OUR THE MICHIGAN DAILY TA UESDAY, A )etroit Pool To Hold )Iympic Swim Tryouts MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Chicago Lead Slimmed As Pappas Wins Ninth By The Associated Press lost a to Baltimore while the Yankees The Cof their first place lead and were beating the Detroit Tigers, now their margin over the New Third place Baltimore, which York Yankees is a mere half game holds a 9-7 lead ovr the White but they're not too depressed. Box, are three games off the pace, White Sox Manager Al Lopez was heartened by the fine perform- Pick Up Game ance of Southpaw Herb Score al- Cleveland, in fourth place, also though he dropped a 2-1 decision picked up a full game on the lead- OLYMPIC CONTENDER-Michigan's Bob Webster is one of the top candidates for the U.S. Olympic diving team. He and over 400 others are competing for 42 berths on the United States swim- ming and diving teams. the first six slots in the 200 team, and Tom Stock, a freshman eter freestyle. The first four fin- sensation, competing. hers will compete in the 200 Another Hoosier freshman, Alan eter event at Rome while the Somers is rated a cinch for a .th- and sixth-place men will berth in the 1500-meter freestyle lp fill out the 800-meter free- event while freestyler Pete Sintz is yle relay team. a good possibility in the 200-meter event. Although Michigan will play a Experts are anticipating that ajor part in the meet with a the usual avalanche of swimming tal of 10 men entered and Wol- records will fall, although the rine Coach Gus Stager presiding swimmers will be hard pressed to head Olympic coach, the ma- duplicate the spectacular perform- rity of collegiate honors should ances put in at the National AAU to Indiana. outdoor meet a week ago. Champion Troy But with improved conditions, Mike Troy is the Hoosier's top i.e., better lighting and pool side l v ,,in rkndidatt. 1H i shbth the gutters, plus the finest crop of Laver Wins Pennsylvania Racket Title HAVERFORD, Pa., (A'), - Aus- tralian tennis might asserted it- self again yesterday as Rod La- ver, champion racquet man from the Kangaroo country, whipped America's Ron Holmberg 9-7, 8-6, 6-3 in the final of the 61st annual Pennsylvania Lawn Tennis Cham- pionship at the Merion Cricket Club. In the women's singles tiny Mimi Arnold, Redwood City, Cal., scored a blistering 6-1, 6-2 victory over the veteran Mrs. William DuPont Jr., Wilmington, Del. Laver polished off the potential United States Davis Cupper with a flntlity that left little doubt Amer- ica's effort to regain the coveted saucer is going to be a rather rough task. Laver, a southpaw who is rated the equal of Australia's 1959 Davis Cup hero, started as if he meant to duplicate the 37-minute wom- en's final. Miss Arnold, fifth-seeded, dis- played the same all-out aggres- sive play that characterized her semifinal triumph Sunday ,over Seattle's second - seeded Janet Hopps. She upset the usually com- posed Mrs. DuPont, a three-time national champion, with a series of powerful passing shots and tricky drop ball tactics. Mrs. DuPont experienced great difficulty with her first serve and relied upon her second ef'ort, a spinning ball that Miss Arnold had little trouble coping with. Miss Ar- nold, ninth-ranking United States player, broke Mrs. DuPont's serv- ice three times in each set. swimmers the ever produced happen. United States has - anything could Aaron Paces Amateur Golf In Qualifiers DULUTH (mil - Tommy Aaron, a University of Florida graduate from Gainesville, Ga., paced the 58th Western Amateur golf field through its first qualifying rund yesterday with a 2-under-par 69. Aaron, 24, one-putted six greens in firing 36-33 over the par 36-33- 71 Northland Country Club course, measuring 6,688 yards. Two members of the host club, 41-year-old attorney Jim Nordin and Leo Spooner, 33, a clothing salesman, were among a foursome trailing Aaron by a single stroke at 70. Also in the group were Phil Rodgers, 22, Marine private from San Diego, Calif., and Gene Hunt, 21, a junior college sophomore from Flint, Mich. Grouped at 71 was the youth- ful foursome Powell Fraser, 20, Panama City, Fla., Jerry Krause, 21, Prairie Village, Kan., Sam Carmichael, Martinsville, Ind., and Labr'n Harris, 18, Stillwater, Okla. Defending champion Dr. Ed Up- degraff of Tucson, Ariz., had an uphill battle with Northland's slick greens after three-putting the third and fifth and wound up with a 38-37-75 which tied him for 41st place in the battle to survive the 36-hole cut after today's round. The low 50 and ties will play a final qualifying round tomorrow to decide the 16 who will launch 36-hole matches daily beginning Thursday. TOM ROBINSON ...Bahaman pick ''Dashman Winis Abroad GOTEBORG, Sweden WA~ United States collegians Tom Robinson of the Bahamas and Keith Gardner of the West Indies scored victories in an international track and field meet last night. Robinson, who did his United States running at the University, won the 200-meter dash in 21 sec- onds. Gardner, a Nebraska run- ner, covered the 110-meter hurdles in :14.2. Laszlo Taborl, the ex-Hungarian sub 4-minute miler now living in California, won the mile in 4:06.4. Dan Waern of Sweden tried to better his world record of 2:17.8 for 1,000 meters, but failed in 2:21.0. George Kerr of the West Indies, who raced for the Univer- sity of Illinois, was second in 2:22.5. fe U FINAL CLEARANCE of Swim Trunks and