THE MICHIGAN DAILYTIK acKay, Buchholz Lose at Wimbledon AID RUSSIAN EFFORT: Soviet Gymnasts. Boost Olympic Sc( W IMBLEDON, England(AP)-The 've - jarring court collapse of ng Earl Buchholz when he was the threshold of a notable vic- y and the defeat of Barry Mac- y in a welter of double faults ,de this one of America's dark- days in the Wimbledon tennis ampionships. Young Buchhold five times had -seeded Neale Fraser of Aus- ,lia within a single point of feat before he fell writhing onto grass-victim of cramps and old ankle injury. Ie was leading 6-4, 3-6, 6-4, -15 when inability to stand up de it impossible for him to rry on and Fraser was declared e winner by default. Shortly afterward, MacKay, the power-hitter formerly of the iiversity of Michigan, who isI seeded second, went down before the inspired stroking of Ni Ala Pietrangeli, the off-and-on rackRt artist from Italy, 16-14, 6-2, 3 .6, 6-4. MacKay's blazing power was helpless before Pietrangeli's deft darts. The six-foot-four American greased the skids for his down- fall by serving double faults at critical points of the match. These two quarter-final set- backs left the United States with no men's representatives in this oldest of tennis championships- the first time in more than a quarter of a century the Yanks have been so degraded. Buchholz's trouble stemmed from a torn ankle ligament which he had suffered in football five years ago. Zays, Gentile Lead Majors Ls Batting AveragesClmb He said he began getting cramps and, when he put weight on his right ankle, the ankle turned. MacKay served 14 doublefaults, ten in the first set which he lost with a doublefault at set point. Generally he was wild, particu- larly off his backhand, and no match for the agile Italian. When MacKay lost the final point with a wild smash that went yards wide, the crowd was still talking about Buchholz' collapse on the famed center court. When Buchholz fell in the 29th game the fashionable Wimbledcn center court gallery-18,000 ca- pacity-let out an audible gasp, then rose as one to watch as attendants rushed to his side. Although tennis rules call ror an automatic withdrawal under such circumstances, a handful of men, two in uniform, worked feverishly over the American's squirming form. They taped his right ankle and in about five minutes he was up and trying desperately to shake away the kinks. He waved away the officials and refused to de- fault. Fraser, the U.S. titleholder, played streakily. At times he won furious volleying exchanges with his youthful rival and befuddled Buchholz with tricky drop shots and stop volleys. But the Aussie's big weapon -a crackling high- bounding service-was poor. He seldom hit with his first delivery and he served 11 double-faults. Buchholz reached match point In the fourth set while leading 5-4, twice when ahead 6-5, and twice in the 24th game. The last time Fraser uncorked two big services to save the day. Fraser served and Buchholz dumped the ball into the net, giving the Australian the game and making the set score 15-15. Buchholz hobbled to the base line to serve. He sent over a de- livery, then volleyed wide, losing the point. He served again - a fault-and that was all. In the day's other major singles matches, all behind schedule, Roy I Emerson of Australia defeated Mario Llamas of Mexico 2-6, 6-0, 6-2, 9-7, and fourth-seeded Luis Ayala of Chile rallied to beat Jan-Erik Lundquist of Sweden 9-11, 0-6, 6-1, 10-8, 6-4. Both went into the quarter-finals. I Christine Truman of Britain en- tered the women's quarter-finals beating Vera Puzejova of Czecho- slovakia 7-5, 6-3. MOSCOW (P) - Some more So- viet Olympic pointmakers are cer- tain to be back this year snagging those extra places that show up so well in the final totals. This time it's gymnastics. Minor sport or not, the figures count and in the last two Olympics the Russians have been taking more than a bear's share of the loot. Shakhlin Returns But the national championships just finished in Leningrad proved that three 1956 champs, 'at least, will be back in Rome. These are the redoubtable Boris Shakhlin of the Ukraine, who won the horse event; Larisa Latynina of the Ukraine who took three gold medals at Melbourne; and Albert Azaryan, the 1956 champ on the rings. As usual, it looks as if the Russians have a strong reserve. The final selections won't be made until a little nearer Olympic time but chief coach Nikolai Popov says Shakhlin, Azaryan, Yuri Ti- tov and Valery Kerdemelidi are definitely choices. Eight Man Contest There will be six men on the team. That leaves eight chaps fighting it out for the remaining two places. Popov indicated he would take the 12 and make theni all compete again before final selection is made. The 28-year-old Shakhlin has ruled the roost here for three years since Chukarin retired. He has figured himself, Titov and Azaryan as certainly in. He also said Japanese gymnasts furnish the ;nost serious threat to Soviet. supremacy, with West Germany, Finland and Switzerland "dan- gerous." Shakhlin has been quoted as saying the Japanese will be strong- er in the vaults and calisthenics than the Europeans and place high in the rings. He picks Ta- kashi Ono and Masao Takemoto as two of Nippon's probable stars based on the strong showing the Japanese team made in competi- tion in Moscow two years ago. Complete Control Experts here rate Shakhlin high on self possession and determina- tion to win, with complete muscle and nerve control. If anyone can take the all' around gold medal as Victor Chukarin did four years ago, it's Shakhlin, these experts say. He won his favorite event, the side horse, with 19.5 points in the recent Leningrad championships; placed second on the rings, with 19.4; was fifth with 19 points in the horse vaults; fourth with 19.1 on the parallel bars, and fourth with 19.05 points on the horizontal bar. Mrs. Latynina, who has come back itno competition after hav- ing a baby, placed second in the Leningrad championships to Po- lina Astakhova, another Ukrainian lass. It was Polina's second na- tional championship in a row. S won this one with 77.9 points. M Latynina, however, was only .15 a point behind. Figure they were competing a tournament that included ' mara Manina, of Leningrad, world champion, and Sofiya Mi atova of Moscow, a former wo champion, and you see what you got. You've got, for one thing, fc almost sure travelers to Rome and then there are such reser as Tamara Lyukhina who plat fourth behind Miss Muratova the women's nationals and Mi gareta Niolayeva who placed six with a 76.3 total, When the roll is called in Ror you can bet the Russians are gol to be fighting for every fracti of a point. Competitions recently ha shown that outcome of team a especially individual competitic in the Olympics are going to settled not by points but by ht dredths of a point. v _-__._ NEW YORK (-P)-Willie Mays won the National League Rookie- of-the-Year Award in 1951. The following season Jim Gentile be- gan his professional baseball ca- reer with Santa Barbara of the California League. Today, Mays, star San Francis- co outfielder leads the Nationa League in batting with a .348 av- erage while Gentile, Baltimore's rookie first baseman, tops the American League with a .347 mark. Both Mays and Gentile noved up from third place with consist- ent hitting in last week's games. Willie climbed nine points with 12 hits in 29 tries and Gentile picked up 19 points with seven safeties in 13 times at bat. The Orioles obtained Gentile from the Los Angeles farm system. Norm Larker, the veteran Los Angeles first sacker, gained 22 Softballers Total 70 Runs The results of the first day's play in the summer IM softball tournament seem to indicate that it will be a season marked by few, if any, pitchers' duels. Chemical Engineering defeated University Television 11-4. Alpha Kappa Lambda scored 15 times to outlast Alpha Tau Omega who crossed the plate a mere 13 times. Pharmacology defeated Mathe- matics 12-2 and Trees lost to AFIT 8-5. In tonight's contests the Ram- blers face the Choaches and Nu- clear Engineering meets Nu Sigma Nu. 3 1! points with a 10-for-11 perform- ance and moved into second place in the National League at .345. Dick Groat of Pittsburgh dropped one notch to third place at .338 and his teammate, Roberto Cle- mente, also fell one place to fourth at .332. Groat tailed off two points and Clemente three. The figures include Sunday's games. Pete Runnels of Boston, the American League leader a weep ago, dropped into the runner-up position behind Gentile as a re- sult of a 15 point decrease to .337. Runnels collected only seven hits in 30 at bats. Stock Reduction Sale! BABY CORD PANTS WASH AND WEAR SIX COLORS Reg. $4.95 Value $299 NO LIMIT-Boston University's John Thomas points to the figures that list the height of the bar when he broke the world, high jump record. He is determined to raise this already miracu- lous record. Thoma.s .BreaksRecord, Short Sleeve SPORT SHIRTS... . $10 Whites and assorted colors I .I Major League Standings i AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. Baltimore.......42 27 .609 New York ..... .37 25 .597 Cleveland ......35 27 .565 Chicago ........36 30 .545 Detroit ........31 32 .492 Washington ....28 35 A44 Kansas City ....26 39 .400 Boston ........22 52 .344 SUNDAY'S RESULTS Washington 4-7, Detroit 2-4 Baltimore 9, Kansas City 2 Chicago 4-21, Boston 3-7 New York 6-6, Cleveland 2-7 (2nd game, 11 innings) YESTERDAY'S RESULT Baltimore Washington (N) TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at Boston (N) Kansas City at New York (N) Cleveland at Baltimore (N) Chicago at Washinigton (N) GB 1 3 4 74 10 13q 17 NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Pittsburgh . 41 24 .631 Milwaukee..,.36 25, .590 3 San Francisco . .36 31 .537 6 St. Louis .......32 34 .485 9V2 Cincinnati ... 31 34 .477 10 Los Angeles ....30 34 .469 101 Philadelphia .. .27 39 .409 1414 Chicago ........25 37 .403 14% SUNDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 7-7, Pittsburgh 6-5 Los Angeles 6, Milwaukee 3 Cincinnati 10, San Francisco 4 Philadelphia 3-3, St. Louis 2-4 (First game, 12 innings) YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games were scheduled TODAY'S GAMES San Francisco at Pittsburgh (N) Milwaukee at Chicago Cincinnati at St. Louis (N) Los Angeles at Philadelphia (N) Leaps 7 Feel BAKERSFIELD, Calif., (AP) -"I can keep going until I miss." Such was the philosophical at- titude of Boston University's John Thomas of high jump fame as he awaited-as a spectator-the final events of the National AAU Track and Field Championships. The 19-year-old sophomore, through with competition here, electrified fans when he leaped 7 feet 2 inches. It was the highest ever in an outdoor meet. Thomas' performance was the outstanding feat of a program that dragged on for more than six t, 2 Inches hours; only a few of the 7,000 present earlier were on hand at the finish after midnight. Thomas, who jumped 7-2% in- doors last winter, again surpassed the recognized world record of 7-1 held by Yuri Stepanov of Russia. set in 1957, and his own pending mark of 7-134 set last month. "I just had to make it," said the 6-foot-5 Thomas. He referred to the fact that on the previous jump he cleared the bar but the wind dislodged it a few moments later. WELCOME STU DENTS! It's a Michigan tradition to have your hair styled by our tonsorial experts. x AIR CONDITIONED 0 10 HAIRCUTTERS DASCOLA BARBERS Near Michigan Theatre Many other big buys -Come in - Look - See! SAM'S STORE.' 122 East Washington Sam J. 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