THE MICHIGAN DAILY enators Dump Yai ikees, 5-3; in 10th, 5-4 COLLEGE FANS MUST WAIT TV Football Schedule Ready August Pittsburgh Wins * By The Assoolated Press The Pittsburgh Pirates, shut out intil the ninth, defeated second place Milwaukee 5-4 in 10 innings on Rocky Nelson's second home run last night and regained a 4/2 - game lead in the National League race. In the American, New York's lead was trimmed to one game over idle Cleveland when Wash- ington beat the Yankees 5-3 in 10 innings. Baltimore's third place Orioles moved within two games of the Yankees with a 9-4 victory at Bos- ton in the only other AL game scheduled. New York opens a two- game series at Baltimore tonight, In the other NL games Los An- geles defeated ' third place San Francisco 8-0 behind the four-hit pitching of southpaw Johnny Pod- r'es. Philadelphia defeated Cincin- nati 2-0 on Robin Roberts' four- hit pitching, and St. Louis beat Chicago's Cubs 3-2. Nelson Smashes Homer Nelson, who led off the ninth with a homer for the first Pitts- burgh run, came through with his game-winning smash after Bob Skinner was credited with a hit on a grounder which second base- man Alvin Dark couldn't handle. ROCKY NELSON ...game-winning homer The Pirates turned to the long ball to take the rubber of a three- game series with Milwaukee. Milwaukee right - hander Carl Willey blanked Pittsburgh on six hits for eight innings as the Braves pushed across single runs in the fifth and eighth. However, the Pirates exploded for three runs in the top of the ninth only to have the Braves tie the count in their half and send the game into overtime. Allison Serves Winning Blow Bob Allison crashed a two-run homer in the 10th inning last night as Washington chopped down a three-run New York lead for a 5-3 victory. New York surged ahead in the first inning, when Roger Maris socked his 26th home run scoring Tony Kubek, who had singled. The Yankees stretched their lead to 3-0 in the fourth when Mickey Mantle scored. Washington tied the score with single runs in the seventh, eighth and ninth innings. In the seventh, the run came on a walk to Allison and singles by Jim Lemon and Billy Gardner. Washington starter Pedro Ra-1 mos limited the Yankees to three hits before he left for a pinch hitter in the bottom of the ninth inning. Chuck Stobbs retired the next six New York batters without a hit. Whiz Kids Win Baltimore's whiz kids showed they are far from finished by shellacking the Red Sox 9-4 be- fore a family night audience of 22,491 at Fenway Park last night. Chuck Estrada, 22-year-old right handed rookie limited the Hose to five hits as he racked up his ninth victory of the season only hours after being named to the American League All-Star team. The Orioles, on the shaky side during the Independence Day lapse by second baseman Mary Breeding, snapped back to belt Red Sox pitching for 14 hits as they took the series from the Bosox. The Birds bombed Tom Brewer from the mound in the fourth inning while running up a 5-0 lead. Roberts Blanks Reds The old master Robin Roberts pitched masterly baseball as he shut outmthe Cincinnati Redlegs, 2-0, at Cincinnati last night. The Philadelphia righthander limited the Redlegs to four hits, and in one stint, retired 19 men in order, from the last out of the second inning through the eighth. Jerry Lynch led off the ninth with a single, but a double play and an easy grounder nailed down the victory. His opponent, Don Newcombe, another shrewd pitching veteran, Links Fans Hold Snead As Favorite TORONTO (P) - Sam Snead popped up with the touring golf pros yesterday, and as usual, was installed as favorite to win the $27,000 Canadian Open starting today.- This is old stuff to the slammer. The 143-member field includes six former Canadian Open cham- pions, including Snead who has won it three times in 22 years. He still has the shots in his bag to make it an even four and equal the record set by the famous Leo Diegel of Washington in the 1920's. The 48-year-old Snead toured the suburban St. George's layout, site of the 72-hole tournament, in leisurely fashion. He took the three-foot "gimme" putts along with the others who wanted a close inspection of the 158-bunker course before firing starts in earnest this morning. Despite the presence of such stars as defending champion Doug Ford of Paradise, Fla., slim Dow Finsterwald of Tequesta, Fla., and sweet - swinging Ken Venturi of Palo Alta, Calif., links fans still like Snead, the pappy of them all who was counting his money as a tournament pro when many of them were toddlers. The lowest score reported to- day was a six-under-par 66 by Doug Sanders, 27-year-old Miami Beach pro who won the Open in 1956 at Montreal with a 273 score. Other previous Open winners to show were Wes Ellis, Jr., of Aldercress, N.J., who won top money in 1958; power-hitting George Bayer of San Gabriel, Calif., 1957 Open champion, and veteran Jim Ferrier of San Fran- cisco, who won in 1940 and again in 1941. Leading the Canadian contin- gent is 45-year-old Stan Leonard of Vancouver who joined the gold trail five years ago. went through the first four innings eliminating a dozen Phils before yielding a hit. The duel went scoreless for five innings. The Phils took eight hits from Newk, but only two runs; he fanned three. White Triples Sharp relief pitching by Lindy McDaniel and a run-scoring triple in the eighth inning by Bill White today gave the St. Louis Cardinals a 3-2 victory over the last place Chicago Cubs. McDaniel, replacing starter Curt Simmons in the seventh with the score tied 2-2 after Ernie Banks' two-run homer for the Cubs in the sixth, was credited with his fourth triumph against three losses. The loser at Los Angeles was Mike McCormick, the Giants' young southpaw, who had held the Dodgers scoreless for 22 innings before last night. Podres, with seven. strikeouts, ended Willie Mays' batting streak at 19 games. The victory brought Los Angeles to an even .500 for the first time since May 2. NEW YORK-College football fans who have yet to buy tickets for a big game this season may as well wait three more weeks. That game, whatever one it may be, might be televised but the ticket buyers won't find out about it until Aug. 1. That's the date the televising network and the colleges involved in the televised gamed-have agreed upon for the announcement. Previously, the NCAA-controlled television schedule has been an- nounced around May 1, or some three months before the. date set for the 1960 TV schedule release. Why the holdup this year? Time To Sell Tickets The obvious answer is more time for ticket sales. The Associated Press has learned that the ' schedule has been completed for sometime and' is resting in a desk drawer just waiting for the go-ahead. As us- ual, it includes the Army-Navy game, and 1959 national cham- pion Syracuse and most of the other big powers are on it. The TV season opens with. Georgia- Alabama at Birmingham Sept. 17. In fact the 1960-61 television, program, formulated by the TV committee of the National Col- legiate Athletic Association, stip- ulates: ". . . selection of specific games shall be made in 1960 with- in four weeks after the day on which the national television rights are awarded.. . Announcement that ABC was awarded the TV rights was made on March 15-almost four months ago. When asked why the delay in the announcement of the sched- ule, Asa Bushnell, commissioner of the Eastern College Athletic Conference and a TV committee member, cited another section of the same paragraph which reads: "The carrying network and/or the sponsor (s) shall make ar- rangements for the telecasting of the games directly with the mem- ber colleges competing in them, and public announcement of each' game involved shall be made at. a time agreed upon by the net- work and/or sponsor (s) with the participating colleges." Bushnell added that the date agreed is Aug. 1, But, Mr. Bushnell, wasn't the late date set so advance ticket sales on TV games wouldn't,lag once the announcement was made? Network Decision "Some schools prefer an early announcement, others a late one," Bushnell replied, "and the TV committee didn't feel it should set the date. It was therefore left up to the network and the schools. ABC has arranged the date with the unanimous consent of the schools." There is one significant dif- ferencewin this year's schedule. Specific games involving Big Ten teams will be announced at the time of the entire schedule. In recent seasons the Big Ten games, usually two or three, were merely listed as . :Big Ten game, teams to be announced." There will be a national TV game on eight of 12 Saturdays through Dec. 3, and a national game on Thanksgiving Day. On the other four Saturdays, the country will be divided into three regions with a different TV game in each. MacKay Leads Players Picked for Cup Team NEW YORK (f)-A trio of play- ers averaging only 21 years of age was named yesterday by U.S. Davis Cup officials for the American zone first round matches with Canada at Quebec City on July 15-17. Named with the youngsters is Bart Bartzen, 33-year-old south- paw from Dallas who also is as- sistant captain of the team. He may play but the major portion of the competition against the Cana- dians is expected to be handled by Barry MacKay, 25, of Dayton, Ohio, and two 19 year olds from St. Louis, Earl Buchholz and Charles Mckinley. The selections were announced by David Freed of Salt Lake City, new captain of the U.S. team. In accepting the captaincy, Freed said he would concentrate on or- ganizational matters while Bart- zen would be concerned with tu- toring and conditioning the play- ers. Freed chose the players from the squad previously picked by the U.S. Tennis Association's se- lection committee of which James Moffet of San Francisco is chair- man. Of the four, only MacKay and Buchholz played in the challenge Collegiate Hairstyles for 1960? Featuring: * THE IVY CUT * THE HOLLYWOOD * THE NEW YORKER * THE FLORIDA * THE CONSERVATIVE see our window The Daseola Barbers near Michigan Theatre round at Forest Hills last Septem- ber when Australia regained the trophy. MacKay defeated Rodney Laver but lost to Neale Fraser. Buchholz paired with Alex Olmedo In the losing double team. However, both Bartzen and Mc- Kinley were members of the squad, McKinley being listed as a junior member. Players for the Canadian team have not yet been named. Last year Australia eliminated the Canadians 5-0 en route to the challenge round. 'I, x ,,:, SATURDAY HERO . ticket sale motive? 4 .... ::" :...;..,,.,r;..~... r,:rrF":"ri:jY~.":r. :.; r'y. FAS&Ic e Cold A&W ROOT BEER] SALE PRICED! Our Entire Stock WASH 'N WEAR Summer Suits ROBIN ROBERTS ...shuts out Cincinnati Hot Dogs Orange Bar BQ Coffee French Fries Floats COME AS YOU ARE EAT IN YOUR CAR 2405 W. Stadium Blvd. Now at 995 soviets Telephone Thomas For High Jumping Advice F f 607 East Liberty Next to Michigan Theatre f .s . . . . rte. BOSTON (IP)-Clearing a high- jump bar at seven feet or more is commonplace now for John Thomas, Boston University leaper; getting a telephone call from Mos- cow was much more exciting, es- pecially when he was asked how to improve Russian high jumping. It gave John a chance to assure a writer for a Moscow sports paper that the pulled muscle he suffered last weekend in California was not serious. It also gave him a chance to suggest to Moscow more Rus- sian-U.S. track meets as a means, of easing the cold war. Sports relations between the two great countries, John sug- gested, have been good. It was clearly confusion over Wimbledon's Ace Fraser Has Troubles BASTAD, Sweden (A-Wimb- ledon champion Neale Fraser of Australia had trouble advancing in the International Tennis Tour- nament here yesterday. Fraser, this' year's Wimbledon champion, won a narrow decision over 44-year-old Swedish veteran Torsten Johansson. The Swede,j who is a doubles specialist and' still on the Swedish Davis Cup team as substitute, fought dog- gedly but the Aussie ace finally won 4-6, 7-5, 6-4, 6-4, and went to the quarter finals. The other lefthanded Austral- fan Wimbledon finalist, red- headed Rod Laver, won the first two but lost the third and fourth sets against Sweden's young Staf- fan Stockenberg when their match was suspended because of dark- ness. The score was then 6-3, 6-4, 4-6, 1-6. The other stars had less trouble. Luis Ayala of Chile, semi-finalist in Wimbledon, lost the first set to American Hugh Stewart of San Francisco but won 3-6, 6-3, 6-1, 8-1. Ramanathan Krishnan of India easily beat Swedish Borger Folke 6-2, 6-2, 7-5. In men's doubles Hugh Stewart and Chuck McKinley of St. Louis advanced to the third round over the Swedish team of T. Hallberg what the term "pulled muscle" meant that caused the call from "Soviet-Sport," a three times weekly paper, John picked up the phone yes- terday, assured an operator that he was John Thomas, and then there was a man speaking in Rus- sian-accented English asking how serious was John's injury. Thomas had set his new 7 feet, 334 inch record at Stanford and it was decided to set the bar for a try for 7 feet, 4, or higher. That was when he strained a muscle high in one leg. He assured the Moscow caller that it was only a soreness that would go away after a week's rest. Then, after some personal ques- tions, the Moscow caller asked- did John know any Russian jump- ers. John said he did; he has seen one in a Russian-United States meet in Philadelphia. "Do you have an suggestion to help them improve their jump- ing?" the caller asked. The Boston youth said, "no." He explained this was because he was not familiar with the Russians' styles. "Do you have any statement for Russian athletes?" asked his call- er, and John replied that any suc- cess he has achieved must be attributed to a lot of practice, and good coaching. .. ......... . ..... ... ........... .................... of CI S)ALE Wash and Wear Suits reduced to $2 "88 Also reductions on - Short sleeve sport shirts Summer polo shirts Bermudas on the Diag, at the Union, and at all the Bookstores