TUESDAY, JUNE 29, 1965 THE 1MICHIG~AN DAILY fl P!W ~V ._a arM lTTF TIi M+11.R. lY l RiiM 1 Y4ll.I aii . t rain .ijgY&&N -r, NCAA Ignores Violation of Ban MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Sox Rap Twins, 17-4; Take Over First Place HAMILTON, N.Y. (())-Ever- ett D. Barnes, president of the National Collegiate Atnietic As- sociation, said yesterday his group plans no formal action against the distance runner Gerry Lindgren or Washington State University. The slender Washington State freshnian, a key figure in the long feud between the NCAA and the rival Amateur Athletic Union, de- fied the Pacific Athletic Confer- ence and the NCAA to compete in the 77th AAU championships Sunday in San Diego.. feating the Russians in the 10,000 meter run. Barnes described as "a lot of bunk" what he said were rumors that collegians who participated in AAU. events would lose any scholarships they might have." "That would be contraty to our rules," he said. Barnes said there was a wide- spread feeling "that our best ath- letes should represent the United States" on the U.S. team that meets the Russians--"and this is only right." Awaits Word He said he was awaiting word from the AAU on a proposal to hold an Olympic year style try- out annually in "which all of the best athletes could compete for a, berth on U.S. teams." He said he would like to see such a tryout to determine the U S. team that will meet the Rus- sians. Cliff Buck, the president of the AAU, has said repeatedly that the AAU will hold to the traditional head-on meetings of its champion- ships to determine the members of the team to meet the Russians. In addition to Lindgren, Tom- my Farrell, the NCAA half-mile champion from St. John's Uni- versity of New York; and a num- ber of other collegians defied the NCAA's ban on the AAU meet. Farrell finished third in the 880 but was picked for the team. Barnes, who also is athletics at Colgate said he did not have tails yet. director of University, all the de- WIMBLEDON PLAY: Ralston Reaches Semifinals By The Associated Press The Chicago White Sox, led by Tom McCraw and Danny Cater, walloped Minnesota 17-4 last night, knocking the Twins out of first place in the American League and moving into a share of the lead with the red-hot Cleveland Indians. The Indians drubbed Boston 9- 2, Fred Whitfield and Vic Da- valillo hitting homers, for their 15th victory in the last 17 games. Detroit nipped. Baltimore 4-3, tying the Orioles for fourth. place -31/ games off the pace and three behind third-place Minne- sota. Mell Stottlemyre tossed a. two- hit shutout and Bobby Richard- son continued his hitting spree as the New York Yankees stretch- ed their winning streak to five with a 3-0, 4-3 twi-night sweep over Washington. The New York Mets, mean- while, ambushed Milwaukee twice, snapping a five-game losing string behind Jack Fisher in the 5-2 opener and taking the night- cap 6-3 with a five-run burst in the fourth inning. Pittsburgh survived a four-run Cincinnati rally in the ninth and edged the Reds 5-4, while Phila- delphia blanked 8t. Louis 3-0 on Chris Short's four-hitter. Two-run homers by Ron San- to and Don Landrum backed Lar- ry Jackson's six-hitter in the. Chi- cago Cubs' 7-2 afternoon victory over Houston. RENT YOUR TV From NEJAC TV RENTALS Rent this 19" GE or Zenith Portable For only $10 per month FREE SERVICE & DELIVERY N EJAC TV RENTALS Call 662-5671 TV Set on Display at Follett's Bookstore No Action Asked whether a4 action would be taken by the NCAA, Barnes said "I would say no." Lindgren "changed his mind so many times" about competing, Baines said. "The last I heard he wasn't going to compete, so I didn't think much about it. It was up to him, naturally." Lindgren finished second to Olympic champion Billy Mills in a thrilling six mile race in which both bettered the world record with a time of 27:11.6 Mills won by one-twentieth of a second. This earned Lindgren another berth on the U.S. team that meets the Russians in Kiev, July 31-Aug. 1. Beats Russians Last year the young runner as- tonished the track world by de- } U Act 'I-M ActinStarts The Intramural Bldg. will be open to Michigan students and faculty 8 a.m.-6 p.m. Monday through Friday for the remainder of the summer session. ' The I-M pool will be open weekdays 4-6. I-M director Earl Riskey an- nounced yesterday that softball league action, will begin on Tues- day, July 6. Individuals may join established clubs, or entire teams will be accepted into the league. Thus far there are 24 teams in the fast-pitch circuit. Games will start at 6:30 p.m. f .A golf tourney will be held on Monday, July 19, on the Michigan Golf Course. There will be 18 holes of medal play, and the eight best performers will shoot another 18. The winner will be the golfer with the lowest 36-hole total.. To enter, one may sign up at the I-M Bldg. or the golf course. Tournaments will also be staged later in the summer in tennis, paddleball and squash. Wednesday nights the I-M Bldg. will be open for co-recrea- tion, 7:30-10 p.m. WIMBLEDON, England ((W))- Shaky Dennis Ralston of Bakers- tield, Calif, climbed over the back of a bavis Cup teammate1 and moved into the semifinals of the Wimbledon Tennis Champion- ships with two top-ranked Aus- tralians and a dark horse from South Africa. Erratic at first and serving 13 double faults in the first two sets, Ralston, top-ranked American, fought from two sets down for a 3-6, 2-6, 6-4, 6-2, 6-2 victory over Marty Riessen of Evanston, Ill. He was joined in the semi-fifials by top-seeded Roy Emerson of Australia, his next opponent Wednesday;' Fred Stolle, Emer- son's Davis Cup teammate, seeded No. 2, and unranked Cliff Drysdale of South Africa,, who eliminated the only other remaining Ameri- can, Allen Fox of Los Angeles, 4-6, 6-2, 7-5, 7-5. Australian Wins Emerson, playing like a machine, overpowered Keith Diepraam of South Africa 4-6, 6-3, 6-1, 6-1 and Stolle, Wimbledon runner-up the last two years, outlasted the foxy Rafael. Osuna of Mexico, 11-13, 6-3, 6-1, 6-2. Stolle plays Drys- dale. Americans had their finest day in the women's division in a dec- ade, sending four players into the quarter-finals. They included Nancy Richey of Dallas, seeded fourth; Billie Jean Moffitt of Long Beach, Calif., No. 5; Justina Bricka of St. Louis and little Jane Albert of Beach, Calif. PebbleI Heldman Out A fifth American representative, Julie Heldman of New York, was ousted by the six-foot Christine Truman of Britain after a tough struggle 3-6, 6-2, 6-3. Misses Richey and Moffitt brushed off their opponents in little more than half an hour. The aggressive, hard-hitting Miss Richey crushed Joyce Williams of England 6-0, 6-3. The bespec- tacled Miss Moffitt trounced Rob- in Lesh of Australia 6-2, 6-0. Miss Bricka, eighth in U.S women's rankings, displayed a lot of fight in outlasting Virginia Wade of England 5-7, 6-4, 8-6. Miss Albert, daughter of former football star Frankie Albert, up- set the eighth-seeded Francoise Durr of France 6-4, 7-5. Miss Albert's quarter-final op- ponent today will be the defending champiaon, Maria Bueno of Bra- zil, who advanced earlier. Miss Richey plays the. towering Miss Truman; Miss Bricka faces Mar- garet Smith, Australia's second- seeded favorite, who won over Frances McClellan of Britain 6-2, 6-1, and Miss Moffitt goes against Lesley Turner of Australia, winner over Lea Pericalo of Italy 6-0, 6-3. GOOD BOOKS .il. II 11 Major League Standings 11 BOB MARSHALL'S AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Chicago 42 26 .618 -- Cleveland 42 26 .618 - Minnesota 42 27 .609 % Detroit 39 30 .565 3%A Baltimore 40 31 .563 3% New York 35 37 .486 9 Los Angeles 32 41 .43 12% Boston 29 41 .414 14 Washington 28 45 .384 16% Kansas City 20 45 .309 20% YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 3-4, Washington 0-3 Detroit 4, Baltimore 3 Cleveland 9, Boston 2 ChIcago 17, Minnesota 4 Only games scheduled TODAY'S GAMES Chicago at Minnesota. New York at Washington, night. Detroit at Baltimore, night. Cleveland at Boston, night. Only games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB x-Los Angeles 44 29 .603 -- Cincinnati 42 30 .583 1% x-San Francisco 39 31 .557 3% Pittsburgh 31 33 M53 Milwaukee 36 32 .529 5% Philadelphia 36 34 .514 6% Chicago 33 39 A4it 10% St. Louis 33 40 .452 11 Houston 33 42 .440 12 New York 25 49 .333 19% x-Late game not included. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Chicago ,, Houston 2 New York 3-6, Milwaukee 2-3 Philadelphia 3, St. Louis 0 Pittsburgh 5, Cincinnati 4 Los Angeles at San Francisco (Ie) TUESDAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at San Francisco. Milwaukeeat New York, night. St. Louis at Philadelphia, night. Houston at Chicago., Cincinnati at Pittsburgh, 2, twl-night. BOOK SHOP 211 s. State y : a. , [, ,. y1 a F t'. _ OPEN 7 NIGHTS Each Week 'til 10 P.M. 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