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August 05, 1960 - Image 4

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1960-08-05

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

FRIDAY, AU

THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, A~

~i1ander s

Set

for

Rome

For Direct Classified Ad Service, Phone NO 2-4786
from 1:00 to 3:00 P.M. Monday through Friday,and Saturday 9:30 'tiI 11:30 A.M.

a.

BY TOM WITECKI
Sports Editor
Special to The Daily
DETROIT-Butterfly star Dave
Glanders became the first Mich-
an member of the 1960 U.S.
ympic swimming team last
ght as he posted the best 200
eters time of his career to finish
Bond behind Indiana's incom-
rable Mike Troy who once again
wered his own world record.
Unfortunately the tall, thin
oyal Oak senior had to edge out
former teammate, Tony Tash-
ck, in order to make the team,
ith just 25 yards remaining in
e 200 meter race, Tashnick, who
as making a comeback after a
W case of mononucleosis last
inter, appeared to have a firm
-ip on the second position.

It was then that Gillanders
made his move. His long thin
arms flailing thru the water, he
slowly crept up on and finally
passed the tiring Tashnick just a
few meters from the finish. Gill-
ander's time of 2:14.0 was a full
three seconds lower than his best
previous time and was the third
fastest timt ever swum in this
event,
- Breaks Record
Up front the husky Troy was
once again battering the world
record as he posted a 2:13.2, two-
tenths of a second lower than the
world mark he set two weeks ago.
Afterwards a tired but extreme-
ly happy Gillanders said, "I tried
to keep even with Mike's body all
the way. I figured if I could do
that I would be in good shape."

And as it turned out he was, for
he is now one of the 42 Olympians
who will represent the United
States in Rome.
Another Michigan swimmer,
Bill Darnton, moved a step closer
to an Olympic berth last night as
he posted the third best qualifying
time in gaining the eight man fi-
nals of the 200 meter freestyle.
Six Qualified
Six of the eight finalists in this
event will make the Olympic team
in one capacity or another. The
first two finishers tonight will
swim this event in Rome while the
next four men will make up the
800 meter freestyle relay team.
Darnton's time of 2:04.8 was
just two- tenths of a second be-
hind the second best qualifying
time posted by Dick Blick of

North Central State. The best
time, a fast 2:03.2, was posted by
George Harrison who appears to
have the first spot in this event
all wrapped up.
Also entered in the finals of this
event is the meet's sentimental
favorite, Jeff Farrell. After making
an amazingly rapid recovery from
an appendectomy, Farrell was just
a tenth of a second short of mak-
ing the team in the 100-meter
freeCyle event the other night.
Now he ismaking a last ditch
attempt in the 200. Last night he
posted the sixth best qualifying
time of the eight finalists in this
event. Whether Farrell, who is in
an obviously weakened condition,
can hold up long enough to finish
at least sixth tonight is a question
that was on many fans' minds as
they filed out of Detroit's Brennan
Pools last night.
Two more Michigan swimmers
who qualified for tonight's finals
were Win Pendleton and Warren
Uhler, who posted the third and
fourth best qualifying times in the
1500-meter event. Pendleton, a
junior, who has improved tremen-
dously in the past year, had a
18:21.9 time while Uhler, just a
freshman last winter, had a 18:23.5
clocking.
Despite their fine showing thus
far, neither Michigan swimmer is
expected to edge out the Indian-
apolis Athletic Club combination
of Alan Somers and George Breen,
who appear to have the first two
places in this grueling event sewed
up.
Class by Himself
A fresh, inexperienced high
school boy and a seasoned veteran
of the competitive swimming wars
were the two qualifiers in the 100-
meter backstroke event. Califor-
nia's youngster Bob Bennett took
first in the event with a 1:02.2
time while Pan American cham-
pion and former Indiana star
Frank McKinney took second with
a 1:02.8 clocking.
In the women's 200-meter breast-
stroke final, Santa Clara Swim
Club star Ann Warner took first as
expected with a 2:53.2, almost a
full two seconds over the world
record she set earlier this summer.
Finishing second was surprising
Patty Kempner, who had the slow-
est qualifying time of the event's
eight finalists.
Women's Final
In the evening's other final, the
women's 100-meter butterfly, Caro-
lyn Wood took first with a 1:09.4
time and Carolyn Schuler finished
second with a 1:09.6 clocking.
Michigan breaststroke performer
Ron Clark, who was disqualified in
the 200-meter event earlier this
week, lost out on his final chance
to make the team yesterday as he
failed to qualify in the 100-meter
event.
Michigan's final qualifying hope-
ful is diver Bob Webster, who will
be attempting to pick off one of
the two berths in today's 10-meter
platform diving event.

MICHIGAN DAILY
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES

LINES
.2
3
4

1 DAY
.80
.96
1.12

3 DAYS
2.00
2.40
2.80

6 DAYS
2.96
3.55
4.14

Figure 5 average words to a line.
Call Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri.
and 9:00 and 11:30 Saturday - Phone NO 2-4786

MUSICAL MDSE.,
RADIOS, REPAIRS
RENT TO BUY
$20 Places This Piano In Your Home'
for 30 Days
Lessons Begin Immediately
8 Lessons Included a
$10 Thereafter
GET IN THE FUN-
Take Advantage of Hammon'a
PLAYTIME PLAN
An Organ In Your Home for 30 Days
With Lessons, for only $25
GRI NNELL'S
323 S. Main St. NO 2-5667
X12.
PIANOS-ORGANS NEW & USED
Ann Arbor Piano & Organ Co.
213 E. Washington NO 3-3109
X1
A-1 New and Used Instruments
BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS
Rental Purchase Plan
PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR
119 W. Washington NO 2-1834
X3
USED CARS
FOR SALE by original owner. 1957 An-
glia (British Ford) $465. MUtual
4-3253 (Milford). N16

BUSINESS SERVICES
PLAN YOUR MENU
As You
SHOP
at
RALPH'S MARKET
709 Packard NO 5-7131
Open every night 'til Midnight'
TYPING: Theses, term papers, reason
able rates. Prompt service. NO 8.759
HELP WANTED
MICHIGAN DAILY CARRIERS 60-
School Year. $14.00 per week. No Co
lections. Morning delivery. Applica
tions- now being accepted at th
Michigan Daily Business Office o
Call NO 2-3241. H
REAL ESTATE
FOR SALE: 3 bedroom older home, tv
doors from Burns Park at 1138 Mar
tin Pl. Large carpeted living-dinix
room plus 12x15 music or TV room
large halupstairs suitable for stud
screened porch an"h large backyar
excellent dry basement; gas heal
Minimum down payment if desire
Owner leaving town. Phone NO 2-213

-David Giltrow
ONE-TWO PUNCH-Mike Troy of Indiana and Dave Gillanders of Michigan pose after qualifying
for the U.S. Olympic team. These two- swimmers have posted the best times in the world in the
butterfly event and should bring home the first two prizes from Rome.
U'

PERSONAL;
WANTED: Male graduate student with
HI FI to share 3 room apartment with
grad student with record collection
and FM tuner. Available anytime
after Aug. 15. Call NO 8-6185. F62
FLY with World Wide Airlines, Inc.
Cheaper than the shoe leather you'd
use to walk.
Ann Arbor to Chicago $10
Ann Arbor to New YorkG $20
AL VA'S TRAVEL AGENCY
NOrm'kndy 2-1006
P61
GET CASH FOR BOOKS
At the Student Book eXchange
In the Basement of the SAB Building
August 8-13
1-5 P.M.
P60
SAN:
Good Morning! P59
WITNESSES OR ANYONE
at the scene after the accident oc-
curring about midnight Thurs. May
12, 1960, between a white Porsche
convertible and a black Chevrolet
sedan at the intersection of 4th
Ave. and East Liberty near the
Pretzel Bell, please call NO 3-6140
and ask for Nancy, or call UN 4-3352
collect in Detroit and ask for War-
ren. Please leave name and phone
number if someone else answers.
F58
COMING-The Duke - Louie - Can-
nonball - The Count - Brubeck -
Dinah - Nina - Dakota plus others.
American Jazz Festival. Detroit -
August 19-21 - Tickets on sale Music
Center, 300 S. Thayer. F53
REAL ESTATE
BUY THIS 3-BEDROOM ranch in Lake-
wood Subdivision now. 1 minute to
elementary school. Full basement.
Call NO 2-8101, See it and make offer.
Goes to realtor in August. R4
GRAD STUDENT leaving. Nice 2 bdrm.,
basement, large lot. Phone 3-2595. R1
BY OWNER--310 Arbana Drive. 3 bed-
room home with 1%,x baths. Large liv-
ing room, dining room, kitchen on
first floor. Recreation room in base-
ment. 2 car detached garage. Excel-
lent condition. Drapes and carpeting
included. Call NO 5-6670 for appoint-
ment. R5
FOR RENT
STUDENTS-NURSES. Large, modern 2-
bedroom apartments. Good Hospital
and campus locations. Deluxe with
twin beds. Hotel innerspring and
mattress. TV outlets. Tub and shower.
Garbage disposal. Of?-street parking
Included. Available furnished or un-
furnished, All utilities except elec-
tricity paid by building. Call for ap-
pointment to see. NO 2-7787 days. NO
2-4351 evenings. C42
FURNISHED, Campus Apartments 2-4
men students. Private baths, 344MS.
Division at Williams. NO 2-3259. Mr.
Pray, agent. F. A. Sergeant Co. Real-
tors. C43
TWO ROOMS for graduate men. 917
MaryhSt. Call NO 2-0521. $57 per
month. C41
WOMAN STUDENT - Free lodging in
exchange for some child care. Not far
from campus. NO 2-0480. C39
MALE SINGLE-Faculty or Grad Stu-
dent. Exclusive Residential-Study -
Bedroom - Bath - Patio - Parking
-Private Entrance. $125.00 per month.
NO 2-1710. C40

CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES
SPORT CARS for True Sports-MG,
Austin Healy, Alpine, Triumph, Mer-
cedes, Alfa Romeo, Hillman, Fiat-
New and Used. You Name it.
All at Bargain Prices -- Terms
CITY AUTO SALES
21730 Michigan Ave., West Dearborn
CR 8-8050
x. 59
C-TED STANDARD SERVICE
Friendly service is our business.
Atlas tires, batteries and accessor-
ies. Warranted & guaranteed. See
us for the beat price on new &
used tires. Road service-mechanic
on duty.
"You expect more from Standard
and you get it!"
1220 S. University at Forest
NO 8-9168
81
WHITE'S AUTO SHOP
Bumping and Painting
2007 South State NO 2-3350
82
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED-Riders to share expenses to
L.A. Leaving Aug. 15. Phone NO 3-
7723 between 6 and 6:30 P.M. Gio
RIDERS WANTED to San Francisco,
leaving Aug. 9. Share expenses. Write
D-34 Law Club or call NO 3-4140. Ask
for Victor Carlson. 09
YOUNG LADY wishes girl passengers
to L. A. Leaving Aug. 20. GL 3-6185.
References. G6
FOR SALE
1953 ABC Housetrailer 40'x8'. HUron 2-
0543. 2499 E. Michigan Ave. No. 15. B8
MODERN 40 FOOT 2 bedroom trailer.
Must sell. Call GE 7-5560. B6
HI FI PHONOGRAPH: Bozak speaker
system. Excellent sound. Low price.
NO 2-8081 evenings.-B5
BARGAIN CORNER
MEN'S short-sleeve sport shirt $1.00.
Skip-dents & seer-suckers sanforized
wash & wear, asstd. colors.
Sam's Store 122 E. Washington
Wi
I-I

music saors

-CAMPUS-
211 S. State
NO 8-9013
-DOWNTOWN-
205 E. Liberty
NO 2-0675

I

y
_...rt ! 1

yi
r"

U' Sailin Club
To Host Races
The University Sailing Club will
play host to the Huron-Portage
Lake Yacht Club Saturday for the
final series of team races this
summer.
Racing will begin at 10 a.m.
with two races. After lunch two
more races will take place. Jet 14
sloops will be used this week in-
stead of rebel class sloops, which
were used last Saturday.
Despite early leads held by com-
modore August Miller in last
week's races, the University club
lost to Portage, 1678 to 2345. This
week the University team will be
sailing their own boats.
The sailing club will continue to
meet in the period after summer
school.

EDRIVE-IN,
Home of the California
Deluxeburger
ANN ARBOR'S MOST POPULAR
DRIVE-IN

-4
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2280 West Stadium

111!1i'iI114 IIII1H3 IIR

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2000 WEST STADIUM

MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP:
Cards Parlay Streak
Into Second NL Position

.9

OPEN DAILY
9 to 5:30

SUMMER SALE!

A".

Short Sleeve WASH n WEAR
Sport Shirts SLACKS
$100 $2.99
($4.95 value)
wash 'n wear pre-cuffed
asst'd patterns asst'd colors
JACKETS Bermuda Shorts
wash 'n wear wash 'n wear
$3.49s r $'d2.77
osst'd colors osst'd colors

By The Associated Press
The torrid St. Louis Cardinals
surged into second place in the
National League race last night
with their seventh straight vic-
tory-a 4-2 decision over the Mil-
waukee Braves.
The leading Pittsburgh Pirates
retained their 3 1 -game margin,
however, by turning back the Los
Angeles Dodgers, 4-1. San Fran-
cisco edged out the Phillies, 8-7,
and the Chicago Cubs beat Cin-
cinnati, 5-3, in the other NL
games.
The idle New York Yankees in-
creased their lead in the Ameri-
can League to 11/2 games as the
second place Chicago White Sox
lost to Washington, 2-1. The Bos-
ton Red Sox took a twin bill from
Kansas City, 5-3 and 9-1, in the
only other American League
Games.
Raay Sadecki, a 19 - year - old
rookie southpaw, was the big show

in the Cardinal triumph. He held
the Braves to six hits, and his two
singles were a major factor in the
St. Louis attack. He was in trouble
in the first innings, but worked
his way out of it. In the ninth
Hank Aaron opened with his 29th
home run, but Sadecki got the
next three men in order.
It was the first defeat suffered
by Bob Buhl against the Cards in
three tries this season, and the
Braves' fourth straight loss and
seventh defeat in the last eight
games.
The Pirates finally beat Don
Drysdale, handing him his first
defeat in his last seven starts.
George Witt started for the Bucs
and won his first game of the sea-
son.
Cal McLish was the losing
pitcher as the revived Chicago
Cubs notched their fifth victory
in six games.
San Francisco spotted the Phil-
lies six runs in the first two in-
nings, and then erupted for five
runs in the seventh inning to pull
the game out of the fire.
lajor League
Standings

CAMPUS ROOMS for graduate men for
fall semester. Comfortable, laige
singles. Phone NO 2-1958 after 5. C38
THREE ROOM apartment near campus.
Of!-streea parking. $75 per month.
Call NO 2-5053 after 5. C37
DOUBLE or SINGLE rooms.Graduate
women. Cooking. 517 E. Ann St. NO1
2-2826. C36
Read.
Daily
Classfied

'We're building again!T
A new front, new entry and
redesigned interior, completing our
building program.
Special SALE VALUES will be continuing
during the remodeling.
Excellent savings for the budget-minded
buyer in suits, sport coats, slacks,
spo rtsh i rts, dress shirts,
swimwear and shoes.

i

SAM'S STORE
122 E.Washington St.

TRAVEL FOR LESS
Deluxe meals included 99-passenger planes
Willow Run to Chicago $10 .... round trip X19

CAFE
PROMETH EAN
--- 508 E. William -
Wed. and Thurs.-Poetry
Fri. and Sat.-Folk songs
(50c door charge)
Sunday--JAZZ--9-1 2 p.m.
(75c door charge)
Open daily 8 p.m. to 2 am

I

jil

i

STATE STREET AT LIBERTY STREET

I;

I

-

..air

I1

AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pct.
New York...56 44 .564
Chicago ........57 44 .564
Baltimore.......57 45 .559
Cleveland.......50 46 .521
Washington ....48 50 .490
Detroit .........45 52 .464
Boston........41 57 .418
Kansas City ....38 58 .396
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct.
Pittsburgh ..E...59 40 .596
St. Louis ......56 44 .560
Milwauke ....54 43 .557

GB
2
6
9
11%
16
18
GB
3%
4

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