THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JUI; TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY, JUl A's Need 13 Innings To Beat Tig ers; Monbouquette Blanks New York, 8-0 4)C ULOUDS'rRUCK-Arnold Palmer, U.S. Open and Masters cham- pion gazes at the threatening clouds overhanging the St. Andrews ecurse as he finishes his fourth round of play. The rains burst down moments later, halting play, and leaving Palmer four strokes out of first. Rain SuspDends Play After Palmer Rally By The Associated Press LATE SCORES Los Angeles 5, Chicago 3 (final) St. Louis 7, San Francisco 1 (7th inning) KANSAS CITY - The Kansas City Athletics came from behind in the 13th inning last night and scored a 5-4 victory over the Detroit Tigers on Bill Tuttle's two- run single. Charley Maxwell's 13th home run of the season had given the Tigers a 4-3 lead in their half of the inning. But the hapless A's, who haven't been able to win con- sistently against anyone except Detroit, drove reliever Dave Sisler out with successive singles by Russ Snyder and Jerry Lumpe. Clem Labine relieved Sisler and Whitey Herzog moved the runners up with a secrifice bunt. Labine then walked Norm Siebern and loaded the bases before Tuttle whacked his winning blow to right field. The victory was the ninth in 12 meetings for the seventh-place Athletics over the Tigers. The A's had started the game with their usual carefree treat- ment of Jim Bunning, the Detroit starter and league strikeout king. They banged him for single runs in the second, third and fourth innings before he retired in favor of Hank Aguirre. Boston 8, New York 0 BOSTON -- Nerveless Bill Mon- bouquette pitched last place Bos- ton to an 8-0 victory over New York's American League leaders last night, humbling the Yankees on a seven-hit shutout. The 23 - year - old righthander fashioned his eighth victory of the season by mowing down the New York siege guns with the same methodical nonchalance the at- tacked a large wad of chewing gum. Monbouquette got all the sup- port he needed when the Red Sox scored two runs on four singles in the fourth inning. Washington 9, Baltimore 5 BALTIMORE - The Washing- ton Senators downed the Baltimore Orioles 9-5 last night, taking ad- vantage of four Bird errors. Four of the Senators' runs were unearned as they scored three times in the second inning and added four more in the fifth to clinch the victory. Washington added another counter in the eighth and one in the ninth on Don Dobbeck's seventh homer of the year. Pedro Ramos went the distance and was credited with his fifth Navy, Cal, Syl T J .At Olympic IR SYRACUSE, N.Y. (P)-Navy's varsity and plebe crews, Calif- ornia and the underdog Syracuse Alumni Rowing Association gained the eight-oared finals of the Olympic rowing trials after an- other series of pulse-pounding races yesterday. Syracuse and California won the thrilling semifinals as the twin middle entry captured sec- ond place in both to become the first college or club ever to put two crews into the tight-oared finals. Rain Delays Heat In the rain-delayed first heat, pace setting Syracuse scored by a half length over the Navy varsity. The middies just nosed out Cor- nell's varsity for the second quali- fying position with Washington fourth and last. Then California's poised Golden Bears led all the way in the sec- ond semifinal, beating Navy's plebes and the Cornell junior var- sity for second. The plebes, in a bow to bow fight with the "Big Red" Jayvees, closed powerfully to earn the place by just under a half length. Pennsylvania was fourth, two lengths back of the winners. Penn Whips Brown Penn had whipped Brown and Washington had beaten Harvard in morning "second chance" re- matches to enter the semifinals. triumph against nine losses. Jack Fisher was the loser, bringing his won-lost record to five and seven. Washington got off to an early, lead when Jim Lemon and Julio Becquer had back-to-back singles in the second. Billy Gardner then hit to Fisher, who tried to cut Lemon off at home. Chicago 4, Cleveland- 1 CHICAGO - The fourth-place Chicago White Sox made it three straight over Cleveland's slumping racuse Victors Lowing1Trials Syracuse was clocked in 6:57.8 for the 2,000 meters (11/4 miles) on' Onondaga Lake followed by Navay's varsity, 6:59.8, Cornell varsity, 7:01.2, and Washington, 7:03.8. California's time, under far better weather conditions, was 6:29. Navy's plebes were timed in 6:31, Cornell's jayvees in 6:32.6, and Penn in 6:37.2. The program in all small boat events leading up to today's final had gone smoothly until it was time for the two eight-oared semi- finals. Then the Navy plebe shell had trouble with its rudder, forc- ing a switch in the two heats. Winds Sweep Course When the crews were ready to start, gusty winds swept the course and a hard shower doused oars- men and spectators. When the shower stopped ten minutes later, the wind died down considerably and the water flattened for Syra- cuse's victory. The second semi- finial was run off' with the water like glass and practically no wind at all. The Syracuse crew is com- posed of oarsmen who finished ninth in the IRA won by Calif- ornia. Coach Loren Schoel bolst- ered the crew with Ed Montesi and Nelson Miller, alumni who had rowed on Syracuse's Pan- American champion eight. Six of the current nine were on the Pan- Am team. Indians with a 4-1 decision last night and gained ground on all three clubs ahead of them. Chicago inched within % game of Baltimore, 11/2 games of Cleve- land and 41/2 games of league lead- ing New York. A crowd of 48,031 saw southpaw Frank Baumann ride out a trouble- some second inning and record his- fifth triumph against four losses. Baumann limited the Tribe to six-hits, walked two and struck out none. Pittsburgh Splits Doubleheader PHILADELPHIA - Bob Friend turned in his first pitching victory in more than two weeks last night as the Pittsbu gh Pirates beat the -Philadelphia Phillies in the sec- ond game of a twi-night double- header, 8-3. The Phillies won the opener, 6-5 in 10 innings, for their seventh consecutive overtime tri- umph. Milwaukee 6, Cincinnati 3 MILWAUKEE -- Juan Pizarro held the Cincinnati Reds to two hits and one run through eight innings last night before he weak- ened in the ninth and had to get help from young Ron Piche be- fore the Milwaukee Braves could come through with a 6-3 victory. The 23-year-old Puerto Rican southpaw did a fine job before the roof caved in on him In the final innings when the Reds greeted him with three extra base hits that scored two runs with none out. Piche then struck out Frank Robinson and got pinch hitter Jerry Lynch and Harry Anderson to fly out to end the game. i~ELRU CflSIIIE PERDO RAMOS goes distance T CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING ST. ANDREWS, Scotand W- A coudburst flooded Old St. An- drews yesterday and forced post- ponement of the final round in the British Open Golf champion- ships until today with Arnold Palmer now only four strokes be- hind the leading Kel Nagle of Australia. The rallying Palmer, Nagle and Roberto de Vicenzo of Mexico, the leader at the halfway point,all flnished their third rounds just before the heavy rains came. Pal- mer, who has won the U.S. Open and Masters this year with scorch- ing finishes, had come in with a See Pascual As Starting AL Pitcher KANSAS CITY (A9-Camilo Pascual of Washington and either Stan Williams of Los Angeles or Larry Jackson of St. Louis, all three right-handers, today ap- peared to be likely selections as the starting pitchers in the first 1980 All-Star game Monday at Municipal Stadium. The starting pitchers and bat- ting orders will be announced by the managers, Walt Alston of the NL and Al Lopez of the AL, at noon (EST) tomorrow. Umpires and official scorers for the games were announced today by Commissioner Ford Frick, Jim Honochick, Nestor Chylak and John Stevens will be the field officials representing the National League, and Dusty Boggess, Tom Gorman and Vinnie Smith will be the American League Umpires. 'M' Gynifasts Place 1, 2, 3 Three Michigan gymnastic stars are setting a blistering pace at the Canadian Olympic tryouts in To- ronto, Ontario. Gymnastic Coach Newt Loken said Captain Rich Monpetit holds first position, Eddie Gagnier, ah Wolverine ace several years ago is a close second, and Gil Larose, a young sophomore is in third slot. Loken explained that last night's results were in the "preliminaries," the final contests to be held this' evening. 70 despite taking bogies on the last two holes. Nagle had a 71 for his rain- spattered tour of the Old Course where par is 36-37--73 but often plays three strokes either way. De Vicenzo had a 75. Rain Stops Play The bottom dropped out of the sky five minutes after Nagle, a one-time timber worker in Aus- tralia, holed out and took the lead at 207. His partner, de Vicenzo, slumped visibly from his hot 67 pace of the first two days and landed at 209. Palmer, who got into the clubhouse as the awesome deluge began and Syd Scott, 47- year-old British pro, are dead- locked at 211. Palmer played perfect golf for the first 16 holes, then three- putted the last two. He was bitterly disappointed both over his sluggish finish and the postponement, the second in the 100-year history of this oldest of golf championships. Picks Up Three Strokes Palmer started the day seven shots back of de Vicenzo. He picked up three in his surging comeback. The one day's delay figures to help the leaders-Nagle, 39, and de Vicenzo, 37-and work to the disadvantage of Palmer, 30, who was just beginning to roll when the rains came. The rain struck with North Sea fury, stranding 12 last round four- somes on the course. Their scores were erased and they must start again tomorrow. High Pace Set In Decathlon EUGENE, Ore. P-The favor- ites in the combined AAU and Olympic tryouts decathlon set out with a sensational pace yesterday. After three events, three Ameri- cans were bettering the perfor- mance of Vasily Kuznetsov when the Russian set a world record last year. The three are Rafer Johnson, former UCLA star and former world recordholder, Mike Herman of New York City, and Dave Ed- strom of the University of Ore- gon. Johnson ran the 100-meter dash in 10.6 seconds. Edstrom and Her- man were timed at 10.8. Herman made a sensational 26-foot, 3- inch broad jump while Johnson had 24 feet, 9% inches and Ed- strom 24 feet, 3 inches. LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY 80 .96 1.12 SPECIAL TEN-DAY RATE .39 .47 .54 USED CARS AN ECONOMICAL barrel of fun. Red Isetta conv. R&H. Low mileage, Ex- cellent condition. NO 3-0302. N6 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. N1 EXCELLENT CONDITION. 1954 Buick Special. 2 door, 4 nylon tires. Orig- inal owner. Phone NO 2-4194. N8 BARGAIN CORNER MEN'S ,short-sleeve sport shirt $125. Skip-dents & seer-suckers sanforized wash & wear, asstd. colors. Sam's Store 122 E. Washington 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 & usedtires. Road service-mechanic on duty. "You expect more from Standard and you get it!" 1220 S. University at Forest NO 8-9168 S1 Call and Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. 9:00 and 11:30 Saturday -- Phone NO 2-4786 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE: Orders Cuban Team to Jersey City MONTREAL (P) - President- Frank Shaughnessy of the Inter- national League yesterday ordered the transfer of the Havana Sugar Kings to Jersey City yesterday. The Cuban-studded club probably will play its first game at a new "home" next Friday. Shaughnessy's announcement came after he had sent a message to Roberto Maduro, President of the Havana club, notifying him of his decision and explaining his reason. The message said an emergency exists in Havana and that the safety and welfare of baseball per- sonnel in the Cuban capital "is or might be endangered." "I therefore direct that the Havana franchisebe transferred to Jersey City if a suitable lease can be secured for Roosevelt Sta- dium," the message read. "The transfer to Jersey City is to be subject to the approval of the majority vote of the league's board of directors." New Stadium 'In Washington Seeks Tenants WASHINGTON () - Ground- breaking ceremonies were held yesterday for a 20-million-dollar municipal stadium that will seat 50,000 persons. The stadium will be constructed on 180 acres that divide the Northeast and Southeast sections of the national's capital city. It will seat 42,000 for baseball and 50,000 for football. There will be parking space for 12,500 cars, 100 buses and 200 taxis. Helicop- ters will be able to land on pads in the stadium area. Boats will pull up along the nearby Anacostia River and a railroad spur line is being considered. So far only the Washington Redskins of the National Football League are committed to use the stadium. The Redskins have signed a 30-year lease. Calvin Griffith, president of the Washington Senators of the American Baseball League, has not yet agreed to any lease. City offi- cials are understood to be con- tinuing negotiations with Griffith. In Jersey City, Parks Commis- sioner Bernard J. Berry assured Shaughnessyno difficultieswould be encountered in working out an acceptable lease for Roosevelt Stadium. "Jersey City is ready to take over," said Berry. "With only one major league team in New York, I amconfident baseball fans will support International League base- ball. "The fans have been screaming for years for the return of a team to Jersey City." Roosevelt Stadium, with a seat- ing capacity of 25,000, is no stranger to International League baseball. It was the home of the Jersey City Giants from 1937 to 1950. In 1956 and 1957, the Brook- lyn Dodgers played 15 "home" games in the stadium before mov- ing to Los Angeles. The Sugar Kings have a work- ing agreement with the Cincinnati Reds of the National League and many of their players are U.S. citizens. Havana's next "home" game is July 15 against Columbus and the grounds crew at Roosevelt Stadium is working feverishly to get the park in shape for it. Satchel Paige, K.C. Monarchs To Meet Negro League Stars Legendary Satchel Paige and the Kansas City Monarchs will meet the Detroit - New Orleans Stars of the Negro American League in a doubleheader at Briggs Stadium tomorrow. Monarch owner Ted Rasberry 's said that Paige would appear with the Monarchs and pitch in one of the games. He also said that the day would be designated as "Sat- chel Paige Day" at Briggs Sta- dium.y Paige has long been a box office attraction. When he was with the Cleveland Indians and St. Louis Browns he was an effec- tive relief pitcher. He joined the Indians in 1948 after many years with top Negro teams. In 1951 he returned to the American League with the St. Louis Browns after a year away from the majors. His lifetime record from 1948 through 1953 was 28 wins and 31 losses. In 1952 Paige won 12 and lost 10 with the Browns. The ageless Paige then pitched several seasons for the Miami Marlins of the International League before returning to exhibi- tion baseball two years ago. Records list Paige as being born July 7, 1906, which would make him 54 years of age. However, there are some old timers who say that Paige is much older. "Satch" is noted for his famous pitches, the hesitation pitch, .... hurry-up ball, and bat-dodger, SATCHEL PAIGE which baffled big league hitters. ...,at Briggs Stadium With several clubs Paige had a special lounge chair in the bull- pen. 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