I PAGE FOUR mrTff E MICMG DAILY SA nDAY, Y 21. 1958 PAGE POUR TUE MICHIGAN DAILY MATTTI1IIAV iTTI.V91 IOP~* VA 1 .'1 LAl J viux 41, 1Ja" IV Ford Ties Strikeout lark as Yan ikees Win Again V '.r Braves Trounce Phils in 10-0 Shutout; Tigers Defeat Red Sox, 9-6, on 15 Hits T MacKay Eliminated from Net Tourney, Chosen for Davis Cup Matches in Canada 4, By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Ed "Whitey" Ford tied an American League record by striking out six batters in a row last night and gained his 12th victory of the season as the New York Yankees defeated the Kansas City Athletics, 6-2, widen- ing their first place bulge to 11 game. Ford, a 27-year-old southpaw, became the seventh hurler to match the league record hung up by Detroit's Bill Donovan in 1908 by fanning Joe Ginsberg, Joe DeMaestri, Cletus Boyer, Hector Lopez and Al Pilarcik. He then hit Enos Slaughter on the next pitch. Ginsberg's called third strike ended the second in- ning. The, major league record for consecutive strikeouts is nine. Ford added only two more strike- outs the rest of the way. The Yankees, enjoying their best lead of the season after coupling ther 60th victory with a rainout that idled runnerup Cleveland at Baltimore, got to A's hurler Jack McMahan for a run in the first inning, then wrapped it up with four in the fifth. Braves 10, Phils 0 MILWAUKEE -- Fastball right- hander Bob Buhl threw a two hit shutout and Henry Aaron and Toby Atwell smashed home runs to give the first place Milwaukee Braves a 10-0 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies. Buhl, in taking his 12th victory against four defeats, permitted only two singles. Granny Hamner got one in the third and Richie Ashburn collected his in the sixth. The lean righthander struck out six 'and walked five. The victory kept the Braves two games ahead of the second place Cincinnati Redlegs who beat the Pittsburgh Pirates, 6-4, in 12 in- nings. It was Milwaukee's tenth victory in 11 starts since the All Star game. The Phillies, in sixth place, got three innings of good pitching from * reliefer Ben Flowers, but it came too late. The Braves landed on starter Stu Miller, a former tormentor, for two runs in the first inning as Aaron, the National League's lead- ing hitter, smashed his 13th homer with Eddie Mathews on base. Tigers 9, Red Sox 6 BOSTON-The Detroit Tigers, led by heavy-hitting Charlie Max- well, ruined Boston's Joe Cronin Hall of Fame recognition night by blasting out 15 hits for a 9-6 victory over the third-place Red Box. Maxwell, who once wore a Boston uniform, boosted his batting aver- age to .354 with three hits in four official times at bat. He also had a sacrifice fly and drove in two runs. Cronin, once a great Boston shortstop now the club's general manager, was honored by sports notables, public officials, friends and fans before the game. He re- ceived a new car and cash gifts to be turned over to the Children's Cancer Research Foundation Jim- my Fund.- Cronin and Hank Greenberg will be inducted into baseball's Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, N. Y., Mon- day.' Redlegs 6, Pirates 4 J CINCINNATI - Catcher Smoky Burgess smacked a two-run homers WHITEY FORD . . . Strikeout artistry behind, 4-0, before they could score. Cincinnati pulled even on a three-run homer by Ted Kluszew- ski in the fifth inning and a four- base blast by Wally Post in the seventh. * * * Dodgers 4, Cards I ST. LOUIS-Big Don Newcombs held St. Louis to five hits and ig- nited a three-run surge in the third inning to lead the Brooklyn Dodgers to a 4-1 triumph over the Cardinals for his 13th victory. Peewee Reese of the Dodgers had four hits, including a solo home run in the fifth. Newcombe's triumph was his seventh straight over St. Louis since August 1951. The husky righthander, beaten five times this season, was bothered only by Stan Musial, who walloped his 17th homer, a single, walked and lined out in four official trips as he boosted his average to .331. The Dodgers hammered 10 hits off righthanders Tom Poholsky, Lindy McDaniel and Larry Jack- son, pinning an eighth setback on Poholsky, a five-game winner. * * * Cubs 7, Giants 4 CHICAGO-The Chicago Cubs handed the New York Giants their 10th loss in the 11 games of their current western junket, 7-4, in the opener of a four game series be- fore 6,318 fans yesterday. Ex-Giant Monte Irvin smashed two homers, his 9th and 10th, and a single to help the Cubs defeat his old New York teammates. Although starter Jim Brosnan retired in the seventh inning, the Cubs' righthander was credited with his third win against four losses. Lefty Jimmy Davis finished up. Johnny McCall of the Giants drew his third loss. He was suc- ceeded by Jim Hearn and Hoyt Wilhelm. * * * Two Postponements Rain caused postponement of last night's American League games involving Cleveland at Bal- timore and Chicago at Washing- ton. PEEWEE REESE ... four hits for Dodgers BARRY MacKAY ... defeat and honor By The Associated Press CHICAGO -- Barry MacKay, Michigan's Big Ten tennis cham- pion was eliminated by top-seeded Art Larsen of San Leandro, Calif., 10-8, 6-4 in yesterday's third round of the National Clay Courts Tennis Tournament. Later Larsen was upset in the quarter-finals by Sammy Giam- malva of Houston. Tex., 7-5, 6-8, 6-3 in a near two-hour match. Sixth-seeded Giammalva, out- hit and out-ran Larsen with a consistent attack that combined amazing court-covering ability. Larsen took a 4-1 lead in the second set, and although Giam- malva tied it at 5-5, the Califor- nian rallied to win it. - In the third set, Giammalva forced the play against the tiring Larsen. He took the lead, stretched it to 5-2, then 5-3, then game at 6-3. ti Bernard "Tut" Bartzen, the number two seed from Dallas, thus assumed the role of favorite. Bartzen moved into the semi- finals by knocking off Alenjando Olmedo, the national collegiate champion from Los Angeles, 6-1, 6-4. Olmedo, unseeded, had defeated eight-seeded Allen Morris, Jr., of Atlanta earlier in the day. Both Shirley Fry, the first seed in the women's division and the Wimbledon champion, and Althea Gibson, second seed from New York City, turned in easy victories. Miss Fry, registering out of St. Petersburg, Fla., entered the semi- finals by whipping Barbara Green, North Hollywood, Calif., 6-0, 6-2, and Miss Gibson entered the quar- ter-finals with a 6-2, 6-1, triumph over Gwen Thomas, Cleveland, Ohio. BOLT UPSET: Most Favorites Win First Rounds in PGA Davis Cup Team NEW YORK - Michigan's Bar- ry MacKay is one of two newcom- ers named Thursday to the four man United States team for next week's North American zone Davis Cup matches against Canada at Victoria, B. C. MacKay and Ronald Holmberg of Brooklyn are expected to join in the doubles, while veterans Ham Richardson and Herb Flam play in the singles matches. It will be the first Davis Cup com- petition for both MacKay and Holmberg. HENRY AARON . another hot Brave hitter in the 12th inning, powering Cin- cinnati's Redlegs to a 6-4 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates. The four-base hit, scoring rookie Frank Robinson ahead of Burgess, broke a 4-4 tie that had existed for four innings. Home runs accounted for all the runs for the Redlegs, who were CAIJTON, Mass. (R) - Charles Prentice, unknown from Colum- bia, S. C., upset Tommy Bolt, 1 up yesterday to fracture the other- wise calm and formful first round of the Professional Golfers Asso- ciation chimpionship. Bolt got behind at the first hole, pulled ahead twice but lost with a scattershot finish which saw him take five's on the last two holes. "Leave me alone - I don't want to talk to anybody," Bolt blurted, as he grabbed his bags and left in a huff. Ford, Snead Advance Defending champion Doug Ford and three-time winner Sam Snead led a phalanx of favorites forward in other opening matches over the 6.634-yard par 71 Blue Hill Coun- try Club course. Ford, from Yonkers, N. Y., turned back Buddy Viar of South Charleston, W. Va., 3 and 2, while Snead rallied to oust Jack Weitzel of Columbus, Ohio, 2 and 1. Others to advance into the 64- man second round were Masters Champion Jackie Burke, Jr., for- mer National Open champions Lew Worsham and Ed Furgol; and such headline tournament pros as Walter Burkemo, Chick Harbert, Dick Mayer, Jimmy De- maret and Shelly Mayfield. Harbert Tops Williams Harbert, 1954 PGA champion from Northville, Mich., had to scramble to beat Henry Williams Jr., of Fleetwood, Pa., on the 20th hole of an overtime match. Al Smith of Danville, Va., took a 22-hole marathon from Vic Ghezzi, 1941 champion. Prentice defeated Bolt by re- fusing to scare and by letting the trigger-tempered Houston pro blow himself out of the match. Bolt Loses Two in Row One up with two holes to play, Bolt hit his drive into the woods on No. 17 and lost to a par four. Then on the 18th he drove into the rough and pitched into a trap, losing the match to Prentice's birdie four-two shots to the edge of the green and two to get down. Ford didn't lose a hole in his match with Viar, shooting even par for the 16 holes he played. Snead was off to a shaky start against Weitzel. The slammer lost two of the first four holes before bringing his big game into range and finishing one under par for 17 holes. 1 T Come to Church Sundcay $ Knight Add To Football Is i I I Major League Scores 1 i AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct New York 60 28 .692 Cleveland 47 37 .560 Boston 47 39 .547 Chicago 44 38 .537 Baltimore 40 45 .471 Detroit 39 47 .453 Washington 35 54 .393 Kansas City 31 55 .360 TODAY'S GAMES Kansas City at New York Detroit at Boston Cleveland at Baltimore (2) Chicago at Washington (N) NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 11 12 13 18 20 25%j 28 Milwaukee Cincinnati Brooklyn St. Louis Pittsburgh Chicago Philadelphia New York W 51 50 46 41 38 37 39 31 L 31 34 38 43 44 46 47 50 Pct GB .522- .595 2? .548 6 .488 11 .463 13 .446 14/ .453 14 .383 19%' TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at Milwaukee Pittsburgh at Cincinnati New York at Chciago Brooklyn at St. Louis Controversy SACRAMENTO, Calif. tJ)}-Gov. Goodwin Knight yesterday in- jected the name of Stanford - his old alma mater -into the Pacific Coast Conference athletic contro- versy. He said ex-Indian gridders, a "great many" in fact, have in- formed him they were paid for performing "fictitious tasks" while attending and playing football for the university. At Press Conference Knight's remarks, made at a press conference,. drew a prompt suggestion that perhaps the gov- ernor had fumbled. Al Masters, Stanford's athletic director, said the governor "ex- aggerated the situation," that he ought to journey to Palo Alto "to see exactly what we are doing." Masters, however, acknowledged that "there may be an occasional case where a boy is not putting enough time on his job." Repeat of Charges The governor said Raymond B. Allen, UCLA chancellor, made similar charges against Stanford, charges Knight said were never denied. The governor recalled he and others spoke out after the PCC slapped fines and suspensions on UCLA and Washington and that subsequently the PCC acted against USC and California. Earlier in the week, Knight had come to the defense of his Calif- ornia schools in their troubles with the PCC. He promised sup- port for any move to dissolve the Coast Conference and to create an all-California athletic league with less stringent eligibility rules. SPORTS SHORTS: Misses Lesser, Quast Gain Golf Finals ST. MARY'S STUDENT CHAPEL William and Thompson Streets Masses Daily at 6:30 A.M., 7:00 A.M., 8:00 A.M., 9:00 A.M. Sundays at 8:00 A.M., 9:30 A.M., 11:00 A.M., 12 noon. Novena Devotions, Wednesday Evenings - 7:30 P.M. Newman Club Rooms in the Father Richard Cen- ter. THE CHURCH OF CHRIST 530 West Stadium Sundays-10:00 A.M. -11:00 A.M. - 7:30 P.M. Wednesdays-7:30 P.M. Bible Study, Minister, Charles Burns. Hear "The Herald of Truth" WXYZ ABC Net- work Sundays-1:00 to 1:30 P.M. WHRV-Sundays 9:15 A.M. FIRST METHODIST CHURCH and WESLEY FOUNDATION 120 S. State St. Merrill R. Abbey, Erland J. Wangdohl, William B. Hutchinson, Eugene A. Ransom Ministers. 9:00 and 10:45 A.M. Worship sermon, "Where Are You?" by Eugene A. Ransom. 9:30 A.M. Discussion group topic: "Problems of Christian Belief." 2:00 P.M. Meet in Wesley lounge for a picnic out- ing. CAMPUS CHAPEL (Sponsored by the Christian Reformed Churches of Michigan) Washtenaw at Forest Rev. Leonard Verduin, Director. Res. Ph. NO 5-4205; Office Ph. NO 8-7421. 10:00 Morning Service. 7.00 Evening Service. GRACE BIBLE CHURCH Corner State & Huron Streets William C. Bennett, Pastor. 10:00 A.M. Sunday school classes. 11:00 A.M. "The Return of Christ."' 7:00 P.M. "An Unfinished Story." 7:30 P.M. Wednesday-Prayer Meeting. We Welcome You. FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH and STUDENT CENTER 1432 Washtenaw Ave., NO 2-3580 Henry Kuizenga, Minister. Win. S. raker, University Pastor Patricia Pickett, Assistant Sunday Morning Worship at 9:15 and 11:00 A.M. Summer Fellowship for Students and Young Adults, meet at 5:30 for supper and to hear Professor Howard McClusky speak on "Liberty or Li- cense?" Patricia Pickett will be in the student office 12- 2 P.M., Monday through Thursday. Bible Study, "The Apostle Paul." Wednesday, July 25th, at 8 o'clock. ST. ANDREWS CHURCH and the EPISCOPAL STUDENT FOUNDATION 306 North Division Street 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion at St. Andrews Church (Followed by breakfast and speaker at Canterbury House), 9:00 A.M. Family Service. 11:00 A.M. Morning Prayer and Sermon. 4:00 P.M. Picnic. Cars leave from Canterbury House. 8:00 P.M. Evening Prayer and Commentary (chapel). BETHLEHEM EVANGELICAL AND REFORMED 423 South Fourth Avenue Walter S. Press, Pastor Arthur Zillgitt, Asst. Pastor. 10:45 A.M. Worship Service. Sermon by Asst. Pas- tor Arthur Zillgitt. 1:30 P.M. Student Guild Meeting. FRIENDS '(QUAKER) MEETING Friends Center, 1416 Hill St. 9:30 and 10:45 A.M.-Meeting for Worship. 9:30 A.M.-Child care, FIRST CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH State and William Streets Minister, Rev. Leonard A. Parr Church School classes up to 6th grade, 10:45 A.M. Public Worship 10:45. Subject: "Only Seven." Speaker: Prof. L. LaMont Okey. Student Guild 7:00 P.M. Speaker: Mr. M.C.A. Boukai of Palestine. "P'roblems Facing the Mid- dIe East." FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH 512 East Huron. Chester H.dLoucks and Duane L. Day. Min- isters. Student Advisor: Beth Mahone, 10:00 A.M. Student Bible Study. 11:00 A.M. Reverend Day's sermon will be "None Shall Separate Us." 2:00 P.M. Roger Williams Guild will meet in the Guild House to go together to Silver Lake for their program, a swim and a picnic supper. Charles Mahone will review Sigmund Freud's "Moses and Monotheism." FIRST UNITARIAN CHURCH 1917 Washtenaw Avenue Rev. Edward H. Redman, Minister. Sunday 8:00 P.M.-The Honorable WADE Mc- CREE, Wayne Court Circuit Judge, will speak on, "Twentieth Century Reconstruction." FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 1833 Washtenaw Avenue Ann Arbor, Michigan Sunday, 11 A.M. Wednesday, 8 P.M., Testimony Meeting. Sunday School, 9:30 A.M. Reading Room, 339 South Main. Tuesday to Saturday, 11 A.M. to 5 P.M.; Monday, 11 A.M. to 9 P.M.; Sunday, 2:30 to 4:30 P.M. I I s By The Associated Press HUNTINGTON. W. Va. - Pat Lesser, the defending champion from Seattle. and Anne Quast, the medalist from Everett, Wash., proved the late pressure winners yesterday to go into today's golf- ing finals of the Women's Western Amateur. Two down after 10 holes in a see-saw semi-final match, the 23- Johnson Loses in 10th Round In Madison Square Garden year-old Miss Lesser won, 2 tip, by taking four of the last five holes from Mary Patton Janssen, inter- national competitor and British amateur runner-up, who faltered badly. Miss Quast's steady par golf on -the last seven holes produced a 3 and 1 victory over Berridge Long, the local pride and hope. * * Greek Game Favored CHICAGO, - The combination of Greek Game, unbeaten in three starts, and Bill Hartack, nation's leading jockey, yesterday appar- ently scared off many rivals and only six other 2-year-olds were entered -in today's $140,850 Ar- lington Futurity. If all go to the post, the 27th running of the six-furlongs fea- ture at Arlington Park will be worth $84,410 to the winner. Sec- ond place money is $30,000, third $15,000 and fourth $10,000. **, * * Hollywood Park Race INGLEWOOD, Calif., - Eleven candidates, topped by Robert Leh- man's Count of Honor and Rex Ellsworth's Terrang, were en- tered in today's $75,000 added Westerner, a mile and one-quarter fixture for the leading 3-year-olds running at Hollywood Park. F 7 NEW YORK GP)-Tony Anthony pounded out a 10-round technical knockout over Tony Johison last night in a light heavyweight match at Madison Square Garden. There were no knockdowns in the fight, but Anthony had put on such a late round barrage of punches that Johnson could not move away from the ropes.. An- thony had slipped to the canvas twice during the fight, but got up without receiving a count. Anthony, a 21-year-old grad of the amateur ranks, made his re- cord 27 victories in 31 fights. Twenty-seven of his triumphs were via the knockout route. The 6'1" winner was favored over the stocky Jc.hnson who gave away three inches in height and couldn't match Anthony's punch- ing power. Johnson's record is now 23-8-8, including only eight knockouts. He was sent down for the count only once before by Paddy Young last year. _ "zxca ia4 . 5 se] the' C MAIN OFFICE 101-107 S. Main St. # NICKELS ARCADE 330 S. State Street * NEAR 'ENGINE ARCH' 1108 South University * PACKARD-BROCKMAN 1923 Packard * WHITMORE LAKE 9571 N. Main St. FRATERNITIES AND SORORITIES .. * I 11 campus SHOP SATURDAY AT WAGNER'S OPEN 9 t 5:30 Haspel cotton and wash'n'wear cords, PALM BEACH washable and tropical weight 41 ( 4 4 .4 11 LUTHERAN STUDENT CHAPEL (National Lutheran Council) Hill St. & South Forest Ave. Dr. H. 0. Yoder, Pastor Sunday-9:30 A.M.-Bible Stidy on Galatians 10:30 A.M. Worship Service with Holy Com- munion. 6:00 Supper. 7:00 P.M. Panel Discussion on Japan-Led by Four Lutheran Japanese Students. Tuesday-7:30 P.M. Class-Teachings of De- nominations (Episcopal & Methodist). MEMORIAL CHRISTIAN CHURCH (Disciples of Christ) Hill and Tappan Streets. Rev. Russell Fuller, Minister 10:45 Morning Worship. Guest Speaker: Mr. Mar- vin Jewell: GATES AND DOORS. 9:45 A.M. Church School. THE CONGREGATIONAL and DISCIPLES STU. 'C Ann Arbor Bank can help your ,r r . r. . .. ! 11 I I I 11 0