WEDNESDAY, APRIL 13, 1936 THE MICHIGAN DAILY V*Arl" M"Vrlnkl WENSDY ARL13 96iTH I H~. N AL PACE SEVEN V igerS By The Associated Press Major League baseball action swung into high gear yesterday with 16 ateams- opening the 1966 schedule. Four games were played in both the American and Na- tional Leagues, while one senior circuit contest, New York at Cin- cinnati, was canceled due to rain.. * * * NEW YORK-Norm Cash clip- ped Whitey Ford for a run-scor- ing single in the ninth inning that gave Mickey Lolich and De- troit's pennant-minded Tigers a 2-1 victory over the New York Yankees in their baseball season opener yesterday. Lolich, who allowed six hits and struck out 10 in besting Ford in the duel .of. left-handers, opened the Tiger ninth with a single but was out trying for third on Don Wert's single. However, Wert took second on the play, went to third as Jerry Lumpe grounded out, and cruised home when Cash lined Ford's first pitch to center for a hit. Rally Falls Short The Yanks rallied in the last of the ninth when a walk and Joe Pepitone's single put men on first and third with one out. But Lo- lich weathered the jam, getting El- ston Howard and pinch-hitter Roy White on popups. The crowd of 40,006 was the largest in 14 years for a Yankee opener., Pepitone got the Yankees' first homer of the season, sending New York ahead 1-0 in the fifth with a 350-footer into the right field seats. The- Tigers came right. back in the top of the sixth, tying the score on Mickey Stanley's double and Wert's single. Stanley's hit Nip was a controversial one, a hard grounder over third base that the ball boy in short right field picked up. He was awarded a ground rule double by the umpires and the Tigers protested, claiming Stanley could have made three bases. But the ruling stood. There also was a dispute at the game's outset, involving Ford. After the Yankee southpaw retir- ed Wert for the first out, Man- ager Charlie Dressen protested about a handwarmer Ford had in his hip pocket. Umpire Jim Hon- ochick ordered Ford to discard the warmer, a small bottle of hot water. Ford, who has circuatory trou- ble in his left arm, is more effec-' tive in warm weather than in cool -and it was in the coolish 50's at Yankee Stadium.: It was Ford's 11th opening-day assignment and the loss left him with a 5-4 record. He gave the Tigers six hits before being reliev- ed by Pedro Ramos with two out in the ninth inning. Billboardr . The Michigan baseball team will meet the University of De- troit in a single game at 3:30 at Ferry Field. The game was orig- inally scheduled for last Fri- day but was postponed because of bad weather. General admission for today's game is one dollar. Students and faculty are admitted free on their I.D. cards and athletic cards. ankees Orioles Win on Balk a two- DenC BOSTON - Jim Lonborg, who seventh had pitched three innings of per- The2 feet relief, balked with the bases in Com loaded in the 13th yesterday, and straigh handed the Baltimore Orioles a 1964, g 5-4 opening day victory over the myl Jo Boston Red Sox. fifth ai Lonborg slammed the door in Big the face of the rallying Orioles in two ou the 10th, but filled the bases with Angels two out in the 13th. He allowed a broke t single to Bob Johnson, then in- run on tentionally walked two Orioles Bob Ro after Johnson moved to third on a sacrifice and a fly ball. TN Then, pitching to Luis Aparicio with two out, he balked and John- ST. son strolled home with the win- Sandy ning run. ninthi S * les fro * X Minnes White Sox Wiiithe Ka CHICAGO - T o m McCraw an Ame scratched a bases-loaded, 14th in- Versa ning single yesterday that propel- a base led the Chicago White Sox to a on a w marathon 3-2 opening day victory fending over the California Angels. pionst McCraw's single off the glove of c a m p first baseman Guillermo Montanez ground drove in Floyd Robinson with the Jimt run that broke the 2-2 tie that winner had existed since the seventh in- son, ga ning. fish) F The winning blow came off only f George Brunet, the fourth Angel Twins. pitcher. Minn Brunet, who came on in the third i 14th, got into trouble immediate- singled ly. He allowed a single to Rob- fielder inson and had two men on when the ba Ken Berry sacrificed and reached fice byt second on a late throw. A single and th by J. C. Martin loaded the bases spino's and set the stage for McCraw's The winner. whenf Rookie outfielder Tommy Agee over T erased a 2-0 California lead with berger In C run homer off Angel ace Chance with two out in the h. Angels, winless all last year niskey Park and beaten 11 t times here since July 22, ot to Chicago starter Tom- hn for single runs in the nd sixth. Joe Adcock's homer with it in the sixth pushed the ahead 2-0. California the ice with a fifth-inning Paul Schaal's triple and odger's single. ** * , Aiiis Slip Past A's PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS - Valdespino's single in the inning scored Zoilo Versal- om second and gave the ota Twins a 2-1 victory over ansas City A's yesterday in erican League opener. alles opened the frame with on balls, moved to second 'ild pitch and gave the de- g American League cham- their first victory of the a i g n when Valdespino ed a single to right. (Mudcat) Grant, a 20-game for Minnesota last sea- ve up six hits. Jim (Cat- Hunter, the loser, yielded our hits to the slugging nesota scored first in the nning when Bernie Allen and took second when out- Mike Hershberger fumbled ll for an error. A sacri- Grant moved Allen to third, e latter scored on Valde- single to left. A's tied it in the fourth Hershberger lined a triple ony Oliva's head. Hersh- scored on Bill Bryan's ~pener grounder to first baseman Don Mincher. * * * Gianits Wallop Cubs SAN FRANCISCO-Ace right- hander Juan Marichal of the San Francisco Giants lost his bid for a perfect game in the seventh in- ning yesterday but went on to whip the Chicago Cubs 9-1 on a three-hitter in their National League baseball opener. Willie Mays spoiled the manag- erial return of his old boss Leo Durocher when he walloped a 415- foot homer with a man on base in the fourth to trigger a six-run uprising, which clinched the game for the Giants. Marichal, who had a 22-13 rec- ord last year, retired the first 18 men to face him. Then Ty Cline was safe on an error opening the seventh, and Glenn Beckert dou- bled for the first Chicago hit. Cline scored on an infield out. . * * The night game between St. Louis and Philadelphia was post- poned after one inning of play in rainy, 44-degree weather. Pittsburgh opened its season by defeating Atlanta 3-2 on Willie Stargell's 13th inning home run, Houston traveled to Los Angeles to play under the lights in the other NL game. Over 50,000 fans attended the Atlanta-Pittsburgh affair, which was the first major league game ever played in the South. Tony Cloninger, a 24-game winner for the Braves last year, went all the way for the Braves, striking out 12. But he ran into trouble in the 13th when Matty Alou beat out a bun. Two outs later, Stargell hammered out his homer. PLAYOFF RESULTS: Celtics Oust 76ers in NBA; By The Associated Press PHILADELPHIA -- The Boston Celtics defeated the Philadelphia 76ers 120-112 last night to advance to the National Basketball Asso- ciation playoff finals for the 10th straight year. Led by their brilliant outside shooters, John Havlicek, with 32 points, and Sam Jones, with 30, the Celtics eliminated the team that had edged them out of the regular season Eastern title by a single game, and qualified to meet the Western champions for the 1966 NBA title. Boston won this four-of-7 game Eastern final series 4-1, twice de- feating the 76ers on their home floor and twice in Boston. The Celtics will be seeking their eighth straight league crown against the winner of the current Western final between Los Angeles and St. Louis. Ironically, Wilt Chamberlain, who scored 46 points, was a major contributor for the Philadelphia defeat as the notoriously poor foul shooter made only eight of 25' free throws. The 76ers as a team missed 27 of 52 attempts at the charity line, while Boston connected on 31 of 42 free throws. In defeating the 76ers on the Convention Hall boards for the first time since Dec. 11, 1964, and after 10 straight losses there, Bos- ton raced to a 61-51 halftime lead. Sam Jones, with 16, and Havli- cek, with 12, led the way. DETROIT-Second period goalsI by Chico Maki and Eric Nesteren- ko carried the Chicago Black Hawks to a 2-1 victory over the Detroit Red Wings last night and moved them to a 2-1 edge in their best-of-7 Stanley Cup playoff se- ries. The triumph was costly to the Black Hawks, however, as they lost the services of defenseman Elmer Vasko in the first period and Maki the third. Maki fell to the ice early in the final period after fighting for the puck with a number of players in front of the Chicago bench. He suffered a sprained right knee and possible torn ligaments. He is not expected to play in the fourth game of the series tomorrow. Vasko sustained an eight-inch gash on the bask of his right thigh while stopping Norm Ull- man's breakaway attempt. The wound required 20 stitches. Bryan Watson, again given the job of shadowing Chicago's Bob- by Hull, scored Detroit's only goal' at the 15:01 mark of the first period. Watson skated around the right side and beat goalie Glenn Hall with a rising 50-footer. Hall ap- peared to be screened by Chicago defenseman Al MacNeil. TORONTO--Ralph Backstrom, Bobby Rousseau and Terry Harper scored three minutes apart in the second period as the Montreal Ca- nadiens came from behind for a 5-2 victory over Toronto last night and a 3-0 lead in their National Hockey League playoff series. I The Canadiens' third straight triumph pushed the Leafs to the bring of elimination in the best- of-7 semintinal set. They now must win four in a row, beginning with tomorrow night's fourth game at Maple Leaf Gardens, to reach the final round. Trailing 2-0 with eight minutes gone in the second period, the Canadiens capitalized on a Toron- to error and turned the tempo of the game. Dick Duff, a former Leaf, trig- gered the explosion when he pick- ed off a clearing pass by Toronto defenseman Tom Horton inside the blue line and fed Backstrom, sweeping in alone on the right side. Backstrom beat Leaf goalie John Bower with a short back- hander and the Canadiens were on their way. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: DAVE WEIR DAVE WEIR defenseman Al MacNeil. I Spring-Summer Students: We have new and previously owned books ENGINEERING-All courses BUS. AD.-All: courses NURSING-All courses L.S.A.-All courses* STUDGNT DOOK SGRVIC9 *Sorry, we don't have any Serbo-Croatian Books. I ECON-O-CAR SEMESTER-BREAK SPECIAL BENT A CAB 10 DAYS NO DAILY CHARGE 7c a mile 2000-mile minimum We rent to students 19, years and older "Unless we are prepared to fight a general war... in all of Southeast Asia, we have no alternative but to seek a general accommodation." -Senator J. William Fuibright, on the Senate floor, March 1,1966 A new approach to peace in Asia- based on hard facts and nonpartisan sanity- prepared for the American Friends Service Committee More Daily Classified Ads / ~ri r~ 633.2033 USED CARS 60 MERCO.2 dr. one owner, new tires, $160. 665-4896 N19 MG TD 1953 reconditioned. Richard Chadwick 6653719. N23 AUSTIN-SPRITE, 1964 Mark III. Low mi.excell. cond. 665-4746 N24 TR-3 1959 2 tops, red, very good running cond. $670 or best offer. Call Ned 764-4447 or 662-9301. N25. 1957 OLDSMOBILE. New tires, good looking, runs well. $125 cash. 662-4746. N17 ALFA ROMEO burgundy roadster, 51,000 m., radio and heater, excellent cond, must be seen. Call 662-4148. 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Only 26,000 mi., excel- lent condition, disc brakes, twin carburetors, front wheel drive, more power than _any,.beetle. Very rea- sonable, niust sell. Phone Norm at 761-2123 cr 764-2163. N14 DATING is more enjoyable with THE RIGHT PERSON IBM Computer AND personal interviews help us arrange DATES YOU'LL REALLY ENJOY MICHIGAN SCIENTIFIC INTRODUCTION SERVICE Call 662-4867, write 216 S. State for free brochure if interview MEALS-Monday, Tues., Thurs., Fri., lunch, Mon.-Fri. dinner. Any or ali meals offered may be purchased. Total price less than $10 per week. Call fraternity house mgr., NO 2-8312. PART TIME Multi-Million Dollar Company hiring for part time sales work. Earnings in excess of $3.00 per hour. This is not pots-knives-books or any of that door Want to be a leader and double your chances for success in life? You can, by earning both a degree and an Army officer's commission at the same time.. . even though you may not have taken ROTC training in your first two years! Through a new program, you can be commissioned as a Second Lieutenant after taking two years of Army ROTC training while you complete your studies for a college degree. You can qualify for this program by attending a special six-week summer training camp after your sophomore year and then completing the ROTC Advanced Course in your junior and senior years of college. Here's what ROTC training and an officer's commission will do for you: * It will qualify you to fulfill your military obligation as an officer. * You will learn to organize, motivate, and lead others. * You will develop leadership qualities that many college men miss-self-discipline, physical stamina, poise, bearing, the acceptance of responsibility and other qualities that contribute to success in either a civilian or military career. f You will receive $40 per month during your junior and senior years, plus pay and mile. age for summer training. The training and experience you will receive through Army ROTC will pay off for the rest of your life. A decision to take advantage of this new program could be one of the most important you will ever make. You owe it to yourself to investigate this new important opportunity. For complete information on the new Two-Year Army ROTC Program see the Professor of Military Science on campus. "You Americans don't understand. You are making beggars of our children, prostitutes of our women, and Communists of our men." An American soldier was handing out candy to, a bunch of kids. The man who unexpectedly spat these words out at him was not a North Vietnamese or a member of the Vietcong. He was a South Vietnamese schoolteacher--and whether or nt his accusations are true, they do reveal South Vietnamese emotions, and facts about the war most Americans tend to ignore. The time for ignoring the facts aboutVietnam is over. Believing this, the American Friends Service Committee set up a "working party" to search for alternatives to military force. Their report does not claim to be the definitive answer to the problem of Vietnam. It does pro- vide a comprehensive historical background to the war; it does provide paths of action which can halt the war's expansion and open the way to peace. There are eight carefully documented chapters-each one written by an expert in the field of history or foreign affairs, and an appendix which includes the full texts of the 1954 Geneva Agreements on-Vietnam, and the program of the National Liberation Front of South Vietnam. If you want facts rather than platitudes about Vietnam... if- you are chiefly concerned not with past wrongs and old griev- ances but with the possibilities for peace now -and with the constructive changes that can redeem a decade of mistakes-then this im- portant, nonpartisan document is indispen- sable reading for you. PEACE IN VIETNAM is more than history, analysis, and a fresh ap- proach. It is an eleventh-hour appeal to sanity. Now available at bookstores, $3.00 (Paperback, 950) AMERICAN FRIENDS SERVICE COMMITT7EE Working Party for Peace in VetNmm, which prepared this vitally important book: BRONSON P. CLARK, Vice-President of Guilford Instrument Laboratories in Oberlin, Ohio; a former Director of the AFSO Algerian Refugee Program. WOODRUFF J. EMLEN, an investment counselor, former Marketing economist for Economic. Cooperation Administration (now AID), and one of 3 members of the AFSC exploratory mission to Vietnam in .1966. DOROTHY HUTCHINSON, International Chairman of the Women's International League for Peace and Free- dom and a writer and lecturer on international relations. GEORGE XvcT. KAHIN, Professor of Government at Cornell University, direc- tor of Cornell's Southeast Asia program, and author of four books in the field. JONATHAN MIRSKY, Instructor in the Oriental Stud- ies Department at the University of Pennsylvania, and an authority on China, who spent the summer of 1965 in South Vietnam. A. J.