PAGE FOUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY SA'TURDA'Y.Al q4-1 1 V lYL[1 i 1 ,( =1 Palmer Expands Golf Classic Lead STOCK, STICKLES, ROSE SET RECORDS: Indianapolis Swimmers Dominate AAU CLASSIFIEDS .m. . AKRON, Ohio tP) -Mighty Arnold Palmer fired his second successive sub-par round yester- day to take a commanding five- stroke lead over Don January in the $50,000 American Golf Classic. The big hitter from Latrobe, Pa., aiming for his eighth tournament title this year and the all-time record earnings in one year, was the only man to conquer the 7,165- yard Firestone layout in succes- sive rounds as he whipped in four strokes under par after 36 holes of the 72-hole tournament which ends tomorrow. Displaying some of the finest golf of his career, Palmer tacked a 69 to his opening-round 67 for a 136. This bettered the two- round course record of 137 by de- fending champion Jay Hebert last year. May Top Record An odds-on-favorite to win the top prize of $9,000, Palmer could surpass his own record of $75,262 earned in 1960 even if he drags down second money of $4,600. He already has amassed $71,198 this year. Although he played the course in two more strokes than he did in the opening round, Palmer said, "I couldn't have played any better than I did on those first seven holes.", Through the first seven, Palmer had two birdies and five pars be- fore slumping to a bogey five on No. 8. In all he had three bogeys and four birdies, taking 29 putts -two more than in his opening round. Others Under Par Aside from Palmer, the only sub-par shooters were Bill Max- well, Bob Goalby and Dow Fin- sterwald, all with 69's. Goalby has a 142 total, Maxwell 143 and Fin- sterwald 145. Mike Souchak, George Bayer and Jim Ferrier, who were in second place with 69's after the opening round, floundered yesterday. Sou- chak and Bayer had 74's and Ferrier rocketed to a 76. January might have kept the tournament from being what ap- pears to be another Palmer run- away if he hadn't encountered trouble on the 18th hole. lie opened with a 71 and then had a 34-36-70 yesterday with a double bogey on the 18th. He failed to chip out of the rough on his third shot and then after getting on the green he missed a short put. January had an eagle three on the second hole and four birdies. U. S. Open Champion Jack Nick- laus and PGA winner Gary Player were tied with three others for third place at 142. Nicklaus had two birdies on his first three holes but couldn't keep up the pace and had to settle for a par 70. Player shot another 71 after a shaky 37 on the front nine. To Build Grid Hall CANTON, Ohio (P)-Commis- sioner Pete Rozelle of the National Football League will turn the first spadeful of earth this morning to get construction of Professional Football's Hall of Fame under way. The ornate, modernistic struc- ture, located on a 14-acre site, will cost $366,000. It is to be com- pleted in time for a dedicatory exhibition game here a year hence. Funds for the hall, where relics of the game will be displayed, were raised in Canton and by each Na- tional League club. Further rev- enue will be derived from an ex- pected $85,000 gate at tonight's exhibition game between the New York Giants and the St. Louis Cardinals. Harry Stuhldreher, one of No- tre Dame's famed Four Horsemen, will be master of ceremonies at the festivities and many of the sport's veteran performers will be on hand. Harry D. Robb, who played with the Canton Bulldogs. 40 years ago, will be the honorary referee. Al Nesser, former New York Giants guard, will be honorary captain of the Giants; and Jim Conzel- man, who played- with the Decatur Staleys back in 1920, will be honorary captain of the St. Louis club. By The Associated Press CUYAHOGA FALLS, Ohio-The talent-rich Indianapolis A.C., load- ed with world record holders, and veteran Olympic champion Mur- ray Rose of Australia dominated the qualifying heats of the Men's National AAU Outdoor Swimming Championships opening yesterday. With Tom Stock, Chet Jastrem- ski, Larry Schulholf, Fred Schmidt and Ted Stickles leading the way, the Indiana team qualified nine speedsters for the five afternoon finals in the 50-meter Waterwork Pool. The Hoosiers are big favor- ites to retain the team title. Rose, the 23-year-old freestyler representing the Los Angeles A.C., topped the 400 meter freestyle qualifiers with a fine time of 4:21.4 during the morning trials run off under cloudy skies and in chilly weather. Olympic Winner The 6-1, 176-pound blond, who returned to the swimming tank last month after an absence of about siN, months, won four gold medals in the 1956 and 1960 Olym- pics. While Rose appeared near his peak, his fellow countryman, John Konrads, seemed to be in a bad slump. The husky Aussie, Rose's teammate at the Los Angeles A.C., In the final Rose improve dhisf Stime.tHe was clocked in 4:17.2, bettering the American mark of 4:17.5 set by Japan's Tsuyoshi Yamanaka in the nationals last year. Yamanaka was unable to de- fend because of illness. Schollander Second Don Schollander, 16, of the San- ta Clara S.C., was second in 4:22.7 and Alan Somers, Olympian from the Indianapolis A.C., third in 4:24.3. Saari, the schoolboy whiz who whipped Rose in the national in- doors, was fourth in 4:24.4 follow- ed by Makato Fukui, Japan, 4:25.0; Pete Sintz, Indianapolis A.C., 4:26.4; Dick Allan, Indianapolis A.C., 4:26.7, and Bill Farley, Los Angeles A.C., eighth and last in 4:28.3. Stock, the defending champion from the Indianapolis A.C., broke his own world record in winning the 200-meter backstroke final. New Record The stocky, blond Indiana Uni- versity junior was clocked in 2 minutes 10.9 seconds erasing his world standard of 2:11.5 in breez- ing to a four meter victory in the first championship race of the three-day meet. Pete Hammer of Evanston, Ill., ED BARTSCH ... third in backstroke turned in a time of 4:29.7 and fail- ed to qualify for the eight-man final. Konrads, 20, holds the world record of 4:15.9 for the event. Rose's 4:18.3 is the Olympic rec- ord. Roy Saari, 17, of El Segundo, Calif., qualified with 4:27.7. WOMEN'S SWIMMING NEXT WEEK IToHold Men's AAU Diving Meet was second in 2:16.5rand Ed Bartsch of Ann Arbor, Mich., third in 2:16.9. Bartsch will be a sophomore on the Michigan swimming team this winter, and is swimming in the meet unattached. Ernst Kuppers of Germany was fourth in 2:18.1 followed by Shigeo Fukushima, Japan, 2:18.2; Bill Ut- ley, Hinsdale, Ill., 2:19.2; Robert Goettsche, Deerfield, Ill., 2:19.2, and Bob Bennett, Encino, Calif., 2:20.9. Stock took the lead from the start but held only a short mar- gin over Kuppers. The Hoosiers opened up his lead to one meter at the 100 and then raced away from the others in the last century. Spencer Wins Ed Spencer, the college cham- pion from North Carolina State, nosed out defending champion Schmidt of the Indianapolis A.C. for the 100-meter butterfly title. Each was timed in 58.9 seconds, just three-tenths of a second un- der Schmidt's listed world record. Schulhof, who led in the qualify- ing, was third in :59.1 as all eight finalists bettered one minute. Dick McDonough of the North Jersey Swimming Association was fourth in :59.6 followed by Walter Richardson, Minneapolis, :59.8; Isao Nakajima, Japan, :59.8 and John Sato, Los Angeles A.C., :59.9. Schmidt set his world record of :58.6 in the nationals at Los An- geles last August 20. Jastremski Tops Jastremski, the world record holder, retained his 100-meter breaststroke title by sweeping to an easy victory in the final. The Indianapolis A.C. star scored by about three meters. Jastremski was clocked in 1:08.2, close to his world record of 1:07.5. Ken Nakasone, another Indianap- olis A.C., swimmer, was second in 1:11.1 and Bill Craig of Glendale, Calif., third in 1:11.3. Yashiaki Shukiishi of Japan, who beat Jastremski in the Japan National 200 last month, was fourth in 1:11.9. He was followed by Gardner Green, Wayne, N.J., 1:11.9; Kenjiro Matsumato, Japan, 1:12.1; Dick Schaible, Santa Clara, S.C., 1:12.4, and Jocher Roos of Germany, 1:14. Stickles Wins Ted Stickles, the defending champion from the Indianapolis A.C., broke his own listed record of 4:55.6 in beating West Ger- many's Gerhard Hetz in the 400 meter individual medley final. Hetz was second by about five meters. Stickles was clocked in 4:51.5, far better than his listed mark but slower than the 4:51.0 he was pending. Hetz, who had bettered the listed world record in Europe, was timed in 4:57.2, Bill Utley, 16, of Hinsdale, Ill., was third in 5:00.4. FOR SALE G.E. UPRIGHT vacuum cleaner-nearly new. Call NO 2-7206 before 8 P.M. Ask for Mrs. Cruse. BIS FOR SALE - Columbia Stereophonic Record Player. Reasonable. Call NO 3-0302. BO USED 4-TRACK STEREO. RCA cartridge tape recorder, $175. E.Q. NO 2-4591, Rm. 310 evenings. B17 RUGS, NEVER USED-6x12 $25; also matching pair larger sizes. G. E. Vac. $15. Call NO 2-9894. B10 TRANSPORTATION WANTED-1 or 2 riders, part or all the way to Denver, Colo. Leaving Fri. 17th or Sat. 18th. Call 665-0763. G7 WANTED-Rider to New York City Aug. 20, 21, 22. Share expenses. NO 2-3728 after 6. G6 BUSINESS SERVICES ANY MOTH HOLES, TEARS. OR BURNS in your clothes? We'll reweave them like new. WEAVE-BAC SHOP, 224 Arcade. J3 MANUSCRIPT PREPARATION-Mimeo- graphing-transcription. 334 Catherine Phone 665-8184. J11 You too can be IMMORTALIZED IN OIL, Canvas or Silk. Postal card brings brochure. Send to Portraits, P.O. Box 531, Ann Arbor. 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 HOT BAGEL LOX Onion Rol Smoked Fish Pastries RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard Open at 8 Sunday morning J9 COME IN AND BROWSE AT THE TREASU RE MART MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .70 1.95 3.45 3 .85 2.40 4.20 4 1.00 2.85 4.95 Figure 5 average words to a line. Clossified deadline, 3 P.M. doily Phone NO2-4786 HELP WANTED PSYCHOLOGICAL subjs. at'$1.25 an American born males and fema See Mrs. Tobin, 3429 Mason Hall. WANTED-Student commercial ar Write Box 3, 420 Maynard, c/o MR gan Daily. CARRIERS NEEDED to deliver The Michigan Daily during the fall and spring semeste Morning delivery 6 days a week. NO COLLECTIONS Call Steve at NO 5-3563 'COLLEGE MEN Part time nelp-17 hours per t Summer school student preferred Workinv schedule will be arranged fit class and study schedule if ne sary. Salary offered-$50 per week. Call Mr. Miller, 9 a.m. to 2 , 662-9311. PERSONAL WANTED-Roommate(s}, female,1 ferably with apartment. Call NO 8337 after 12:15 p.m. FEMALE GRAD student wanted share house near campus. Call 5-7164. hr. les. H5 tist. chi- H3 rs. H eek. . d to ces- .m., H1 pre- 5- F22 to NO F23 By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA -- John Vogel of Lafayette, Ind. and Don Harper of Columbus, Ohio, will defend titles today in the Men's National AAU Diving Championships at Kelly Pool. Bogel won the 3-meter spring- board title last year while Harper took the platform crown. It is expected that about 70 divers will enter the springboard competition and about 36 will com- pete in the platform event. Among the top contenders for Vogel's crown is Rick Gilbert of Lancaster, Pa., an Indiana Uni- versity sophomore, and Lou Vituc- ci of Boston. ----- In the platform Harper will be fighting off Bob Webster, the.1960 Olympic champion, and Greg Shuff, of Los Angeles, among others. CHICAGO - A field of 407 entries, representing the United States, West Germany, Japan and Canada, wil compete in the Na- tional AAU Women's Outdoor Swimming Championships next weekend. Entries closed yesterday with defending champions booked to return in all 16 events at Portage Park next Thursday through Sun- day. DOMINICK'S PIZZAS-SUBS 812 Monroe -WE DELIVER- NO 2-5414 PrfsonlFootball Card 'Spotlights Many Rookies Staged concurrently with the feminine swim will be an Inter- national Invitational Men's Meet, including top American perform- ers in the current Men's AAU Meet at Cuyahoga Falls, Ohio, plus stars from West Germany, Japan and Australia. Battle for women's team honors is expected to be waged between the Vesper Boat Club of Phila- delphia, last year's winner at Phil- adelphia, the Santa Clara (Calif) Swim Club and the Rivera Clubj of Indianapolis. Returning individual champions include: Carolyn House, Los An- geles Athletic Club, in the 200, 400 and 1,500 meter free style: 16- year-old Robyn Johnson, North Virginia Athletic Club, in the 100 free style; Donna De Varona, 15, Santa Clara Swim Club, in the 200 and 400 individual medley; Nine Harmer, Vesper Boat Club, in the 100 and 200 backstroke. Dale Barnhard, Congressional Club, Washington, D.S., in the 100 breaststroke; Jean Dellekamp, In- dianapolis A.C., in the 200 breast- stroke; Susan Eoerr, Vesper Boat' Club, in the 100 butterfly; Becky Collins, Indianapolis, in the 200' butterfly; Joel Lenzi, Philadelphia, in 3 meter diving; and Barbara Mc Alister, Los Angeles A.C., in plat- form diving. 529 Detroit St. NO 2-1363 """"" SUBSCRIBE TO for FALL.. ONLY $8.00 ($9.00 by mail) Order now by calling Joann at NO 2-3241 I--. ..... By The Associated Press Rookies, some with glittering reputations and other unheralded but hopeful, will continue their, fight for' jobs and fame in pro football as the pre-season action picks up steam this weekend. Twelve National Football League clubs will open their exhibition schedules today. Minnesota plays San Francisco in a day game at the Seattle World's Fair. In night games, New York meets St. Louis at the site of the New National Professional Football Hall of Fame at Canton, Ohio; Cleveland is at Detroit; Baltimore faces Phila- delphia at Hershey, Pa.; Chicago takes on Pittsburgh at Atlanta, and Washington plays at Los An- geles. In the American Football League -Dallas has a night game to- night with the Chargers at San Diego, Boston and Oakland play R. I., and there will be a Sunday in the afternoon at Providence, match between New York and Buffalo at New Haven, Conn. Rookie Ends Minnesota's Vikings may wind up with two rookies at offensive end, Tom Stonebreaker and Tom s Adams. The Vikings also have tackle Pat Russ and linebacker Roy Winston as newcomers to test against the 49ers. The Cardinals are trying out a flock of rookies, including interior lineman Fate Echols and Irv Goode plus Wilburn Hollis, former star quarterback at Iowa who will be a running back as a pro. Guard Bookie Bolin may be the Giants' rookie standout. Cleveland lost All-America half- back Ernie Davis through illness but counts on Gary Collins to do the punting and play some offen- sive end. The Lions also have a rookie end in Tom Hall. Budd To Sprint Wendell Harris is slated for defensive backfield duty for the Colts against the Eagles, who have a potential flyaway runner in the current world's fastest human, sprint champion Frank Budd. Among the Bears' rookie prizes are running back Ron Bull and defensive back Tommy Neck, while the Steelers boast one of the sea- son's prime possibilities in All- American fullback Bob Ferguson. The Rams have invested heavily in rookie talent, with safetyman Bobby Smith listed as one of their starters. Other new men in Los Angeles uniforms are tackle Mer- lin Olsen and quarterbacks Roman Gabriel and Ron Miller. The Red- skins top prospect is speedboy Le- Roy Jackson. Many in AFL, Too A host of talented rookies will be on hand for the AFL game at San Diego - including halfbacks Lance Alworth and Bert Coan, quarterback John Hadl and line- backer Bob Mitinger for the Chargers, and quarterback Eddie Wilson, halfbacks Curtis McClin- ton and John Saxton, and Bill Miller for the Texans. Boston is trying out two highly regarded linemen, Billy Neighbors and Nick Buoniconti, Oakland has a comer in defensive back Henry Rivera and New York's chief rookie hope is All-America center Alex Kroll. AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB New York 68 43 .643 - Los Angeles 64 50 .561 51/2 Minnesota 64 50 .561 5%2 Baltimore 58 56 .509 112 Cleveland 56 57 .496 13 Chicago 57 58 .496 131/ Detroit 55 58 .486 14 Boston 51 61 .455 17K4 Kansas City 52 63 .452 18 Washington 42 71 .372 27 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 8, Detroit 0 Baltimore at Boston (rain) Cleveland 3, Washington 1 Chicago 3, Kansas City 1 (7th inn.) Minnesota at Los Angeles (inc.) TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at New York (2, d-n) Baltimore at Boston (2, d-n) Minnesota at Los Angeles (n) Cleveland at Washington (n) Chicago at Kansas City (n) LEADING BATSMEN (Based on 275 or More at Bats) Player and Club G AB R H Pct. Runnels, Bos. 109 403 58 143 .330 Jiminez, K.C. 109 402 43 132 .328 Robinson, Chi. 109 425 62 134 .315 Rollins, Minn. 114 455 68 139 .305 Siebern, K.C. 115 428 79 130 .304 Power, Minn. 97 411 56 125 .304 Smith, Chi. 100 358 46 108 .302 Hinton, Wash. 101 350 48 105 .300 Lumpe, K.C. 112 461 64 138 .299 Moran, L.A. 113 471 67 140 .297 HOME RUNS Cash, Detroit 31 Killebrew, Minnesota 30 Wagner, Los Angeles 28 Gentile, Baltimore 26 Maris, New York 25 Major League Standings Los Angeles San Francisco Cincinnati St. Louis Pittsburgh Milwaukee Philadelphia Chicago Houston New York NAtIONAL] LEAGUE W L Pct. 79 37 .681 73 42 .635 69 46 .600 65 50 .565 63 50 .558 61 54 .530 51 66 .436 43 73 .371 40 '12 .357 30 84 .263 Featuring student furnishings of all kinds, appliances, typewriters, televi- sions, bicycles, etc. Open Monday and Friday Evenings 'til 9. J4 MISCELLANEOUS WASHTENAW CAFE GERMAN AND AMERICAN CUISINE We specialize in German foods. STUDENT SPECIALS DAILY 211 N. 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