FOURT THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, AUGUST 14, RUNNELS LEADS AMERICAN: Musial Loses NL Batting Lead, NEW YORK (91)-Stan Musial has a pair of lucky sevens going for him in his bid to win another National League batting crown. He has won seven champion- ships and there are seven weeks remaining in the 1962 baseball sea- son. But there are a couple of rea- sons why the St. Louis veteran's chances are fading. 1) He is in a slump. 2) He may not have enough to- tal appearances to qualify for the title. SPORTS SHORTS: 49er Back Quits Grid By The Associated Press MORAGA, Calif. - Don Mcdl- henny, seven-year National League veteran, announced yesterday his retirement from the San Francis- co 49ers. McIlhenny did not play in Sat- urday's 49er exhibition game against Minnesota. Drabowsky Sold CINCINNATI - The Cincinnati Reds yesterday sold pitcher Moe Drabowsky to the Kansas City Ath- letics of the American League. At the same time, the Reds ap- plied for reinstatement of third baseman Gene Freese to the ac- tive list, effective yesterday. Freese has been on the disabled list since he suffered a broken right ankle during spring training. Collecting only three hits in 21 tries last week, Musial lost 15 points and first place. The 41- year-old outfielder dropped into the runnerup position with a .342 average while Tommy Davis of the Los Angeles Dodgers moved in- to the lead at .345. Must Have Trips To qualify for the championship a player must be credited with 502 trips to the plate. This total in- cludes official times at bat plus bases on balls, times hit by pitch- er, sacrifice hits, sacrifice flies and times awarded first base be- cause of interference or obstruc- tion. Musial's total appearances to date number 348 on 301 official bats, 42 walks, four sacrifice flies and one hit by pitcher. With 348 total appearances in the Cards' 118 games, he has aver- aged 2.9 a game. If he continues this pace in his team's 44 remain- lug games, Musial will wind up with 476 total appearances - 26 short of qualifying. Burgess Really Tops Actually, the highest average among the regulars is .353 held by catcher Smoky Burgess of Pitts- burgh. However. with only 269 of- ficial at bats, Burgess is certain not to meet the minimum total ap- pearances requirement. Until re- cently, Burgess, a left-handed hit- ter, saw little action when a south- paw faced the Pirates as Don Lep- pert, a righty batter, took over behind the plate. Frank Robinson of Cincinnati, an early-season failure, has rush- ed up to challenge for the lead. The slugging outfielder is only one point behind Musial and four behind Davis. He solidified his hold on third place last week by gaining three points to .341 with 10 hits in 26 tries. Hank Aaron of Milwaukee held the No. 4 spot as he increased his average two points to .335. Rober- to Clemente of Pittsburgh, the de- fending titleholder, remained in fifth place despite a two point drop to .330. American Batters In the American League, Pete Runnels of Boston continued to set the pace at .330. He fell three points with a 4-for-16 showing. Rookie Manny Jimenez, Kansas City, lost eight points to .324 but managed to remain in second place. Floyd Robinson of the Chi- cago White Sox is third with .310. The most noteworthy advance was made by Chuck Hinton, Wash- ington outfielder. He climbed from 10th to fourth on a 15-point gain to .309. Hinton collected 14 hits in 30 times at bat. Colavito Moves Rocky Colavito of Detroit drove in nine runs and tied Norm Sie- bern of Kansas City for the Amer- ican League RBI lead. Each has 81. Norm Cash of Detroit has the most homers, 31. The figures in- clude Sunday's games. Willie Mays of San Francisco walloped three homers, lifting his National League leading total to 35. Tommy Davis is the top RBI producer with 118. He drove in six runs in last week's games. White Gets Grid Honor NEW YORK (T)-Byron (Whiz- zer) White, new associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court and former All-America halfback at Colorado, was named winner of the Gold Medal Award for 1962 yesterday by the National Foot- ball Foundation and Hall of Fame. Only one other Hall of Fame member, Amos Alonzo Stagg, has received this award "for distin- guished service and devotion to the game of American intercol- legiate football." The other win- ners were former President Dwight Eisenhower, 1958, General Douglas MacArthur, 1959, former President Herbert Hoover, 1960 and Presi- dent John F. Kennedy, 1961. In his years at Colorado, 1935- 36-37, White was a 6-2, 190-pound triple threat man who led the na- tion's major colleges in scoring in his senior year with 16 touch- downs, 23 conversions and one field goal for 122 points. Unbeaten Colo- rado went to the Cotton Bowl. He played pro football with Pittsburgh and Detroit and led the National' Football League twice in rushing before he went to Oxford Univer- sity as a Rhodes Scholar. II. For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone NO 2-4786 from 1:00 to 3:00 P.M. Monday through Friday, and Saturday 9:30 'til 11:30 A.M.* ' rY I I I 1 O iiiii rii l 1 I I 1 I - 1 Y 11 ... r FOR SALE BARGAINS! Moving, must sell clean, well-running Norge refrig., $30, Ken- more auto. washer $35. NO 3-7982. B19 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 RUGS, NEVER USED-9x12 $25; also matching pair larger sizes. G. E. Vac. $15. Call NO 2-9894. B10 TRANSPORTATION WANTED-Riders to Seattle, San Fran- cisco, Aug. 18. NO 3-8454. G8 WANTED-Female to share expenses and driving to Southern California. For info, call NO 3-2783r G9 WANTED-1 or 2 riders, part or all the way to Denver, Coo. Leaving Fri. 17th or Sat. 18th. Call 665-0763. 07 WANTED-Rider to New York City Aug. 20, 21, 22. Share expenses. NO 2-3728 after 6. G6 BUSINESS SERVICES COEDS: While you're having a FREE cup of coffee, why not E ave your HAIR DONE at the VOGUE BEAUTY SALON 300 S. Thayer in the concourse of the Bell Tower Where it's COOL all summer long Call NO 8-8384, also evenings by appointment PERSONAL I II BEST WISHES TO JUDY AND MICHAEL FROM THE DAILY I -In II WANTED - Grad woman student to share pleasant apt. at 1026 Church. Call NO 3-7357 after 5. F29 GATHER ye rosebuds while ye may: Old Time is still a-flying; and this same flower that smiles today Tomorrow will be killed, fixed, Washed, dehydrated, infiltrated, im- bedded, Sectioned, affixed, deparaffined, Hydrated, stained, washed, dehy- drated. Counterstained, dehydrated, cleared, Mounted, labeled studied and stored. STUDENTS AND TEACHERS-Closing out my large library. Books on many subjects by famous authors; Collec- tion of 70 years. Privat~e sale at low prices. 617 Packard St. (near State) 12 noon to 4 p.m. every day except Sunday. F11 WANTED-Roommate(s), female, pre- ferably with apartment. Call NO 5- 8337 after 12:15 p.m. F2' 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 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES TIRE SALE CONTINUES . . . Get our price before you buyl Life- time guarantee. No money down. Up to one year to pay. Specializing in brake service and motor tune- ups. HICKEY'S SERVICE STATION Main at Catherine NO 8-7717 S3 FOREIGN CAR SERVICE We service all makes and models of Foreign and Sports Cars Lubrication $1.50 Nye Motor Sales 514 E. Washington 82 MICHIGAN DAILY E CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .70 1.95 345 3 .85 2.40 420 4 1.00 2.85 4.95 Figure 5 average words to aoline. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. doily Phone NO2-4/86 MISCELLANEOUS If you are looking for a good time and an ice cold beer this summer come to the SCHWABEN INN at 215 Ashley The only place in town fea- turing the gigantic POOR BOY SANDWICH and the terrific SCHWABENBURGER Beer--Wine-Liquor M2 BIKES AND SCOOTERS NEED A BIKE! If your soles are wearing thin on the hot summer sidewalks, stop in at BEAVER'S BIKE AND HARDWARE Ask about Beaver's BIKE RENTAL (by the week or month) Your bike failing? Beaver can restore it to good healtn. Major League Standings FOR RENT REDECORATED APARTMENTS Close to campus mrodernly furnished 1 or 2 bedrooms Girls preferred. Call NO 3-7268. C15 APARTMENTS LIMITED. Call Karl D. Malcolm, Jr., Realtor. NO 3-0511. C31 ONE RM. STUDIO for single woman; in sorority area off Washtenaw. Well furnished, with complete community kitchen. NO 2-6987. C14 Campus Apts. Furnished 2, 3, 4 person apts. for Fall. $90-$180 with or without utilities. Call NO 5-9405. C13 Summer Rates Furnished apts. from $60 up. NO 5-9405. 020 NEW twu bedroom apartment units now being completed on South Forest for Sept. occupancy. For appoint, to see, call Karl D. Malcolm, Jr. Realtor NO 3-0511. C2 STUDIO APARTMENTS $108 and $111 September Occupancy HURON TOWERS APTS. 2200 Fuller Road Call Management Office NO 5-9161 Mon.-Fri. 9-5:30 Sat. 9-12:30 HELP WANTED PSYCHOLOGICAL subjs. at $1.25 an hr. American born 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 CARRIERS NEEDED to deliver The Michigan Daily during the fall and spring semesters. Morning delivery 6 days a week. NO COLLECTIONS Call Steve at NO 5-3563 H0 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. C l Mr. Miller, 9 am. to 2 p.m., 662-9311. H1 USED CARS '58 PLYMOUTH. 4dr., 2 tone, R., H., & WSW, auto trans., power brakes. $425. Call NO 2-2890. N20 '54 CHEVY convertible, power glide, power steering, good cond. Ph. NO 2- 8308. N19 '57 CHEVY, V-8, Power Glide--2 door. Excellent condition. Call NO 5-0456. AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB New York 70 44 .614 - Los Angeles 66 51 .564 5%/ Minnesota 65 52 .556 6V2 Chicago 60 58 .508 12 Baltimore 58 59 .496 1312 Cleveland 58 59 .496 13% Detroit 56 60 .483 15 Boston 54 61 .470 16/ Kansas City 52 66 .441 20 Washington 44 73 .374 271/ YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cleveland 2-2, Washington 1-3 New York at Minnesota (inc.) Boston at Los Angeles (inc.) (Only games scheduled) TODAY'S GAMES New York at Minnesota (n) Boston at Los Angeles (2, twi) Baltimore at Detroit (2, twi) Washington at Kansas City (n) Chicago at Cleveland (n) i -NATIONAL LEAGUE Los Angeles San Francisco Cincinnati Pittsburgh St. Louis Milwaukee Philadelphia Chicago Houston New York w 79 76 72 65 65 63 54 43 41 30 L 40 42 46 50 53 56 66 75 74 86 Pet. GB .664 - .644 2%1 .611 6x1 .565 12 .551 13%j .530 16 .454 25/2 .364 351, .357 36 .259 472 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Cincinnati 6, Milwaukee 0 (Only game scheduled) TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at Pittsburgh (n) San Francisco at Chicago St. Louis at Houston (n) Philadelphia at New York Milwaukee at Cincinnati (n) Experienced Hair Stylists J1 FERGUSON SHINES THE MOST: Rookies Get First Tests on Pro Grid All roads lead to RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard Food Specialties Kitchen Utensils Open every night till Midnight 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. 605 Church i NO 5-6607 Z1 NEW YORK ()P)-Bob Ferguson, the All-America back from Ohio State who is playing with the Pitts- burgh Steelers, turned in an out- standing job over the weekend as the 1962 rookie crop made its bow in National Football League exhi- bitions. The 5-11, 220-pounder showed why his college, coach, Woody Hayes, called him "the best full- back in 20 years in the Big 10" when he carried 16 times for a net of 56 yards. Ferguson's long- est gainer was 21 yards. He also caught a 15-yard pass. Although he dodn't score, Ferguson gained 11 more yards on the ground than the entire Chicago Bears' team in DOMINICK s PIZZAS-SUBS 812 Monroe WE DELIVER- NO 2-5414 the Steelers' 19-14 victory Satur- day night at Atlanta. Top Freshmen Both the St. Louis Cardinals and New York Giants had reason to beam about their freshmen in their 21-21 tie at Canton, Ohio. The Cards, looking for a punter, may have found the answer in Ro- land Jackson of Rice who averag- ed 43 yards for five kicks. Despite the loss of rookie end Lou Kirouac of Boston College due to a broken leg, Coach Allie Sher- man of the Giants was pleased by the work of Johnny Counts, for- mer Ilinois back, and end Jim Col- lier of Arkansas. Counts, who played semi-pro ball last year, gained 41 yards in nine carries for the Giants. Collier caught four passes for 50 yards. One of Col- lier's catches from Ralph Gugliel- mi was good for a touchdown. Jer- ry Hillebrand of Colorado, the Gi- ants' No. 1 draftee, just joined the club after Army service and was limited to work on the kickoff team. Ram Rookie Big Merlin Olsen, the 6-5, 265- pound defensive tackle from Utah Stat,e was a member of the Los Angeles Rams' rush line that har- assed Washington's Norm Snead and rookie Galen Hall of Penn State. The two Washington quar- terbacks lost 106 yards while the Rams rolled up a 37-7 victory. Hall did throw the Redskins' only TD pass to Fred Dugan, setting it up with a 49-yard toss to Bobby Mitchell, ex-Cleveland Brown. Art Perkins, the Rams' No. 4 draft choice from North Texas State, scored one of the four touchdowns. Ron Miller, the Wis- consin quarterback, handled the club in the late stages of the game after Zeke Bratkowski connected with two scoring passes to Ollie Matson and Jon Arnett. Brown Impressed Coach Paul Brown of the Cleve- land Browns was impressed with the work of linebacker Mike Lucci of Tennessee and Fred Cox of Pittsburgh who handled the kick- off chores in his club's 17-14 vic- tory over Detroit. Needless to say, the Browns were satisfied with Jim Ninowski, ex-Lion, who outplayed Milt Plum, ex-Brown, in their first meeting since the off-season trade. Ninowski threw two TD passes to Ray Renfro. Plum led the way to a first half Detroit score. For Detroit, rookie Larry Vargo of the University of Detroit, caught one of Earl Morrall's passes for a score. The rookies didn't have much chance to show their stuff as Bal- timore bombed Philadelphia 56-28 with Johnny Unitas of the Colts throwing for two touchdowns and scoring a third. The Colts lost a valuable man when halfback Jer- ry Hill suffered a broken left leg. Mark Smolinski, fighting Joe Per- ry for the Colts' regular fullback job, suffered a left knee sprain. Budd Used Little The Eagles used Frank Budd, the Olympic sprinter, sparingly. It was his first football game since his schoolboy days. There was no scoring by rookies in San Francisco's 30-24 win over Minnesota at Seattle. The 49ers came up with a switch when Bill Kilmer, one of the three quarter- backs in the shotgun offense last year, took a pitch from John Bro- die and threw a halfback pass to Jim Johnson, good for 92 yards. Green Bay rolled over the Dallas Cowboys 31-7 Friday night with the old combination of Paul Hor- nung running and kicking and Bart Starr throwing. The lone Dal- las TD was scored by rookie Amos Bullocks, the No. 20 draft from Southern Illinois. In Other League John Hadl of Kansas ran the San Diego club for the second half in its 17-0 victory over the Dallas Texans in an American Football League pre-season game. Hadl, voted most valuable player in the College All-Star game at Chicago earlier this month, threw a TD passe to Charlie Flowers. Rookie Bob Jackson of New Mexico State also scored. Gene White, a rookie from Flor- ida A & M, scored for Oakland in the Raiders' 21-20 victory over Boston at Providence, R.I. Satur- day afternoon. Buffalo used backs Glenn Glass of Tennessee, Tom Dellinger of North Carolina State and guard Jim Lecompte in the 20-10 deci- sion over the New York Titans. In Houston's 33-17 victory over Denver, the old pro, George Blan- da, took charge with help from Billy Cannon. Up in Canada, rookie Sandy Stephens turned in one of the most impressive jobs of all. The former Minnesota quarterback scored once and threw two TD passes for the Montreal Alouettes in their 28-15 victory over Toron- to Friday night. - ' C-TED STAN DARD SERVICE FRIENDLY SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS Stop in NOW for broke work MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY on radios, phonos, tape recorders and TVs with this ad. Campus Radio & TV. 325 E. Hoover. 8.4 AT GRINNELL'S Used Upright Practice Pianos $89.50 Used Grands from $495 Brand New Spinet $399 Once in a lifetime special Piano and Organ $295 B'NAI B'RITH HILLEL FOUNDATION 1429 Hill No planned Hillel programs this week. Building wit[ be open from 7:30 P.M. for STUDY and RELAXATION ALL WELCOME SUCCESS ON YOUR EXAMS!! For your convenience " 9 BARBERS r NO WAITING * AIR-CONDITIONED The Drascola Barbers near Michigan Theatre h i I STEIN & GOETZ Sporting Goods "Your Friendly Dealer"