PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDA". PAGESIX HE MCHIGN DALY TURSD - l Delicious Hamburgers 15c Hot Tasty French Fries 12c Triple Thick Shakes. 20c 2000 W. Stadium Blvd. LLLLL vc FREE EXAM WEEK MOVIES MAY 11 AND 12 THE MOUSE THAT ROARED Starring PETER SELLERS MAY 13 AND 14 IT HAPPENED TO JANE Starring DORIS DAY JACK LEMMON, and ERN I E KOVACS Showing at 7:00 and 9:00 IN THE UNION BALLROOM CHECKMATE FOR BERMUDAS!I BERMUDA SALE 3.771 CHECKMATE the store with the College Spirit 302 S. State Games for Summer Fun Badminton * Scoopball Horeshoes o Bow s " Arrows 9 Tennis Flying Saucers Golf Fling-A-Ring SI ingshots Jarts STEIN & GOETZ Sporting Goods II i 315 S. Main St. Downtown NO 2-5001 U U t iU l =1 i i i E i Julius Boros drew strong support to successfully defent his title. A few votes also went to Ben Hogan who consistently plays Co- lonial's 7,122-yard course as if he owns it. The Fort Worth battler has won the tourney five times. His lone tourney excursion this year came at the Masters, where he registered a one-under-par total for 72 holes en route to a tie for ninth. Gary Player, the lithe South African, heads a foreign delega- tion among the best in the tour- nament's 19-year history. The visitors include Al Balding and George Knudson of Canada; Bob Charles of New Zealand; Bruce Crampton, Bruce Devlin and Kel Nagle of Australia; Juan (Chi Chi) Rodriguez of Puerto Rico and Ramon Sota of Spain. By The Associated Press FORT WORTH, Tex. - The wheel of fortune spun toward Jack Nicklaus and Arnold Palmer as they prepared yesterday to renew warfare in the Colonial National Invitation Golf Tournament. Rain has fallen intermittently the last two days and the area was placed under a tornado afert yes- terday. But the long-range fore- cast called for possible scattered showers for the start of the four- day event today, with conditions improving daily. A pre-tournament poll produced few surprises. Nicklaus and Pal- mer were picked to finish 1-2 in that order in the field of 72 and Los Angeles Open winner Paul Harney is the lone 1964 titleholder who will not compete for the $14,000 first prize. Perhaps the remarkable aspect of this Colonial is the harmony, that prevails between tournament officials and the Professional Golf- ers Association. Spirited disputes had become. somewhat of a tradition, but all appeared well on the eve of the tournament. Even terms of a tele- vision contract with ABC met with agreement from both sides. Portions of play Saturday and Sunday will be televised nationally. * * * NEW YORK-Dave Nicholson's 573-foot homer in the first game of the Kansas City at Chicago doubleheader last night ranks as the second longest ever hit in the major leagues, according to avail- able records. Babe Ruth's 600-footer at De- troit in 1926 is ranked No. 1 and Mickey Mantle's 565-foot one at Washington on April 17, 1953 was No. 2 until Nicholson's blast for the White Sox in the fifth inning at Comiskey Park. LONDON - Dr. Roger Ban- nister celebrated the 10th anni- versary of his 3:59.4 mile-the first to break the four-minute barrier-wth champagne yesterday and forecast a 3:45 mile will be run more than a decade later. Bannister, now 34 and an em- inent specialist in nervous diseas- es, dined -out at a post midnight: party with two men who paced' him to the world mark, Chris Chataway and Chris Brasher. Chataway now is a member of Parliament and junior minister in t h e conservative government. Brasher's a prominent newsman and television producer. They meet every year on the mile anniversary. This year they made it something special and took their wives along. Bannister said he expects to see the .mile record lowered to 3:45 .but added: "It will not be in the next 10 years. It will come when runners on the standard of Peter Snell and Herb Elliott meet in an im- portant race." New Zealander Snell holds the world record of 3:54.4. Elliott, of Australia, hit 3:54.5 in August 1958, but retired from the track without ever meeting Snell. Bannister usually hedges when asked his opinion of the ultimate in mile records. I AMERICAN LEAGUE WI Cleveland 105 x-Chicago 95 New York 87 Detroit 98 Baltimore 98 x-Minnesota 9 x-Los Angeles 8 1 x-Kansas City 7 1 Boston 7 1 Washington 913 L 5 5 7 8 8 9 0 0 3 Pct. .667 .643 .533 .529. .529 .500 .444 .412 .412 .409 GB 2 2 2 2 3/ 4 4 4Y2, NATIONAL LEAGUE WV L Pct. San Francisco 12 5 .706 Philadelphia 11 6 .647. Milwaukee 12 7 .632 Pittsburgh 11 8 .579 St. Louis 11 9 .550 Cincinnati 11 9 .550 Chicago 7 9 .438 x-Los Angeles 8 12 .400 x-Houstno 8 13 .381 New York 3 16 .158 GB 1 1 2% 2% 4% 6° 10 He once said, "I don't think there is an ultimate. The incre- ment by which the record is brok- en will go on decreasing." When pinned down to what may be the. minimum, he said: "Around 3:30. It will be getting very difficult. This is the sort of physiological limit with our bodies made the way they are." Physically Bannister seems little changed from the historic evening when .he tore up Oxford Univer- sity's Ifley Road track in 3:59.4. He now scales 168 pounds, only eight pounds more than at his peak fitness. Since then the four-minute bar- rier has been broken 127 times. Britain, once rich in milers, now hardly competes. The last British runner to crash four minutes was Dorek Ibbotson and that was seven years ago. HELSINKI - Brian Sternberg, former world pole vault record- holder, was awarded the, gold medal'of Finland's Olympic com- mittee during a television program yesterday. Sternberg, still in a wheelchair after a serious accident last year, received the medal from General Ali Koskima, leader of the Fin- nish delegation to the Tokyo Olympics this fall. Sternberg is the guest of the state-owned Finnish Television Co. * * * NEW YORK - The Oakland Raiders of the American Football League , will buck the National League's San Francisco 49ers for the favor of Bay area fans on five Sunday afternoons during the 1964 season, the AFL schedule revealed yesterday. The AFL's 56-game schedule will open Saturday, Sept. 12 and runs 15 weeks through Sunday, Dec. 20. The championship playoff game between the two divisional winners will be played Saturday, Dec. 26, in the home city of the Eastern Division champion. Each team will have one open weekend during the season. Oakland opens its home season Sept. 13 against the Boston Pa- triots. San Francisco is at home the same afternoon to the Detroit Lions. Other conflicting games are Sept. 27-Kansas City at Oakland and St. Louis at San Francisco; Oct. 25-Denver at Oakland and Minnesota at San Francisco; Nov. 15-Houston . at Oakland ' and Green Bay at San Francisco; Dec. 6-Buffalo at Oakland and Los Angeles at San Francisco. In the only other two-league city, New York, the schedule shows only one conflict in dates between the AFL Jets and the NFL Giants. On Sunday, Nov. 8 Buffalo plays the Jets at New York while Dal- las visits the Giants at Yankee Stadium. One in three AFL games will be played at night, including five Friday night games at Boston and one Sunday night game Oct. 11 at Houston. The breakdown shows 39 day games, including Thanksgiv- ing Day, Nov. 26, and 17 night games. The championship game Dec. 26 and the Thanksgiving Day game will be televised nationally by the American Broadcasting Co. ABC also will televise Sunday afternoon games on a limited basis into cities where no AFL games are being played. I 1 I ARNOLD PALMER x-Played night game. x-Played night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 6, Boston 3 Chicago 4, San Francisco 2 Cleveland 7, Baltimore 5 Philadelphia 7, Milwaukee 6 New York 9-4, Washington 2-5 Pittsburgh 1, St. Louis 0 Chicago 6, Kansas City 4 (2nd, inc) Cincinnati 12, New York 4 Los Angeles at Minnesota (inc. Houston at Los Angeles (inc) TODAY'S GAMES TODAY'S GAMES Baltimore at Cleveland (n) Chicago at San Francisco New York at, Washington (n) Cincinnati at~ New. York (n) Boston at Detroit St. Louis at Pittsburgh (n) Los Angeles at Minnesota Milwaukee at Philadelphia (n) Only games scheduled Houston at Los Angeles (n) SPORTS SHORTS: Nicklaus, Palmer Rated Tops Major League Standings I Win/Place/Show summer weight.. i I a. ' y£ a,. typically Gant cuffs showing.. Oxford Voile?.A zephyr-weight oxford with a silken hand. Virtue? It maintains its poise (and yours) on hot, humid days.'In long or half sleeves. Like all Gant shirts, Oxford Voile has elan in a gentlemanly manner. Maize, blue or white. About $6.50 at discerning stores. ARM I = M .1F = 8 61964 Cont Shiffmakef r 1 __- ; 1 -_- - - - - .