58 .318 GB 2% 8 1r 111/ 161 26 ,' \7 BARGAINS in PHOTO EQUIPMENT at FOLLETT'S Cameras - Projectors -Screens Gadget Bags-Polaroid Cameras if B$ARGAIN DAYS 0% off on Entire MerchandiseV ..o INDIA ART SHOP 8 k 330 Maynard Street d~o<-yo--yo--y<=-y<-=omo<-yo=:No o<=yo< o< I ZINDELL OLDSMOBILE 4 Ann Arbor, NO 3-0507 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Milwaukee 8-1, Philadelphia 5-2 Los Angeles 8, Cincinnati 3 St. Louis 3, San Francisco 2 (10 inn.) Chicago at Pittsburgh (rain) TODAY'S GAMES Milwaukee (Spahn 9-11) at Phila- delphia (Short 3-5) (n) Chicago (Curtis 6-3) at Pittsburgh (Gibbon 7-4) (n) San Francisco (Marachial 6-7) at St. Louis (Cicotte 2-3) (n) Los Angeles (Drysdale 7-5 or Kou- fax 11-6) at Cincinnati (Jay 13-4) (n) 322 South State Street Bob Graham, Mgr. m c u4 I HOME AT LAST: Last Rites for Ty Cobb Held I of By The Associated Press ROYSTON, Ga. - Ty Cobb went home for the last time yesterday. The body of baseball's fiery genius was entombed in the white marble family mausoleum beside his parents and his sister Flor- ence. Cobb's earthly saga ended in the rolling red clay hills of northeast Georgia only a few miles from his birthplace. Some of the old-timers who once played sandlot baseball with the matchless Georgia Peach were on hand to see him into his final resting place. Cobb, 74, died Monday in an Atlanta hospital after a 19-month battle with cancer. Diabetes, a chronic heart ailment and a se- vere arthritic condition also handi- capped the baseball great and made his final years painful. Conquers World Cobb left this hilly country 56 years ago as a teen-ager to chal- lenge and then conquer the base- ball world. His feats put more records in the annals of the past- time than any other player before or since. About 200 little league baseball players, uniformed and with heads bared, lined the roadway leading from the cemetery entrance to and Detroit Tigers and Schalk with the Chicago White Sox. Both were warm personal friends of Cobb. Other notables from the baseball world included Sid Keen- er, Director of the Baseball Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, N. Y., where Cobb headed the first group of super stars to be enshrined. Nap Rucker, later a National League pitching star but Cobb's. roommate when they broke into baseball together at Augusta, was also among the mourners. In the enclosed family section at the chapel were Cobb's first wife, the former Charlie Marion Lombard of Augusta; their son, James; and two daughters, Mrs. Thomas D. McLaren and Mrs. Richard D. Beckworth, all of Cali- fornia. Several of Cobb's 15 grand- children were also present. Services were conducted by the Rev. E. A. Miller, pastor of the Cornelia Christian Church, and Dr. John R. Richardson, pastor of Atlanta's Westminister Presbyter- ian Church. "He leaves a host of friends and admirers, not only across the United States but across the whole world," Miller said. "In his field of endeavor he won just about everything that could be won. His influence will continue to bring the best out of youth. Ty Cobb was never satis- fied with second best." Cobb lay in state in a bronze, glass-topped casket until 2 p.m. (EST) an hour before the funeral. A steady procession of townspeople including many boys in little league shirts entered the small room for a last look at the figure who had become a baseball leg- end. A gaunt, graying man lifted a small boy so he could glimpse Cobb. "Davey, that man was the greatest ballplayer who ever lived," he said in a soft voice. "I know, grandpa," the boy whispered. "That's Ty Cobb. He got more hits than anybody, didn't he?" He certainly did. I t I ( I u E u Ix at the Bookstores, and the Student Publications Building i I