THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURD MA" . igers TROIT (JP-The Detroit Ti- bombed the skidding New Yankees with a six-run third g and a barrage of home for an 8-4 triumph last thpaw Don Mossi, after be- ehind 3-0, perpetrated the Le leaders' fourth straight efore 45,714 Briggs Stadium The defeat, combined with land's 4-0 blanking of Wash- n, pared the Yankees' Ameri- League margin to just 11/2 s over the Indians. Homers Bomb Slam Homers Eddie Yost and red-hot Rocky Colavito slammed Art Ditmar for homers in the big third and sent the Yankee starter to his sixth defeat against seven triumphs. Colavito's long three-run belt into the upper deck in left center was his fourth homer in three games and started a parade of four Yankee relievers. Frank Boling lofted the Tiger's third homer off rookie John Gab- ler in the sixth. Mossi was in difficulty only in the first inning and the ninth. Mickey Mantle touched him for a towering three-run homer, his 21st, at the outset, and the Yan- kees added their other run on Els- ton Howard's sacrifice fly in the -ninth. Opens Gates Colavito opened the gates in the first when he lost Cletis Boy- er's leadoff fly in the lights. The ball fell 35 feet behind the Tiger right fielder for a triple. Bob Cerv was hit by a pitch before Mantle's homer. Mossi, beating the Yanks for the third time and boosting his season record to 8-6, gave up only three hits after the first and ended with a five-hitter.' Roger Maris, the League's home run and RBI leader, was benched by Yankee Manager Casey Sten- gel because of an ailing wrist. Maris pinchhit in the ninth, how- ever, and was called out on strikes for the final out. He may return to the lineup today. Hector Lopez replaced him last night. Los Angeles May Receive Ti *le Fight LOS ANGELES (AI--Boxing pro- moter Bill Fugazy said yesterday Los Angeles may well get the Floyd Patterson-Ingemar Johans- son heavyweight title fight unless Dallas comes up with a millionI dollar guarantee. Fugazy, president of Feature' Sports, Inc., told a press luncheon Los Angeles appears the logical site for a proposed No. 1 date for the rematch. He quickly added if a group of Texans headed by wealthy young Lamar Hunt of Dallas, comes through by Tuesday with a mil- lion dollar net "live gate" guaran- tee, "this would be very hard to walk away from." The young New Yorker said November weather risks made New York, Chicago and Detroit doubt- ful as a fight site. Fugazy said Hunt, owner of the Dallas team in the new American Football League, broached the bid earlier this week at a meeting in Dallas. The New York syndicate will make no decision, however, until its board meets in New York late pext week. BREAKS WORLD RECORD-Lynn Burke, of the Santa Clara, Calif. Swim Club finishes f preliminaries of the 200-meter backstroke event at the Women's AAU swimming and divi pionships yesterday. She was clocked in two minutes and 35 seconds, which eclipses the li record of two minutes and 37 seconds. Women's AA INDIANAPOLIS (-Four Cal- ifornia girls splashed two world and four American records from the books yesterday in the first full session of AAU Women's Na- tional Swimming Championships at Broad Ripple Pool. Donna de Varona of Berkeley, 5 feet 2 and barely 13-years-old, washed out the world's mark for the 400-meter individual medely, beating defending champion Syl- via Ruuska of the same city by inches, 5:36.5 to 5:36.1. Lynn Burke, 17-year-old blonde from Santa Clara, edged her teammate, free style champion Chris von Saltza with another world mark of 2:33.5 in the 200- meter backstroke. The 1959 cham- pion, Carin Cone of Houston, Texas, did not defend. Breaks Record Miss Burke's time broke the year-old record of 2:37.1 by Sa- tako Tanaka of Japan and also bettered Miss Tanaka's subse- quent claim of a 2:34.8 world mark. Miss Ruuska, who lost her 1500- meter freestyle crown Thursday to Carolyn House of Los Angeles, also gave up the medley world record in her loss to little Miss de Varona. Sylvia had an accepted world mark of 5:40.2 from last year and a better one of 5:39.4 accepted only as the American record. Tall blonde Chris von Saltza; continued her domination of American freestylers at middle, and shorter distances by setting a United States record of 1:01.6 in the 100 meters, rubbing out her own 2-year-old mark 1:03. Trifle Short Miss von Saltza's sprint today was only 4-tenths second off the accepted world mark of 1:01.2 by Dawn Fraser of Australia. Ann Warner, another Santa Clara star, repeated as 200-meter breaststroke champion with a 2:53.3 time that beat her listed American record of 2:56.4 set last year. However, it was short of Miss Warner's pending claim for a 2:51.4 mark. U Tankers Snash Recc ' The de Varona-Ruuska medley race was one of the classics of the AAU meet. Miss Ruuska lea in the 100- meter butterfly section. Donna pulled ahead in the backstroke and Sylvia came up even in the breaststroke. They started the freestyle leg exactly even and it looked as if they finished the same way but timers and judges an- nounced a new champion. The individual medley and 200- meter backstroke are not Olympic events. Patsy Willard, competing for Dick Smith's swin gym of Phoe- nix, Ariz., took the 3-meter diving championship from defending champion Irene MacDonald of the Canadian Olympic team with 381.8 points to Missb 353.55. Miss Willard, a from Mesa, Ariz., w meter springboard t women's indoor na winter. Joel Lenzi of C Fla., was a close thir m e t e r yesterdayv points. Other final summa 100-meter freestylee 2, Shirley Stobs, M: (Fla.) Country Club Donna De Varona, Be: YMCA, 1:04.6. 4, S Vesper Boat Club,P 1:05.4. 5, Molly Botk geles A.C., 1:05.5. 6, B meyer, Yonkers (N.Y.) 1:06.2. DAVIS CUP PRELIMS: Yankees Both Leage Leads Pared By The Assoiated Press Pittsburgh's National League x lead was trimmed to three games and the New York Yankee's Amer- ican League edge was chopped to 11/2 games last night, but a pair of splendid individual perform- ances stole the thunder from the pennant races. Right - hander Ernie Broglio blanked the Chicago Cubs on one hit-a second-inning single by Ed Bouchee-and struck out 14 as the St-,Louis Cardinals stayed hot with a 6-0 victory in the NL. And Brooks Robinson became the first American Leaguer to hit for the cycle-home run, triple, double and single-in three years, going 5-for-5 and driving in three runs as Baltimore beat the Chi- cago White Sox 5-2. The fourth place Birds had lost five in a row. Second Loss Cincinnati handed Pittsburgh its lrst in the second straight loss, 4-1, and sec- rin he- ond place Milwaukee closed in on' ing chai- the Pirates with a 7-5 victory at sted world Philadelphia. Third place Los Angeles led 4-1 after five innings at San Fran- Srds cisco. Second-place Cleveland defeated Washington 4-0 on Jim Perry's four-hit pitching. And Boston de- MacDonald's feated Kansas City 2-1. Broglio (10-4), pitching the first 19-year-old one-hitter by a Cardinal since Von on the one- McDaniel did it against Pittsburgh itle in the on July 28, 1957, walked just two. tionals last His strikeout total was high for oral Gables, a nine-inning game in the NL this d in the 3- year. Don Cardwell (4-8), who with 353.15 earlier no-hit the Cards, dropped his second in a row to St. Louis. aries in the Stan Musial, 2-for-3 for a .307 event were: average, drove in two runs for the iami Shores Cards, starting with an RBI single , 1:04.1. 3, in the first inning. Carl Sawatski rkeley (Cal.) homered in the second. usan Doerr, The Reds, who had lost eight Philadelphia, in a row to the Pirates beat Bob in, Los An- Friend (10-6) in a two-run first arbara Null- inning capped by Wally Post's Swim Club, sacrifice fly. Southpaw Jim O'Toole (7-8) gave up seven hits, but blanked the Bucs until the eighth, when pinch-hitter Smoky Burgess hit a bases-loaded safrifice fly. Jim Broshnan then saved it with ;ea-'t 1% innings of perfect relief. Joe Adcock's grand-slam home run got the Braves rolling in the ^ fourth inning against lower Chris SShort, and Ed Matthews' two-run double clinched it in the fifth. veteran us- iclay courts 'uiu ~ m c itle the Plastirie eats extended to t the match Qulfig ntil Bedard u n his right the second Running Time command. ," said Bed- LONDON (')-Britain's Gordon ered me in Pirie, who is aiming at both the 5,000 and 10,000 meters in next art months' Olympic Games, bettered if he in- the 10,000 meters qualifying time away of his yesterday for the first time this > a 5-1 lead ~er *are Bedard He won the six miles event in er and the British championships at Lon- lerofndervik don'sWhite City in 28 minutes e of service 9.6 seconds - 33.4 seconds inside le fault by the time needed to qualify for the set at 5-5. Olympics. It was his best time over d set point the distance. re wrapping The 29-year-old runner, second ed shot- in the 5,000 meters at Melbourne t ahead 2-0 in 1956, took the lead 80 yards d had a 4- from the finish. The next four men llied to tak ithatke -Martin Hyman, John Merriman, With Bai Stan Eldon and Alan Wood-also r o thesp10thwere under the qualifying time. ent to scoop Britain's biggest sprinting hope, e tightened. Peter Radford, ran his heat of the 10 minutes. 100 yard dash in 9.5 seconds and smashed a record for these cham- win the set pionships set 10 years ago by West artzen never Indian MacDonald Bailey. rdly worked third set, five straight Set To Host fter Bedard and led all NTP AA g set. ACers ay's victory dull affair. COLORADO SPRINGS OM)-The game was basketball committee of the Na- e Canadian. tional Collegiate Athletic Associ- volleys and ation recommended yesterday that ften caught the annual NCAA tournament be ooted. The held at Kansas City next year, minutes. beginning March 24. - The committee also recom- mended regional tournaments be held March 17-18 at these sites: East, Charlotte, N.C., Davidson College as host. Mideast, Louisville, University of Kentucky as host. Midwest, Lawrence, Kan., Uni- versity of Kansas as host. West, Portland, Ore., Oregon State College as host. The committee's recommenda- tions must be approved by the NCAA executive committee, which .4786 meets at Cincinnati Aug. 12-13. Approval is expected to be auto- Ive rt Iiing matic. DETROIT M-'-Art Wall, Jr., ledv the way with a record 66 in a par-wrecking assault at the West- ern Golf and Country Club yes- terday and turned it into the half- way in the $25,000 57th Western' Open. Warm, dry weather made a per- fect setting and the pros played the 6,800-yard course to perfection. Wall, 36-year-old former Masters champion, broke a record that has stood since 1951. His 66 gave the slim Pennsylvanian a two-stroke lead with a 137 total, seven under par, at the 36-hole mark.- Trall by Two* Four players trailed by two. All took part in the best shooting this course has ever seen. Pete Cooper, Stan Leonard, Jim Ferree and young Tommy Jacobs deadlocked at 139. Ferree and Leonard had 68s yesterday, Cooper and Jacobs 69s. Four tied the old record of 67. They included Joe Zakarian of Detroit and Don Whitt of Borrego Springs, Calif., tied at 140 with Julius Boros, Doug Sanders, Ken Venturi and Dave Ragan. Wall holed six birdie putts and was never over par on any hole. It was a six-foot putt for a par on the 10th hole that he called "the key to the whole day." "I made a terrible first putt and N- IIHESt~ , left it six feet short," Wall ex- plained. "I was fortunate not to three-putt." Wall quickly made birdie putts from 15 and 7 feet on the next two holes, made another birdie at the par five 15th and finished with his second straight 33. Another who tied the old course record was burly Mike Souchak, defending champion. Souchak, who opened with a 41, has been eight strokes under par for the last 27 holes. Mike's second round 67 earned Caplin Paces Honolulu Golf HONOLULU (JP)-Twenty-three- year-old Ty Caplin of Michigan State and Verne Callison of Sac- ramento, Calif., were leading at the midway point in yesterday's 36-hole semifinals of the National Public Links Golf Tournament. Caplin, of East Lansing, had a 3-up margin on Bob McMasters of Royal Oak, Mich. Callison was 2 up on Mike Andonian of Pontiac, Mich. The cool Californian is rated as one of the best amateurs on the West Coast. him a nine-way, tie at 141 with Jack Fleck, Doug Ford, Bill Col- lins, Bob Rosburg, Bert Weaver, George Bayer, Jerry Barber and Cary Middlecoff. Hard Way Zakarian got his 67 the hard way-finishing with birdies on the last four holes. Jacobs, 25-year-old Californian, did his damage on the front side where he, canned birdie putts from 9, 10 and 15 feet-then played it with par the rest of the way. Whitt, another young player, did just about everything right. The only time he was over par was on the 11th hole, when he droveinto the rough behind a tree and then hit into a trap. Tony Lema of San Leandro, Calif., also-tied the course record. Man To Catch But Wall is the man to catch. He has not been over par in his last nine rounds. of tournament golf. He won the Canadian Open with a 19-under-par total after finishing in a tie for second at the Flint Open. Gay Brewer, Jr., who tied with Wall at Flint and shot an opening 70 here, withdrew yesterday to be with his wife, who is expecting their first child. A , CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY . 80 .96 1.12 SPECIAL TEN-DAY RATE .39 .47 .54 Ca1l and Figure 5 average words to o line. Classified between 1 :00 and 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. 9:00 and 11:30 Saturday - Phone NO 2-4786 NEW COURSE RECORD: Wall Leads Western Open a Canadian Singles A MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS DON'T MISS The Big Convention News! Get your radio fixed almost Immediately QUEBEC (W-The United States taak a 2-0 lead over Canada in their first round American Zone Davis Cup tennis competition yes- terday as 32-year-old Bernard Bartzen and 24-year-old Barry MacKay scored victories in the opening singles matches. Bartzen of Dallas, Tex., had to come from a two-set deficit in downing Bob Bedard, Canada's top ranking player, 5-7, 4-6, 6-0, 6-2, 6-2. But his Dayton, Ohio, teammate had no such difficulties as he turned back Don Fontana 6-1, 6-3, 6-2. The two triumphs left the United States where only a vic- tory in today's doubles or in one of tomorrow's two singles matches is needed to send the Americans into the second round against 'Mexico. The matches were played on the clay courts of the Civil Em- ployees Tennis Club. Although the Texas ually is at his best on (he's won the U.S. ti two years), he was the limit before he go under control, Not u suffered a cramp it knee near the end of set did Bartzen takes "I just couldn't do it ard. "The knee both the last three sets." itunaway Ste Bartzen started as tended to make a run match. He was off to in the first set bef pulled his game togeth advantage of a coupl breaks and a doubt Bartzen to square the Bedard twice reache in the 12th game befo it up with a well plac The Texan also wen in the second set and lead before Bedard ra the next four games. zen leading 40-15 iz game, the Canadian w up a shot and his kne Play was held up for No Sweat Bedard managed to but from there on Ba was in trouble. He ha up a sweat in the crashed through for games in the fourth a had taken a 2-1 lead the way in the decidin By contrast, MacK over Fontana was a The American's big just too much for th MacKay's well placed smashing services of the Canadian flat-f match lasted only 69r Music 300 S. Thayer Center NO 2-2500 X8 I- Use Our Convenient Michigan Daily Ad-O-Gram Complete line of H FPicomponents including kits; complete service on radios, phonographs and Hi F1 equipments. HI FI STUDIO 1317 South University 1 block east at Campus Theatre X2 PIANOS-ORGANS NEW & USED Ann Arbor Piano & Organ Co. 213 E. Washington NO 3-3109 - X1 A-1 New and Used Instruments BANJOS, GUITARS and BONGOS Rental Purchase Plan PAUL'S MUSICAL REPAIR 119 W. Washington NO 2-1834 X3 Planos MIRROR STYLE CONSOLE -- Used, perfect condition ..$189 USED UPRIGHTS-From ..$49 STEINWAY CONSOLE -- Like new. 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"You expect more from Standard and you get it 1" 1220 S. University at Forest NO 8-9168 61 WHI'E'S AUTO SHOP Bumping and Painting 2007 South State NO 2-3350 S2 FOR SALE HI FI PHONOGRAPH: Bozak speaker system. Excellent sound. Low price. NO 2-8081 evenings. B5 HELP WANTED REPRESENTATIVE WANTED in your territory. From your desk you can earn a substantial addition to your income. Only written contacts with your clients! Write for particulars and further details to VKK-Office, Vienna 66, P.O.B. 128, Austria. H3 BARGAIN CORNER' MEN'S short-sleeve sport shirt $1.00. Skip-dents & seer-suckers sanforized wash & wear, asstd. colors. Sam's Store 122 E. Washington W1 ROOM AND BOARD TIRED ofArestaurants? Eat better for less at Alpha Chi ,Sigma, 1318 Cam- bridge. NO 2-8312. E4 PERSONAL CONFIDENTIAL interview with physi- cian, nurse, marriage counselor con- cerning birth control, child spacing, marriage problems. 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Near schools; good con- dition, good neighborhood. Fenced lot unfurnished. $110 per month. Call HU 3-0790. 29 EDGE OF CAMPUS-a nice 2 room fur- nished apt. Private bath, all utilities. $75 a month. NO 8-7234. C27 FURN. 1st floor apt., 3 rms., bath, pri- vate entrance, and laundry facilities. All utilities paid. $110 per month. Phone NO 3-0292. C26 BUSINESS SERVICES We're on Packard just around the corner from State Street. Stop in anytime 'til 12 P.M. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard NO 5-7131 "Open every night 'til Midnight." J24 MAYNARD & SEEGER WELDERS and BLACKSMITHING 109 South Ashley NO 8-7403 J5 TYPING: Theses, term papers, reason- able rates. Prompt service. NO 8-7590. J2 REWEAVING-Burns, tears, moth holes rewoven. Let us save your clothes. Weave-Ba shop, 224 Nickels Arcade NO 2-4847. 34 LOST AND FOUND LOST: Man's watch, Swiss-made Buch- erer, with silver Ktelsler expansion band; letter "H" scratched on back of case. Call NO 2-3241. Reward. A LOST: Off-white leather billfold with 6 keys. Help I'm locked out! Contact K. Moore, NO 2-3241. A3 I LINES 2 3 4 ONE-DAY .80 .96 1.12 SPECIAL TEN-DAY RATE .39 .47 .54 Just Fill In The Following Form and Send to THE MICHIGAN DAILY 420 MAYNARD ANN ARBOR, MICH. Phone NO 2-4786 1 :00 to 3:00 Mon. thru Fri. " " DATES TO RUN I r r * NAME PHONE I I ADDRESS; Figure 5 average words to a line. " r " I U Read and Use Michigan Daily Classifieds rI ~-.. --. 11 I Phone NO 2- for Classified Ad FEINER GLASS & PAINT COn. 216 W. William Street Ann Arbor, Michigan Telephone NO 8-8014 Il/ E 1/8 lf ^ 1 1 . 13 S T __ r r"% . . . r r r r% r r r+ III I«