PAGE SIX THE.lYIIC ICA DAILY" ~ll IA E 1T 'TU IA~ A T 'y~a"A T~~E A~n .1L4ZJZ2.lA ,iuji~l 'J~V .y7 'M's Jacobs Cops Trampoline Title Dave Jacobs, ace trampoline, gymnast for the Michigan team," won his specialty for the United States Team at the World Tram- . poline Meet in London Saturday. E ' Jacobs, a junior, won the title from teammate Wayne Miller, also. competing at the London meet, : who had earned the title in 1966 " in the World Tramp meet held in his home town, Lafayette, La. . .*- ' -. Jacobs hails from Sheboygan, z. . ' Wisc. The two Wolverines were ac- .''" companied to London by Michigan' Wolverine gymnastics coach Newt ". Loken. There was no immediate L. word how soon the Michigan peo- { r ple would return to the U.S.. Jacobs has amassed a half-: dozen titles inmess than a year / as a varsity competitor. During ., ' f the fall semester of 1966, he won . .. the Midwest Open crown and the - -' Winter NAAU championship and t' '( " A "4 the Nissen Cup in London. He is i the 1967 Big Ten tramp cham- " pion and added the 1967 NCAA M'3 trampoline title and the floor ex- ercise crown to his growing list of accomplishments. DAVE JACOBS T rizona tate Nine Takes orldSeries Crown, 11-2 NCAA Golf Championships Open With East-West Rivalry SHAWNEE - ON - DELAWARE, Pa. (P)-The annual NCAA Golf Championship unfolds the first of its three-pronged competition to- day with the best ball East-West rivalry.. There are 243 golfers from 74 colleges and universities on hand at the Shawnee Inn Golf Course for the tournament which had its beginning 70 years ago at Ardsley- on-Hudson, N.Y. Following the regional competi- tioin, the team championship will be determined on Wednesday aid Thursday, with the individual 1967 college golf champion crowned after completion of 72 hole medal play Friday and Saturday. The west is favored to Gloss the gap in this 33rd annual sectional rivalry, led 16-14 by the East, two matches ended in ties. The person- nel of each squad has been de- termined by the coaches. Kemp Richardson of Southern Califrnia, Brigham Young's John Miller, and San Diego State's Mike Riley lead the Western team, while the East is banking on such stars as Bunky Henry, the Georgia Tech football placekicker; B. R. McLen- don of Louisiana State and Jack Lewis Jr., the Wake Forest golfer who played on Uncle Sam's Walker Cup winners this spring. The West also is banking heavily on Hal Underwood of Houston, Chip Stewart of Texas and Jamie Thompson of Wichita State. Other Eastern headliners include Steve Melnyk of Florida, Tommy Barnes of Georgia, Jim Geiger of Penn State and Steve Mayhew of Pur- due. The competition gets underway at 11 a.m. EDT with Penn's Dave London and Maryland's Steve Rosen for the East facing the West's Ron Schmedemann of Kansas State and Bill Reid of San Francisco over the par 70, 7,000- yard Shawneer course in the Po- cono Mountains, about 90 miles nrth of Philadelphia. While Houston is favored to de-1 fend its 4th straight champion- ship, there are at least eight other prime . contenders, including San Jose State, Lousiana State, Ok- lahoma State, Florida; Penn State and Southern California. The team championship will be determined among those schools with full squads, over 36 holes of play. The unattached individuals and individuals attached to teams will continue stroke play the fol- lowing two days with the low golfers winning the individual honors. Michigan is represented by cap- tain-elect Jhn Schroeder, Rod Sumpter, Mark Christensen, Ed Groves and John Richart. Southern Cal Wins in Track I Pro Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE 1 OMAHA (IP) - Arizona State clinched its claim to the 1-966 NCAA title of college baseball champion Sunday after a shaky semi-finals, with a 11-2 trouncing of the Houston Cougars. The Sun Devils had dropped their only series game to Houston on Friday, 3-0. Wildness by the Cougar pitchers and six Houston errors were the decisive edge Ari- zona State needed. The Sun Devils scored three runs in the first as the entire batting order went to the plate., Four men were walked by Hous- ton pitchers in the opening frame. Tom Burgess went the distance for State and struck out 15, a record for a College World Series championship game. Arizona State carried a 4-1 rec- ord into the final. They' beat Stanford twice and defeated both Oklahoma State and Boston College. Houston dropped its opening round game to Stanford 12-1, then came back to win aaginst Ohio State, Boston College and Arizona before drawing a bye into the final of the round-robin tourna- ment. Ron Davini, fiery little catcher for Arizona State, was dumb- founded when told he had been voted most outstanding player of the World Series Sunday night. "I can't talk, except to say several other guys deserved it more," stammered the 19-year-old sophomore from Anaheim, Calif, The award was a tribute to Davini's .409 Series hitting and superb fielding. His uniform is always the first to get dirty. His teammates call him "pig pen." He's so excitable, Coach Bobby Winkles had him write 'relax" in big letters on the back of his catcher's mitt. He was so worked up about the title game he didn't eat. He ex- plained, "I just forgot to eat supper." A second NCAA baseball crown' in three years is a tribute to the coaching and recruiting zeal of Winkles, a 37-year-old former White Sox infielder from Swifton, Ark. "We've played 15 one-run games this year and won 13," Winkles said after his clubs 4-3 victory over Stanford in 14 innings Satur- day night. "This speaks well for sophomores." Gary Gentry of Arizona and Stanford's Rod Poteete went all 14 innings and Reid's double won it. It was an errorless game filled with top plays, and ended the coaching career of Stanford's re- tiring Dutch Fehring. W L Pct. St. Louis 37 22 .627 Cincinnati 40 26 .606 Pittsburgh 33 27 .550 San Francisco 34 28 .541 Chicago 32 28 .433 x-Atlanta 31 30 .508 Philadelphia 28 32 .467 x-Los Angeles 25 36 .4101 Houston 26 39 .400 New York 20" 38 .345 x--Late game not included. YESTERDAY'S. RESULTS San Francisco 6, Cincinnati 3 Pittsburgh 4, Chicago 3 St. Louis 5, Houston 4 (10 inn) Atlanta at Los Angeles (inc) Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES New York at Philadelphia (n) Chicago at Pittsburgh (n) St. Louis at Houston (n) Atlanta at Los Angeles (n) Cincinnati at San Francisco (n) AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct, Chicago 36 23 .610 Detroit 34 28 548 Minnesota 32 31 .508 Cleveland 32 31 .508 Boston 31 31 .500 Baltimore 30 32 .484 California 32 35 .478 Kansas City 31 34 .477 New York 28 33 .459 Washington 28 36 .4381 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Minnesota 4-5,Baltimore 0-9 Cleveland 4-2, Kansas City ?.-1 California 2-1, Detroit 0-5 Boston at New York (rain) Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Washington at Chicago (n) California at Detroit (n) Kansas City at Cleveland (t-n) Boston at New York (n) Only games scheduled GB 4 41/> 4%/ 5 / 7 9f 13 14 161z GB 3'l 6 7 8 8 9 10 PROVO, Utah (A) - Southern California is collegiate track and field king once more, and the reign may be a long one. That was obvious after the Tro- joke of the team -competition in competition in the 46th annual NCAA track and field meet at Brigham Young University Satur- day night. As 19,500 watched, Southern California broke the world 440- yard relay record with three soph- omores and a junior, swept the top two places in the pole vault with two sophomores, and rolled up 86 points with surprising ease. Oregon was a distant second with 40 points and defending champion UCLA was third with 27. Sophomore pole vaulters Bob Seagren and Paul Wilson put on an exciting show as both tried to clear the world record height of 17-8. Seagren has the pending mark of 17-7, set only a few days before the meet. Big Randy Matson of Texas A&M won the shot and discus titles for the second straight year, then said he would give up the discus next year. "I'm a shot put- ter," he said. The other double winner, Gerry Lindgren of Washington State, said he was tired after the three mile run Saturday night. He won the six-mile Thursday. Tommie Smith of San Jose State. who won the 220 in 20.2, said he was unhappy with the time.--even though just a shade off his world record of 20 seconds flat. Jim Ryun of Kansas,, world record-holder in the mile, said the slow pace wiped out the pos- sibility of a sub-four minute mile. He sprinted the final lap in 52.5 and won in 4:03.5. Eight meet records were broken, one world record shattered and another tied. The world record tied- was the 100-yard dash mark of 9.1 seconds by Charlie Greene of Nebraska in an elimination heat. He won the final in 9.2, PROVO, Utah (2) - Jim Ryun, Kansas University miler and half miler, was announced winner of the Brian Sternberg track award Saturday night by NCAA officials. Ryun was cited for his courage and performance in track last year. Sternberg, a former pole vaulter from Washington State, was one of themworld's best in 1963 when a trampoline accident paralyzedj him. Other winners were Sternberg, Mike Larabee and Gerry Lindgreh. Lutz Claimrs CARBONDALE, Ill. (P-Power- ful Bob Lutz of the University of Southern - California turned back a challenge by Jaime Fillol of the University of Miami and won the National Collegiate tennis singles championship 6-0, 6-0, 8-10, 2-6, 6-2. Fillol, who injured his leg while exercising Friday, didn't win a game as Lutz swept the first two sets. The stocky sophomore with the big backcourt game out in front with booming backhand and pass- ing shots Fillol was unable to touch. Fillol, a junior from Santiago, Chile, passed up a chance to rep- resent Chile in the Davis Cup zone competition last week. USC won the team championship Saturday night. HOUSTON (AP) - Mohammad Ali, singing, joking and preach- ing as he waited, went on trail yesterday on charges of refusing to be inducted into the Armed Forces. Attorneys settled on an all-white jury of six men and six women. The case had prevented the start of selection of a jury until midafternoon after the heavy- weight champion had spent most of the day roaming the Federal Court corridors chatting, joking and preaching. Ali finally entered the court- room at 3:40., EDT after 84 pros- pective juors remaining from an original pool of 150 had been as- sembled before Judge Joe Ing- raham. Ingraham had introduced the case as "The U.S. government vs. Cassius Marcellus Clay Jr." and read the brief indictment that was returned 10 days after Ali refused to accept induction that was re- turned 10 days after All refused to accept induction April 28. The judge then asked if any- one knew Clay personally. As Ali stood facing the jury panel, his New York City attorney, Hayden Covington, said, "If you please, your honor, he is also known by his Muslim name, Muhammad Ali." "Do any of you know him per- sonally by.his, Muslim name, Mu- hammad Ali?" the judge then ask- ed. No one responded.c Ingraham then asked a series of questions that included whether anyone had any religious beliefs that might cause them to lean one way or another. Again there was no response. The procedure ror questioning was changed abruptly, however, after the defense began question- ing 12 prospects who had relatives in the Armed service. Quinnan Hodges, a Houston at- torney, asked Earl Ashley of Houston, who has a son in the Air Force and a nephew in Viet- nam, if this would influence him in any way. "Well, I think he's guilty my- self," Ashley said. Ingraham asked Ashley to re- turn to his seat. He then had all attorneys confer with him at the bench. After the conference, Ingraham said to the prospective jurors, "There was a statement made by juror No. 11. You may have heard or may not, I ask if anyone was influenced and if so please rise," Again no one responded. The attorneys then began ques- tioning each juror in front of the bench, out of hearing range of the other members of the panel. The entire jury panel had spent the morning in another court room where another case was get- ting under way. A single jury pool had been summoned for the two cases. The case of a man being tried on a heroin smuggling charge had priority so jurors for that trial, in which well-know Houston law- yer Percy Foreman headed the de- fense, were sellected first. In the hallway, Ali grabbed Foreman by the arm and called to Covington: "Hayden, Hayden, you're fired. I've got me a law- yer." Covington, who predicted the trial would last a maximum of two days, was expected to center his case around two points: * That Ali is draft exempt as a Black Muslim minister called Muhammad Ali., " And that Ali and other Neg- roes are systematically discrimin- ated against by the nation's draft boards, which Covington will arg- ue are unfairly loaded with whites. The charges grew out of All's refusal April 28 to: take the tra- ditional one step forward that would have constituted his in- duction into the. Army. He has been free on $5,000 bond since a federal grand jury indicated him 10 days later. When he declined induction, the World Boxing Association and the New York State Athletic Com- mission stripped him of his box- ing crown which he earned during an undefeated professional ca- reer, beating 29 opponents, 23 by knockouts. He is still recognized as the champ in some areas of the world. 4 I MUHAMMAD ALI, right and in-set, rolls with a punch thrown by Alvin "Blue" Lewis' last Friday in an exhibitior match at Detroit's Cobo Arena. Match may be Ali's last for some time as he faces a stiff jail sentence if convicted for draft resistance. A Jovla While Jury Selection Delye a Sar oDraf Trial 4 4. -r- I' ...,.t V Contributions are DESPERATELY needed IMMEDIATELY for Medical Supplies and Food for the Arab victims of the Middle East War. Make checks payable to any of the following agencies:* 4 1. American Red 2. Church World 3. Catholic Relief Cross Service Service 4. U.S. Committee for Refugees, United Nations Relief and Work Agency PLEASE SPECIFY ON THE CHECK: "FOR MIDDLE EAST ARAB RELIEF" A' I E * # *Contributions are tax deductible I ENCLOSE MY CHECK, PAYABLE T.O ___ __________I1N THE SUM OF $ kiAkANIetIII _______________________________ r. I I I I I I U I U U I I 1"!RM C it . , . I