THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. IUL*, THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~AT!TR.BAV YTTT.V I L1.i ViL#.lL1.[ A S'lrV VAA M',O ashington Beats Chisox, 7-5 Olympics Just Like Amateu WASHINGTONW_ '-Washing-i ton's persistent Senators rallied twice last night to down second place Chicago 7-5, as rain fell throughout the game. Despite the loss, Chicago re- mained only .003 percentage points behind first place New York, which lost 5-2 to Kansas City. Washington put together three- run rallies in the fourth and seventh innings and added an in- surance run in the eighth for its third straight victory. Chicago scored a run in the first on infield hits by Jim Landis and Nelson Fox and Sherman Lollar's double. The Senators' snapped back in the fourth with the help of some erratic throwing by the White Sox. Harmon Killebrew led off with a single, but turned his ankle and was replaced by Billy Consolo. Bob Allison then walked and1 Jim Lemon singled to drive in one run. When Minoso threw wild to third, Allison also scored. Lemon tallied when pitcher Dick Dono- van threw the ball away trying to catch Allison at the plate. Billy Gardner followed with a single but Russ Kemmerer came in to retire the side. Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 0 CHICAGO - Wilmer (Vinegar Bend) Mizell hurler a two-hitter and ex-Cub Don Hoak drove across three runs, two on a fifth-inning homer, as the first place Pitts- burgh Pirates stretched the Chi- cago Cubs' loving streak to eight, 4-0 yesterday. Mizell, hurling only his third complete game but notching his seventh victory against five losses, faced only 29 Cub batters in a masterful performance. Mizell allowed a single by Cub starter Jim Brewer in the sixth and a ninth-inning one-bagger by Richie Ashburn, who was nailed at second trying to stretch it into a double. Mizell, acquired earlier this year, from the St. Louis Cardinals,! struck out five and walked onlyj one, that pass following Brewer's single in the sixth. Kansas City 5, New York 2 NEW YORK - Ray Herbert TBoston 1, Detroit 0 In Battle NAILED AT SECOND-Chicago Cub Richie Ashburn is out at second as he tries to stretch a ninth inning single in yesterday's contest with Pittsburgh. The Pirates won 4-0 on the two-hit pitching of Vinegar Bend Mizell. handcuffed New York with six hits last night and became the first Kansas City pitcher to win at Yankee Stadium in more than a year as the Athletics defeated the Yankees 5-2. The Athletics managed only five hits against four Yankee pitchers but they included home runs by catcher Danny Kravitz and first baseman Mary Throneberry. Kravitz' blow came with two on in the fourth inning to climax a four-run outburst that shackled Eli Grba with his first defeat of the season. Throneberry's drive was hit off Duke Mass in the eighth. Herbert fanned six and walked only one as he registered his sixth victory and his third in succes- sion. He has lost 10. Both Yankee runs were unearned. A sixth inning error by short- stop Ken Hamlin of Hector Lopez'start of the seventh and was re- grounder with one out cost Herbertplaced by Stigman. his shutout. Tony Kubek, who had Stigman ended Oriole threats in three of the Yankee hits, bouncedthe seventh, eighth and ninth by a ground rule double into the leftstriking out the last batter. field stands. Cleveland scored two runs off Cleveland 3, Baltimore j loser Jack Fisher in the second on BALTIMORE-Cleveland pitch-four singles and a sacrifice. One ers Jack Harshman and Dick Stig-run scored on Ken Aspromonte's man stopped the Baltimore Orioleshard infield smash and the other on six singles, two of them bunts, on Vic Power's single to center. as the Indians won 3-1 last night St. Louis 3, Philadelphia 0 and snapped a five-game losing ST. LOUIS - Ernie Broglio streak. pitched a five-hit, 12-strikeout Harshman, making his second shutout and Ken Boyer drove in start after being sidelined three all the runs as the St. Louis Car- months with back trouble, allowed dinals blanked the Philadelphia just two hits before he tired at thePhillies here last night, 3-0. BOSTON (A) -- Aging Boston slugger Ted Williams-who thrives on the pitching of Jim Bunning- singled home the only run to beat the Deroit righthander 1-0 last night. Red Sox ace Billy Monbouquette threw a five-hitter for his 11th triumph of the season but still needed the bat of old maestro Williams. Williams slashed a two-out sin- gle to right field in the third inn- ing, scoring Don Buddin. The Bos- ton shortstop had made it to third by singling and advancing on a Monbouquette sacrifice and a Wil- lie Tasby base blow to short left. Williams Lashes Bunning Williams got another single and1 a walk off Bunning and the Tigers couldn't retire the 40-year-old left fielder until southpaw reliever Pete Burnside turned the trick on a grounder in the eighth. Williams is batting .700 against Bunning this season with two homers, a double and four singles in 10 trips plus four walks. Pitching Duel Monbouquette hooked in a mas- terful duel with Bunning, the American League strikeout king, until the latter was lifted for a pinchhitter in the eighth. Former Red Sox outfielder Neil Chrisley and Norm Cash accounted for the entire offense for the Tigers, poorest hitting club in the1 league. Chrisley's third hit was a ringing double off the left field wall to lead off the ninth. Near Collision Al Kaline, back in the lineup for the first time since Sunday when he was benched for low blood pressure and a batting average to match, sent a high foul to the box seat railing behind first base. Catcher Russ Nixon and Pete Runnels, just switched to first in- a defensive maneuver, nearly col- lided chasing the ball. Runnels speared it out of the stands, turned and fired to third base in time to retire Chrisley. The double play killed waning1 Tiger hopes as Monbo quickly dis-I posed of Rock Colavito on a flyi to center. Detroit .. 000 000 000--0 5 0 1 Boston .. 001 000 000-1 6 0 Bunning, Burnside (8) and Foiles; Monbouquette and Nixon. W -- Monbouquette (11-8). L - Bunning (6-8). Littler Maintains Lead In Eastern Golf Open PURELY RECREATION?--John Thomas, top U.S. Olympic high jumper, who clears the bar here easily at seven feet, will have to, sign an entry form declaring himself to be a strictly amateur athlete. The form, which all entrants to the 1960 Rome games must sign, is designed to "maintain the prestige of the Olympia movement." AT MIDPOINT: PARIS (A') - The International Olympic Committee (IOC) has urged that the national Olympic committees make certain only pure-in-heart amateurs are per- mitted to compete in the Rome games. A letter signed by Avery Brun- dage of Chicago, TO president, and Otto Mayor, Olympic chan- cellor, has been sent to all na- tional Olympic committees. Copies of the letter posted from Olympic headquarters at Lausanne were received in Paris yesterday. The letter notes that entries for the games are due soon and that each entry form requires the com- petitor to sign the following pledge: "I, the undersigned, declare on my honor that I am an amateur and fulfill the conditions stipu- lated by the Olympic rules." The letter goes on to say: "This declaration must be coun- tersigned by the national (sports) federation of the competitor and by your committee. "We trust that you will use the utmost discretion in signing these forms and that you will bring to the attention of your national federations their responsbillity in exercising a strict control of their af iliated athletes ... "It has been alleged that there have been competitors in previous Olympic games who were not eli- gible under the Olympic rules. If this is the case, at least three people have made false certifica- tions in each instance. "We count on you to help us maintain the prestige of the Olympic movement by confining the games to those who are eligi- ble according to the rules. Participates for Pleasure The IOC's rule on amateurism says "an amateur is one who par- ticipates and always has partici- pated in sport solely for pleasure and for the physical, mental and social benefits he derives there- from, and to whom participation in sport is nothing more than recreation without material gain of any kind, direct or indirect." Brundage and the IOC created a furor four years ago just prior to the Melbourne games when the athletes were asked to sign a pledge in which they swore they were true amateurs at the time and would continue to be. The committee has been dis- turbed for some time by boxers, basketball players and figure skaters who sign lucrative pro contracts soon after gaining Olympic fame. Both Floyd Patterson and Ingemar Johansson, who fought a second time for the world heavy- weight title on June 20, turned pro soon after the 1952 games and Bill Russell of the United States winning basketball team joined Boston soon after the 1956 games. Baltimore (M)-Gene Littler of Singing Hills, Calif., managed to hold onto the lead yesterday in the second round of the $25,000 East- ern Open Golf Tournament by shooting an eagle three on the last hole. The sensational finish provided the 30-year-old with a 68 and a total of 133, 11 under par for the Pine Ridge course, halfway through the tournament, which concludes tomorrow. It staved off Doug, Ford, the hard working veteran from Crystal River, Fla., and Juan Ridriguez, the surprising newcomer of this tourney. They pulled to within one stroke of Littler; Ford by carving a 66 on the part 72 course, and Rodriguez by posting his second straight 67. Littler Ties Record Littler had boomed into a two- stroke lead in Thursday's round by tying his own record of 65 for the course. Ford, one of the game's constant money winners and in- frequent champions, began with a 68. Then he carded his first bogey of the tournament at the 15th hole, where he overshot the green and carded a five. Littler responded by hitting the ball within 10 feet of the 523-yard 18th hole with a drive and three iron. He sank the putt for the saving eagle, two strokes under par. Ford, a 10-year veteran of the PGA circuit nearing his 38th birth- day, had a chance to duplicate and tie Littler. He was within 15 feet of the 18th hole with a drive and four iron, but just missed the putt and had to settle for a birdie. Rodriguez Cards Birdie Rodriguez, a putting wizard weighing less than 120 pounds, missed the chance to tie at the 15th, where he also carded his first bogey in two rounds. He hastily hit a putt of only 18 inches for a " par four and it stayed out. Rodriguez, 24 years old and playing in this third tournament in this country, had 10 one-putt greens. Two of them were long distance jobs of 35 and 20 feet' for a pair of his six birdies. Only the 76 pros who scored 145 or under will continue in today's third round and the low 60 scorers on Sunday. Among the best known pros who failed to make the third round was Jack Fleck, the Open champion of 1955 and 11th leading money winner this season. He had 148. American Football League Opens Grid Action Tonight BUFFALO, N.Y. (AI)--The spank- ing-new American Football League puts its untested product on the sports market tonight in one of football's earliest starts. The Buffalo Bills and the Boston Patriots will provide the fireworks' in initiating the rookie league's 1960 exhibition schedule. The bat- tle of unknowns could shape upj as a preview of what's to come in the next five months. The game is expected to attract 20,000, including commissioner Joe Foss, at Buffalo's newly renovated and re-named War Memorial Sta- dium. The Bills are rated as the team to beat in the fledgling circuit that includes the Los Angeles Charg- ers, the New York Titans, the Denver Broncos, the Dallas Tex- Continentals To Request Recognition' By The Associated Press The Continental League is ex-, pected to make formal application for recognition as a third major league Tuesday at Chicago at an important meeting of baseball's expansion committees. No formal action is anticipated but the committees' recommenda- tions could chart the course for the sport's future program. "This could be the most momen-- tuous meeting in the history of baseball," said Bill Shea, founder of the Continenal League in New York. "It depends on the sincerity of the people who are there." Shea will attend the meeting with Branch Rickey, league president, and representatives of each of the eight clubs in the league. Frick Won't Attend - Commissioner Ford Frick will, not attend. Neither will President Warren Giles of the National nor Joe Cronin of the American. "This is a meeting at a com- mittee level," said Commissioner Frick. "That should be under- stood. If the committees can reach an agreement on something they can submit, league meetings will be called. No official action can be taken." Shea and Rickey plan to show how they have qualified under the 10-nnint vtem the i iaors ans, the Houston Oilers and the Oakland Raiders. Boston, however, will field a more experienced squad, sprinkled with some of the flash rookies that; it spirited from the National Foot-I ball League in last winter's player- drafts. The Patriots have Northwest- ern's Ron Burton at fullback and can call on Syracuse's Ger Schwe- des at a halfback slot. Directing the visitors from the quarterback spot will be Ed Song- in, formerly of Boston College. Songin was considered the "find" of the Patriot training camp. Wray Carlton of Duke probably will start at a halfback position, also. The Bills hopes hang on the passing arms of three highly re- garded quarterbacks - Tommy O'Connell of Cleveland Brown play, Bob Brodhead, who played at Duke and with the Hamilton, Ont., Tiger Cats, and Penn State's second-team All-American Richie Lucas. The starting nod has gone to Brodhead, a fine passer and cap-i able runner. Por company he'll s have Art Smith of Cortland, N.Y., ] State and Elbert Dubenion ofI Bluffton College, Ohio, at half- backs and former Cleveland, Brown Maurice Bassett at full. !I lis e '' ' NEW FOOTBALL LEAGUE ...untested product C O ME 10 CHUC 1 STREAMLINED-Gus Stager, Michigan swimming mentor and U.S. Olympic swimming team coach, is advising his young hope- fuls to shave their legs and torsos to increase speed in the water by lessening body resistance. Coach Believes Shaves Streamline!S1witmm ers The time-honored means of re- moving a swarthy five o'clock Now if he takes 25 strokes to swim shadow is helping Olympic swim- kthe length of a 50 meter pool,, ming hopefuls crack world and then his legs actually have trav- national speed records. eled 300 feet. The practice of shaving all su- "We don't want to know how perfluous hair from limbs and the tired a boy is when he finishes a torso before a meet is growing race. We want to know how tired steadily among American swim- his legs are. When they are mers and has drawn the emphat- shaved, and offer less resistance ic approval of Gus Stager, Michi- to the water, they feel less tired. gan and U.S. Olympic swim coach. That's where the advantage is." "All of my boys from Michigan Just Like Barnacles will shave before the trials start," The idea caught fire after the Stager said, referring to the U.S. 1956 Olympics in which the shaved Olympic final swimming and div- Australians gained top victory. ing trials which open Tuesday at sMichigan's Dick Hanley brought River Rouge'sdBreyn aPoohs.rthe razor concept back to the feel-and so do they-that there States. is a physical advantage to shav- "It's like taking the barnacles ing. They don't do it all the time, off the bottom of a boat," said becauses they'd get to be like hairy Jeff Farrell, 100 and 200 meter apes if they did. freestyle champion in the AAU Different Theory outdoor at Toledo last week. "You "We save it until just before a just naturally go faster." big meet. Some people say it's There are those who don't be- psychological; that it's just the lieve in it, however. Indiana's Mike feeling of smoothness on the legs Troy, rated the top butterfly swim- and body that betters a boy's per- mer in the U.S., said, "If shaving formance. But I've got a different helps, why do the women keep go- theory, ing faster and faster all the time? "You figure that a swimmer will If you ask me, it's a lot of kick his legs six times for every baloney." stroke he takes through the wa- "He's so good," Stager said, "he ter. Each kick is about two feet. doesn't need to shave." ON 7h~l CAB BATwH ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Streets Rev. John F. Bradley, Chaplain Rev. Paul V. Matheson, Assistant Sunday Masses, 6:30, 8:00, 9:30, 11:00 A.M., 12:00 noon and 12:30 P.M. Holyday Masses 6:30, 7:00, 8:00 and 9:00 A.M., 12:00 noon and 5:10 P.M. Week-day Masses 6:00, 6:30, 7:00, 8:00 and 9:00 A.M. Novena Devotions: Wed. evening, 7:30. Class in fundamentals of the Christian faith, Monday and Thursday evenings at 7 P.M. THE CHURCH OF CHRIST W. Stadium at Edgwood Lester F. Allen, Minister 10:00 A.M. Bible School. 11:00 A.M. Regular Worship. .6:30 P.M. Evening Worship. WEDNESDAY- 7:30 P.M. Bible Study. BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL REFORMED United Church of Christ 423 South Fourth Avenue Ernest R. Klaudt, Pastor Orville H. Schroer, Parish Minister. 9:30 A.M. Worship Service. 10:45 A.M. Worship Service. ST. ANDREWS CHURCH AND THE EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION 306 North Division St. 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion with Breakfast, following at the Cantebury House. 9:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH 1432 Washtenaw -NO 2-3580 Wm. S. Baker, Campus Pastor. Patricia Pickett, Roajo Nasr, counselors Sunday Morning Worship at 9:00 and 10:30 A.M. "A Sacrificial Self-Examination," Mr. Van Winkle. Student Coffee Hour at 11:30 A.M., Lewis Room. Tuesday: 8-10 P.M. "Conversation with Punch" at the Guild House, 524 Thomp- son. Grad Group meets Friday, August 5, at 6:00 P.M. at the church for dinner-75c. Fol- lowed by slides taken in Mexico by Marga- ret Orris. FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH of Ann Arbor Washtenaw at Berkshire Edward H. Redman, Minister Donald H. Meyer, Ministerial Interne Summer Sunday Evening Series, 8:00 P.M. Judith Nesthel, "What's Modern about Modern Dance." CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Streets 8:30 A.M. Douglas Chapel - 11:00 A.M. Sanctuary. "Does Religion Affect Health?" Dr. Luchs, preaching. Student Guild, 7:30 P.M. Tuesday, "Conversa.. tional Punch." 524 Thompson. Church School-11:00 A.M* Crib through 9th Grade. Dr. Luchs' Vesper Service--6:15 P.M. WOIA - 1290. Question-Answer, period begins next Sunday evening. FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH (American Baptist Student Fellowship) UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL & CENTER 1511 Washtenow Avenue (The Lutheran Church--Missouri Synod) Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor Arthur L. Dauer, Vicar William F. Eifrig, Director of Music Sunday at 9:30: Bible Study. Sunday at 10:45: Worship service, with ser- mon by the vicar, "How to Make Life Pro- portionate." Sunday at 5:45: Meet at Center to go to 1710 S. Maple for Gamma Delta Supper and Program. Discussion, "The Christian Church and Urban Maladjustments." CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH 1131 Church St. Dr. E. H. Palmer, Minister Morning Service, 10:30 A.M. University Bible Class, 9:30 A.M. Evening Worship Service, 7:00 P.M. MEMORIAL BAPTIST CHURCH 411 Fountain Street Rev. William Nicholas, Pastor and Student Advisor. NO 3-0698 Sunday School, 9:45 A.M. Worship Service, 11:00 A.M. Training Union, 7:00 P.M. Worship Service, 8:00 P.M. Prayer Meeting, 7:30 P.M. Wednesday. Cooperating with the Southern Baptist Con. vention. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH AND WESLEY FOUNDATION State and Hu-on Streets, Tel. NO 8-6881 Dr. Hoover Rupert, Minister Rev. Gene Ransom, Minister to students FEINER GLASS-& PAINT CO. .1