r I3 ~T ________THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, JULY 20 11 1962 2 dcKinley, Douglas Set ni Tennis Quarterfinal .. ~ r*~~- PALMER, NICKLAUS FOURTH: UnknownTa kes PGA Tourney Lead , . i By The Associated Press CHICAGO -- Top-seeded Chuck McKinley and No. 2 Jon Douglas, the only two U.S. Davis Cup play- ers remaining in the tournament, powered their way into the quar- terfinals of the National Clay Court Championships yesterday. Women's Golf Sees Upsets WICHITA, Kan. OP) - Co-med- alist Carol JTo Skala of Sutherlin, Ore., and two members of the 1962 Curtis Cup Team were knocked out of the 32nd Annual Women's Trans-Mississippi Golf Tourna- ment in third-round upsets yes- terday. Miss Kathy Farrer, an 18-year- old from Decatur, Alabama, de- feated Mrs. Skala, 3 and 2, to move into the quarter-final round. Miss Jeannie Thompson, of Tul- sa, upset Curtis Cupper Clifford Ann Creed of Alexandria, La., 3 and 2. Cup team member Judy Bell of Wichita fell before the 1-over-par shooting of Miss Maureen Crum of Plant City, Fla. However, upsets and injuries which have hexed the meet at the River Forest Tennis Club all week, did not take a holiday. Wimbledon Champion Karen Susman, the main attraction, withdrew to avoid risking further injury to her sprained left thumb. Takes Layoff The 19-year-old bride hurt it Wednesday in a fall and it still pained her yesterday when she was warming up. She hopes a lay- off the rest of the week will permit her to play in the Pennsylvania Grass Court Tournament at Mer- ion next week. Donna Floyd, her quarterfinal opponent, moved into today's semifinals by default. The 21- year-old Miss Floyd from.Arling- ton, Ala., ranked 10th nationally, will face 16-year-old Julie Held- man of New York, No. 16. Miss Heldman advanced with 6-4, 6-4 ease over Carol Hanks of St. Louis. McKinley Romps McKinley blew Junior Davis Cup player, Bill. Higgings of Lawton, Okla., off the courts 6-1, 6-2. Douglas, the ex-Marine and for- mer Stanford quarterback, dropped the first set to Clark Graebner, Lakewood, Ohio, and another Junior Davis Cupper, 4-6, and trailed 5-2 in the second. Then he won 11 games in a row to take the final two sets 7-5, 6-0. McKinley faces Marty Riessen, Big Ten Champion from North- western, today. Riessen, seeded 8th, smashed Jaidip Mukerjea of India 6-1, 6-2. Douglas Meets Couder Douglas squares off against Juan Couder of Spain, No. 2 for- eign seed. He advanced with a 6-3, 6-1 victory over the third-ranked junior, Clifford Buchholz of St. Louis. I JIM KAAT ., ... pitches three-hitter CLETIS BOYER ... homers for Yanks Yankees Clout Red Sox; Twins Shut Out Indians; Angels Trim Tigers Once More NEWTON SQUARE, Pa. uP) - John Barnum, a towering, 50- year-old gaffer who barely makes expenses on the tour, shot into the first round lead of the PGA Golf Championship with a record 4- under-par yesterday while most of a boisterous gallery of 17,000 were watching Arnold Palmer and Jack Nicklaus scramble to 71's. The little-known Barnum, a na- tive Texan who holds down a club job in Belmont, Mich., in the sum- mer and tackles the circuit in the winter, didn't have a bogey and he one-putted seven greens as he took a two-stroke advantage over another old timer, 47-year-old Chick Harbert, second with 68. Giant George Bayer was third with 69. Barnum's 32-34 - 66 was the lowest ever fired competitively over the 7,045-yard, par 35-35-70 Aronimink Golf Club Course and it was the best first round ever re- corded in this championship, con- verted from match play four years ago. New Record The previous course record was 68, set by Marty Furgol and Bobby Nichols a month ago. Barnum's 66 wiped out the first round mark of 67, held by Palmer, Dow Finster- wald and Art Wall Jr. Barnum, who towers 6 feet, 3%/2 inches and weighs 225 pounds, never has won a major tourna- ment. The current winning list of the PGA tour shows him in 85th place with $2,449.28 - peanuts compared with Palmer's $70,000 plus. He played the course so meticu- lously that he was putting for birdies on virtually every green. . p{ A He ran in four of them. He sank the U. S. Open crown, called his a 25-footer for his first birdie at round "horrible." the fifth, dropped easy four and Harbert, graying 1954 PGA two-footers on the eighth and Champion and twice a runnerup ninth and nudged in one from 12 when it was a match play tourna- inches at the 13th after a beauti- ment, had a fabulous round for his ful pitch. 68. He chipped in from 49 feet on Palmer, winner of the British the third hole, sank from 35 yards Open with a record score at Troon out on the fourth and sank a putt last week, had only one birdie. of 25 feet at the ninth and 45 feet That was a 15-foot putt on the at the 14th. 10th hole. The rest of the time he Bayer, a 6-foot-5, 250-pound was scrambling for his pars. giant who is rated the game's Nicklaus, the 22-year-old rookie longest hitter, tamed the long who beat Palmer in a playoff for course with powerful drives. ,k DISCOUNT RECORDS By The Associated Press BOSTON - New York rode the booming bats of Elston Howard, Cletis Boyer andBill Skowron to a 10-6 victory over Boston yesterday, matching its season's longest win- ning streak of seven games. Howard had a triple and two singles, drove in three runs and scored twice. RUSSIAN-U.S. TRACK MEET: Attendance Figures May Set Record MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL - Two home runs by Bob Allison and Jim Kaat's three-hit pitching gave the Minnesota Twins an 8-0 vic- tory over Cleveland and boosted the Twins into third place in the American League. The Twins, sweeping the three- game set, had been tied with the Indians before the game. Allison drove in four runs with a two-run homer in the eighth, a solo shot in the second and a run- scoring single in the fourth. His homers were his 12th and 13th of the season. *. * * LOS ANGELES - The Los An- geles Angels took command on a seventh inning single by Billy Moran and dealt the doddering Detroit Tigers their s e v e n t h straight loss, 2-1. The Tigers, who have made only nine runs in their last seven games, scored only once in the entire 3-game series. They were shut out 1-0 and 5-0 the first two games. The loss went to right-hander Jim Bunning (9-6), who had a career record 6-0 against the An- gels coming into this game. Right- hander Eli Grba got the victory, his sixth in 11 decisions. Bunning was working on a three-hitter and leading 1-0 after six innings. Then, in the Angel seventh, Tom Burgess opened with a single. Gordon Windhorn, running for Bur g ess, moved around to third on a sacrifice and a wild pitch and scored on a sac- rifice fly by pinch hitter Earl Aver- ill. With two out, Albie Pearson singled, stole second and scored the deciding run on Moran's single. ANNOUNCES A SPECIAL SALE MONDAY, July 16th, through Saturday, July 21st 1 n OFF LIST PRICE on all records in our huge stock v By The Associated Press STANFORD, Calif .-Attendance of more than 100,000 for the weekend's Russian-United States track meet at Stanford Stadium was assured yesterday, and could set a record for this international competition. Stanford Athletic Director Al Masters reported ticket sales al- ready total 98,600, assuring a greater spectator turnout than the stadium saw in 1960 when 82,519 watched the two-day United States Olympic tryouts. It could exceed the 130,000 who watched Harris Leads Amateur Meet ORCHARD LAKE, Mich. (/P) - Labron Harris Jr., hitting the greens with pinpoint accuracy, shaved two more strokes off par yesterday with a 70 and widened his lead at the halfway point of the 72-hole qualifying round of the Western Amateur. Harris' 136 total - eight under par -- was six strokes better than his nearest rivals. Ganged up behind him at 142 were Jim Jamieson of Moline, Ill., Tim Holland of New York, Johnny Stevens of Wichita, Kan., and Dud Wysong of McKinney, Tex. the U.S.-Russian Meet in Moscow last year. Many Fans Already Fans jam the stands daily at Stanford's Angell Field for the practices as both Russians and Yankees work out at the same time. Starter Berney Wagner ob- served, "I think most of these peo- ple thought they could tell a Rus- sian just by looking and are sur- prised when they can't." A feeling of good fellowship ex- ists between the athletes. Wash- ington pole vaulter John Cramer and Soviet decathlon star Yuriy Kutenko trotted around the field together and did handsprings. Russian Autographs Russian hurdler Anatoliy Mik- hailov responded to pleas from a group of youngsters and signed autographs. Tamara Press, the Russian wo- man shot put champion, walked with Stanford Coach Payton Jor- dan and tossed the iron sphere up and down in her hand, much as you would a tennis ball. "I've never seen so much spec- tator interest in the training," Jordan declared. "There wasn't this much in Moscow in 1958." Top Crowds Jordan was an assistant coach for the United States team in that meet which started this interna- tional competition. It drew crowds totaling 105,000 for the meet. The following year in Philadelphia, the attendance was 54,000 and last year in Russia hit 130,000. With Stanford Stadium having a capacity in the 100,000 range, that 130,000 could be exceeded in the two days. Coaches John Oelkers of the Yankees and Gavriel Korobkov of. the Soviets must decide at noon today on their final lineups for the meet. After that there can be no changes except in emergency. except imports. .. with the coupon below I I Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE New York Los Angeles Minnesota Cleveland Baltimore Chicago Detroit Boston Kansas City Washington w 53 51 50 48 47 47 43 43 42 33 L 35 40 43 43 45 48 47 48 52 56 Pet. GB .602 - .560 3Y'2 .538 5% .527 6% .511 8 .495 9'/f .478 11 .473 11Y2 .447 14 .371 2011 NATIONAL Los Angeles San Francisco Pittsburgh St. Louis Cincinnati Milwaukee Philadelphia Houston Chicago New York LEAGUE W L Pet. GB 63 34 .652 - 62 35 .639 1 58 35 .624 3 53 41 .564 8 Y 50 41 .548 10 46 48 .489 151/ 43 51 .457 18% 34 57 .374 26 35 61 .365 271/ 24 65 .269 35 200 Pairs of Berm udais ON SALE Bermudas previously priced up to $8.98 Now Selling from 398 to 45.98 r Available in Continental and Ivy Styles "Triumph Over Traditio'n" 1209 SO. 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