PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY, APRIL 10, 1966 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SUNDAY. APRIL 10, 1960 Hi-Fi Studio 121 W. Washington NO 8-7942 (Across from Old German) Just arrived .. . COLOR TV SH IPMENT- VM-GRUNDIG- STEREO CONSOLES. SERVICE PROBLEMS? TRY OUR EXPANDED DOWNTOWN SERVICE COUNCIL OF EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN MEETING, APRIL 11, at 7:30 P.M. in the University High School Cafeteria, Rm. 1430 Everybody is welcome lediegs, NEW YORK (t:) - The Cincin- nati Reds and the Minnesota Twins will open the World Series in Cincinnati next October accord- ing to a sampling of opinion among baseball writers covering the spring training camps. If the writers are correct the Reds will beat out the San Fran- cisco Giants in a wild scramble that also will involve the Atlanta Braves, Los Angeles Dodgers, Pittsburgh Pirates and Philadel- phia Phillies. A poll of 43 writers, scattered among the 20 camps, picked the Twins to repeat in the American League in a tight finish with the Baltimore Orioles and Detroit Tigers. The Twins and Tigers each drew 13 first place votes but Min- nesota's total of 372 points was good for first and Detroit's 362 left them third, one point behind Baltimore. Chicago, Cleveland and New Twins ,Picked fc York also drew at least one pen- nant vote. The writers korecast six-club races in each league. St. Louis and Chicago followed the top six in the National with Houston and the New Yolk Mets bringing up the rear. The Mets were doomed to 10th once more despite their fine spring training season. The Yanks, perennial champs in the American League,. drew only one first place vote and were picked to finish sixth again. Cali- fornia's Angels were ranked sev- enth, followed by the also rans- Washington, Boston and Kansas City-in,-that order. All polls will go out the window Monday and Tuesday when they get down to serious work with the bat and ball. The 10-game open- ing program, spread over two days, is expected to draw about 320,000 fans. Washington gets a chance to hop away first when it opens Mon- day with the special presidential extravanganza. However, Cleve- land is the opposition and Birdie Tebbetts plans to throw Sam Mc-. Dowell against the Senators. Cincinnati also gets a chance to steal a day's march by opening at home Monday against the Mets. The Tuesday program in the American: Kansas City at Minne- sota, California at Chicago, De- SeriesPALMER, HOGAN troit at New York and Baltimore at Boston. By The Associated Press There will be three night games AUGUSTA, Ga. - Baby-faced Tuesday in the National including Tommy Jacobs came charging out the Atlanta opener against Pitts- of the pack and tied defending burgh before a sellout crowd of champion Jack Nicklaus for the 50,983 fans. Philadelphia will be third round lead in the Masters at St. Louis and Houston at the Golf Tournament with an even defending c h a m p i o n Dodgers' par 216 yesterday, but the loudest home park. cheers went to a great champion 'Th I Onnannr 1 -1-I TWO BACK: Jacobs Deadlocked 0 OPENING DAY GAMES Probable Pitchers and Estimated Attendance MONDAY MONDAY American League National League Cleveland (McDowell 17-11), at New York (Fisher 8-24), at Cin- Washington (Richert 15-12), 1:30 cinnati (Pappas 13-9), 2:30 p.m., p.m., 46,019. 30,000. Only game scheduled. Only game scheduled. TUESDAY FUT7UV~'T~ ,. MI(HIGAN MEN IN EUROPE HAVE IT MADE- WHEN THEY BUY, RENT OR LEASE A CAR IN EUROPE FROM CTE Write-Phone for Free Car Guide-Low Rate Student Plan (AR-TOURS IN EUROPE, Inc. 555 Fifth Ave., N.Y., N.Y. 10017 " PL 1-3550 Campus Rep. Richard Rogers, P.O. Box 112, Ann Arbor CALL ANYTIME-662-5676 .. .. . . TUIJE AY American League Kansas City (Hunter 8-8), at Minnesota (Grant 21-7 or Pascual 9-3), 2:30 p.m., 27,000. Detroit (Lolich 15-9), at New York (Ford 16-13), 2 p.m., 35,000. Baltimore (Barber 15-10), at Boston (Wilson 13-14), 1:30 p.m., 15,000. California (Chance 15-10), at Chicago (John 14-7), 2:15 p.m., 25,000. Only games scheduled. National League Houston (Roberts 5-2), at Los Ongeles (Osteen 15-15), 11 p.m., 35,000. Chicago (Broglio 1-6), at San Francisco (Marichal 22-13), 4 p.m.,, 42,500. Pittsburgh(Veale 17-12), at At-' lanta (Cloninger 24-11), 8:05 p.m., 50,983. Philadelphia (Bunning 19-9), at St. Louis (Gibson 20-12), 9 p.m., 24,000. Only games scheduled. Old Thne i966 openers also will see several clubs guided by new pilots this year. In the American League, Eddie Stanky takes over the Chi- cago White Sox for the retired Al Lopez. The beantowners of B'oston will welcome Billy Herman, and the Kansas City A's will try to improve their last place finish of last year under the tutelage of Alvin Dark, former manager of the San Francisco Giants. In the National League, all eyes are on Leo "The Lip" Durocher' who retired fight coaches to take' over the field generalship of the Cubs. Houston initiates Grady Hatton, and the Mets will begin their first full year under Wes Westrum. Here's the way the vote went with first place votes and points on a 10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis: NATIONAL LEAGUE 1.Cincinnati (14) 371 2. San Francisco (11) 364 3. Atlanta (8) 320 4.Los Angeles (5) 319 5. Pittsburgh (3) 289 6. Philadelphia (2) 263 7. St. Louis 155 8. Chicago 132 9. Houston 80 10. New York 73 AMERICAN LEAGUE 1. Minnesota (13) 373 2. Baltimore (10) 363 3. Detroit (13) 362 4. Chicago (3) 362 5. Cleveland (3) 305 6. New York (1) 242 7. California 189 8. Washington 108 9. Boston 91 10. Kansas City 68 out of the past, Ben Hogan. Amazing Ben The amazing 53-year-old Hogan, in semiretirement for 10 years, beat Arnold Palmer in a head-to- head duel and shot ah73 for 218, which left him in the thick of contention. Palmer, with Hogan command- ing the bulk of the gallery of close to 50,000, settled for a wild, scat- tershot 74-a strange mixture of birdies and bogeys-also for a 218. Jacobs, 31, from Bermuda Dunes, Calif., played in semiprivacy in cutting Augusta National's sprawl- ing par 72 layout down to size with a mechanical 70. Nicklaus, the 26-year-old Gold- en Bear from Columbus, Ohio, youngest player ever to win this title at 23 in 1963 and author of the record 271 score last year, bogeyed the last two holes for a score of 72. He led the field through most of the calm, almost windless day but at the 17th he blasted long and wvent into a trap and at the uphill, 18th he drove into the trees at the right and then pitched onto the fairway, reaching the green in three and two-putting from about 10 feet. Bogey Blues Meanwhile, disaster s t r u c k quickly for the two surprise sec- ond round leaders, Paul Harney, the prematurely graying home pro from Sutton, Mass., and Peter Butler, the British Ryder Cupper. Harney bogeyed four holes in a row-9, 10, 11 and 12-and fin- ished with a 76 for 219. Butler took double bogeys at the third I 0 J" 4 STUDENTS! how adventuresome3 a re you? Come with us and discover the Student's world of East and West Europe-the lure of unknown Africa Travel with -the fascinating Middle East! STUDENTS INTERNATIONAL A TRAVEL CENTER FOR YOUTH OF ALL NATIONS I 203 North Wabash Avenue ! Chicago, Illinois 60601 -----.--.-------- .--------------... . ._._ 1.L:::V1 :'.t .Smt ": iii. :.'f A GRIMACING ARNOLD PALMER and seventh for a nightmarish 79 It looked as if Nicklaus planned and a score of 222. to retake full charge of the tour- January, 38, who hasn't had a nament until he arrived at the tour victory in almost two years, 155-yard, par 3 12th hole, which came to the final hole with a chance to tie for the lead. He I is fronted by a stream, of water poled his approach into a trap andrbacked up by a hillside and at the front of the green, blasted yawning. traps. out 15 feet from the cup and miss- He dunked his tee shot into the ed the putt for a bogey. left, rear trap. When he tried to January finished with a 71 for get out, he moved the ball only six 217 feet, still in the trap, then re- covered to within eight feet, miss- Three players were tied at 219, ing the putt for a double bogey 5. still very much in the dogfight,.iJgtebputtha sobe oge They were dudish Doug San- Just about this same time. ders, seeking his third straight Jacobs was making an equalizing tournament triumph, 75; Jay He- shot on the 475-yard 13th. There bert, elder of the two golfing he boomed a four-wood shot, hole brothers from Lafayette, La., 73, high 40 feet to the left of the pin. and big, long-hitting Ray Floyd Then he sank the putt for an of St. Andrews, Ill. 74. eagle 3. ---Jacobs, who tied the U.S. Open record for a single round with a 64 at Washington, D.C., in 1964, also sank a 15-foot putt for a birdie at the eighth but lost a shot at the 10th, where he hit' an ap- proach into the bunker. The rest of the time, he was steady par. saiI ht 4 $ AV a I r l 1 UNIVERSITY LECTURE Sponsored by Center for Russian Studies and Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures "Heresy Trial in Moscow: The Sinyavsky-Daniel Case" Speaker MAX HAYWARD Fellow, St. Anthony's College, Oxford 4:00 P.M. April 12, 1966 Lane Hall Auditorium 4 Mr. Hayward, an expert on current Soviet affairs, is the author of numer- 11