THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRIL TUE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAY, APRIL ill . -m- - TOMORROW at 7:30 P. HILLEL WILL COMMEMO! The 20th Anniversary of the Warsaw Ghe at the Sabbath Service i. III Karras 1429 Hill St. Zwerdl ing-Cohn Chc SUMMER EMPLOYMEI $5.20 Per Hour A, national corporation desires a college student in every city throughout the U.S. You will be self-employed and working when you desire. Not selling; but pro- viding a service in your home town. M. no ia RATE etto NEW YORK (P)-Paul Hornung of the Green Bay Packers and Alex Karras of the Detroit Lions were suspended indefinitely by the National Football League yester- opel day. Five other Detroit players were fined $2,000 each and the Detroit club was fined $4,000 as a result of an investigation into pro foot- ball betting. The five Detroit players were fined $2,000 each for betting $50 each on the 1962 championship game between the New York Giants and Green Bay. The play- ers are John Gordy, an offensive guard; Gordy. Lowe, a defensive halfback; Joe Schmidt, all-league middle linebacker; Wayne Walk- er, linebacker; and Sam Williams, defensive end. They were not sus- pended. Commissioner Pete Rozelle su- pervised the investigation and an- nounced the findings at a news conference in his office. Other Probes Rozelle said investigation of al- .B. legations that Carroll Rosenbloom, 1 president of the Baltimore Colts, had bet on league games, was not completed. He pointed out that Rosenbloom had denied the charges in a sworn affidavit and said the probe had- been delayed by legal proceedings involving the Baltimore owner. Rozelle prom- S dS ised the Rosenbloom investigation would be, completed in the near future. Lrig, suspended Rozelle said Hornung, the league's most valuable player in 1961 with the champion Packers but hobbled by injuries during most of the 1962 season, had placed bets on NFL and college games in some instances reaching the sum of $500, from 1959 through 1961. Info Revealed Rozelle said Hornung also had transmitted specific information concerning NFL games for betting purposes. The commissioner said this constituted serious breaches of the player's contract and the league's by-laws and constitution which forbid betting on games. He is a halfback. Karras, the 250-pound defensive tackle of the Lions who said in a television interview he bet on games but only for cigarettes and cigars, was judged guilty of asso- ciating with individuals described by Detroit police as "known hood- lums." Six Bets Rozelle said Karras had made at least six significant bets on NFL games since 1958 ranging from $50 to $100. He said there was no evidence of any criminal wrongdoing or any evidence that Karras sold information for bet- ting purposes or ever bet against his own team. Asked when it would be possible to review the indefinite suspen- sions of Hornung and Karras, Rozelle said: "The earliest that any consideration could be given to the review of their cases would be in 1964." Neither Hornung nor Karras will receive any pay while under suspension. The incident involving Gordy, CAMPUS INTERVIEWING 1-5 p.m. Friday, April 19 by NFL 3500 S.A CRead and Use Michigan Daily Classifi Lowe, Schmidt, Walker and Wil- liams was said to have resulted when Karras invited his Detroit mates to watch the televised title game at the home of a friend in Miami while the squad was in the Florida city last December. The investigation revealed Kar- ras bet $100 on Green Bay and five teammates each bet $50 on the Packers. Rozelle said there were no other instances of betting by the five men who were fined the maximum $2,000 for a single violation. Club Fined The Detroit club was fined $4,000 because a report to Coach George Wilson by the Detroit Police Department .last August "of certain associations by mem- bers of the Detroit team" was not forwarded to the proper club authority and also because un- authorized individuals were per- mitted to sit on the Lions' bench during games. Rozelle said the league deeply regretted that some players had suffered mental anguish because of inferences drawn in highly pub- licized accounts of rumors or partly developed facts. He gave as example Bob St. Clair, San Francisco tackle, and added, "There is absolutely no evidence of wrongdoing on the part of St. Clair." Casares Mentioned Rick Casares, Chicago Bears' fullback, also was mentioned among those connected with gam- blers through rumors. "The league investigation developed no evi- dence to support such charges," said Rozelle., The commissioner also said many players technically violated the rules by betting on $1 football cards and making token bets of little value with friends. He said these players, not mentioned by name, had been reprimanded- and no further action on them was to be expected. Hornung Wagers In the Hornung case, Rozelle said the Packers' star halfback WANTED! 1000 HEADS be they square, flat, or rounded for that collegiate cut. U of M BARBERS near Kresge's met a wealthy unnamed West Coast businessman, prior to the East-West college game in 1956 at San Francisco. He said the man bet on college and pro games and developed the habit of calling Hornung with football queries. Rozelle said Hornung began placing bets on NFL and college games in 1959 through his friend. They normally talked twice a week by phone. He said the Notre Dame graduate usually bet $100 or $200 but on several instances bet $500. Pattern Continued The pattern was said to have continued through 1960 and 1961. but ceased during the 1962 season. Rozelle said Hornung broke even in his betting, except for one sea- son when he made $1,500. He said there was no evidence he ever bet against the Packers or sold in- formation for betting purposes or performed less than his best. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE WINKS THINKS S. .By Jan. Winkel man 11 Practice Makes Perfect Detroit Kansas City Baltimore New York Los Angeles Boston Chicago Cleveland Washington Minnesota w 5 4 4 3 3 2 2 a 2 2 L 2 2 3 3 3 4 3 3 3 5 Pct. .714 .667 .571 .571 .500 .429 .400 .400 .400 .2&6 GB 1 1 2 21, 2 3 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Los Angeles 4, Minnesota d Detroit 4, New York 2 Baltimore 5, Boston 4 Washington at Cleveland (rain) TODAY'S GAMES Los Angeles at Minnesota Kansas City at Chicago Only games scheduled AUSTIN DIAMOND CORPORATION 1209 South U. '663-7151 NATIONAL LEAGUE x-San Francisco Milwaukee St. Louis Pittsburgh Philadelphia x-Chicago Cincinnati x-Los Angeles x-Houston New York 5 8 S 4 4 3 3 3 .2 d L 1 2 3 3 3 3 4 4 8 Pct. .833 .750 .714 .571 .571 .500 .429 .429 .28& .000 GB 2- 21/i 2Y 3% 6 Sophomore Steve August won't be walking around campus with his letter sweater this spring. He won't be traveling with any varsity squad while he is at Michigan. In fact, he won't even attract an inad- vertent gaze from a varsity coach. Yet he may very well be one of the best athletes at the University right now. The reason? Steve is National Intercollegiate handball champion. Steve won the national title last Friday in Miami. Owing to his runner-up position in last year's tourney. Steve was seded first. Besides his most recent victory, Steve has an impressive total of other conquests under his belt. In the last two years he has finished out of the first four places in a tournament only once. The modest 20-yea-old from Farmington has copped titles ranging from local to national. Last year he won the National Juiior Singles Championship in Chicago. "The Junior Championship meant more to me than the inter- ollegiates because I had never won a national tournament until then," remarked August. "I started out as seventh-ranked and after four years finally made it to the top." In addition to the Intercollegiate singles championship and the National Junior title, Steve has won the Michigan YMCA singles, YMCA doubles, and state opendoubles championships. Breakfast of Champions? Steve's accomplishments are even more impressive than they appear. He rarely works out. He has been playing the game for only six years. He has never had a professional coach or paid for a lesson. "In high school I worked out three or four times a week," said Steve, "but up here I only play about once a week. Time limits me as well as the fact that there is not too much competition for me in Ann Arbor. As long as I play regularly every week, I'm O.K. Once a week is enough to keep me in shape." August's training habits are conspicuously modest alongside those of runners or swimmers who work out three or four hours a day every day. Handball is a de- manding game that involves quickness, endurance, precision, strength, and strategy. August's accomplishments are snothing short of amazing when one con- siders the ordinary practice de- mands which go into the making of a champion. ;ยข: +.... Steve admits, though, that he STEVE AUGUST ran track last week before the in- tercollegiate tournament. Nevertheless he insists that "playing the game is the best way to stay in shape." With a Little Bit of Luck.. His father, Dr. Alvin August, introduced Steve to the game. Within a year Steve had captured the Detroit Junior Handball title; an honor that he renewed for the next five years. Dr. August is also developing Steve's younger brother, Larry, who is now 15. Steve proudly mentions that his brother was the youngest player ever to compete in the National Junior championships. Handball is played almost exclusively in the U.S., Ireland, South America, and Israel. The Irish brought the game over here, where it developed great popularity, especially in the East. In the East the game is played against a wall. In the rest of the country handball isplayed against three, or four walls. Steve competes in three and four-wall tournaments. His three-wall doubles partner, Ken Davidoff Of Brooklyn, N.Y., is national one-wall champion. The three- and four-wall games are the most widely used in tournament play. A new development which is helping handball is the glass-walled court. According to August, "Handball has been held back by the diffl- culty in finding seating for spectators." In certain parts of the country the construction of the new glass-walled stadiums should prove 'a boon to the game. For example, the University of Texas is building a 12,000-seat stadium exclusively for handball. With the increasing popularity of the sport, Steve's future looks especially bright. "I plan to play until I'm too old to move," he says. Perhaps his victory last Friday was an omen, for it came on Steve's birthday. At any rate, he's a man to keep your eye on: If he starts working out every day, God only knows ... I x-Games incomplete. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Milwaukee 6, Philadelphia 5 Cincinnati 5, New York 0 St. Louis 7, Pittsburgh 3 Chicago at Los Angeles (Inc) Houston at San Francisco (inc) TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at Milwaukee Houston at San Francisco Chicago at Los Angeles Pittsburgh at St. Louis Only games scheduled 11 The one lotion that's cool, exciting -brisk as an ocean breeze I The one-and.ornly Old Spice exhilarates...gives you that great-to-be. 1depe alive feeling...refreshes after every shave...adds to your assurance... ''M" SAVE*1 and wins feminine approval every time. Old Spice After Shave Lotion, 1.25 and 2.00 plus tax. S H U L.TO N -the shave lotion men recommend to other men/ BIKE SALE Best Selection in town ! I ROSS reg. 33.95 .. . .. . . 26 in coaster brake,. ROLLFAST 3-speed model ...... . .@. ..".0 . . 29,95 36 95 . .".0.0.0. . . . ARMSTRONG English 3-speed ............ ROYCE English 3-speed 3958 Bag and chrome light . .. ..O.Y. cmpus BIKE & O STANLEY CUP SERIES: Detroit's Chances Dim For Hockey Comeback TORONTO (AP)-"I like the.odds right now," bubbled Coach Punch have all the odds against them Imlach of the Toronto Maple The fifth game of the finals : Lach. othe coveted Stanley Cup is tonig "It'll be tough winning one in at Maple Leaf Gardens-and Toronto," responded Coach Sid could be the last game. Abel, 'whose Detroit Red Wings Leads Series 514.E. William NO 2-0035 _ ." : :'"s:.v r :vti. .:eW.: *"."v ."..lsY. a ,." .:":{::ms.%Wfl. "ts ".ry::M"'AJ::r t + TOMORROW April 19 Angell Hall 4:15 p.m. Auditorium A DANIEL J. BOORSTIN Professor of History, University of Chicago will speak on: .... .. i t 1-. 9 f : n -_ ..fi ... m 0 z: vVa O'l I'l r-