s THE MICHIGAN DAILY w' EDNESDA Netters [I L ell Marcus. Vin Singles Special To The Daily Bow to MSU' Batmen Beat WMU Broncs 7-2' Bouts Set To Replace Clay at Heavyweigli YvAue Tilt, n1 v v - I l4sk-e WMM..W- AMb- EAST LANSING-The Michigan ate Spartans fought a nip- id-tuck battle on their home urts yesterday to edge past the .ichigan tennis team 5-4. By spitting the singles matches id muscling their way past the 'olverines in the first two dou- e matches, the Spartans were ble to pull themselves within le point of the league-leading dlves just nine days shy of the restern Conference tennis tour- ament. "I'm pleased that we won four," ,id Wolverine Coach Bill Mur- iy. "There were several close atches and we're in pretty good :ape for our up-coming meets." Dick Dell continued on his hot in streak as number one singles ayed for Michigan with a 6-4, -3 pasting of Spartan Chuck rainard. The other standout performance the match was turned in by the ird Michigan doubles team of I Waits and Bob Pritula who ok on their victorious Spartan ngles opponents Dick Dhooge and m. Phillips and handed them a .fty 6-8, 7-5, 9-7 loss. Murphy termed that match the finest they've done to date." Brian Marcus bested Rich Mon- i for Michigan's second set, 6-4, 6, 8-6. Likewise Pete Fishback imped Mickey Szilagyi 8-6, 6-1. The Spartans proved strong in e backup positionls as John oode from MSU defeated Ron eeguarden 7-, 5-7, 6-4; Dhooge 'opped Waits in three sets 6-2, 6, 6-4, and Phillips overpowered :itula 6-0, 6-1. Special To The DailyC KALAMAZOO-Michigan came on like a power-house of pent-1 up energy to explode againstj Western Michigan's baseball teamf yesterday for a 7-2 victory thati wiped out an anomalous loss lastE week at the hands of the Broncos, 8-0. Wolverine outfielder Keith Spi- t N. cei twice drove in Les Tanona, Michigan's first baseman, who had preceded him with doubles both times. Tanona went three for five, in batting. -.:'The Wolverine victory went to' 2 Geoff Zahn who pitched the first four innings. Zahn's mark now stands at 7-1. He was relieved by Bill Zepp in the fifth who gave up two runs to WMU in the fifth' inning. Larry Guidi hurled the last two frames.{ The Michigan nine were rained out of successive doubleheaders over the weekend, Illinois on Fri- jay and Purdue on Saturday. The Sunday make-up contest with Purdue died a-borning as the field was still in wet form. Spicer's RBI's came in the first with a double and in the third s when he singled Tanona home. Second baseman Rick Sygar in-1 creased the Wolverine lead in the1 fourth with a two-run single that sent Zahn and third baseman ::... Glenn Redmon scampering for hicago Cubs Ron Santos' smash home.dn to the ubs. 4Redmon also drove in a run in1 o the Cubs. the seventh and had two hits. Michigan scored a run in the1 NEW YORK {) - A tentative four-bout schedule for an elimi- was rained-out of one weekend nation tournament to determine game. Michigan is now 5-3 in the the successor to heavyweight league. champion Cassius Clay was out- Minesota faces a stiff series of fined yesterday by Michael Malitz, four twin bills, two each weekend ! president of a new promoting including a Saturday affair here' firm to be known as Sports Ac- at the Wolverines' lair. tion, Inc. Michigan also plays Iowa in a In the meantime, there were twin bill on Friday and wins up reports that Clay wants to fight' the season the following weekend at least three contenders outside with two games with Michigan the United States while under in- State on separate days. dictment on a charge of refusing to be drafted into the armed LINE SCORE forces. Malitz said previously that sev- MICHIGAN 101 200 210 en of eight contenders listed by WMU 000 020 000 the New York State Commission Zahn, Zepp, Guidi; Nelson. and the World Boxing Association Hall, Mays; Brown. WP-Zahn had agreed to participate in the (6-1); LP-Hall. tourney. Only Joe Franzier of Philadelphia was uncommitted. Tentative Schedule Ta Il * According to Malitz, a guiding Illini force in many of Clay's closed cir- cuit television bouts, the tenta- tive schedule would read like this: To iMianinarn July 15 - Floyd Patterson of New York vs. Oscar Bonavena of Argentina at Houston Astrodome. uenAug. 4-5-Ernie Terrell of Chi-s FSes cago vs. Jimmy Ellis of Louisville, Ky., site to be determined. CHAMPAIGN, Ill. 03) - Dr. Sept. 2 or Sept. 16 - George David D. Henry, University of Il- Chuvalo of Toronto vs. Frazier, linois president, said today the site to be determined. university will carry on a com- Sept. 16 or Oct. 7-Karl Mil-j denberger, West Germany, vs. plete program ofninCrlg Thad Spencer, San Francisco, in athletics despite an NCAA ruling Frankfurt, Germany. According to Malitz, the first round matches would be followed by semifinals, hopefully Oct. 21 and Dec. 2 with a final champion- ship bout in late January, 1968. No actual contracts have been signed. Malitz said the first six fights probably would be carried on home television on the American Broadcasting Company's W i d e World of Sports. All would be held late Saturday afternoons to fit the schedule or would be held Friday night and taped for television Clay Wants to Fight Clay said in Houston Monday he would like to fight Chuvalo. Patterson and Mildenberger to finance his court fight. Irv Ungerman of Toronto, who manages Chuvalo, said in Toron- to "We're very, very eager to get him, but we'll also try to fight Frazier in the elimination tour- nament." There were other repoi'ts that Clay was considering boxing Leotis Martin of Toledo, Ohio, in Stockholm and possibly Spencer in Tokyo. If Clay wants to fight outside the country he will have to get permission to leave the country from a federal judge. Clay was indicted Monday by a federal grand jury in Houston, the adopted hometown where he was called as a draftee April 28, but refused to take the oath, ex- plaining that he was Muslim min- ister Muhammad Ali and, as a man of the cloth, exempt from military duty. Keeps Passport The government asked U.S. Dist. Judge Ben C. Connally to order Clay to surrender his pass- port, but one of Clay's lawyers. Hayden Covington of New York, argued that this would be taking the fighter's livelihood away. Covington told Connally in a brief hearing on bond terms that the influential New York State Athletic Commission, the World Boxing Association and other state boxing commissions have taken Clay's right to fight away. Connally interrupted Covington to saythat Clay could keep the passport and would be free to travel through the United States on Muslim duties, but that he would have to request court per- mission for any trip abroad- U.S Atty. Morton Susman ob- jected to Connally's ruling on the passport, explaining that a Selec- tive Service violation is not an extraditable offense, but that leaving the country without a passport is. "Their fear is that if he is per- mitted to leave the country, he will not return," Covington said. "We have seen a few cases where they don't," the judge replied. 4 k SAN FRANCISCO'S third baseman Jim Hart, le ft, knocks down C as shortstop Jim Davenport overruns the hit in yes terday's 10-2 loss t P C C f: 1h h2 Ol:ympics Bar, Of Stimulantit TEHRAN, Iran (P)-Teammates e f any athlete found to be taking t timulants during the 1968 Olym- ic games and future Olympics b vill be automatically disqualified, d every Brundage announced yes- a erday. T Brundage is president of the I nternational Olypmic Committee- r The new rule does not mean all thletes from the convicted ath- C ete's country would be disquali- A Led, but only those competing di- S ectly with him. c Officials also will make a care- F ul check of the amateur standing p f Olympic athletes, Brundage d aid. But, he added, the IOC turned t .own a proposal that Olympic F thletes turning professional with- d a one year of the games would f ave withdrawn any medal they r night have won. C Appointments Barred i Brundage said a key issue de- S ided at the just-completed IOC o ession here was a rule that gov- g rnments cannot designate mem- )rs of national Olympic com- u Mets Davis. Beats Reds in 11th;- Tigers, Cubs, Sox Notch Wints By The Associated Press had tripled, with the winning run home run into the right field The Chicago White Sox drop- in the seventh inning, stands. ed the world champion Baltimore Buford sliced a single to left The victory went to Denny Mc- orioles nto last place in the off loser Eddie Watt after win- Lain, 3-3. kmerican League by beating the ning pitcher Gary Peters tripled Fred Gladding replaced Mc- )rioles 5-4 last night for their' off the right field wall for his Lain with two out in the seventhj ifth straight victory. second hit of the game. after the Indians scored on Larry The White Sox remained a The first four Chicago runs scor- Brown's infield hit, Fred Whit- Lalf-game back.of first-place De- ed on homers by Tommy Agee and fd's pinch double and infield ome pitcher Gary ,Peters, who Ron Hansen after Baltimore start- er Tom Phoebus yielded, leadoff St. Louis, helped by Roger Mar-J walks in the first sand fifth in- is' first NL homer, took over sec- 1eam m ates nings. and place, 11/2 games back of the A homer by Boog Powell, fol- Reds, by defeating Pittsburgh 6- * lowing a pair of two-out walks in 3. The Pirates dropped to third, Qsn1 A hthe first inning, gave Baltimore a two games back. OIL . r A thl etes 9 3-2 lead. The Orioles came from Philadelphia beat Atlanta 3-2 behind again, tying the score 4-4 when reliever Dick Hall got Hank lection as IOC president when his in the sixth, when Paul Blair's Aaron on a foul fly with two out erm expires next year. sacrifice fly scored Brooks Rob- and the bases loaded in the eighth. Eleven awards were announced inson who had doubled and mov- Houston beat Los Angeles 5-2 and y Brundage, ranging from a ed to third on ani nfield out. the Chicago Cubs walloped San iploma for the Japanese director Tommy Davis' homer in the 11th Francisco 10-2 in the other NL who produced the film on the 1964 inning gave the New York Mets a games. Tokyo games to a trophy for an 3-2 victory over first place Cin- talian bobsledder who helped his cinnati in the National League, ivals win a gold medal. Davis' shot, his third, came off The IOC awarded the Olympic Reds, Mel Queen, who lost his J"e "up to both the Bolivar Games first game after winning four. AMERICAN LEAGUE kssociation for arranging the Queen relived Cincinnati starter w L Pct. GB outh American Bolivar sports Gary Nolan in the eighth inning Detroit 14 7 .667 - :ompetition,and the International and struck out six in setting the Washington 2 11 .53 - Federation of Silent Sports for Mets down-until Davis' homer over x-California 12 12 .500 31: romoting competion among the the left-field wall. Boston 11 11 .500 3.. leaf and dumb. t tx-New York 10 10 .500 31. The Reds tied the game 2-2 on Minnesota 10 12 .455 41. The oytrib r omw ntt an unearned run in the eighth af- Baltimore 9 13 .409 5'2 hree contributors to world sport: t Kansas City 9 13 .409 514 Kon Ichikawa of Japan who pro-tr pich hitter rt Shamskyle Cleveland 8 12 .400 5 % Kon the1a ToyoOlympics off with a single. Pinch runner x-Late game not included, luced the 1964 Tokyo Olmo, Dick Simpson took second on a YESTERDAY'S RESULTS ilm, Jose Antonio Eiola Olaso, acrifice, third on a fly out, and Kansas City 4-2, Boston 3-5 etiring president of S p a i n ' s scred on aly cathen Detroit 4, Cleveland 3 )lympic Committee for promot- scored on a passed ball by catcher Chicago 5, Baltimore 4 ng Spanish sports, and Britain's John Sullivan. Minnesota 11, Washington ' ir H e r b e r t MacDonald for Detroit, paced by home runs TNew ork at California (ME) rganizing the Commonwealth from Al Kaline and Bill Freehan, New York at California (n) games in Jamaica. stayed on top in the AL by beat- Boston at Kansas City (n) ing levland4-3 Detroit at Cleveland (n) The Mohammed Taher trophy ing Cleveland 4-3. hicgo at Baltimore (n) vent to Italy's Eugenio Monti, Kaline's homer, his seventh, only games scheduled who helped the British two-man followed a leadoff single by Dick obsled team defeat him for a McAuliffe in the fifth inning and ;old medal at the Innsbruck broke a 1-1 tie. Freehan homeredj Olympics by giving them a bolt later in the inning with the bases - rom his own sled, and to Rodri- empty. go de Castro Pereira of the Por- The Indians got a run back in ugese Olympic committee for his the bottom of the fifth when Lee A mI eric a a questrian activities a 1 t h o u g h Mays batted for starter and loser more than 70 years old. Sam McDowell, 2-1, and hit a A3 __ - 1 F c E . . ( :I >!!! U 7 Sco res - SINGLES Dick Dell (M) d. Chuck Brain- ard, 6-4, 6-3; Brian Marcus (M) d. Rich Monan, 6-4, 0-6, 8-6; Pete Fishback d. Mickey Szila- gyi, 8-6, 6-1; John Goode (MSU) d. Ron Teeguarden, 7-5, 5-7, 6-4; Dick Dhooge (MSU) d. Ed Waits, 6-2, 4-6, 6-4; Jim Phillips (MSU) d. Bob Pritula, 6-0, 6-1. DOUBLES Monan, Brainard (MSU) d. Dell, Fishback, 7-5, 3-6, 6-2; Szilagyi, Goode (MSU) d. Mar- cus, Teeguarden, 6-4, 5-7, 6-4; Waits, Pritula (M) d. Dhooge, Pritula, 6-8, 7-5, 9-7. eighth on a wild pitch. "The fellows were just a little bit more ready to play, having to wait out the weekend rains," com- mented assistant coach Dick Honig about the revenge on the Broncos. Yesterday's game was a non- conference contest. The loss of the Big Ten twin bills on the weekend have hurt second-place Michigan's chances to overtake 'first-place Minnesota. Minnesota has an 8-1 record and una piceaTnescnooi on proba- tion for two years. The ruling, announced Sunday, barred the Illini from any Rose Bowl participation, NCAA basket- ball playoffs and football games on television for two years after this fall's schedule. In a statement, Dr. Henry said the university "is disappointed that the National Collegiate Ath- letic Association has seen fit to invoke further severe penalties on the university beyond those which were imposed by the intercollegiate conference Big Ten." "However, as a member of the NCAA, the university respects its authority and principle under which it has acted. }"The University of Illinois - in- tends to continue a complete pro- gram of intercollegiate athletics regulations set forth by the asso- ciation," the statement added. "We urge our alumni and friends to be understanding and cooperative in this objective." The NCAA probation action stemmed from the Illini slush fund scandal. Under a Big Ten edict coaches Pete Elliott, Harry Com- bes and Howard Braun were forced to resign. Jim Valek replaced Elliott and Harv Schmidt succeeded Combes as head football and basketball coach, respectively. Name Three To M' Prize Jack Clancy, Bob Fehrs and Carl Robie have been nominated for the Ann Arbor Quarterback Club's annual "Michigan Senior Athlete Award." The award will be presented next Tuesday at the club's meet- ing at the Barton Hills Country Club to the athlete receiving thej most votes cast by undergraduatej varsity men. Prof. Marcus Plant, faculty rep- resentative to the Big Ten and president of the National Colle- giate Athletic Association will make the presentation. Clancy is Michigan's 50th foot- ball All-America and set a pass- catching record last season. Fehrs is a three-letter man in wrestling and Robie breaks swimming rec- ords just about everytime he 'hits the water. Terry Barr, alumnus of Micni- gan and the Detroit Lions, will be toastmaster for the occasion which will also hear Michigan football coach Bump Elliott outline next year's prospects. 4 I NTIe StAEndings NATIONAL LEAGUE - I '1 I Cincinnati St. Louis Pittsburgh Atlanta Chicago Philadelphia San Francisco New York Los A-ngeles Houston W L 17 9 14 9 12 8 12 10 11 10 11 10 10 13 9 13 8 14 8 16 Pct. .654 .609 .600 .545 .514 .514 .435 .409 .364 .333 GB 2 3 3z2 31% 5Y2 6 7 8 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago 16, San Francisco 2 New York 3, Cincinnati 2 (11 inn) St. Louis 6, Pittsburgh 3 Philadelphia 3, Atlanta 2 H1oustor, 5, Los Angeles 2 TODAY'S GAMES Cincinnati at New York (n) Atlanta at Philadelphia (2, t-n) St. Louis at Pittsburgh (n) San Francisco at Chicago Los Angeles at Houston (n) This appeared to be a move aimed particularly against the French government, which has designated officials for the French Olympic Committee. The committee has since amend- ed its statutes, however, so that government officials can serve on the Olympic body as long as they are not chosen by the government and do not represent it. Brundage, who at 79 has been head of the Olympic Committee the past 15 years, refused to say whether he would stand for re- Huge discounts with the international Student ID Card Air travel throughout Europe, Israel * at 60% less. Same' huge savings on accommodations, admissions, etc. The ID Card is a must for every traveling student. 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We go to such fuss and expense brewing all that taste into Budweiser, we want our cus- tomers to get it all out. And this is a fact: chilling beer to near-freezing tem- peratures hides both taste and aroma. 40° is just right. To make it easy for you, we've asked all the bartenders to serve Bud@ at 40°. Also, every refrigerator is designed to