PAGE SIX A'NT K KMICHIGAN " U 1 A F1~ 'A-"° 1v1UIZ uU'1t/alfZA1r ThIUW THURSDAY, JUNE 28, 1962 P, lichigan Baseball Squad Continues l Wimbledon Sees U.S. Star Falter WIMBLEDON, England ( )- America's hopes of recapturing the Men's Singles Title nosedived yes- terday as fifth-seeded Chuck Mc- Kinley slumped to defeat in the second round of the Wimbledon Lawn Tennis Championships. Mike Hann, 24-year-old former Cambridge University captain on special leave from his school- master's job, defeated McKinley 6-3, 6-2, 6-2. Dennis Ralston, Mckinley's Davis Cup colleague, brightened the day for Uncle Sam by defeating Sergei Likhachev of Russia 6-4, 6-3, 6-3 on the center court with a fine exhibition of controlled tennis. Ralston, of Bakersfield, Calif., had all the shots and showed no 111 effects from a cartilage operation on his knee. Donald Dell of Bethseda, Md., who is fifth ranked in the United States, joined McKinley on the casualty list. Jaidip Mukerjea of India knocked him out 6-4, 3-6, 3-6, 6-4, 6-2. Rod Laver, defending champion from Australia and the top seed, easily crushed Tony Pickard of Britain 6-1, 6-2, 6-2. Bg 10 Shifts Headquarters CHICAGO (P-The Big Ten headquarters will move "across; the river," July. 1, shifting fromI the La Salle Hotel to the Shera-1 ton-Chicago. The Conference, in existence 671 years-oldest continuous collegiate athletic league in the nation- had its offices in the La Salle for' 11 years, it moved to theLa Salle7 in 1951 from the Sherman Hotel.' The new location centers the Big Ten 'base in the city's news- paper row, all four dailies now located north of the ChicagoI River near the loop. Michigan has been a member of the Big Ten since itsaformation in 1896, except for years 1908- 1917 when the Wolverines with-1 drew from competition. WOODY HAYES ... names captains Grid Heads Nvame Team Co-Captains BUFFALO, N. Y. tom')-The coach- ng staffs for the Second Annual All-America Football Bowl Game announced team co-captains but remained mum on the starting lineups for Friday night's contest here. Roman Gabriel of North Caro- lina State and Larry Onesti of Northwestern were named field leaders for the East. Competing quarterbacks, Bobby Ply of Baylor and Sandy Stephens of Minnesota, got the nod from their West team- mates. Gabriel was at quarterback in the East's backfield that Head Coach Woody Hayes of Ohio State has summoned as his No. 1 group. The others in that unit were Ernie Davis of Syracuse, Heisman Trophy winner, Angelo Dabiero of Notre Dame at halfback, and Ohio State's Bob Ferguson at fullback. The backfield that Head Coach Murray Warmath of Minnesota most often called for is composed of Stephens at quarterback, Jim Saxton of TexasandBobby Lee Thompson of Arizona at half- backs, and Art Perkins of North Texas State at fullback. Yanks Beat Minnesota; Tigers Win By The Associated Pres3 NEW YORK-The New York Yankees, held to four runs in their last 36 innings, erupted for six in the first three frames yesterday and went on to beat the Min- nesota Twins, 7-3. Ralph Terry won his ninth, tops for the Yanks. * * * DETROIT-Paul Foytack halted the first-place Cleveland Indians on six hits yesterday and the De- troit Tigers' slumping batters bunched their hits for a 4-0 vic- tory. * * * BALTIMORE-Two home runs by Jim Gentile and a strong pitch- ing performance by Robin Roberts gave the Baltimore Orioles a 3-1 victory over the Chicago White Sox last night. The big first baseman, emerging solidly from a batting slump, hit his second homer in the eighth with a man on to break a 1-1 tie. * * * BOSTON-Don Lee, with ninth inning help from Dean Chance, stifled the Boston Red Sox ,'on five hits yesterday as the Los Angeles Angels bounced back from Tuesday's no-hit defeat and posted a 3-0 victory. WASHINGTON - Kansas City topped Washington 4-1 here last nightto drop the sagging Senators further into the American League basement. * * * SAN FRANCISCO-Catcher Ed Bailey walloped his second key home run against his former teammates in as many games and his two-run blast yesterday sent San Fransciso to a 6-3 victory over Cincinnati. CHICAGO - The surging St. Louis Cardinals rolled to their fourth and fifth straight victories yesterday by sweeping a double shutout 4-0 and 8-0 from the Chicago Cubs behind the spectular pitching of veteran Larry Jackson and southpaw Ray Sadecki. Jackson, balancing his record at 7-7, yielded just four singles in the first game. Sadecki posted his fifth win among nine decisions via a five-hitter in the nightcap. * * * PITTSBURGH-The Pittsburgh Pirates handed the New York Mets a 6-5 defeat in the 10th inning of their National League game last night. Winnin Wolverines Beat Squad In Hawaii Kerr Pitches Victory Over Subpac Raiders Special To The Daily HONOLULU-Michigan's base- ball squad continued its winning ways here late Tuesday evening with a 3-0 shutout victory over the Subpac Raiders of the Hawaii Interservice League. Fresh from Monday night's de- cisive victory in the International Collegiate World Series, Michigan got their runs in the second and third innings, and senior pitcher John Kerr held the Raiders to eight scattered hits. Three Champignships This was the Wolverines' 35th victory of the year, agaThst 15 losses, as Coach Don Lund's, team has extended its season by win- ning Regional, National and Inter- national Collegiate crowns. Eight more games are planned with ser- vice teams in Hawaii, including a meeting with the Hickham Flyers of Hickham Air Force Base late last night. The victory for Kerr ran his season's record to 9-2. While both teams managed eight hits, Michi- gan made better use of their's. Score Early Runs In the second inning M' catcher Joe Merullo walked and scored from first on a single by first- baseman Dave Campbell. Camp- bell took second on the throw to the plate, and scored on a single by third-baseman Harvey Chap- man. The other Michigan run came in the third when Subpac pitcher Walt Haun hit Dick Honig with a pitch when two were out. Ron Tate and Jim Steckley, both out- fielders, singled to bring Honig home. ' ' is A LONG WAY FROM HOME-Action like that above on the Ferry Field home diamond is a long way behind Michigan's baseball squad, which has forsaken the home surroundings to win three collegiate championships and is currently playing service teams in Hawaii. Major League Standings McNitt Leaves 'U' High Spot AMERICAN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE Cleveland Minnesota New York Los Angeles Baltimore Detroit Chicago Kansas City Boston Washington W 41 42 37 39 37 35 36 34 33 24 L 30 33 30 32 35 35 38 40 39 46 Pet. GB .577 - .560 1 .552 2 .549 2 .514 4Y2 .500 5/ .486 62 .459 812 .458 8% .343 16% San Francisco Los Angeles Pittsburgh St. Louis Cincinnati Milwaukee Philadelphia Houston Chicago New York Wv 49 48 43 42 38 36 33 31 27 19 L 27 28 31 31 33 37 39 40 49 51 Pct. .645 .632 .575 .575 .535 .493 .458 .437 .355 .275 GB 1 5 512 8 11 14 15% 22 27 Gary McNitt, a former defensive halfback on Michigan's football team, has left his position as football coach at University High. School here in Ann Arbor to as- sume similar duties at Adrian High School. McNitt was coach at 'U' High for one year, where his team has a 3-3-2 record and a third place finish in the Washtenaw Confer- ence. The 22-year old coach will replace Charles Marvin who has taken the head coaching position at Adrian College. SPORTS SHORTS: W~estern Open Begins YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 7, Minnesota 3 Los Angeles 3 Boston 0 Detroit 4, Cleveland 0 Kansas City 4, Washington 1 Baltimore 3, Chicago 1 TODAY'S GAMES Minnesota at New York Los Angeles at Boston Chicago at Baltimore (n) Kansas City at Washington (n) (Only games scheduled) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 6, Cincinnati 3 St. Louis 4-8, Chicago 0-0 Pittsburgh 6, New York 5 Milwaukee at Los Angeles, inc. (Only games scheduled) TODAY'S GAMES New York at Los Angeles (n) Philadelphia at San Francisco St. Louis at Chicago (Only games scheduled) By The Associated Press 4 CHICAGO-Arnold Palmer was up in the air yesterday over his chances to gain revenge on Jack Nicklaus and repeat as champion in the 59th Western Open Golf Tourney starting here today. Palmer arrived at heavily-wood- ed Medinah Country Club in the morning and immediately sized up the "big bear'' course in a heli- copter tour over the nienacing par 71, 7,110 layout. Some 135 players, including new U.S. Open Champion Nicklaus, shove off tomorrow in a 72-hole medal play test that carries a $10,- 000 top prize. By the luck of the draw, Nick- laus and Palmer-playoff antag- onists in the U.S. Open at Oak- mont, Pa., two weeks ago - will match strokes in the first two rounds of the match. , s * Women's Golf Starts MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. - Long- hitting Mickey Wright opens her bid today for a fourth U.S. Golf Association Woomen's Open Cham- pionship in five years over a course that should be made to order for her explosive tee shots. The 6,400-yard, par - 72 Dunes Golf and Beach Club appears well tailored to the Wright. game. The field closed at 70 players. The 27-year-old California na- tive who plays out of Dallas, Tex., won the title in 1958, repeated the next year, but lost it to Betsy Rawls of Spartanburg, S.C., while finish- ing fifth in 1960. But last summer she bounced back with her third championship, winning by six shots over Miss Rawls. * s Hungarian Wins Title TOLEDO, O.-Imre Polyak of Hungary won the first individual championship of the World Ama- teur Greco - Roman Wrestling Tournament yesterday. Polyak drew with Russia's Kop- stantin Virupayev and won the featherweight (138.5 pounds) title on the basis of fewer penalty points. Polyak's victory stymied Rus- sia's hopes of sweeping all eight individual champions en route to the team title that was almost as- sured as the tournament entered its final day. Jim Burke of the U.S. also fought a draw with Vladimir Rosin of Russia, thereby keeping alive his hopes in the 154-pound class. * * * AFL Vetoes Expansion BOSTON-The American Foot- ball League's executive committee voted yesterday to defer expansion from eight to 10 teams at the pres- ent. Commissioner Joe Foss said the league still might decide later this year to expand. The decision to postpone expansion came as a mild surprise. The eight-member exec- utive committee was winding up its three-day between-seasons-meet- ing. I I RODGERS & HART'S GREAT MUSICAL COMEDY THE w SERVICES FOR YOU!' at theb(c1a itih SNACK BAR-Ground Floor-Air Conditioned 7:00 A.M.-10:00 P.M. through Thursday June 17 7:00 A.M.- 8:00 P.M. Friday and Saturday through 8:00 A.M.- 8:00 P.M. Sunday August 17 7:00 A.M.- 8:00 P.M. Monday through Saturday --Balance of Summer 8:00 A.M.- 8:00P.M. Sundays-Balance of Summer CAFETERIA-Ground Floor-Air Conditioned Lunch 11:30 A.M.-1 :00 P.M. Daily 12:00 noon-2:00 P.M. Sunday Dinner 5:00 P.M.-7:00 P.M. Daily OPEN A LL SUMMER FROM C S **TONIGHT * 8:00 P.M. TRUEBLOOD AUDITORIUM, FRIEZE BLDG., HURON CR. STATE PERFORMANCES THROUGH SATURDAY U-M PLAYERS SEASON TICKETS NOW INCLUDE THE BOYS FROM SYRACUSE MAIN DINING ROOM-First Floor Air Conditioned Breakfast 7:15 A.M.-9:00 A.M. Daily Lunch 11:45 A.M.-1 :30 P.M. Daily Dinner 5:45 P.M.-7:45 P.M. 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