W12nvv(ZTIAv ATT! _TTQrr 1 lAC4 PAGE FOUR. THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGA1~T flAITV WEUI h:! 13AX, AUUUST 1, 1962 National League Votes Another 162-Game Year, CHICAGO () - The National League approved yesterday anoth- er 162-game schedule for 1963 at the same time waiving a touchy Sunday night playing ban for heat-bothered Houston only next season. The National League officials, holding a post All-Star Game ses- sion, also unanimously rejected any interleague scheduling of games during the regular season, as favored by the American League. The 162-game slate for next year would start April 8 and close September 29. Lift Night Ban In lifting, for one club only, the ban against Sunday night baseball, the league heeded a re- quest by General Manager Paul Richards of the Houston Colts, who said summer heat in Houston worked a hardship on fans at day games. Commissioner Ford Frick said that as an emergency measure in view of Houston's hot weather problem-and pending completion of Houston's air-conditioned dom- ed stadium-he would not object. The Colts will be able to play Sunda ynights after May 31 un- der instruction by the league that such games on nights when the opposing team is leaving town must be approved by the player representatives and the visiting club. National League President War- ren Giles said a 153-game sched- ule was considered at the session, but the vote for the 162-game slate was unanimous. "We hope to have a much better schedule than this year (the first 162-game NL season), working out a program that will avoid short road stands on long hops," Giles said. Stephens Stars MONTREAL (P)-Rookie quar- terback Sandy Stephens led the Montreal Alouettes to a 29-9 vic- tory over the Saskatchewan Roughriders in a Canadian Foot- ball League exhibition game last night before 17,705. NY, Indians, Orioles Win Only Gaines By The Associated Press WASHINGTON - Bill Skowron blasted a grand slam home run in the first inning and Elston Howard chipped in with a two-run homer in the third last night as the New York Yankees topped Washington, 9-5. New York was coasting along with a 9-1 lead when the Senators made some eighth-inning noise. They rallied for four runs before reliefer Jim Coates got Chuck Cot- tier to hit into a double play. * * * CLEVELAND - The Cleveland Indians beat the Los Angeles An- gels, 5-3, last night, scoring the winning run without a hit in the seventh inning. Gary Bell, who won his eighth game in 16 decisions, scored the winning run and drove in an in- surance marker in the eighth. * * * BALTIMORE - Reliever Hoyt Wilhelm preserved an 8-7 victory for the Baltimore Orioles last night after the Minnesota Twins almost overcame a 6-run deficit in a loosely played game. A run-scoring single by Bob Al- lison and a 3-run homer by Earl Battey produced four Minnesota runs in the eighth inning and chased Orioles starter Jack Fisher, who had enjoyed an 8-2 lead. SPORTS SHORTS: Reed Wins on Grass s E SfltErS By The Associated Press EAST ORANGE, N.J.-Whitney Reed, top-seeded in the men's di- vision, and. Mrs. Karen Hantze Susman, the defending women's champion, both advanced easily in the Eastern Grass Court Tennis Championships here yesterday. Reed ousted Arthur Ashe, 7-5, 7-5, and Mrs. Susman defeated Carol Suthmayd, 6-3, 6-2. Second- seeded Mike Sangster of Britain struggled past Bob Siska of San Francisco, 12-10, 5-7, 6-2, and third-seeded Fred Stolle of Aus- tralia triumphed over Billy Hig- gins of Lawton, Okla., 6-3, 6-2. Frank Froehling and Bill Bond also won in the men's brackets while Margaret Smith and Justina Bricka scored women's victories. Lary Disabled DETROIT-Right-hander Frank Lary, a 23-game winner with the Detroit Tigers last season, was placed on the disabled list yester- day because his ailing pitching shoulder has failed to respond to treatment and he has a miserable 2-6 won and lost record for 1962. The Tigers called up Howard Koplitz, a 24-year-old right-hand- er, from their Denver farm club of the American Association to replace Lary on the pitching staff. Koplitz, 1961 Minor League Play- er of the Year, had a 23-3 record at Birmingham in the Southern Association and a 2-0 mark with the parent Tigers. Koplitz was released only July 20 from six months of Army duty, and lost his only start this year at Denver, 2-1, to Louisville, although he gave up only fou rhits. * * * Indiana Wants Money BLOOMINGTON, Ind.-Athlet- ic Director Bill Orwig of Indiana University is looking for 100 fans who would like to invest $1,000 each in getting the Hoosiers out of the Big Ten football cellar. The $100,000 Orwig is hoping to raise would be used to finance scholarships for athletes who might get that job done and who also have the academic standing to qualify for aid under Big Ten rules. The academic part won't be easy. The player must take a C average as a freshman and B- minus thereafter to keep the grant. The plan is called the Bo Mc- Millin Achievement Award Pro- gram, after the late coach under which Indiana enjoyed some of its best football years. The university decided to ask its alumni and friends for help because athletic costs are rising and the crowds in its new stadium have been disappointing. * * * Davis Sidelined EVANSTON, Il1.-Halfback Er- nie Davis of Syracuse University is undergoing tests in Evanston Hospital and is lost to the College All Stars for their game Friday night against the Green Bay Pack- ers. i_ MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES TRANSPORTATION RIDE WANTED from East Side-Mound Rd. area of Detroit to Ann Arbor. Week of fAug. I-6. Call NO 5-5992. 05 LINES 2 3 4 1 DAY 3 DAYS 70 .85 1.00 1.95 2.40 2.85 6 DAYS 3.45 4.20 4.95 Affis-mr-a-aw A i Avis. Figure 5 average words to a line. Phone NO 2-4786 Call NO 3-4156 Special weekend rates from 5 p.. Friday till 9 a.m. Monday $15.00 plus 9c a mile. Rates include gas, oil, insurance. 514 E. WASHINGTON ST. 01 i PERSONAL Too subtle? You got the picture , What is your answer? Fl FEMALE GRAD student wanted to share house near campus. Call NO 5-7164. F23 WANTED-Girl to share beautiful apt. near campus. $60. Call 665-0211 after 5. F22 STUDENTS AND TEACHERS-Closing out my large library.Books on many subjects by famous authors; Collec- tion of 70 years. Private sale at low prices. 617 Packard St. (near State) 12 noon to 4 p.m. every day except Sunday. Fl Majo AMERICAN New York Los Angeles Minnesota Baltimore Cleveland Chicago Detroit Boston Kansas City Washington r League Standings BIKES AND SCOOTERS FOR SALE - Bike, Eng.-girls. Light, baskets-$10. Call NO 3-7311. Z7 FOR SALE SAVE $100-Used 4 track stereo. RCA cartridgetape recorder. E.Q. NO 2-4591 room 310 evenings. B17 RUGS, NEVER USED-9x12 $25; also matching pair larger sizes. G. E. Vac. $15. Call NO 2-9894. B16 FOR SALE-Remington portable;type- writer, quiet riter eleven. 10 months old. Excellent condition. Call NO 3-7315 after 3 p.m. B18 DIAMONDS-At wholesale prices from our mines, to you. Buy direct and save. Robert Haack Diamond Import- ers. 504 First National Bldg. NO 3-0653. B8 BARGAIN CORNER MEN'S WEAR: SUMMER SPECIALS- Blue cord pants $2.99; Bermudas and swim suits 1.99 and up. Short sleeve sport shirts 1.25 up. Wash and wear pants 3.95 up. Briefs, shorts, T-shirts 69c. Canvas casuals, oxfords, 2.9. 3.95. Many other BIG BUYS. SAM'S STORE, 122 E. Washington St. W2 YOUNG MAN, exp. TV News-reel, Film Prod., Photo, Dark room teck., P.R., available now. These and allied fields. Box No. 3, Mich. Daily. J? You too can be IMMORTALIZED IN OIL, Canvas or Silk. Postal card brings brochure. P.O. Box 531, Ann Arbor. MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION-Mimeo- graphing-transcription. 334 Catherine Phone 665-8184. J11 Variety is the SPICE OF RALPH'S MARKET Picnic Supplies Party Foods Kitchen Supplies Kosher Foods 709 PACKARD-OPEN TILL MIDNIGHT J6 BUSINESS SERVICES LEAGUE W L Pct. GB 62 39 .614 - 57 46 .555 6 57 47 .549 6% 54 51 .514 10 52 49 .514 10 52 53 .495 12 49 51 .490 12Y2 46 56 .451 16Y2 45 59 .433 18Y2 39 62 .396 23 NATIONAL Los Angeles San Francisco Cincinnati Pittsburgh . . St. Louis Milwaukee Philadelphia Chicago Houston New York LEAGUE W L Pct. 71 35 .670 67 39 .632 61 42 .592 61 41 .581 59 47 .557 54 52 .509 49 58 .458 39 66 .371 37 65 .363 26 76 .255 MUSICAL MDSE.,, RADIOS, REPAIRS GB 4- 9Y2 12 17 222 31Y2 32 43 MANY NATIONAL LEAGUE STARS: Mantle, Davis Lead MVP Possibilities YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 9, Washington 5 Cleveland 5, Los Angeles 3 Baltimore 8, Minnesota 7 (Only games scheduled) TODAY'S GAMES New York at Washington (2, twi) Los Angeles at Cleveland (2, twi) Kansas City at Detroit (2, twi) Minnesota at Baltimore (n) Boston at Chicago (n) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS (No games scheduled) TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at San Francisco Philadelphia at New York (n) Houston at Milwaukee (n) St. Lou-is at Cincinnati (n) Pittsburgh at Los Angeles (n) B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL 1429 Hill Street Presents DR. LOUISE CUYLER a talk on "The Jewish Thread in Western Music" 7:30 P.M. - All Welcome By The Associated Press NEW YORK - A lame-legged veteran slugger and an exciting young hitting star who have sparked their teams into com- manding leads in the Major League pennant races are top contenders: for 1962's Most Valuable Player awards. Mickey Mantle of the New York Yankees, despite a month's ab- sence with knee and thigh injur- ies, appears without a serious chal- lenger for the American League MVP, a prize he captured twice before-in 1956 and 1957. And Tommy Davis, the youthful Los Angeles 'Dodgers outfielder, has! the edge in what shapes up as a' tight battle for MVP honors -in the National League. Leads New Surge Mantle's value to the Yankees can be summed up briefly-they faltered while he was sidelined and they've surged since he's return- ed. The 31-yearlold power hitter tore a thigh muscle and damaged t a knee May 18 and did not return ] to the starting lineup until June b 22. While he was out, the Yanks i won 15 games and lost 15. In the six weeks since the return the p Bombers have had a 28-12 mark,' t barreling into a five-game lead in 1 the pennant chase.F Batting Leader c Mantle's contributions duringa the 40-game span have been con- siderable-14 homers for a seasont total of 21, 33 runs batted in for aL total of 50. He's currently hitting .323. Another factor in his im- portance is the inspiration he hast provided the Yankees.V Davis, 23 and in his third fulla season with Los Angeles, has been ROBERTS Recorders at the HI FI & T.V. Center, 304 S. Thayer, next to Hill Aud. X5 FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY on radios, phonos, tape recorders and TVs with this ad. Campus Radio & TV. 325 E. Hoover. X4 HELP WANTED PSYCHOLOGICAL subjs. at $1.25 an hr. American born k males and females. See Mrs. Tobin, 3429 Mason Hall. H5 WANTED-Student commercial artist. Write Box 3, 420 Maynard, c/o Michi- gan Daily. H3 COLLEGE MEN Part time nelp-17 hours per week. Summer school student preferred. Working schedule will be arranged to fit class and study schedule if neces- sary. Salary offered-$50 per week. Call Mr. Miller, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., 662-9311. H1 USED CARS 1956 MGA-Beautiful roadster with con- vertible and hard top. New body. Wire wheels. Recently overhauled. $750.00 or best offer. Bob Tarte, 503 N. 7th, NO 5-6787. N? TAPE RECORDER SALE up to 45% off--$199'PuP Over 50 Tape Recorders in Stock Low, Low prices on Pre-Recorded and Blank Tapes HI FI STUDIO ANN ARBOR RADIO & TV 1319 So. University-'1/2 block W. of Washtenaw Read Daily Classifieds A FOR RENT MORE MICKEY MANTLE TOMMY DAVIS top most-valuable-player candidates ATTENTION, GRADS! MIXER-DANCE at V.F.W. Friday, Aug. 3 . . . 9-12 ARDEN MIESEN BAND One Dollar per person Sponsored by Grad. Student Council n F A s t Y h r r r i a t l i he Dodgers' consistent standout. He leads the National League in batting at .353 and in runs batted n with 106. Davis is likely to get tough com- petition in the MVP voting from eammates Frank Howard and Maury Wills, Willie Mays of San Francisco, Frank Robinson of Cin- cinnati, Stan Musial of St. Louis, and Hank Aaron of Milwaukee. Howard was devastating against he Giants last weekend when the Dodgers swept three games and climbed four games ahead of run- nerup San Francisco. Wills paces he Dodgers' feared running game with 51 stolen bases and is batting' a creditable .285. Other Possibilities Mays, MVP in 1954 and a peren- nial contender ever since, is the NL's home run leader with 32. Robinson, last year's MVP, and Aaron, 1957 winner, both have shots at the triple crown of bat- ing. Musial, the remarkable 41- year-old record collector who took his first MVP prize in 1943 and has won two since, is gunning for his eighth batting title with a cur- rent .352 mark. Beyond Mantle, there is a thin ank of potential MVP's in the American League with such pre- season possibilities as Roger Mar- s of the Yankees, 1961 winner with his 61 homers, Norm Cash and Al Kaline of Detroit, Jim Gen- ile of Baltimore and Harmon Kil- ebrew of Minnesota presently not n the running. Likely vote-getters include Leon Wagner of Los Angeles (28 homers and 74 RBI), Floyd Robinson of Chicago (.320 and 72 RBI), Rich Rollins of Minnesota (.316 and 70 RBI), Norm Siebern of Kansas City (.302 and 71 RBI) and the two batting leaders at .332, Pete Runnels of Boston and rookie Manny Jiminez of Kansas City. Pitchers? Pitchers generally have been pretty well shut out of MVP awards, particularly in recent years since they have had their special prize, the Cy Young Tro- phy. But a handful could be high in the MVP voting nonetheless, including 19-game winner Don Drysdale of Los Angeles, Bob Pur- key (16-3) of Cincinnati, Art Ma- haffey (14-9) of Philadelphia and relief star Elroy Face (8-2) of Pittsburgh in the National League and Camilo Pascual (15-6) of Minnesota, Dick Donovan (14-4) of Cleveland and Ken McBride (11-3) of Los Angeles in the Amer- ican. LARGE, 3-rm. furn, apt., with garage. $75 mo. Cali after 4:30 p.m. NO 8-7673. C7 APARTMENTS LIMITED. Call Carl D. Malcolm, Jr., Realtor. NO 3-0511. C31 THREE ROOM and bath apt. at 414 Lawrence. Available Sept. 1. For ap- pointment call GE 7-7523. C6 CAMPUS-Hospital area. Lovely furnish- ed apt. ?? block from St. Joseph Hospt. Suitable for four girls. Call NO 2-0671. C5 I Men's and Boys' Wear I Summer Rates Furnished apts. from $60 up. 5-9405. NO C20 NEW twu: bedroom apartment units now Nbeing completed on South Forest for Sept. occupancy. For appoint. to see, call Karl D. Malcolm, Jr. Realtor NO 3-0511. C2 DOMI NICK'S PIZZAS-SUBS 812 Monroe WE DELIVER NO 2-5414 .I BARGAINS Boy's or Men' s SHORT SLEEVE si1a SPORT SHIRTS 0 BOAT NECKS TOO! Assorted Colors Values to 2.49 MEN'S GABARDINE PANTS $2.99 Not In Every Size MEN'S WASH 'N WEAR Blue Cord and Polfished Cotton PANTS Asst'd Colors MEN'S BERMUDA SHORTS 96c - $2.99 - $3.49 Boy's Walk Shorts $1.69 Men's Wash 'n Wear PLAY JEANS pair Assorted Colors 2 pr. $3.50 NOVELTY STRAW HATS 77c MEN'S and BOYS' Swim Trunks -Deck Pants $1.49 - $1.99 - $2.49 - $2.88 DOUBLE DISCOUNTS on SLEEPING BAGS (' I