THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, JUNE M rR T1 H 6 ALYTUSAJN -'M Star Winner at Wimbledon DETROIT'S FOURTH STRAIGHT: Tigers Lose to Yankees; White Sox Beat Orioles MBLEDON, England ()- zar Mulloy laughed in the Af Father Time yesterday by cing into the third round of Wimbledon Men's Singles s Championship along with fellow Americans. 46-year-old Miami veteran ed Britain's top ranking Davies 6-3, 6-3, 6-4 in a r court battle of two tennis ations. loy-his crew cut hair now a battleship gray-called on the craft and skill gained in more than a quarter of a century of competition. Davies, 24 and strong as a young lion, chased from cor- ner to corner, strained for volleys Just beyond the reach of his racked and sometimes shook his head in wonder as Mulloy sent over a smoking drive of remark- able power. Brightest Spot From an American point of PORT SHORTS: Illini's Counts Ineligible To Play Football in '60 By The Associated Press CHAMPAIGN - Illinois' lead- ing halfback, Johnny Counts, yes- terday was pronounced scholas- tically ineligible for the 1960 football season. Counts, as a sophomore last sea- son, led the Illini in total yardage with 730 yards, topped pass-re- Court Hears Testmony OXFORD, Miss. (P)-All Ameri- ca fullback Charlie Flowers testi- fled yesterday Coach Jim Lee Howell of the New York Giants told him the National Football League would "spend every cent we've got to run" the new Ameri- can Football League out of busi- ness. . Flowers testified at a federal court hearing where the Giants are trying to prevent the Univer- sity of Mississippi star from sign- ing with the Los Angeles Charg- ers of the newly-organized pro football group. The Giants coach also told him, Flowers said, that a contract Flowers signed Dec. 1 was binding. "We're not going to let a two- bit athlete. take something away from us," Flowers quoted Howell as telling him. The Giants offered Flowers a bonus of $3,500 and a two-year, no-cut contract at $11,000 yearly. The Chargers offered Flowers a $10,000 bonus and a two-year contract calling for $17,500 per year with the same no-cut pro- visions. President Barron Hilton of the Chargers testified Tuesday and said Flowers would be the, highest paid man on the Chargers' roster. Flowers said Wellington T. Mara, Vice-President of the Giants, broke a promise by filing the Dec. 1 contract with the NFL commissioner's office, although they told him they would not file it until after the Sugar Bowl Game last New Year's Day. Flowers said Mara told him the Giants took the action "to keep me from signing with the Charg- ers." ceivers with 19 catches for 314 yards and was second in both rush- ing and scoring. It was the second blow in recent weeks for Pete Elliott, who makes his debut as Illini coach this fall. Earlier, another top halfback prospect, Gary Kolb, signed a bonus contract with the St. Louis baseball Cardinals to end his col- legiate competition. No Pitching Limits NEW YORK - National and American league pitchers will be allowed to play in both all-star games this year, Commissioner Ford C. Frick announced yester- day. The previous ruling confined the hurlers to one of the games. The new ruling reads: "There is to be no limitation on the use of pitchers other than they cannot pitch more than three innings in either of the games." However, a pitcher in the lineup at the end of nine innings, if the game is tied, may continue at the discretion of a manager. The first game will be played at Kansas City July 11 and the sec-' ond at Yankee Stadium here July 13. * * * Action Postponed NEW ORLEANS - A federal Judge yesterday delayed action on a suit filed by the Detroit Lions to keep Louisiana State halfback Johnny Robinson from playing in the rival American Football League. Judge J. Skelly Wright gave attorneys for the Lions until to- morrow to file additional briefs. Attorney Carl J. Schumacher, representing the National Foot- ball League club, described Robin- son as "a football player of extra- ordinary ability." He said Robin- son signed with Detroit in a Baton Rouge, La., hotel room on Dec. 2 and was given $2,500 in cash as a bonus. The Detroit contract, Schu- macher said, was for one year at a $14,500 salary. Attorney Theo Cangelosi, chair- man of the LSU Board of Super- visors, represented Robinson and said Lions President Edward Rob- inson made the trip to. Baton Rouge because-of competition from Dallas in the new league. view this victory by Mulloy was9 the brightest spot in a day which: saw the nine first round survivors from the United States reduced to four. Eighteen Yanks began; play Monday. The American winners in ad- dition to Mulloy: Earl (Butch) Bucchholz of St. Louis defeated John Cranston, a Marine from San Marino, Calif., 6-4, 6-3, 6-1. Jack Frost of Monterey, Calif., Finland 6-3, 6-3, 6-8, 8-6. outlasted Reino Nyyssonen of MacKay Wins Seconded-seeded Marry Mac- Kay of Dayton, former Michigan tennis team captain, eliminated Adrian Bey of Rhodesia 6-2, 8-6, 6-4. First-seeded Neale Fraser of Australia also had an easy ride, beating Dutchman Willem Maris 6-2, 6-3, 6-2. The American victories hardly made up for these heavy losses: Third-seeded Rod (the Rocket) Laver of Australia swamped Her- bie Flam of Beverly Hills, Calif., 6-2, 6-2, 6-2. Laver never last a service game. Jan-Erik Lundquist, a blond Swedish slugger, ousted Dennis 'Ralston of Bakersfield, Calif., 6-4,' 6-1, 9-7. Ralston is the ,United States junior champion. Big Jean Grinda of France toyedwith Mal Fox of Baltimore 6-0, 6-1, 6-2. McKinley Loses Pierre Darmon of France hung on grimly to defeat Charles Mc- Kinley of St. Louis, 6-4, 6-2, 3-6, 4-6, 6-1. Fatigue robbed McKin- ley of his chance in the last set. The gloomy American picture was relieved by Janet Hopps of Seattle. In one of the few second round women's matches of the day Miss Hopps surprised Suzy Kormoczy, a 38-year-old Buda- pest housewife, 6-3, 3-6, 9-7. Mrs. Kormoczy, the sixth seed, was th6 first seeded player to fall in either the men's or women's singles. Karen Hantze, of San Diego, Calif., and Mrs. Dorothy Head Knode, of Panama City, also gained the third round. ..Miss Hantze, 17, required less than 30 minutes to beat Mrs. A. H. Thomas of Britain, 6-1, 6-2. Mrs. Knode, formerly of New York didn't need much more time to eliminate Mrs. Laura Lou Bryan of Tampa, Fla., 6-2, 6-2. In one of the' nerve stretching matches of the day Ramanathan Krishnan, the seventh seed from India, eliminated Andres Gimeno, a brilliant Spaniard who had rated as the dark horse of the field. The score was 2-6, 6-3, 6-0, 2-6, 6-3. Britain's Billy Knight came within two points of eliminating Denmark's Kurt Nielsen, the run- ner-up in 1954 and 1956. The "Great Dane" played sluggish tennis until he reached the very, edge of disaster and then he' pulled it out 2-6, 6-4, 2-6, 11-9, 6-3. r' ---*-- WINS AT WIMBLEDON-Former Michigan star Barry MacKay, second seeded at the Wimbledon Men's Tennis Tournament, de- feated A~rian Bey of Rhodesia to mave into the third round along with three other Americans. AT TITLE FIGHT: Furor Raised over Crowds NEW YORK (VP) - The storm about the crowd handling at Mon- day's heavyweight title fight con- tinued yesterday with statements from the police commissioner, the promoters and the boxing com- mission. The squabble enhanced the chances of Los Angeles, Chicago or Dallas as possible sites for the third match. Bill Fugazy, a director of Fea- ture Sports, Inc., promoting its first fight, estimated the actual Polo Grounds crowd at 55,000, in- cluding 15,000 to 20,000 gate crash- GRAD SOCIAL HOUR SUMMER RECREATION-The zational meeting today in the summer. Students and faculty participate. Sailing Union, of the Club will hold its organi- to arrange itself for the University are invited to ers. The paid attendance was an- nounced at 31,892. Fugazy repeated earlier warnings that he would take the third match out of town unless Mayor Robert Wagner in- tervenes. Stephen Kennedy, New York Police Commissioner, who was. blasted by Fugazy, replied in a telephone statement dictated to his office from Miami where he is on vacation. Kennedy Replies "The police of New York City will not be used as bouncers, ticket takers or ushers for prize fight promoters," it read. "The police function is to enforce public law for the protection of all the public and not to assist fight promoters who chisel on expenses. "With an estimated gate of $4,000,000 an adequate number of employees should have been hired to conduct the business (this word was underscored) of running the fight properly. I do not intend to strip the city of protection for the benefit of any fight promoters or private business enterprise." The $4,000,000 Kennedy men- tioned included theater-TV and all the extras. Fugazy claimed he had 635 guards, special police, ticket tak- ers, gatemen, watchers, ushers and supervisors. This included 150 pri- vate detectives and 75 "security representatives." He estimated the cost "in excess of $25,000." Gates Crashed Fugazy claimed the biggest prob- lem at the Polo grounds was the crowd outside the park which crashed the gate and scattered out in the ringside section, lo- located on the playing field. He said all the trouble started when late arriving ticket holders were blocked from the gates. The promoter said he had wired Mayor Wagner on Sunday that he had reports that several unruly groups would cause trouble and asked the Mayor to intercede with Commissioner Kennedy to provide "adequate police protection." Fu- gazy said Roy Cohn also a direc- tor of the promotional group, called Kennedy and repeated the request but was told the Police Department was not in the en- tertainment or fight business. Gen. Melvin Krulewitch, chair- man of the New York State Ath- letic Commission, issued a lengthy statement in which he said the promoters had been directed to provide adequate personnel to handle the crowd as it was their responsibility. 300 Promised The chairman also said he had spoken with Police Department officials, as late as the afternoon of the fight, and had been as- DIAL NO 8-6416 NOW SNOWING M--M present / GINNESSF NEW AMAZING1 DUAL ROLEI "The SCAPEGOAr sud 0, "s.Nvo"b DAPNE DU MAURIA BETTE DAVIS *AND >vsau < sured that 300 police would be on hand outside the ball park and that a majority of these would move inside at 9:40 p.m. (EDT). He also said the police advised him they would not escort the fighters to and from their dress- ing rooms and that Fugazy had assured him special police would handle that chore. Gen. Krulewitch said temporary work permits had been issued to 200 ushers, 108 special policemen and 50 ticket takers for a total of 358 in addition to previously li- censed specials that he "under- stood came to an additional 100." Moore Bout Moved Back NEW YORK OP) - Archie Moore's light heavyweight defense against Germany's Erich Schoep- pner, scheduled for Toronto July 18, has been postponed to give the champ more time to pare down to the 175-pound limit. Jack Fugazy, Executive Director of Feature Sports, Inc., which is co-promoting the' match with Dave Rush of Toronto, announced the postponement after a confer- ence with Jack Kearns, Moore's manager. He said a new date, pos- sibly Aug. 18, will be set within a few days, pending further dis- cussions, Originally, it had been planned to stage the Moore - Schoeppner bout and a heavyweight match between Sonny Liston and Zora Folley in Denver as a theater tele- vision doubleheader. It was not known whether the Folley-Liston match would be held on the scheduled date. A closed circuit television com- pany which was so successful with the Ingemar Johansson - Floyd Patterson fight Monday night, had planned the electronic double- header. Irving Kahn, president of the corporation, was in Miami. Fugazy said he hoped to set up a new date after discussing mat- ters with Kahn in a few days. DETROIT () - Kent Hadley slugged a pair of home runs and Roger Maris hit his 20th of the season last night, pacing the streaking New York Yankees to a 7-3 bombardment of the Detroit Tigers before 30,394 spectators. Hadley, filling in for the injured Bill Skowron at first base, drove in three runs with his second and third home runs. Maris, the Amer- ican League's,top home run hit- ter and run producer, hit a Hank Aguirre 3-0 pitch into the upper right field deck with a mate aboard in the eighth. For the league-leading Yan- kees, it was the sixth victory in a row, the 13th In 14 games and the 15th in 17. Art Ditmar scat- tered eight hits, including solo home runs by Al Kaline and Rocky Colavito, for his sixth triumph. Ryne Duren bailed Ditmar out of trouble in the ninth. Finally Scores Colavito broke Detroit's 28-in- ning scoring famine with his 11th home run in the second inning. Kaline hammered his seventh in the eighth inning. Charlie Max- well singled across Detroit's other run in the sixth. Hadley's home runs came in the second and fourth innings and got Ditmar in front of Paul Foy- tack 3-1. The Tigers narrowed it to 3-2 before the Yankee dyna- mite exploded again in the eighth. Hector Lopez greeted Aguirre with a triple. Mickey Mantle doubled Lopez home and Maris socked his two-run homer. Bob Bruce relieved Aguirre and gave up another run on a walk, a single and a throwing error by second- baseman Casey Wise. The loss was Detroit's fourth in a row, Chicago 3, Baltimore 1 CHICAGO (/P) - White Sox pitcher Early Wynn snapped his five-game losing streak last night with a masterful two-hit 3-1 tri- umph over the Baltimore Orioles. The 40-year-old Wynn gave up a single to the first man to face him, Mary Breeding. He did not allow another hit until pinch hit- ter Clint Courtney smashed a single with one out in the eighth. For Wynn it was his third tri- umph agansit six losses. The loser was starter Jack Fisher, the first of three Baltimore hurlers. Wynn now has won 274 major league games-more than any ac- tive pitcher in the game. Wynn struck out seven and walked four. Score in Third The Sox scored their three runs in the third on three hits. Gene Freese started with a double to left and Jim Landis walked. Wynn sacrificed. Freese then scored and Landis moved to third on Luis Aparacio's sacrifice. Nellie Fox followed with a single scoring Landis and Minnie Minoso sent Fox across with the third run on a double to center, Baltimore got back a run i the fourth when Wynn had trouble with his control and issued walks to Gene Stephens, Gene Woodling and Jim Gentile. Stephens crossed the plate as Gus Triandos hit into a double play. Brooks Robin- son ended the Inning with a fly to Minoso. Threaten Again The White Sox threatened in the sixth when Fox and Minoso led off with singles. However, Roy Sievers forced Fox at third. Joe Ginsberg popped to Breeding and Sievers was forced by Al Smith. Wynn got into trouble briefly in the ninth when after one out, Minoso dropped Woodling's fly ball for an error. Gentile forced Woodling and Wynn was out of the jam when Triandos tapped in front of the plate and Ginsberg threw him out. * * * Cleveland 1, Washington 0 CLEVELAND(A) - Ted Bows- field limited the Washington Sen- ators to five hits in pitching the Cleveland Indians to a 1-0 victory last night. A first-inning run on a triple by Jim Piersall and a single by Harvey Kuenn gave the 24-year- old southpaw all he needed in winning his third game of the season. He has lost two. The loser was starter Bill Fisch- er, who gave up five hits, struck out four batters and. walked none in the seven innings he worked. He now has a 2-3 record. Truman Clevenger finished the mound duties for the Senators. Bowsfield struck out three bat- ters and walked three. He gave rp no more than one hit an inning and only one of them was for extra bases-a double by Bob Al- lison. Washington got a runner as far as third base only in the sixth inning, when with one out Bows- field walked Billy Gardner and Allison and the runners advanced on a long fly to right field by Jim Lemon. Pete Whisenant hit a fly to Piersall in center field to end the inning. .t Hajor League S tanding AMERICAN LEAGUE w L Pet. GB New ..York ..... .35 22 .614 Baltimore.......37 27 .578 1Y2 Cleveland.......32 25 .561 3 Chicago........32 29 .525 5 Detroit .........29 29 .500 6Yz washington ....25 32 .439 10 Kansas City ....26 35 .426 11 Boston.........21 38 .356 15 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 7, Detroit 3 Chicago 3, Baltimore. 1 Cleveland 1, washington 0 Kansas City 2, Boston 1 TODAY'S GAMES New York at Detroit Baltimore at Chicago Washington at Cleveland Boston at Kansas City (N) NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh .....39 21 .650 Milwaukee ...34 23 .596 3Y2 San Francisco ..34 29 .540 61f Cincinnati .....30 31 .492 9% St. Louis .......29 32 .475 101 Los Angeles .. ..27 33 .450 12 Chicago.... ..23 34 .404 144/ Philadelphia ...24 37 .393 15 4 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 5, St. Louis 0 Philadelphia 6, Chicago 3 Milwaukee 7, San Francisco 4 Los Angeles at Cincinnati postponed, rain TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at Pittsburgh (N) San Francisco at Milwaukee Los Angeles at Cincinnati (N) Chicago at Philadelphia (N) . . .4 5-7 P.M., Friday, June 24 VFW LODGE 314 East Liberty Sailing Club To Begin Summer Activity Today Persons attending mnust be 21 or over Sponsored by the Graduate Student Council HIGH ADVENTURE ON THE MIGHTY MISSISSIPPI 1 Mark Twain's romantic rogues came to thrilling life on the big CinemaScope screen! TONY RANDALL ,..*,,ARCHIE MOORE ;JI EDDIE HODGES HUsH COD NTENDS DIAL NO 5-6290 TONIGHT A meeting for those interested in joining the Summer session of the University Sailing Club will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in Rms. 3R and 3S of the Union. The program will include a resume of all the club's activities, movies of past sailing weekends and slides of the boats and grounds. Following the movies, re- freshments will be served. Membership in the club is open to any student or employe of the University, and non-students are encouraged to join. Most new members are inexperienced and in- struction is given on every phase of sailing and seamanship. Mem- bership in the past has been split evenly between the sexes, with perhaps a third being graduate students and another fourth fac- ulty and employes of the Univer- sity. The club is located on 286-acre Base Line Lake at the foot of Peach Mountain. The boats are a fleet of eight Jet 14 sloops, similar to the famous international 14 sloop, one Tech dinghy and a crash boat for unlucky sailors. Facilities also include a 200-foot dock with 90 feet in floating sec- tions, a swimming raft and beach, a boat house and a workshop. In the past, members have kept their private boats at the lake; last year these included two snipes, a 505, a catamaran, two sailfish, a none design sloop and a sailing canoe. Besides sailing instruction the club also sponsors moonlight sails for the romantic, picnics and a once-a-week racing series. After weekly Thursday meetings, which are held at 7:30 p.m. in 311 West Engineering, a "shore school" is held. HAIRSTYLES GALORE for the FEMININE SET!! " No Appointments Needed " Air Conditioned The Doscolo Barbers Near Michigan Theatre Daily Classifieds Bring Results 'AIE FIRST BRA WNAT WIIS £ACH! SIDE IHIVIDUALLY! ! The two sides of your body don't match! . 0 But each cup in Warner's new 'Tomorrow' gives and adjusts N { individually to eacch side! . '.You get perfect fit all day, every day, month in and month out? * And the nicest, natural-est shaping you ever saw! t Cool ( tool All-around ventilation ends that hot "perspire-y" / feeling! 0 All at a price as pretty as you'll look-from $2.50! } .A- 'I I I COMING FRIDAY "THE STORY OF RUTH" I" 9 S.G.C. a truly new kind of bra rR~wxc y . i a d S ..4.- r.. . Y71i an wit~aHS , y . -wl l iR «. wcewntracss~ts expand;' l " C/u ena qudd -1 *. contracts TONIGHT AND TOMORROW expands