y i THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY.-JUL3t" L' 19'a's" THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY.. ]TTLY t I~U~i vt#1 YJAAi 1p lOUJ W, wart Clouts 3 Homers, s Pirates Pad NL Lead Track Stars Meet For Olympic Trials MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS IfflDS (S Maury Wills' bases-loaded triple3 won it for the Dodgers as they came from behind with five runs in the fifth off loser Jim Owens (3-9). Charlie Neal also drove in three for the Dodgers, two with a homer. Ed Roebuck, (6-1) won his fifth in a row in relief. B. G.' Smith homered for the Phils. Bill Skowron rapped a pair pf solo homers for the Yankees and Roger Maris hit his 25th, with a man on, as the Yankees put away a 21-9 record for June. Mickey Mantle and Tony Kubek ham- mered the other two. Ralph Terry (4-3) gave up seven hits, in- cluding homers by Jerry Lumpe and Andy Carey, but blanked the A's on two singles over the last six frames. STANFORD, Calif. (P) - Uncle V Sam's best track and field stars, including eight who won 1956 gold medals in Australia, match speed and strength today and tomorrow for coveted places on the United States Olympic team. Some of those eight stars of four years ago may not even qualify for this year's team in competition rated the toughest ever. "Heartbreaks will be plentiful here tomorrow night," forecast Larry Snyder, the Ohio State coach who heads the nation's Olympic track and field forces. "The competition is the best it's ever been -- ours and in every other country with perhaps only one or two exceptions." Seeking to defend Olympic titles are Parry O'Brien in the shot put, AT WIMBLEDON: Surprise Pair Upsets Australians in Doubles WIMBLEDON, England (,P) - Defending Queen Maria Bueno of Brazil and South Africa's Sandra Reynolds reached the singles final yesterday but a couple of brash youngsters from the Pacific Coast stole the show from the girls in the Wimbledon tennis champion- ships. Dennis Ralston of Bakersfield, Calif., a 1,7-year-old schoolboy, and his Mexican partner, Raphael Osuna, 21, a student at the Uni- versity of Southern California, swept into the last round of the men's doubles by beating Aus- tralia's second-seeded Rod Laver and Bob Mark in a 31/-hour, 86- game marathon. The score was 4-6, 10-8, 15-13, 4-6, 11-9. The victory climaxed a' phe-' nomenal march past some of the finest doubles teams in Europe. Gallery Forsakes Dinner A gallery of 18,000 became so enthralled that it skipped the din-' ner hour to wacth the excitingd struggle replete with exciting rallies and changing fortunes. The young team had eight match points-two in the 12th game of the fifth set, four in the 16th and two more in the 20th-and it was on the second of these that the nimble Osuna hit a shot at Laver and the red-head netted. The crowd gave the Americans a tremendous, standing ovation as they trudged off the court, arm in arm. The fans and officials hailed it as the best match of this 77- year-old fixture. Bueno Meets Reynolds Miss Bueno moved near her sec- ond straight Wimbledon crown by beating Britain's Christine Tru- man, 6-0, 5-7, 6-1.Miss Reynolds, a blue-eyed beauty with a cannon- shot forehand, eliminated left- handed Ann Haydon, British Wightman Cup ace, 6-3, 2-6, 6-4. They will clash tomorrow with the net - charging, crisp - hitting Brazilian a favorite although she has lost four times to Sandra. Neale Fraser and Laver meet today in an all-Australian and all- lefthanded men's singles final. discus thrower Al Oerter, hammer thrower Harold Connolly, broad jumper Greg Bell, high jumper Charlie Dumas, 200-meter sprint- er Bobby Morrow, 400-meter hur- dler Glenn Davis and 110-meter high hurdler Lee Calhoun. Only Connolly, Oerter and Davis are strong favorites in the com- petition among qualifliers from the armed forces, colleges and na- tional AAU. Sprint Competition Competition in the sprints ap- pears close all the way with Ray, Norton, the AAU king, and NCAA champion Charlie Tidwell of Kan- sas the favorites. Norton worked out at his former college track at San Jose State and is described as "eager to go" by his coach, Bud Winter. Hampered by injuries earlier in the year, Norton last week won both the 100 and 200-meter dashes in the AAU championships at Bakersfield, Calif., On the docket tonight are the hammer throw, high jump, jave- lin, shot put, broad jump, 400- meter hurdles, 100 - meter dash, 5,000-meter run and 800 meter pre- liminaries. Hard, Fast Track Stanford coach Payton Jordan says the track will be hard and fast. It was rolled and rerolled last night to harden the topping of crushed volcanic rock over clay. Jumpers will approach on grass runways mowed smooth like a putting green. High jumper John Thomas, who cleared 7'-2" at Bakersfield, says the setup is to his liking. Having cleared a record 7'-2'' indoors, he said, "There is no reason a jumper can't go as high outdoors as indoors." Jordan points out that Bob Gutowki's 15 feet 84 inches world record in the pole vault was set here on April 27, 1957. Harvard, Kent To Compete HANLEY - ON -THAMES, Eng- land UP) -- Two crews from Har- vard, Kent School of Connecticut, and the Detroit Boat Club, yester- day rowed into the quarter-finals of the Thames Challenge Cup competition of the Henley Royal Regatta. Today the Americans face each other. Harvard's unbeaten light- weights, seeking their third straight Thames Cup triumph, take on the heavier Kent eight. Detroit meets Eliot House of Har- vard. PIANOS-ORGANS NEW & USED Ann Arbor Piano & Organ Co. 213 E. Washington NO 3-3169 Xi A-1 New and Used lnstruments BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington NO 2-1834 X3 Grinnell's Music Festival Pianos NOW ON SALE More than 30 styles and finishes to select from. SAVE UP TO '185 NEW SPINET PIANO $479 USED PIANO SPECIALS Grands from .................$ 288 Uprights from...............$ 49 Spinet, floor sample......$ 395 Baldwin Grand, electric player $1,200 Chickering Grand.............$ 895 Grinnell upright..............$ 195 Trade-In Accepted Low Budget Terms Grinnel 's 323 S. Main St. X4 USED CARS AN ECONOMICAL barrel of fun. Red Isetta cony. R&H. Low mileage. Ex- cellent condition. NO 3-0302. N6 152 FORD 2-dr. coupe; excellent trans- portation. Radio, new tires. $125. NO 2-2110. N4 1948 PONTIAC. Great trans. R. & H. Highest offer takes it. NO 2-3061. N3 CLEAN '54 Volkswagon. Sunroof. New WSW tires, safety belts, radio. NO 3-3893. Ni TRANSPORTATION RIDERS wanted to Cape Cod area; leaving June 30, returning July 4. Call NO 2-3241; after 5, NO 8-6101. Gl CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessor- ies. warranted & guaranteed. See us for the best 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 Complete line of Hi Fi components including kits; complete service on radios, phonographs and Hi Fi equipments. HI F ISTUDIO 1317 South University, 1 block east at Campus Theatre. X21 BARGAIN CORNER MEN'S short-sleeve sport shirt $1.25. Skip-dents & seer-suckers sanforized wash & wear, asstd. colors. Sam's Store 122 E. Washington W1 LOST AND FOUND LOST: U-M Graduation ring. Initials P.C.W. inside. Phone NO 8-8838. Re- ward. Al FOR RENT LEASE to organized group, 20 to 30 students. 1026 Oakland. See by appt. only. NO 5-5291. C24 SINGLE ROOM for gentleman in best Southeast residential section. NO 8-6171. C23 CAMPUS: 2 bedrm. furnished, near Law School. Deluxe with air conditioner, TV outlets, all new furnishings. Twin beds with hotel deluxe innerspring and mattress. Off-street parking pro- vided. No vacancies at present, but Sept. assignments now being taken. NO 2-7787 days, NO 2-4351 evenings. C22 PLEASANT ROOM for bus. or college women. For summer or fall. Near the bus line. Breakfast privileges. $7.50 a week. Phone NO 8-6551. C20 RECREATION ROOM for rent facing Huron River. 1 miles from campus. To young, refined married couple only. Phone after 6 P.M. or before 10 A.M., NO 3-5126. , 017 006D STUDENT apartments close to campus at 344 S. Division. Phone Mr. Pray. F. A. Sergeant Co. Realtors, NO 2-3259. 012 NEAR ST. JOSEPH'S. Three rooms, fur- nished. Private bath. NO 2-5776, eve- nings NO 2-5140. CI. CAMPUS -- Clean furnished bachelor apartment, $75. Three room apart- ment, $95. 614 Monroe. NO 3-5224. C2 REAL ESTATE STOP and SEE 1804 Cooley Ave. $16,500 By owner, three yr. old, three bedroom ranch. Slate entry, large living room, dining area, tie bath. Aluminum storms, screens, gutters. Shrubs and flowers. Lot 53x170x101x150 on quiet dead end street one block from Wines and For- sythe schools. 1804 Cooley Ave. NO 3-6551. SEE IT TODAYI! R MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .80 2.00 2.96 3 96 2.40 3.55 4 1.12 2.80 4.14 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. doily Phone NO 2-4786 BUSINESS SERVICES For that weekend picnde Pick up your hotdogs, mustard, And mosquito spray at RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard NO 5-7131 / J18 TYPING DONE at reasonable rates. Call NO 8-8884 evenings. J15 ALTERATIONS and REPAIRS Laundry and Dry Cleaning Harriet's Haven 1025 E. Ann NO 5-5915 PERSONAL EMPLOYER WANTED To hire creative, energetic grad. Research, report writing, etc. NO 3-7756, evenings. F24 AN AGRICULTURAL, study group in Michigan applying 'itself to find out which way pigs' tails curl, discovered that 50 per cent curl clockwise, 18% per cent counterclockwise, and 3113 per cent both ways. P25 YOU CAN NOW buy a leather-covered toilet seat, decorated with your own coat of arms, for about $48. P26 GREAT SAVINGS-all Magazine subs. 1 yr.: Time--$3.87, Newsweek-$3.50, Life & Spts. Illustrated-$4.00. Special Student Rates. NO 2-3061. F18 STUDENTS WANTED To take part in psychological ex- periments. $1.25 per hour; apply at 1020 Administration Building. $14 I ( ,, ;' SOCIAL HOUR 5 to 7 P.M. Friday, July 1 and each Friday in July GR AD MIXER 9 to 12 P.M. Friday, July 1 MUSIC by the MEN OF NOTE Admission $1.00 VFW CLUB . . 314 East Liberty Everyone must be 21 or over I I bIUSIC SHOPS -CAMPUS- 211 S. State NO 8-9013 -DOWNTOWN- 205 E. Liberty NO 2-0675 for summer dining enjoyment .. . Samples from our tempting A IL The DEL RIO .. .known for its good pizza SPAGHETTI -- RAVIOLI -- STEAKS - CHOPS - CHICKEN Special Served Daily PASTIES-made every Wednesday- orders taken in advance FREE DELIVERY-CLOSED MONDAY 122 W. WASHINGTON ST. Phone NO 2-9575 I V SPAGHETTI HOUSE FOR THE FINEST IN PIZZA ltnu BROILED N. Y. STEER SIRLOIN STEAK, ONION RINGS 1I% lb. of western grain fed beef 1 I it * SPAGHETTI * CHICKEN * STEAK * RAVIOLI FA K "Only Italian Spaghetti House in Town" Businessman lunch served daily CARRY OUT and DELIVERY BROILED RIB LAMB CHOPS, APPLE MINT JELLY From U.S. prime lambs Good food...,expertly berved. in pleasant surroundings, to the most exacting taste. Luncheons.11:30to2:00 Dinners,5:00to7;00 Sunday: Dinners, 12:00 to 3:00 Closed Mondays We suggest that you telephone for reservationr dze Corner JWoue S. Thayer at Washington in Ann Arbor A block west of Rackham Bldg.-NO 6-6056 301 E. Liberty of 5th, NO 3-7363 OPEN SUNDAY 0 ROAST PRIME RIB EYE OF BEEF, AU JUS Roasted in coarse salt to hold in the delectable natural juices 0 11 I FRESH WHOLE LOBSTER, DRAWN BUTTER (11/2 lb. avg.) from the East Coast and kept in our lobster - tank to insure freshness { W-T- The GOLDEN APPLES Restaurant Featuring BROILED LAKE SUPERIOR TROUT, LEMON BUTTER the aristocrat of the Great Lakes III I III !11 11 I -7. -111-- 1I "- I 0