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July 01, 1967 - Image 6

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1967-07-01

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

SATURDAY. JULY 1. 190

THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATTTRDAV.. ITT! V 1.. loai~, - .a S., e.r.e

4,74ai V Aw A-Iki v 0 LJ.LJJL At AUV

a

Ali Scoffs
At Tourney
For His Title
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
Muhammad Ali, dethroned as
heavyweight boxing champion by
the World Boxing Association,
said yesterday Sonny Liston
could whip all eight boxers the
WBA has selected for an elimi-
nation series to find a new title-
holder.
He scoffed at the series at a
news conference, saying:
"Boxing is no good if the peo-
ple don't pay. The American peo-
ple are too smart to pay to see
those boys. Making a home-made
champion is no good.
"I've beaten them all."
Actually, he has beaten some
of the eight, hasn't fought others.
"I'm watching Joe Frazier and
Jerry Quarry," indicating he
thinks they're the best of the
eight.
Ali also said, "I'm deciding
right now on retirement," but
flatly refused to make such an
announcement now.
"The ministry come first," he
went on, and said his spiritual
manager, Herbert Muhammad, is
not now managing him but is
busy with religious work.
He said he writes poetry no
longer, that he had done it "just
to promote fights. Now that I
have the title, I don't need poe-
try."
And he said he'll preach his
first sermon Sunday, in the Mus-
lim Temple in San Francisco. As
to his subject, he said:
"I never have a speech out-
lined. I'll just sit down and think
it over."
Ali came to San Francisco to
participate in a national conven-
tion of Congress of Racial Equal-
ity.

*

Alston Names Eight Hurers

MOVED DOWN AT PLATE, Al Spangler of the Chicago Cubs fails to score in the second inning
yesterday as he is tagged out by Cincinnati's Don Pavletich; but Cubs won anyway, 7-5.
Tigers Defeat hite Sox 4=1;
Cubs-, Red Sox e Pace

NANCY RICHEY of San Angelo, Tex:, shows winning form by
advancing in third round of women's singles at Wimbledon, de-
feating Anna Dmitrieva of Russia, 6-4, 6-4.
,Only One American
In Men's Wimbledon

CINCINNATI (P) - Manager
Walt Alston of the Los Angeles
Dodgers named two of his own
hurlers yesterday to the eight-
man National League pitching
staff for the annual All-Star game
to be played at Anaheim, Calif.,
July 11.
They were Don Drysdale and
Claude Osteen.I
Besides the Dodgers, Alston also
picked Juan Marichal of the San
Francisco Giants, Ferguson Jen-
kins of the Chicago Cubs, Bob

Gibson of the.St. Louis Cardinals,
York Mets, all of whom are right-
handers.
The lefthanders, including Os-
teen, are Denny Lemaster of the
Atlanta Braves and Mike Cueller
of the Houston Astros.
The starting lineup, named by
a vote of the players, except for
pitchers, was announced Thursday
and Alston's choices for hurlers
leaves only the Cincinnati Reds
without a man on the squad thus
far.

4

By The Associated Press
Veteran Johnny Podres, with
relief help from Mike Marshall,
pitched the Detroit Tigers to a
4-1 victory over the league leading
Chicago White Sox last night.
Podres, 2-0, a 34-year-old left-
hander making his third start of
the season, but the leadoff man on
base three times in the first six
innings without allowing a run.
But he got into trouble in the
eighth when Don Buford and Dick
Kenworthy hit consecutive singles
With one out.
Marshall took over and gave up
a run-scoring single to Tommy
Agee before retiring ,the'side.
Detroit jumped on White Sox'
starter Tommy John, 6-5, for
three runs in the first on a triple
by Dick McAuliffe, a pair of walks,
a passed ball, and a two-run dou-
ble by Norm Cash. The Tigers
added another run in the third
without a hit.
Home runs by Billy Williams
and Ron Santo propelled the high
flying Chicago Cubs to a 7-5 vic-
tory over the Cincinnati Reds.
The triumph was the fourth
straight and 11th in the last 12
games for the second place Cubs
who finished' in the National
League cellar last year.
Bill Hands, who aided his, own
cause with a two run single in the
sixth, picked up his fourth vic-
tory in seven decisions but need-
ed ~help in the seventh after hurl-
ing 6 1-3 hitless innings.
Tony Conigliaro's three-run
homer and clutch relief pitching
by John Wyatt carried Boston to
a 5-3 victory over Kansas City.
Conigliaro's 430-foot landed in
a parking lot beyond the left
field fence in the sixth inning
after Joe Foy had doubled and
Carl Yastrzemski walked with two
out.
That gave Gary Bell a 4-1
cushions but the A's rallied in
the eighth with three straight
hits producing two runs. Then
Wyatt slammed the door, saving
Bell's fifth victory this month.
Chris Short, pitching for the
first time since tearing a ligament
in his left knee May 23, hurled
the Philadelphia Phillies to a 10-
3 victory over the San Francisco
Giants in the first game of a twi-
night double-header.
Three doubles by Johnny Cal-
lison, a two-run single by Tony
Gonzalez and a two-run double
by Bobby Wine helped Short, a
20-game winner last season in six
decisions.
The Phillies' left-hander, who
missed a month after being in-
jured in a collision during pre-
game practice, gave up a three-
run homer in the third to Dick
Dietz for the Giants' only runs.
He drove in the Phillies' last
three runs with a bases-loaded
double in the seventh.
Vic Davalillo, who entered the
game as a pinch runner in the
eighth inning, singled home a run

in the 14th inning, boosting Cleve-
land to a 6-5 victory over Balti-
more in the first game of a twi-
night doubleheader.
Max Alvis had singled with one
out, Chuck Hinton walked and
with two out, Davalillo singled to
left field against loser Wally Bun-
ker.
The Indians had tied the game
in the ninth when Eddie Watt
walked two men, forcing in a run,
after Leon Wagner singled with
one out and Alvis doubled off Moe
Drabowsky.

Julian Javier drove in three runs
and Larry Jaster held off New
York as the National League-lead-
ing. St. Louis Cardinals beat the
Mets 4-1, ending a three-game
losing string.
The Cardinals wrapped up the
game with three runs in the first
inning against Bob Shaw after the
first two -hitters were retired.
Roger Maris doubled and scored
on Orlando Cepeda's hit, Tim
McCarver doubled and Mike Shan-
non walked to load the bases.

WIMBLEDON, England (P) -
Third-seeded John Newcombe of
Australia defeated Clark Graebner
of Beachwood, Ohio, 17-15, 6-3,
6-4, yesterday, leaving only one
American in the men's singles of
the Wimbledon Tennis Champion-
ships.
The lone survivor, Charlie Pasa-
rell of Santurce, Puerto Rico, takes
on Tomas Kock of Brazil today.

I

SIumpiun
By The Associated Press
The most amazing thing about
the Detroit Tigers' June slump is
that they still are in second place.
Going into last night's opener
of a crucial three-game series with
the league-leading Chicago White
Sox, the Tigers have dropped.15 of
their last 21 games. With their 5-3
loss Tuesday night to Cleveland,
they stand 10-18 for June and trail
Chicago by 51/2 games.
After sweeping a Memorial Day
doubleheader from the Sox, De-
troit was first, a half game ahead,
of Chicago.
The White Sox have played 17-
12 baseball since Memorial Day, a:
steady record but nothing like a+
runaway. :
Most teams beset by a slump
such as Detroit's would have fallen
into second division.
"It isn't over yet," says Tiger
manager Mayo Smith. who still

Tigers Hit with Injuries

thinks the defending American
League champion Baltimore Ori-
oles are the team to beat.
But Chicago is at hand for the
weekend and Detroit must win at
least two of the thre games to stay
in the race. A White Sox sweep of,
the series would put Chicago 8 /2
games in front with the Fourth of
July coming up, traditional meas-
uring point of the likely pennant
winner.
White Sox manager Eddie Stan-
ky has said if his club is first on
July 4th, it will win the pennant.
The Tigers, who have held on
to second despite collapse of their
starting rotation, which has turn-
ed in only three complete games
since June 6, has its back against
the wall in the White Sox series.
Starter Earl Wilson will miss a
turn because of a bruised hip. All-
Star right fielder Al Kaline, who
leads the team in hitting .328, rbis

53, and homers 15, is .out for three
weeks with a brokten bone in his
right hand.
Reserve outfielder Gates Brown
dislocated a bone in his left wrist
while trying to field a ball in the
loss to the Indians Thursday night
and will be out for two weeks.
Brown was filling in for slugger
Willie Horton, who has been in
and out of the lineup all year be-
cause of a chronic pulled muscle in
his left leg and a bruised achilles
tendon.
"I'm not going to use Willie,
except for pinch-hitting, until he
can run again," said Smith. "Jim
Landis will play left field."
Landis, acquired Thursday in a
trade with Houston Astros for
pitcher Larry Sherry, reported to
Tiger Stadium just before the
game with Cleveland.
The Tigers took a 3-1 lead into

the eighth on a two-run homer by
Mickey Stanley and Dick Mc-
Auliffe's solo homer, his 13th.
But pinch-hitter Fred Whit-
field slammed relief pitcher Fred
Gladding's second pitch for a
three-run homer in the eighth
after the Indians got a run off
Denny McLain.
"I guess a losing streak's con-
tagious," said L a n d is, who
bounced out to second for the
final out of the game with two
men on in the ninth.
Despite the slump, the Tigers
remain a cohesive unit, without
petty bickering and name-calling.
"The pitchers can't start blam-
ing the hitters and the hitters
can't start blaming the pitchers,"
says McLain, 8-9, who took the
loss against Cleveland Thursday.
"We've got to pull out of it as a
team."

The leading American hope in
the tournament, Mrs. Billie Jean
King of Long Beach, Calif., the
defending women's champion, won
by default from Mrs. Elsie Veen-
tjer of the Netherlands.
In another third-round women's
match, Kathy Harter of Seal
Beach, Calif., defeated Edda Bud-
ding of West Germany 6-2, 6-3.
Mrs. King was much more for-
tunate than fourth-seeded lFran-
coise Durr of France, who lost to
Mrs. Janet O'Neill of Australia
6-4, 9-7. Miss Durr was the first
women's seed to lose in the first
week of the championships.
In men's action, Australians Ken
Fletcher and John Cooper ad-
vanced to the quater-finals. Sixth-
seeded Fletcher defeated Hans-
Joachim Plotz of Germany 6-1,
3-6, 6-0, while Cooper eliminated
Russia's Sergei Likhachev 6-4, 6-3,
6-1.
For a brief while it appeared
that Plotz was heading for an up-
set. He evened the match by win-
ning the second set and then rush-
ed to a 3-0 lead in the third. But
the Berliner was not to win an-
other game.
Hitting superb backhand pass-
ing shots, Fletcher took control
and served, volleyed and drove his
way to victory in the next six
games for a 2-1 advantage in sets.

AUGUST
GRADUATION
AN NOU NCEMENTS
order at
2503 STUDENT ACTIVITIES BUILDING
ECONO-CAR
H oliday Transportation

Special
1 st to Wed., July 5th

Sat, July

ONLY
$20.00 plus mileage
Econo-Car of Ann- Arbor

438 W. Huron

Phone 663-2033

00

U! (I

WORSHIP

t
R6~Ngtg o ,nr tor right wan q R ci t1
r lth1 o entn. e n ete
iomp.YbefittS a1467?87$1.
Who got the job

Pro Standings

GRACE BIBLE CHURCH
Corner State and Huron Streets
663-0589
Dr. Raymond H. Saxe, Pastor
8:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Morning Services.
6:00 p.m.-Training Hour-Classes for all
ages.
7:00 p.m.-Gospel Services.
Wednesday Prayer Meeting at 7:00 p.m.
If it's Bible you want, come to Grace Bible
-Fundamental, Pre-Millenial, Biblical.
CAMPUS CHAPEL
1236 Washtenaw
Donald Postema, Minister
10:00 a.m.-Morning Worship Service. Ser-
mon: "John the Baptist."
S11:00 a.m.-Coffee in the lounge.
7:00 p.m.-Evening Worship Service. Ser-
mon: "One Nation Under God."
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
512 E. Huron
James H. Middleton, Minister
Cleo Boyd, Associate Minister
Ronald Tipton, Campus Minister
SUNDAY
9:30 and 11:00 a.m.-Worship Service.
PACKARD ROAD BAPTIST CHURCH
Southern Baptist Convention
1131 Church St.
761-0441
Rev. Tom Bloxam
9:45 a.m.-Sunday School.
1 1 :00 a.m.-Morning Worship.
6:30 p.m.-Training Union.
7:30 p.m.-Evening Worship.

WESLEY FOUNDATION AND
FIRST METHODIST CHURCH
Corner State and Huron Streets
Phone 662-4536
Hoover Rupert, Minister
Eugene Ransom, Campus Minister
Bartlett Beavin, Associate Campus-Minister
SUNDAY
9:00 and 11:15 a.m.-Worship Services. Dr.
Ransom: "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of
Happiness."
FRIDAY
6:00 p.m-Dinner-Program Series, Presby-
terian Campus Center, 1432 Washtenaw.
Please make dinner reservation by calling
662-3580 or 662-5529. Dinner $1.00
(50c foreign students).
SATURDAY
2:00 p.m.-Picnic. Meet in parking lot of
First Methodist Church, State and Huron.
Transportation provided. Return at 7:00
p.m. Cost of picnic supper 75c.
UNIVERSITY LUTHERAN CHAPEL
1511 Washtenaw Ave.
(The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod)
Alfred T. Scheips, Pastor
Sunday at 9:45 a.m.-Service, "A Lord's Day
That Edifies," Pastor Scheips.
Sunday at 11 :00 a.m.-Bible Class.
Sunday at 6:00 p.m.-Supper-Program, Dr.
Won Ji of .Korea and Mr. Morts Jahshan
of Jerusalem, Speakers.
Wednesday at 9:00 p.m.-Book review of
"Marburg Reyisited," reviewed by Theo-
logical Intern Gene Beerens.
Wednesday at ,10:00 p.m.-Midweek Devo-

7:30 p.m.-Bible Study.
Transportation furnished for all
NO 2-2756.

AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pet.
Chicago 42 28 .600
Detroit 38 33 .535
Boston 37 34 .520
Minnesota 36 34 .514
x-Cleveand 37 35 513
x-California 37 38 .493
x-New York 33 37 .471
x-Baltimore 33 38 .463
Kansas City 34 41 .450
Washington 32 41 .438
x-Late game not included.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Detroit 4, Chicago 1
Boston 5, Kansas City 3
Cleveland 6, Baltimore 5 (1st)
New York at California (inc)
Washington at Minnesota (rain)
TODAY'S GAMES
New York at California (n)
Boston at Kansas City (n)
Washington at Minnesota
Chicago at Detroit (n)
Cleveland at Baltimore (n)
NATIONAL LEAGUE

THE CHURCH OF CHRIST
W. Stadium at Edgewood
Across from Ann Arbor High
Roy V. Palmer, Minister
SUNDAY
10:00 a.m.-Bible School.
11:00 a.m.-Regular Worship.
6:00 p.m.-Evening Worship.
WEDNESDAY

services-Call

GB
4/
5%
6
6
7!j
9
912
I OY
102
li1i.

HURON HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH
Presently meeting at the YM-YWCA
Affiliated with the Baptist General Conf.
Rev. Charles Johnson
761-6749
9:30 a.m.-U. Fellowship Coffee Presession.
9:45 a.m.-U. Fellowship Bible Study.
1 1 :00 a.m.-"The Liberators We Need Most."
7:00 p.m. - "'Revival:' Superannuated or
Supernatural?"
BETHLEHEM UNITED
CHURCH OF CHRIST
423 S. Fourth Ave.
Telephone 665-6159
Pastors: E. R. Klaudt, Armin C. Bizer,
W. C. Wright
9:30 and 10:45 a.m.-Worship Services.
9:30 and 10:45 a m.-Church School.

*,l

Idid.

4

"I'm Marshall Wright. Went to college at night. Wasted
a lot of dimes trying to land a job. Finally one came
through: I'm an electronics engineer and well on my way
to a Master's Degree."
\ings are changing.

4

W LPet. GB
St. Louis 44 27 .620 -
Chicago 43 29 .597 1 fa
Cincinnati 43 33 .566 3%

LUTHERAN STUDENT CENTER

,

1I

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