Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY SHOOTS NEAR-RECORD 66: Nelson's tip helps Fleckman take command in PCI SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (P)-Tour rookie Marty Fleckman took a tip from sage Byron Nelson and fired a four-under-par 66 yester- day for a two-stroke lead in the opening round of the 50th PGA golf championship. "Byron told me you've got to play the par threes and the par fives if you hope to do any good," the strapping 24-year-old young- ster from Port Arthur, Tex., said. "I birdied three of the four par threes, and that's what did it." . Fleckman, who as an amateur led the U.S. Open in 1967 through three rounds and who made golf history by winning his first tour- nament as a pro, birdied the 213- yard third hole without ever hit- ting the fairway or the green, chipping in from the rough, and added birdies at the 12th and 16th on putts on 12 and seven feet. He had only 26 putts - 10 be- low par - for the phenomenal round. The 66, one over the course record, gave the tall, dark-haired Texan a two-stroke lead over Frank Beard, who also putted with radar eyes for a 68 despite bogeys on the last two holes. Only three other players in the bulky 'field of 167 managed to crack the 70 par of the' 7,096-yard Peach Valley course, which swel- tered under 95-degree heat. They were Lee Trevino, the casual wisecracking winner of the U.S. Open in June; bespectacled Mason Rudolph of Clarksville, Tenn., and Don Bies, 30-year-old assistant .pro from Seattle who always seems to play his best in the PGA. All fired 69s. tournament and teaching variety, was quickly dubbed the "Sweat and Swear Open." The searing heat sent rivulets of water down the competitors and the gallery of 12,350. The swearing came in contestants' protests over the 'knotty wire-like rough and the peculiar architec- ture of the course which forced the big hitters to throttle their cannons and fire pop guns. On at least half a dozen holes- the 18th being the prime and most castigated example-players had to lay up off the tee to avoid meandering, Slado Creek or some other hazard. "It's ridiculous," said Arnold Palmer. "Jack Nicklaus is the only player I know who can go over the creek, and he would need a carry of 270 yards." Contenders such as Nicklaus, Beard and Fleckman all acknowl- edged that they used drivers on only five or six of the 14 holes where normally a man might let out with a big blast.. Nicklaus and Palmer each shot 71, a respectable score, and were tied with 'more than a half-dozen other blue ribbon performers in- cluding former Masters winner Gay Brewer. There were seven tied at par 70. They included former PGA champion Al Geiberger, Dan Sikes, Charles Coody, Miller Barber,' Johnny Pott, Frank Barber and Laurie Hammer. All are seasoned pros except Hammer, a blond, matinee idol type of 24, who is in his third year on the circuit. Three of the advance favorites -defending champion Don Janu- ary, Bill Casper and Tom Weis- kopf, fell victim to the weather, the rough and fickle golfing for- tunes. The struggling and. frustrated January, getting a double bogey at the 14th and bogeying the last three holes skied to a 78. Weiskopf, bidding to overtake Casper in the season's money- winning race, saw his game col- lapse on the back nine, shooting 35-42-77.. Casper, unable to shake the putting 'miseries that beset him in the final round of the British Open at Carnoustie last week, struggled to a 74. The bull-shouldered Fleckman, who turned pro last summer, re- fused to be shaken by the heat or the odd character of the course. "I'd rather hit the driver off the tee," he said, "but there's no use getting mad. Everybody else has to play 'the same course. It didn't bother me at all." He birdied three holes in a row, chippingkin from 2'5 feet at the second, knocking in a six-footer at the third and a, seven-footer at the fourth. After bogeying the long 607-yard par 5 sixth by three-putting, he snapped back with birdies on the two par 3 holes on the back nine. Trevino, followed by a large and enthusiastic gallery, also spun off three straight birdies at the sixth, seventh and eighth holes. He double-bogeyed the 11th, where he misjudged a nine-iron approach and took three from the fringe, and'played all other holes in par. ,"I'm scrambling great," he said afterward, his. swarthy face break- ing into a wide grin, "just like I did when I won the Open." This 50th tournament America's professionals, for both daily spots NIGHT EDITOR: PHIL BROWN TEXAS' OWN LEE TREVINO gets off to a rough start in yesterday's opening of the PGA cham- pionship in San Antonio. Trevino had to get out of this sand trap on the first hole, but still shot a' three-under-par 32 on the front nine. The reigning U.S. Open titlist recorded a first-round 69, three strokes off the pace set by young Marty Fleckman. , I I -0 - Barry, SAN FRANCISCO (P) - The San Francisco Warriors opened a court struggle yesterday to re- capture their basketball super- star Rick Ba ry or collect dam- ages for his loss. The Warriors of the National Basketball Association charged in a suit before Superior Court Judge Walter Carpeneti that Bar- ry's 1966-67 contract required that he play for them through the 1967-68 season even though he re- fused to sign a new agreement. Instead, Barry sat out the 1967- 68 season after signing a three- year contract with the Oakland Oaks of the rival American Bas- ketball Association at $75,000 a: season. The Warriors contend that Bar- ry did not fulfill his part of a reserve option clause by merely sitting out the past season. They insist he still is required to give them a year of actual play. The amount of damages the Warriors feel they would be en- titled to fop the loss of the play- er's services was not specified in advance of testimony. Warriors tip off court battle The Oakland contract also gave ' Barry a 15 per cent stock interest in the Oaks, owned by singer Pat Boone and coached by Barry's father-in-law, Bruce Hale. Hale coached Barry ate the Uni versity of Miami. The Oakland agreement also pledged that the Oakland owners would indemnify Barry for any perialties resulting from his leav- ing the San Francisco team. Richard Archer, heading a three-lawyer Warrior legal team started the trial by entering Bar- ry's contracts with the Warriors and the Oaks as exhibits. Pete Peletta, University of pan Francisco athletic director and former coach, testified as the first witness that Barry was the most exciting player in professional basketball. Archersaid he would establish that the Warriors playing without Barry suffered a serious decrease in attendance and that other NBA teams also suffered an attendance lag. Barry played two years with San Francisco before signing the three year contract with Oakland for $225,000. The Warriors won a restraining order forbidding him from playing for any other team until his reserve clause with San Francisco expires on Sept. '30, 1968. With Barry as top scorer, the San Francisco club won the NBA Western Division title for 1966-67. The trial will be in recess today because Judge Carpeneti has a previous commitment on the Su- perior Court's appellate bench. *, * * * /.* Franks will resign if Giants don't take flag By The Associated Press' ST. LOUIS'- Herman Franks said yesterday, he will quit as manager of the San Francisco Gi- ants at the end of the year if the club doesn't win the National League - pennant., "Yes," Franks said in confirm- ing reports he would retire. "Four years is enough. Change is good for everybody. I just made the statement that if we couldn't win the pennant this year, then I would resign. It's that simple." The Giants were in fourth place, 14 games behind St. Louis before eall-time football victory list --Associated Press OAKLAND OAK (or San Francisco Warrior) forward Rick Barry discusses his date in court with a lawyer in yesterday's opening session of a breach-of-contract trial in The City. The former NBA All-Star, who accepted a fabulous offer to jump to the ABA Oaks, is charged with failure to carry out his contract obligations to the Warriors. AN EXCITING CONTEST: Students and faculty 7, Regents 3 By The Associated Press Yale defends more than an Ivy League championship this fall. The Elis are the biggest winners in college football history - by a whopping 31 victories. Princeton, Harvard and Penn- sylvania round out the top quartet as schools which helped start the game{ on American campuses. They still dominate the win col- umn long after their national prestige, poll-wise, has waned. From a three-goals-to-none vic- tory over Columbia in 1872 through Walter Camp and Amos Alonzo Stagg to Carmen Cozza and Brian Dowling, Yale has post- ed 619 triumphs. Princeton follows with 588 while Harvard and Penn both claim 567 The rankings are based solely (Continued from Page 1) "You have to remember," as- sited Davis, "That when you're delegating authority you can't both delegate it and not delegate it." Goebel objected to the compo- sition of the Committee on Com- munications, which would include two faculty members, two stu- dents and one administrator. Stu- Perkins bares problems of black Cowboys ALBUQUERQUE, N. M. «'1 -- Don Perkins, one of the National Football League's top running backs, says it's not easy for a Ne- gro athlete to live in Dallas, Tex, where he gets paid about $40,000 a year to play for the. NFL Cow- boys. He confirmed yesterday state- ments he made in an interview, before he left Albuquerque for Dallas this week, about housing conditions for Negroes in Dallas. "Do you know my wife Virginia and I would be embarrassed to have you visit our home in Dal- las?" he said "Why? The Negroes on the Cowboys can only find roach-in- fested houses." His comments on Dallas hous- ing were made in an interview with J. D. Kaier of the Albuquer- que News, a weekly newspaper. Perkins said he has his family in a Dallas motel until they can find a suitable home. He plans to leave today for Thousand Oaks, Calif., and the Cowboys training camp. He said friends had been try- ing to find a suitable home for his family, "but they haven't had any luck so far." Asked if he felt he had been exploited by the Cowboys, as the magazine Sports Illustrated has indicated is the case with some college Negro athletes, Perkins re- plied: "I honestly don't feel I've been exploited any more by the Cow- boys than I've used them. I've been hired to play fullback, and I receive a good salary to do dents and faculty members lost points for being unable to present a cogent rationale for the pro- posed composition. As the first half wore on, Re- gent Robert Brown picked up a copy of the proposed OSS bylaw and, as if to roll up his shirt- sleeves, demanded "Let's get down to business." "7.01," he read "'There is her- by established an Office of Stu- dent Services."' "Now what's wrong with that?" he said. Before he had a chance to go down the list of provisions (the students were encouraging him to continue), official referee Robben W. Fleming intervened and chan- ged the topic. Mendel, Sinclair, Knowles, and Bishop put the contest out of reach in the final minutes as they supported a common theme: Don't rock the boat. "I think the Regents should listen carefully to the students be- cause they are--if not 100 per, cent right-nearly so," Mendel said. "I spent the month of May in Paris," he noted. "And while I don't foresee a reenactment here of what happened there, I do see the same trends developing." Knowles also contended that the peace of the University was at stake. "We haven't had trouble here because we have had discus-' sions like this. Nobody wants a Columbia here. I'm afraid some of the Regents are acting out of fear, and I'm afraid that they will enact a hasty and carelessly de- vised bylawJust to get something on the books." "No rule is going to stop some- thing from happening if it's going to happen,"her warned. "One of you hinted that a bad bylaw is better than none at all. That's not true. A bad bylaw could only pre- cipitate trouble." on the ntumber of games won with percentages a factor only when teams have the same* totals. Thus the Crimson, .723, edge the Quak- ers, .659, for'the No. 3 spot. Michigan with 502 triumphs. and Notre Dame at 501 are the only other schools to reach the elite '500' bracket. Texas, Army, Dartmouth and Alabama round out the top 10. It stands to reason the ancient Ivy powers are well 'out in front. Whattahead start they had. By the end of 1888 -- a year the Elis outscored the opposition 694-0 -Yale had won 92 games, Prince- ton, 91, Harvard 79 and Penn 51. By comparison, Michigan had 16 victories to its credit and that brash newcomer, Notre Dame, one. The Fighting Irish have a slight. lead, percentagewise, with a .784 mark compared to Princeton's .780 and Yale's .778. Michigan, .732, and Army, .729, are the closest pursuers. Yale has the most unbeaten seasons to its credit, 29, while Princeton claims the most perfect campaigns with 18. Yale appears up to its old tricks this fall, favored to retain the Ivy crown it won last fall with stars like quarterback Dowling and halfback Calvin Hill returning. The Elis had gained the cham- pionship the first time the Ivy League became formalized in 1956, too. Harvard, of course, shaped foot- ball's destiny by introducing rug- by aspects to a soccer-oriented game in those early days. The schools which are closest to cracking the 400-victory circle are Colorado with 303; Louisiana State, 391; Georgia, 383; Miami of Ohio, 381; Brown and West Vir- ginia, 378; Rutgers and Michigan State, 377; Holy Cross and Vir- ginia, 375. their game last night with the/ Cardinals. Franks qualified his announce-. ment by adding that "more than likely" he would return as man- ager next year if the Giants did pull out a pennant. There has been no talk of a. successor for Franks with the Giant management, he added. "Ij Just mentioned it- to them about' a month ago, but we won't talk' about it until after the season.", g'ers edge aXs OAKLAND-Earl Wilson roused slumping Detroit with a six-hitter and the Tigers 'went, on to beat the OaklandrAthletics 3-1 yes- terday. Wilson,- evening his record at 7-7, allowed only three hits for seven innings before a double by' pinch-hitter Ramon Webster, a single by John Donaldson and an infield out ruined his shutout in the eighth. Wilson struck out five and walked none. The Tigers jumped on Lew Krausse, 6-8, for all their 'runs as tsey won for only the third time in eight starts since the All-Star break and raised their American League lead to seven games. Jim Northrup opened the fourthl inning with a single, reached third base on Willie Horton's hit and, scored on Bill Freehan's sacrifice fly.' Don Wert singled and Dick Mc- Auliffe doubled in the fifth to set up two m6re.sruns on Mickey Stan- ley's infield hit and Northrup's 4 sacrifice fly. -Birds drop toughie CHICAGO -- Leon Wagner and Pete Ward each' drove in a run with singles in the first inning and the Chic go White Sox held on to defeat the Baltimore Orioles 2-1 yesterday. Luis Aparicio doubled and Tom- my Davis singled also in the open- ing four-hit inning but after 'that Dave Leonhard, 5-4, held the Sox' hitless before being lifted for a pinch h'itter in the seventh. Starter' Jack Fisher was in. 0o trouble severalktimes in boosting his record to 4-5 as the -Sox won their fifth game in six outings under new Manager Al Lopez. In six innings, he yielded five "hits, includiig Frank Robinson's lead- off No. 5 homer 415 feet over the center field bull pen fence in the fourth. The Orioles loaded the bases with none out in the fifth on a pair of singles and an error. Then Fisher got Don Buford on a force out and made Mark Belanger slap into a double play. The Orioles again threatened in the sixth as Curt Blefary and Brooks Robinson singled after two out. But center fielder Ken Berry made a. spectacular one-handed leaping ".catch off the fence of Dade Johnson's fly bal to end it. I -- AME Detroit Cleveland Baltimore Boston, Minnesota Oakland New York California Chicago Washington .RRCA Major League Standings AN LEAGUE NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB W L ;Pet. 58 33 .559 - St. Lolis 59 32 '.648 52 41 .559 7 Atlanta 50 41 .549 49 39' .557 7% Philadelphia 46, 42 .523 46 '42 .523 11 san Francisco 46 45 .505 43 46 .483 14 Cincinnati 43 45 .489 43 47 ..478 141>~ Chicago 45 48 .484 42 46 477 I V Pittsburgh 42 49 .462 42 47 .472 15 New York 43 50 .462 39 48 .448 17 Los Angeles 42 50 .457 31 56 .356 25 Houston 39 53 .424. GB 9 11 . 13 14%'# 17 17 17% 21%2 Yesterday's Results Detroit 3, Oakland 1 Minnesota 7, Boston 2 Chicago 2, Baltimore 1 New York 4, Washington I Only games scheduled Today's Games Baltimore at Detroit, night Oakland at Minnesota, night California at Chicago, night Cleveland at New York, night Washington at Boston, night Yesterday's Results Atlanta 7, Houston 1 New York 3, Pittsburgh 0 San Francis o 3, St. Louis 0 Los Angeles at Cincinnati, rain Only games scheduled Today's Games Pittsburgh at Atlanta, night Chicago at Los Angeles, night Philadelphia at-Cincinnati, night Houston at San Francisco, night New York at St. Louis, night -/4 ii i ,._. i I-M Scores i -DaiIy-Richard Lee Bringingthe kids u ight With determination gleaming in their eyes, these ambitious Ann Arbor youngsters take off! around the Ferry Field track as part of a day's fitness training. The program in which they are participating runs for six weeks, and is conducted by the Athletic Department in conjunction with the city Department 'of Recreation. There is only a modest registration charge for the participants. SOFTBALL Bio-engineering 3, Bio-chemistry 0 Carlton Nads vs. Gaslighters, rain /1/lelMoonlight Pici This. Sunday, July 21. BOB STACK'' sing and play the guitar At Island Park within walking distance of campus. Meet at Stockwell at 7:30 to walk together. Cars will also bevleaving from the Hillel Foundation at 7:50. Bring informal bttire, musical instruments, yourown food and 25c for soda and marshmallows. DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN, Open: Mon., Wed., and Thurs. 4 P.M.-2 A.M. Open: « Fri., Sat., Sun. Noon to 3 A.M. (Closed Tues.) DeLONG'S PIT BARBECUE 314 Dettoit St. Phone 665-2266 MY PLACE A CIVIC SALON 215 E. Davis NO 2-5,780 ART SALE July 17,t18, 19,2o I 4i (Continued from Page 2) Doctoral Examinations Hugo Andreas Beiswenger, Psycholo- gy, Dissertation: "Linguistic and Psy- chological Factors in the Speech Regu- lation of Behavior in very Young Chil- dren," on Fri., July 19 at 1 p.m. in Rm. 3419 Mason Hall. Chairman: J.D. Bircl. Marjorie Harrell Eubank. Sneech. college degree and 6 mo. work in psych. courses or any other bckrnd helpful., Some athletic ability desired. State of Oregon - ADP Systems Co- ordinator, BA in acctg., math or enigrg. and 8 yrs. in card and computer syst.. supv.exper. Management Consultants, Chicago, Ill. - Engineer for company in north- ern Ohio, division of larger corporation. Chief Mechanical engineer, line of plas- tic molding machines is product. Min. 5-6 years in industry. State of Michian .- Raeerionists_ CARRY OUT ONLY FREE DELIVERY I Bar-B-Q Beef Dinner........ ....$1.95. 1/2 Fried Chicken....... ..........$1.55 Fried Shrimp.....................$1.60 All Dinners include French Fries and Slaw ( :.O t :iQG.iO -tt J(3 .:?)tea!{:.30< f7 x.... .. .. _ . I 1 p.m. 8 p.m. Featuring MANY LOCAL ARTISTS,, CRAFTSMEN, PRINTERS, SCULPTORS I DINNER PROGRAM - 6P.M. FRIDAY, JULY 1 rnrr br c frnm rnmmiccinn i (A ftnrzi. T ?.*~aZ'mI~s..Uhu9 I A