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June 29, 1966 - Image 6

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Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1966-06-29

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PAGE aSIX

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

WEDNESDAY, JUNE 29, 1966

WAGE SI THE MICHIGAN I~AILY WEDNESDAY. JUNE 2~l. 1~4~i~

s w wwaia asvssa . .} V V1l L, NV} ivVV

WIMBLEDON TENNIS:

Santana, Drysdale Reach Semis

WIMBLEDON, England (AP) -
Manuel Santana, Spain's darling
of the Wimbledon tennis aficio-
nados, and the handsome South
African Cliff Drysdale reached
the semifinals' of the Wimbledon
men's singles yesterday and braced
themselves to break the 11-year
hold Americans and Australians
have had on the world's premier
tennis title.
Santana, the reigning U.S.
champion and seeded fourth here,
used his racket like a flashing
matador's sword to defeat Ken
Fletcher, the happy-go-lucky Aus-
tralian in a thriller that turned
out to be the best singles played
here this year.
Drysdale Upsets Roche
Drysdale, seeded seventh and a
losing semifinalist last year, was
the surprise 9-7, 6-2, 6-2 winner
over Tony Roche, the left-handed
Australian who had won the
French and Italian titles earlier
this year.
In the semifinals today, San-
tana plays Owen Davidson, the
unseeded Australian who beat Roy
Emerson Monday after the cham-
pion hurt his shoulder in a fall,
while Drysdale plays Dennis Ral-
ston of Bakersfield, Calif., the
sixth seed and thenother losing
semifinalist last year.
The women's bracket turned out
exactly as the seeding committee
predicted it would. The first four
seeds all got through their quar-
ter-final round tests - three of
them with ease.
Margaret Smith of Australia,
defending champion, and Maria
Bueno, the second seed, whom she
beat in last year's final, both
strode through their matches with

regal ease. Miss Smith defeated
22-year-old Trudy Groenman, first
Dutch girl to reach the last eight
in 39 years, 6-0, 6-4 while the
Brazilian disposed of Francoise
Durr, the seventh seeded French
girl, almost as easily 6-4, 6-3.
Mrs. Ann Haydon Jones of Bri-
tain, seeded third by virtue of her
winning this year's French and
Italian championships, dropped a
set to fifth seeded Nancy Richey
of Dallas, Tex., but eventually
won in commanding fashion 4-6,
6-1, 6-1.
Mrs. King Has Trouble
The fourth seed, ebullient little
Billie Jean King of Long Beach,
Calif., nearly c a m e unstuck
against Annette Van Zyl, the tall

South African girl, but won 1-6,
6-2, 6-4.
In the semifinals tomorrow,
Margaret Smith will play Mrs.
King and Maria Bueno will play
Mrs. Jones. After his defeat Mon-
day, Emerson predicted that the
1966 title would go to Santana.
If it does, the sunny Spaniard
will be the first European to win
it since Jaroslav Drobny did it
back in 1954. Since then, the
men's crown has been worn by
either Americans or Australians.
Santana an Artist
Santana, a firm favorite with
the Wimbledon crowd, plays the
typical European game of artistry
allied to delicacy rather than the
power game the Australians and

Americans have made their own.
He needed all his artistry Tues-
day in the two hours 15 minutes
the match see-sawed as the pack-
ed center court gasped and
cheered.
In the battle between the
Spaniard's spin, slice and sub-
tlety and Fletcher's power, San-
tana kept his nerve and it was
eventually the Australian, who
now lives in Hong Kong, who
cracked in the tense atmosphere
of the final set.
By contrast, the Roche-Drys-
dale quarter-final was an anti-
climax, Roche, seeded No, 2 here,
had been expected to meet Emer-
son in the final, but yesterday he
folded after starting well.

.S
discount records, inc.
ANN ARBOR'S LARGEST
AND MOST COMPLETE
RECORD SHOPS ON CAMPUS
WITH TWO FANTASTIC
LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU!

McAULIFFE, ROBINSON REPEAT:
All-Star Infielders Selected

By The Associated Press
NEW YORK - Third baseman
Brooks Robinson of the Balti-
more Orioles, the top vote getter
with 257, and shortstop Dick Mc-
Auliffe of the Detroit Tigers were
the only repeaters on the two
starting infields named for the
July 12 All-Star baseball game at
St. Louis.
Robinson and McAuliffe were
joined by rookie first baseman
George Scott of the Boston Red
Sox and second baseman Bobby
Knoop of the California Angels on
the American League infield. Rob-
inson got all but two votes of
those eligible to pick him.

Willie McCovey, first baseman
of the San Francisco Giants, ledi
the National League voting with
214. Joe Morgan, Houston second
baseman, and Ron Santo, Chi-
cago Cubs' third baseman, both
were picked to the team although
they were injured over the week-
end. Leo Cardenas, Cincinnati
shortstop, was the fourth mem-
ber of the National League in-
field.
Morgan suffered a broken right
knee cap in batting practice be-
fore Saturday's game and will be
out of action for at least three
weeks. Santo received a fractured
cheek bone when hit by a pitched

ball in Sunday's
New York Mets
surgery Monday.

game with the
and underwent

Alston To Pick Subs
Presumably, substitution will be
made if they are unable to play.
It will be up to Manager Walter
Alston to ask. Sam Mele of Min-
nesota is the American League
manager.
Starters were selected by the
vote of players, managers and
coaches in each league. Nobody
was permitted to vote for a player
on his own team.
The closest contest was between
Knoop and Bobby Richardson for
second base in the American
League. Robinson won in a land-
slide and both Scott and McAu-
liffe had comfortable margins.
Santo Edges Hart
Santo beat Jim Ray Hart ofa
San Francisco 151-125 in the
third base competition in the Na-
tional League, the closest contest.
McCovey was a lopsided winnerI
over Bill White of Philadelphia,
Cardenas had a solid edge on
Maury Wills of Los Angeles and
Morgan beat out Jim Lefebvre of
the Dodgers 144-94.

1235 S. University
(in University Towers)
Phone 668-9866

300 S. State
(corner of Liberty)
Phone 665-3679

EVERY L.P. AT DISCOUNT PRICE
ANYTHING IN THE SCHWANN CATALOG YOU
BE SPECIAL ORDERED FOR YOU

ot

MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP:
A's Break Orioles' String, 4-3

'If it's CLASSICAL you
you'll find the largest
seletion here-

want

By The Associated Press.
KANSAS CITY-Bert Campan-
eris touched off two ralies with
leadoff singles and scored two runs
as Kansas City defeated Balti-
more 4-3 last night.
It was the fifth victory in the
last six starts for the Athletics and
it ended a three-game Oriole win-;
ning streak.#
Chuck Dobson, Ken Sanders1
and Jack Aker combined to limit
the league leading Orioles tosix
hits, one of them Andy Etchebar-
ren's ninth home run.
Campaneris singled leading off
the firstmagainst Jim Palmer and
rode home on Jim Gosger's dou-
ble. Danny Cater's two-out double
delivered Gosger.
After Etchbarren's homer had
cut the A's lead in half, singles by
Campaneris and Gosger and Mike
Hershberger's sacrifice fly gave
the A's another run in the fifth.
A two-out double by Phil Roof and
Sanders' single made it 4-1 in the
sixth.
Second Term
I-M Program
Begins Today
The intramural program for the
summer half term begins tonight
with the first of the weekly co-
recreation nights.
Every Wednesday night until the
end of the term the Sports Build-
ing will be open to both men and
women students and faculty from
7:30 to 9:30. Facilities are avail-
able for participation in swim-
ming, g y m n a s t i c s, paddleball,
squash, volleyball and badminton.
Students and faculty may bring
their families for the first hour of
co-rec each Wednesday.
Open Swimming
There will be open swimming
for male students and faculty
Monday through Friday from 4
to 6 p.m. and for faculty from 12
to 1:15 p.m.
Entries are now being accepted
for softball and basketball teams,
and individual entries are wanted
for paddleball, handball and ten-
nis. Play begins next Tuesday in
the softball program.
The building will be open Mon-
day through Friday from 8 a.m. to
7 p.m. and will not be open Sat-
urday or Sunday during the sum-
mer.

B~unning Jilasks Mets
NEW YORK-Bill White's sev-
enth inning home run broke up a
scoreless battle and gave Jim
Bunning and the Philadelphia
Phillies a 1-0 victory over Bob
Friend and the New York Mets in
a duel of two-hitters last night.
White's 12th homer of the sea-
son sailed over the right center
field wall with two out in the
seventh, and Bunning protected
the margin for his ninth victory
of the season against four losses.
Bunning, who pitched a perfect
game against the Mets in New
York two years ago, struck out
eight, including four in a row at
one stretch. He retired 12 of the
last 13 batters he faced.
Giants Win Again
ST. LOUIS-Bob Bolin pitched
hitless ball until Orlando Cepeda
singled with one out in the sev-
enth inning and wound up with a
two-hitter as the San Francisco
Giants whipped St. Louis 7-1 last
night.
Bolin, who evened his record at
5-5, was backed by a 13-hit at-
tack that included Willie Mays'
523rd homer.
Mays socked a two-run homer in
the eighth inning, his 18th of the
season.

The Giants, retaining their
four-game National League lead
over second - place Pittsburgh,
jumped on starter Tracy Stallard
for two runs in the third inning.
Jesus Alou and Tom Haller sin-
gled and scored on singles by
Willie McCovey and Hart.
Reds Dump Dodgers
CINCINNATI - Sammy Ellis'
scattered five hits as the surging
Cincinnati Reds downed Los An-
geles 3-1 last night for their 10th
victory in the last 11 games.
Tommy Harper led the Reds'
attack with a homer and two sin-
gles as Ellis won his third straight
and fifth in 16 decisions this yeair.
The Dodgers scored in the first
inning when Maury Wills led off
with a single, stole second and
scored on Willie Davis' sacrifice
fly after advancing on a fielder's
choice.
Harper scored the tying run in
the Reds' half of the inning. He
led off with a single off Claude,
Osteen, advanced on Vada Pin-
son's walkdand crossed the plate
when Tony Perez smashed a dou-
ble to right center. Pinson scored
on Deron Johnson's sacrifice fly.
Harper's lead-off home run in
the seventh gave the Reds their
final run.

Major League
Standings

FROM ALBINONI to
ZELENKA
FROM BACH to VARESE
FROM JOSQU I N DES PRES
to JOHN GAGE

If it's FOLK you want
you'll.findthe most complete
selection here-
ALL THE WELL KNOWN ARTISTS
BAEZ, DYLAN, RUSH, BUFFEY
BUTTERFIELD, COLLINS
PLUS A COMPLETE STOCK
OF BLUES-BOTH REAL
FOLK & CITY VARIETY

AMERICAN1
Ialtimnore
D)etroit
cleveland
California
Minnesota
Chicago
New York
Kansas CiI N
WNas iiin g toll
Eiuston

LEAGUE
W L Pct.
48 25 .658
44 26 .6'28
41 29 .586
38 35 .521
35 36 .493
:2 38 .457
A1 38 .441
31 40 .437
31? 43 .419
26 46 .361

G'
51.
10
16

N

YESTERAYS RESU.S
Minn neot a 4, Cleveland 0
Kansas City 4,"Baltimore 3
Washington 4, Chip ago I
Boston 5, New York 3
Detroit 15, California 3
TODAY'S GAMES
Detroit at California (n)
Baltimore at Kansas City (n)
Cleveland at Minnesota (n)
Washington at Chicago (n)
New York at Boston (n)
NATIONAL LEAGUE

If it's JAZZ you want.. .
WE CARRY BLUE NOTE, ATLANTIC,
VERVE, ESP, PRESTIGE, and many more.
BRUEBECK, JIMMY SMITH, LOU RAWLS,
BOB JAMES, ARCH I E SH EPP, GETZEL
GILBERTO, SARAH VAUGHN, MODERN
JAZZ CONCERT, and many more

If it's POP you want .. .
WE HAVE A GREAT SELECTION
FROM ANDY WILLIAMS to
CHARLES AZNAVOUR
FROM HENRY MANCINI to
RUTH ETTING
FROM TI JUANA BRASS to
FRANK SINATRA

U

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

San Francisco
Pittsburgh
Los Angeles
Houston
Philadelphia
Cincinnati
St. Louis
Atlanta
New York
Chicago

W L
47 27
41 29
40 32
39 34
38 34
36 35
33 38
14 42
29 39
22 49

Pet.
.635
.586
.556
.534
.528
.507
.465
.447
.426
.310

(13
_x t
4
6
8 ~
15
231,

If it's SPOKEN WORD you want...
you'll- find the largest
selection here
POETRY, PROSE, PLAYS, and DOCUMENTARY
RECORDINGS IN ENGLISH, SPANISH,
FRENCH, RUSSIAN, etc.
WE ALSO CARRY LANGUAGE
INSTRUCTION RECORDS

If it's ROCK you want . .
YOU CAN'T BEAT THE SOUL SHAKIN'
SOUNDS AVAILABLE NOW ... .
FROM ROLLINGSTONES to BEATLES
FROM TEMPTATIONS to KINGSMEN
FROM DOVA CLARK to PAUL REVERE
YOU NAME IT-WE'LL GET IT

(Continued from Page 2)
line.oExper. In.gear drive and/or small
motors helpful. Trined, opening.
Platte CountyPark and Recreation
Comm., Parkville, Mo.-Director for
newly formed parks and recreation de-
pairtmnent.
Assoc. of Jr. Leagues of America,
N.Y.C.-Arts Consultant. M.A. in art
education or art hist. or equiv. 5 years
exper. in teaching or museum work, in-
eluding work with volunteers. Assist
211 Jr. Leagues with art programs.
Must be free to travel.
State of Minnesota, S. Paul-Fores-
try Trainees. Degree in forest mgmt,
pref. 1 yr. trng. progrmincluades for-
mal and on-the-job trnig. Applic. avail
at Bureau.
Cutter Labs, Berkeley, Calif.-Chem.
Engr. Immed. opening. B.S. Ch. E., 5
yrs. exper. In process engrg or MS
Ch E 5 yrs exper not req. Dev. new
equip for blol. and pharmaceutical
firm.
Small Business Dev. Ctr., South Bend,
Id.- Mgmt. Assistance Coordinator,
B.A, in Educ, or eqluiv exper. 3 yrs.
in mgmt. consulting, bus. educ., or rel.
Advanced degree considered in lieu of
specific exper. Work In adult bus. ed.
for small bus, mgmt. and supv., ini-
tiate and dev. employee trng. programs,
etc.

B. F. Goodrich Co., Akron, Ohio -
Various openings include auditors,
sales, mkt, res. analyst, nurse-overseas
assignment, chem, patent attorney,
tech. writer, chemists, new product res.
etc. Also enrs. including new grads,
exper'd and adv. degrees for textiles,
chemical, services, power and aero-
spa(e, stress, etc.
Giffels & Rtossetti, Inc., Detroit .
Arch., civil, mech, and elect. engrs and
architects for mat'ls and specs (ept. to
Investigate construction-related prob-
lems. Degree plus exper. in construction
or des. for construction.
Mgmt. Consultants, Chicago-Indus~t.
Engrs. for midwestern heavy equip.
mfr. Degree not r eq., but desirable.
1-3 years exper. in metal working shop.
5-8 yrs. and supv. exper, qualifiesfor
I.E. supervisor.
For further information, please call
764-7460, General Div., Bureau of Ap-
points., 3200 SAB.
Los Angeles City School District will
have a representative in our office to
Interview prospective teachers of Agri-
culture, English, Girls Phys. Ed., In-
dust. Arts, Math, Science, and All
Gen. Elem. on Fri., July 1st.
For additional info and appointment
contact Miss Collins Bureau of Ap-
pointments, Educ. Div., 3200 SAB. 764-
7462.

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
San Francisco 7, St. Louis I
Cincinnati 8, Los Angeles I
Pittsburgh 4, Houston 3
Philadelphia 1, New York 0
Atlanta 4, Chicago 2
TODAY'S GAMES
Philadelphia at New York
Houston at Pittsburgh (n)
Chicago at Atlanta
Los Angeles at Cincinnati (n)
San Francisco at St. Louis
THANK YOU
U-M Barber Customers
and friends for your
patronage. We now
WELCOME you to the
DASCOLA BARBERS near
the Michigan Theater.
--Dominic Dascola
Michigan Lit '36

BY THE WAY-
If you want 8-track stereo
tape cartridges, you can
get them at our

WYE CARRY THE
LARGEST SELECTION
OF "OLDIES"
IN THE STATE
OF MICHIGAN

1235 S.

University Store

LARGE SELECTION

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LARGE SELECTION AT BOTH STORES

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