PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JULY I1; 1967 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY TUESDAY, JULY 11, 1967 Marichal, Chance Named WBA Tourney Nearly Complete in Signing Of Patterson To Fight Over Ah's Title To Start in All-Star Gamel ANAHEIM, Calif. (R) - San Francisco's Juan Marichal, the major leagues winningest pitcher, and Dean Chance of the Minne- sota Twins were named yesterday to ppose each other as the starting pitchers in today's All-Star base- ball game. Manager Walter Alston of the National League All-Stars an- nounced that Marichal would be his starter, and Manager Hank Bauer followed with word that Chance would go for the American League. The rest of the National League batting order has Lou Brock of St. Louis leading off in left field; Robert Clemente, Pittsburgh, right field; Hanle Aaron, Atlanta, center field; Orlando Cepeda, St. Louis, first base; Rich Allen, Philadel- phia, third base; Joe Torre, At- lanta, catcher; Bill Mazeroski, Pittsburgh, second bose; Gene Al- ley, Pittsburgh, shortstop, and Marichal. Bauer said lis third baseman, at Baltimore, Brooks Robinson, would lead off and be followed by Rod Carew, Minnesota, second base; Tony Oliva, Minnesota, cen- ter field; Harmon Killebrew, Min- nesota, first base; Tony Congliaro, Boston, right field; Carl Yas- trzemiski, Boston, left field; Bill Freehan, Detroit, catcher; Rico Petrocelli, Boston, shortstop, and Chance. Marichal, 12-7, and Chance, 11- 7, each will be making his second start in' All-Star competition. Marichal, who has played in five previous games, started in 1965 and allowed only one hit in his three innings of pitching. He didn't receive credit for the victory that year, but his overall All-Star record is 2-1, with a 0.82 earned run average. Chance, who left Anaheim for the Twins in a winter trade was the American League starter in 1964 and blanked the National on two hits in three innings. That was his only All-Star ap- pearance until this year. Neither manager would say what pitcher might follow the starters, who can go no further than the first three innings. Bauer appearedhtobe in slightly better position than Alston be- cause five of his pitchers haven't worked since Friday. Neither team as regular center fielder in the starting line-up. Bauer is switching, Oliva, a reg- ular right fielder, into center, while Alston has tabbed Aaron as his man for the job. Aaron also is regularly a right fielder. "I've given a little thought to that position," Alston said. "I re- serve the right to change my mind. I'm sure I want Clemente in right field, and Brock will be playing left. "So that would leave Aaron in center. I considered putting Brock in centerf and Aaron in left but that would leave two men out of position." NEW YORK (P - The World Boxing Association . approved eight-man heavyweight elimina- tion tournament was virtually completed yesterday as Floyd Patterson, the former two-time champion, agreed to compete. The 32-year-old New Yorker probably will meet 22-year-old Jerry Quarry of Los Angeles in the fourth quarter-final at either Los Angeles or Oakland, Calif.. Olympic Boxing Club of Los An- ' Yancey Durham, said he prefer- Oct. 28. geles or Dan Chargin of the Bo- red to take one match at a time Promoter Mike Malitz of Sports nanza Boxing Club of Oakland. for the hard-hitting 1964 Olympic Action, Inc., which has organized Mrs. Eaton promoted the 10- champion. the tournament to determine a round draw between Patterson Malitz said all of the 'tourney successor to Muhammad Ali, said ?nd Quarry at Los Angeles a contestants had signed run of it -will be up to the California month ago. the tournament contracts. He said pi'omoter to announce Patterson's "If Quarry doesn't sign then most of them will receive a mini- opponent, the date and site. He said the promoter will be either Mrs. Aileen Eaton of the Turbocar To Revolutionize Indy 500, Says Granetelli we'll meet with the WBA to name mum of $50,000 for the quarter- a replacement," said Malitz. finals, $75,000 against 30 per cent Mexico's Manuel Ramos probably of the receipts for the semifinals, would be the sub. and $125,000 against 30 per cent All of the 12-round quarter- for the final. finals, the 15-round semifinals He said the semifinals and and final will be shown on home final will be held in the United television in the United States by States. The Astrodome will be the ABC-TV. site of one semifinal and the 4 -Associated Press YUKKING IT UP before the All-Star game are National League Manager Walt Alston, left, and American League Manager Hank Bauer at press conference in Anaheim, Calif., scene of today's game. Ryun, Keino Emerge Victorious Middle-Distancepecialties LOS ANGELES UIP) - A pair of the world's most celebrated dis- tance 'runners, Kansas collegian Jim Ryun and Kenya policeman Kipchoge Keino, emerged more formidable than ever today in the wake of the United States-British Commonwealth track and field meet. Ryun, the lean, powerful holder of the world mile record, added the 1,500-meter mark to his grow- ing record collection, running 3:33.1 Saturday in the opening session of the two-day interna- tional competition. Keino, possessor of the world 3,000-meter mark and an easy, loping stride, came back Sunday to outduel Australia's great Ron Clarke in the 5,000 meters with a 13:36.8 dlocking. Clarke was timed in 13:40.9. DiminutivesG e r ry Lindgren, America's lone hope against Keino and Clarke, was bothered by foot blisters and finnished a painful third in 13:47.8. Ryun, in beating Keino and smashing the metric mile record of 3:35.6 by Herb Elliott of Aus- tralia in the 1960 Olympics, said: "It was my plan all along to start running well at this time of year. I was surprised that I beat the record by so much and I'm real happy about the time." Keino said: "'I didn't want to come here because I've trained only three weeks and I didn't feel that I was in shape." But the crowd-pleasing African continued his mastery over Clarke and took home honors as the outstanding Commonwealth performer. Asked about his loss to Ryun, Keino flashed his wide grin: "Ryun, he's a good guy. I think I made a mistake by taking the lead on the second lap and run- ning it too fast. I killed myself off.", Then, in a bit of understate- ment, Kipchoge concluded: "But Ryun, he has a good sprint. He's too fast." On the whole, the U.S. men's team dominated their Common- wealth counterparts, 254 - 170, while the visiting women gained a 125-102 victory over the Ameri- can gals. Despite the lack of records, however, crowds of 23,786 and 21,163 in Memorial Coliseum saw a complement of strong perform- ances on consecutive afternoons of warm temperatures and sunny skies. Tommie Smith, the San Jose State sprint sensation with the overdrive kick, nipped rival Jim Hines in 20.2 in the 200 meters as the Texas Southern ace clocked 20.3. Oregon's Wade Bell powered through the last 200 yards to hold off Wilson Kiprught of Ke- nya and win the 800 meters in 1:45.0, just one-tenth off Ryun's American record. Hurdler Ron Whitney, a Colo- rado graduate, turned in.a life- time best of 49.3 in the 400-meter event, just two-tenths off the world markby Rex Cawley of the United States. Ageless long jumper Ralph Bos- ton cleared 27-0% on his initial leap to beat Olympic champ Lynn Davies of Wales, who had to be content with fourth at 26-134. Outstanding in the women's competition were America's Mad- eline Manning, who set a new U.S. record, winning the 800 me- ters in 2:01.6, and Australia's petite Dianne Burge who doubled with victories in the 100 meters, 11.5, and the 200, 23.2. CHICAGO (AP)-A lot of rev- olutionary things are going to be seen in the Indianapolis 500 next year, says Andy Granetelli whose turbine racer made history and started ' controversy there this spring. Driver Parnelli Jones breezed the §TP-Paxton turbocar to with- in 7% miles of victory in the Me- morial Day classic before failure of a $6 ball bearing put it out. Until then, no machine was close to matching it. The turbine threatened to be such a runaway that new restruc- tions by the United States Auto Club have made it all but impos- sible for the same car to race at Indy next year. Reduction of the air intake, for instance, would render the present Pratt & Whitney turmine useless. A new one would have to be devel- oped to compensate for less air and that would take years, says Granatelli. "We no.longer are going to offer to handicap our turbocar," says Granatelli, who will hold a news League Leaders AMERICAN LEAGUE BATTING (200 at bats)-F. Robinson, Balt., .327; Kaline, Det., .328; Yastrzemski, BosC, .324; CarewMinn., .313; Mi- cher, Calif., .295. RUNS BATTED IN - Kille- brew, Minn., 62; F.NRobinson, Balt., 59; Yastrzemski, Bost., 56; Kaline, Det., 53; F. Howard, Wash., 53. HOME RUNS -- F. Howard, Wash., 24; Killebrew, Minn., 22; F. Robinson, Balt., 21; Yastr- zemski,ABost., 19; Mantle, N,Y., 16; McAuliffe, Det., 16. NATIONAL LEAGUE BATTING (200 at bats)-Ce- peda, St.L., .356; Clemente, Pitt., .352; McCarver, St.L., .348; Staub, Houst., .346; Gon- zales, Phil., .328. RUNS BATTED IN - Wynn, Houst., 65; Cepeda, St.L., 59; Aaron, At., 57; Hart, S.F., 57; Perez, Cin., 56. HOME RUNS - Aaron, Atl., 22; Wynn, Houst., 21; Perez, Cin., 17; Santo, Chic., 17; Banks, Chic., 15; Williams, Chic., 15. conference in Indianapolis today. "We will henceforth maintain that the car was designed and built to the exact letter of USAC rules for this year's 500 race and we have no further intention on downgrad- ing it. We want the right to race it like we did in the 500, legally and without restrictions." Granatelli said that "our posi- tion for the future is that if any new burst of ingenuity is called for, it is up .to our competitors to. display it." "Such ingenuity is already hard at work," he added. "It is no secret in racing circles that turbocharged V-8 racing engines easily capable of 700 horsepower, will'be entered in the race next year. It is no secret that a partial torque con- verted racing transmission, multi- plying power, will be ready. And four-wheel drives will be on more cars than just our STP Specials. "The torque converted, which is found on 90 per cent of all pas- senger cars today, can double the torque of a piston engine at lower speeds. These transmissions, fitted to either a four-cylinre or V-8 engine, could make the turbine obsolete in a single race." Shown on TV All but the final will be on the Saturday Wide World of Sports prograb, starting at 5 p.m., East- ern time. The final, projected for January or February of next year, will be shown on prime evening time. The other quarter-finals, an- nounced previously, are: Aug. 5 , Houston; Astrodome, doubleheader, Ernie Terrell. Chi- cago, ranked 4th by the WBA, vs. Thad Spencer, San Francisco, No. 5, and Jimmy Ellis, Louisville, No. 8, vs. Leotis- Martin, Philadelphia, No. 9. Sept. 16, Offenbach Stadium, Frankfurt, Germany, Karl Mil- denberger, Germany, European heavyweight champion and No. 1, vs. Oscar Bonavena, Argentina, No. 3. Patterson is ranked sixth and Quarry seventh. Frazier vs. Chuvalo That leaves only undefeated Joe Frazier, No. 2, of Philadelphia, and George Chuvalo, No. 10, of Toronto, out of the tournament. They will meet in a 12-rounder at Madison Square Garden, July 19. Frazier refused an invitation to the tournament. His manager, CENTER FOR JAPANESE STUDIES in co-operation with the C.I.C. SUMMER-ASIAN LANGUAGE INSTITUTE PRESENTS RICHARD K. BEARDSLEY Professor of Anthropology at U of M GIVING A PUBLIC LECTURE ENTITLED JAPANESE RELIGIONS AND THEIR SOCIAL FUNCTIONS TODAY TUESDAY, JULY 11, AUDITORIUM A 8:30 P.M. ANGELL HALL final. Announce Dates Malitz said the semifinal dates and sites will be announced near .the completion of the quarter-fi- nals. ABC, however, said the semis are tentatively scheduled for Nov. 11 and Dec. 2. Among those present at the press conference were Bob Evans of Louisville, the WBA president; Mildenberger, Terrell, Martin, and Al Bolan, Patterson's advisor. "THE CLIMATE FOR EDUCATION IS PROGRESS. the technique is innovation" F lorida HAS A PLACE FOR EL E-MENTARY, S ECONDARY TEACHERS Want more facts? SEND FOR FREE COPY 16 PAGE BOOK IN COLORI GHE COMPLETE STORYI "where the action is!" J. W. BURT, Teacher Recruitment Knott Bldg. State Dept. of Education Tallahassee, Florida 32304 Name Maior Address City State____ Zip 4 * 1 -----. I' -- - -7 I Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE W L' Pct. GB St. Louis 49 32 .605 - - Chicago 46 36 .561 312 San Francisco 45 38 .542 5 Cincinnati 46 39 .541 5 Atlanta 42 39 .519 7 Pittsburgh 40 38 .513 714 Philadelphia 40 40 .500 8!2 Los Angeles 34 47 .420 15 Houston 33 50 .398 17 New York 31 47 .397 16yz YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No gainesscheduled TODAY'S GAME American League All - Stars (Chance, Minnesota, 11-7) vs. Na- tional League All-Stars (Marichal, San Francisco, 12-7) at Anaheim, Calif., 7:30 p.m. AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. GR Chicago 47 33 .*88 - Detroit 45 35 .563 2 Minnesota 45 36 556 21j California 45 40 .529 4/ Boston 41 39 .513 '6 Cleveland 40 42 .488 8 Baltimore 39 43 .476 9 New York 36 45, .444,11/ Washington 36 47 .434 12 Kansas City 35 49 .417 14 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS No games scheduled TODAY'S GAME American League All - Stars (Chance, Minnesota, 11-7) vs. Na- tional League All Stars (Marichal, San Francisco, 12-7) at Anaheim, Calif., 7:30 p.m. SPONSORS UNION-LEAGUE DUPLICATE BRIDGE AT THE UNION ROOM 3R THURSDAY, 8:00 JULY 13 CASH PRIZES MASTERS POINTS SUMMER LECTURE SERIES Wednesday, July 12, at 8:15 P.M. PROFESSOR HILLEL 1. SHUVAL Associate Professor of Environmental Health at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem and Environmental Health Consultant to the Israel Defense Army WILL DELIVER A FIRST-HAND REPORT ON THE RECENT EVENTS IN ISRAEL now accepting contributions for fall issue GENERATION t j the initer-arts magazine please send to: David Appel, Editor 1906 Dorchester Kalamazoo, Michigan 49001 * J' li .Il tennis Everyone? HERE IN ANN ARBOR: i i' 1429 HILL ST. Everyone Is Welcome , Professional I nstruction Student Rates Beginning Lessons Membership Package "LEARN WITH A PROFESSIONAL" UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN STUDENT FACULTY TENNIS CLUB THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN Department of Political Science and Center for Russian and East European Studies cordially invite you to a series of lectures on SOCIETY-_ AND POLITICS IN, POLAND TODAY' by DR. JERZY WIATR 'Dice-Director and Chairman, Department of Political Sociology Institute of Philosophy and Sociology Polish Academy of Sciences PRESENTS THE REPERTORY COMPANY CALL 763-0163 for details U VIETNAM STUDY COURSE A series of lectures and discussions # Open to the public TUESDAY EVENINGS-8 P.M., Wesley Foundation Lounge, First Methodist Church 6t° FALL FESTIVAL (SEPT. 19-NOV. 5) 3 NEW PRODUCTIONS -I' lI July 1 1-"The Strategy of Containment and Future ConflictsI in Southeast Asia" Speaker: Walter Goldstein, visiting Professor from the school of International Affairs at Columbia Iul R-"l-itnrical Cultural 'nnd Snciolonicnl Rackarouncl of Vietnam" WEDNESDAY, JULY 12 WEDNESDAY, JULY 19 WEDNESDAY. "Political and Social Transformation in Postwar Poland" "The Party System in Poland in a Comparative Perspective" "Local Politics as an Instrument of Michel de Ghelderode's r1i The Al Euge: I., MERICAN PREMIERE of ne Ionesco's I I 1I F 1. w~~w-~ ~E U