PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY; MAY 14. 1866 PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY SATURDAY. MAY 14 ':'A.,lia.i: lliViilili 1 1L1y 12 1JVV p Iowa Dents 'M' Title Hopes, 4-1l NEW ORLEANS OPEN: Goalby Takes Second-Round Lead; Palmer Injures Back in Tourney Special To The Daily IOWA CITY-The Big Ten win streaks of Michigan and pitcher Bob Reed both came to an end yesterday when the Hawkeyes, be- hind the strong pitching of Bob Schauenberg, downed the Wolver- ines 4-1. It was a battle between two of the league's top pitchers, and somebody had to lose. Schauen- berg last year set an all-time con- ference record for earned run average with an 0.28 mark, and last weekend Reed tied the rec- ord for the most victories in a season. Major League Standin gs AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. Cleveland 16 5 .762 Baltimore 16 7 .695 Detroit 15 9 .625 California 15 11 .577 Chicago, 13 10 .565 Minnesota 11 10 .514 Washington 9 15 .375 Kansas City 8 16 .333 New York 8 17 .320 Boston7 18 .280 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Clevelad 4, Baltimore 3 (1 inn) Minnesota 9, Washington 5 New York 4, Kansas City 2 Detroit 5, Chicago 4 California 4, Boston 1 TODAY'S GAMES Boston at California (n) New York at Kansas City (t-n) Washington at Minnesota Chicago at Detroit Baltimore at Cleveland (n) SUNDAY'S GAMES Boston at California (2) New York at Kansas City (2) Washington at Minnesota Chicago at Detroit Baltimore at Cleveland (2) NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 1 312 4 5 81! 10 11 Reed struck out 11 but alsoc gave up 11 hits to the Hawkeyes. The Wolverines banged out nine' hits off Schauenberg but could not put them together to bring in more runs. Good Start The lone Michigan tally came in the first inning. The run scor- ed when Ted Sizemore's single{ was followed by singles from the next two men in the batting order, Dick Schryer and Les Tanona. Schryer was the leading hitter for Michigan, going three for five. Schryer also punched out two doubles-the only extra-base hits for Michigan-but was left strand- ed both times. In the seventh inning the dia- mondmen loaded the bases but could not bring a? run home. After two outs in the inning Schryer doubled and Tanona walked to put men at first and second. Third baseman Keith Spicer then singled. Schryer would have MAJOR LEAGUE ROUN Tigers Edge Indians Top By The Associated Press DETROIT-Larry Sherry came on in the eighth inning and chok- ed off a Chicago threat, then ended a rally just in time in the ninth, preserving a 5-4 vic- tory for Detroit over the White Sox last night. Sherry came in after Tommy' Agee beat out a bunt and Floyd Robinson doubled off Detroit starter Denny McLain, who had allowed only four hits throughj seven innings. Sherry struck out Pete Ward,I got Tom McCraw on a pop fly and Gene Freese on a grounder to short. In the ninth, however, the White Sox cut the deficit to one run on a walk, John Romano's single and Agee's two-out triple. But Sherry ended the game by get- tins Robinson on a linedrive. Al Kaline opened the Detroitj scoring with a solo homer in the second inning and drove in an- other run in the seventh on a ground out. * * * Indians Win in I IIth CLEVELAND - Leon WagnerI raced home in the 11th inning as Jerry Adair threw the ball into! scored on the hit, but he slipped on the wet and muddy basepaths while rounding third base. Chan Simonds grounded out to end the Wolverine threat. Iowa's first run came in the fifth inning with two out when Bob Schneider blasted a home run with no one on base. The Hawkeyes scored their sec- ond run on a double steal at- tempt in the sixth frame. The ac- tion started when Steve Hirko sin- gled and was forced at second by Larry Rathje. Co-Captain Mickey Moses fol- lowed with a single which ad- vanced Rathje to third, and then the double steal was attempted. Rathje Scores Michigan catcher Sizemore bluf- fed to second, then threw to third to try to get Rathje in a run- down. The ball got past Spicer and Rathie came in to score. Meanwhile, Moses who had reached second easily by this time, started edging toward third and DUP: Chicago- Birds in 11I the dirt at home plate,. giving Cleveland a 4-3 victory over Bal- timore last night. Wagner's run was the second of the inning. The Orioles had taken a 3-2 lead in the top of the 11th on singles by Adair and Brooks Robinson sandwiched around Luis Tiant's walk to Frank Robinson. Dick Hall came in to pitch for the Orioles at the start of the bot- tom of the 11th and gave up con- secutive singles to Chuck Hin- ton, Wagner and Fred Whitfield for one run. Pedro Gonzales then grounded' to Adair, but the second baseman threw the ball into the dirt trying to get Wagner at the plate. G;ints Extend Streak NEW YORK - Jim Davenport lashed a two-out home run in the 17th inning, giving San Francisco a 5-4 victory over the New York Mets last night and extending the Giants' winning string to 12 games. Davenport, who had come into the game in the seventh inning, homered over the left field fence off Dave Ellers, the sixth Met pitcher, to decide the marathan contest. was thrown out at second by Size- more. The last two Hawkeye tallies came in the eighth inning to put the game on ice. Rathje singled and advanced to third on Moses' double. Ross Sum- ka and Mark Michel both follow- ed with singles, each driving in one run. The bases were loaded again on a walk to Schneider but Reed got out of further trouble when John Prina popped up. Twin Bill Today The Wolverines play a twin bill against Minnesota at Min- neapolis today in an effort to keep their chances for the title alive. Both Minnesota and Ohio State, the other two leading title con- tenders, were rained out yester- day in their scheduled games with Michigan State and Illinois, re- spectively. MICHIGAN AB R H Gilhooey ss 5 0 0 Sizenmore c 5 1 2 Schryer cf 5 0 3 Tanona If 3 0 1 Spicer 3b 4 0 1 Sinmonds lb 4 0 0 Bara rf 3 0 1 Sygar 2b 4 0 1 Deed p 4 0 0 Totals 37 1 9 IOWA AB B IH Endsley ss 4 0 0 Hirko rf 3 0 2 Rathje cf 4 2 2 Moses lb 4 1 2 Sumka 2b 4 0 2 Michel If 4 0 1 Schneider c 3 1 Prina 3b 3 0 1 Schauenberg p 3 0 0 Myatt rf 1 0 0 Totals 33 4 11 MICHIGAN 100 000 000-I IOWA 000 011 02x-4 E-Sizemore, Endsley. PO-A-Iowa 27-16, Michigan 24-10. DP-Reed, Gilhooley, Simonds; Moses, Endsley,I Moses. LOB-Iowa 17, Michigan 12. RB1 - Sumka, Michel, Schneider, Tanona. 2B--Schryer 2, Moses. HR- -Schneider. SB-Simonds, Moses. PITCHING SUMMARY IP H1 R-ER BBSOI Seh'berg (W, 4-2) 9 9 1-1 4 2 Reed (L, 9-2) 8 11 4=3 2 11 WOULD YOU LIKE TO READ 1000 to 2000 WORDS A MINUTE WITH FULL COMPREHENSION & RETENTION EASE PRESSURE-SAVE TIME-IMPROVE CONCENTRATION You can read 150-200 pages an hour using the ACCELERATED READING method. You'll learn to comprehend at speeds of 1,000 to 2,000 words a minute. And retention is excel lent. This is NOT a skimming method; you definitely read every word. You can apply the ACCELERATED READING method to textbooks and factual' ma- terial as well as to literature and fiction.-The author's style is not lost when you read at these speeds. In fact, your accuracy and enjoyment in reading will be increased. Consider what this new reading ability will enable you to accomplish-in your re- quired reading, and in the additional reading you want to do. No machines, projectors, or apparatus are used in learning the ACCELERATED READ- ING method. Thus the reader avoids developing ANY dependence upon external equipment in reading. The new reading skill is permanently retained. An afternoon class and an evening class in ACCELERATED READING will be taught each TUESDAY adjacent to the U. of M. campus, beginning on MAY 24. This is our Sixth semester of classes in Ann Arbor. Be our guest at a 30-minute public DEMONSTRATION of the ACCELERATED READING method, and see it applied by U. of M. students who have recently completed the course. BRING A BOOK! Demonstrations will be held at the BELL TOWER INN, located at 300 S. Thayer St. (across from Hill Auditorium ). By The Associated Press mer told a newsman as he walked NEW ORLEANS --Bob Goalby up his 18th fairway. blazed out of a five-way tie and Nevertheless, the game's all- took the second round lead of the time money-winner limped in with $100,000 Greater New Orleans a one-under par 71. His status for Open golf tourney yesterday with today's third round will be in a three-under par 69. But much doubt right up to tee time. of the attention focused on Arn- Goalby's 69 gave him a 36-hole old Palmer, crippled by a painful total of 137 and put him a stroke back injury, ahead of big Jack Nicklaus, who Palmer wrenched his back while had a 70 and said he "played bet- hitting off the tee of his fifth ter than Thursday when I had hole. 68." "It really hurts me bad," Pal- Goalby, 35, and winner of six tour championships, but none since 1962, didn't make the cut at the last stop on the PGA cir- cuit, the Texas Open two weeks ago. "I missed only two fairways with my drives," said Goalby, who hit 16 greens in regulation and used 31 putts. He birdied four holes took a bogey at No. 13, where he three-putted from 20 feet. He saved pars on both of the greens that he missed. Downtown HONDA Wenk Sales & Services, Inc r 310 E. Washington Ann Arbor-665-8637 4 .4- San Francisco Houston Pittsburgh Los Angeles . Philadelphia Atlanta St. Louis New York Cincinnati Chicago w 22 17 15 15 12 14 11 9 10 6 L 7 11 11 14 12 17 14 12 15 18 Pct. .759 .607 .577 .517 .500 .452 .440 .429 .400 .250 GB 414 7 9 9 9 10 1214 THURSDAY, May 12 at 7:30 P.M. TUESDAY, May 17 at 7:30 P.M. THURSDAY, May 19 at 7:30 P.M. MONDAY, May 23 at 7:30 P.M. NATIONAL CLINIC OF ACCELERATED READING 18964 Coyle St. Detroit 35, Michigan Read and Use Daily Classifieds YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Pittsburgh 4, Los Angeles 3 Houston 1, Philadelphia 0 San Francisco 5, New York 4 (17 inn) St. Louis 8, Atlanta 0 Cincinnati at Chicago (rain) TODAY'S GAMES san Francisco at New York Houston at Philadelphia Los Angeles at Pittsburgh Cincinnati at Chicago Atlanta at St. Louis (n) SUNDAY'S GAMES San Francisco at New York Houston at Philadelphia Los Angeles at Pittsburgh Cincinnati at Chicago Atlanta at St. Louis If you haven't examined a new Chevrolet since Telstar II, the twist or electric toothbrushes, 1966 Impala Snort Sedan-a more powerful, more beautiful car at a most pleasing price. shame on you! You've been missing out on a lot that's new and better since '62: " A more powerful standard Six and V8 (155 and 195 hp, respectively). " New Turbo-Jet V8s with displacements of 396 and 427 cubic inches that you can order. " A fully synchronized 3-speed transmission as standard. " A Turbo Hydra-Matic transmission available. " Deep-twist carpeting on every model. " Six-month or 6,000-mile lubrication intervals. " Self-adjusting brakes. " A Delcotron generator that extends battery life. " Self-cleaning rocker panels. " Up to 3' more shoulder room; increased leg and head room. " A smoother coil-spring suspension. * New sound and vibration dampeners throughout. * A longer body, a wider frame and tread. " Itnms n an add. such as AM-FM Multiplex Stereo radio, Comfortron automatic