THE MICHIGAN DAILY mts Trounce -Stars, 22-12 erly Sparks Pros to Win in Rain; lie, Barnes Lead Stars' Offense 160- t O (lf)-Charlie Conerly New York Giants to a ry over the College All- night before a damp early 75,000 in Soldier die of Stanford almhost onerly's -passing skill Ray Barnes of Wake gled his way through offense to keep the ispense almost to the arnes Scores scdred the All - Star and Paige Cothren of kicked two field goals ly missed a third. passed for both of the bdowns, but Ben Aga- d e d the spectacular his two field goals for rk team. He kicked one rds away in the first another from 45 in off and on throughout 'r the end of the first period when Agajanian kicked a field goal from 33 yards away. Barnes presented the Giants with the opportunity when he fumbled and Charley Toogood recovered on the All- Stars 25~, Giants Show Power The Giants show ed real power in the second period. The NFL champions moved 88 yards in only five plays. One of these was a 33-yd. pass from Conerly to Web- ster. Then Conerly passed to Keh MacAfee who caught the ball on the All-Stars' 25 and ran for the touchdown. The play was good for 38 yards.,; The All-Stars came back after the Giants took a 10-6 lead in the second period. The collegians swept from their 15.to the Giants' 7 in 10 plays. Then Cothren of Mississippi kicked a fleld goal from the 7. A ruling that Peaks of Michigan State interfered with one of Con- e'rly's passes intended for Frank Giford paved the way for the Giants touchdown in the third period. This gave the ball to the Giants on the All-Stars' 15 and Conerly promptly passed to -Mac- Afee who was all alone in the end zone. CHARLIE CONERLY JOHN MATSKO . Giants sparkplug .. strong at center Snead Fires 69 To Keep Tam Lead CHICAGO (A)- - With the in- stinct of an old fire horse when the alarm sounds, perked-up Sam Snead showed his heels to the awed younger pros yesterday with a second-round 69 and a sizzling halfway total of 134 to maintain his lead in golf's biggest money stampede. Finishes in Rain. The 45-yr.-old sweet swinger finished his chore in a light rain at Tam O'Shanter. His 134 represented 10 strokes under par and wheeled him far- ther ahead in the field of .100 pros prospecting for the game's richest reward - $50,000 in cash and a $50,000 exhibition contract. Mike Souchak with a 33-37-70 and Shelley Mayfield with 36-34-. 70 shared third place at 138. Grouped at 139 were Ed Oliver and Tony Holguin, followed at 140 by Bob Rosburg and Arnold Palmer. National Open champion Dick Mayer and highly-favored Gene' Littler were among. seven, check- ing in at 141. Dow Finsterwald and Bill Casper, two other touted young players, were among those at 142. Kroll Shoots 143 Defending "World" champion Ted Kroll was buried at 143 along with Jerry Barber and Jack Fleck, while All-American winner Rc- berto de Vicenzo was an also -ran at 147 and leading money-winner and Masters' champion Doug Ford was lost at 148. Rounding out the other sections of the "World" championships: Men amateurs - defending champion Ward .Wettlaufer of Buffalo, N.Y., shot his second 72 for 144 and a one-stroke lead. Women pros - Louise Suggs, twice a runnerup, smashed a 73, for 4-under-par 148 and a two- MICHIGAN DAILY CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .80 2.00 2.96 3 .96 2.40 3.55 4 1.12 2.80 , 4.14 Figure 5 overage words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. 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A spacious room, single or double, for men. fClosets, bath, beautiful location.)C31 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES EUROPEAN CARS T obELUIIfl/l I We service all foreign cars. 303 Ashley TIRE SALE Prices slashed Big trade-in for used tires Fully Guaranteed GOLDEN'S SERVICE featuring STANDARD Products 601 Pack$ard - NO 8-9429 )S2 C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. At- las tires, batteries and accessories. Warranteed & guaranteed. See us for the best price on new & used tires. Road service -- mechanic on duty. "You expect more from Standard and you get It l" 1220 8. University at Forest NO 8-9168 )S1 EXPERT FOREIGN and Sports Car Service. :ye Motor Sales, Inc., 514 E. Washington. NO. 3-4858. " )S3 WANTED TO RENT TWO -LAW STUDENTS desire apart- ment for next fall. Call NO 3-6374. )L WANTED-Furnished houses, cottages, or apartments to sublease for the two week period August 18-30 inclusive to participants attending, Engineer- Ing Summer Conference. Send letter. giving address, phone, number of rooms, facilities available, rent de- sired; children acceptable to Engi- neering Summer Conference, 2038 East Engineering Building. )L5 PHOTO SUPPLIES NO 5-5800 )S6 BUSINESS SERVICES WASHINGS - Also ironing separat Specialize in cotton blouses, , washed skirts. Free pick up and livery. Phone NO 2-9020. TYPING - Reasonable rates. The term papers, etc. 830 S. Main. Call 8-7590. RE-WEAVING--Burns. tears, moth he rewoven. Let us save your elot Weave-Bac Shop, 224 Nickels Arc PERSONAL WANTED: ROOMMATE to share mr ern camapus apartment. $50)per mon Write 19795 Stansburg, Detroit. LAST CHANCE to obtain magazine student discount rates. Student i odical, NO 2-3061. TRANSPORTATION WANTED-Ride to New York-New Sey area. Leaving Aug. 16 or 17. share driving and expenses. Call ene at NO 2-2547. PETS AND SUPPLIES TROPICAL FISH aquariums and I plies, Hamsters, Parakeets, etc. UNIVERSITY AQUARIUM 328 East Liberty N03-02 (Open daily except 'Thursday) HELP WANTED ASSISTANT TEACHER for Nur School Mon., Wed., and Fri. next Call NO 3-1320. ANN ARBOR EMPLOYERS PERSONNEl 504'First National Bldg. NO 5-6107 JH mph in the 24th .e it 15 victories teams against egians with two the game, the eason, g6 to the .ts 10-Pt. Favorites Lnts, the National League s of 1956, were 10-pt. In the end it was their beam play that tipped ce despite the perform- Brodie, Barnes, Paul of Notre Dame, Jim Syracuse and Jon Ar- uthern California. atsko of Michigan State trong game for the All- ;enter.' -Stars scored at the out- Alex Webster of the Gi- ledand Wayne Bock of covered on the All-Star s carried over from the Brodie passed to' Ron f Michigan foi 10 and to 11. Abe Woodson of Illi- pered around left end for SMOKY BURGESS LINDY McDANIEL . homers against 'Cubs .. . scalped by Braves Yank Lead Cut to, Four Games; Braves Increase Margin to 312 USED CAMERAS C-3 Camera, Case, and Flash,; Argus Read By The Associated Press' BALTIMORE -- Bob Nieman snapped out of a slump last night with a home run and two doubles as he drove in all the runs for the Baltimore Orioles in a 4-3 victory over the New York Yankees. The loss, third straight and fourth in their last five games, left the Yanks fodr games ahead of second-place Chicago in the American League standings. gnt thle ts' first at A, Big Ten Chiefs, Law, Order Prevail ElHCAQO (N)- The chief offi- s of the National Collegiate Metic Assn. and the Big Ten, reports to the nation's football ters, agreed yesterday that law d order prefail in the college Lletie rnks despite a few rebels. Valter Byers, executive direc- of the NCAA and Kenneth L. ug" Wilson, Big Ten commis- nerA made statistical reports on ir athletic codes before the an- al meeting of the Football iters Assn. of America. 'Done Tremendous Job' 3yers, pointing out that 18 cas- of NCAA code violations cur- tly are being investigated, still ne' to, the conclusion that "this' gram has done a tremendous in cooperation with the con- ences, "of establishing law and er in college athletic adminis- bion." ithough .the Big Ten recently pended. Indiana's new football ch, Phil Dickens, for violating controversial new financial aid' gram, Wilson told the writers: I , think there definitely is a wing acceptance and approval the plan among 'our people, as niristrators and coaches have a chance to see it in opera- Pegged on Grants 'he Big Ten plan primarily is ged .on grants for board; room, ks, tuition and fees on the is of need. The need factor is ermined by a professional sur- of an interested athlete's fam- means. Conference school pays the erence between the total cost. what the family presumably afford--or the whole amount, he survey certifies it. 'he Big Ten also allows full fi- icial aid to Athletes with high demic rating. Under the new n, each Big Ten'school was al- ed to extend 100 tenders of aid prospective freshmen athletes. s codered all sports. 691 Acceptances Reported Vilson reported that, as of the K. 1 deadline for accepting ten- s, 911 were extended to 776 s with a total of 691, accept- es. The percentage of accept- e was 89 per cent, indicating t 11 per cent._of athletes de- d by Big Ten schools enrolled side the Conference. UP e t it Despite the Dickens case and. rumors which Wilson said hinted that virtually every Conference school was under investigation,, the commissioner said there was -no indication whatsoever of wide- spread violations. But. Wilson pointed, out that Jack Ryan, a formerd conference athlete and football official, and' a former FBI agent, heads an in-' vestigation system in which' Ryan has developed "a network of cor- responding investigators" to track down any cited violations. These men aill have FBI experience. Major League, Standings- Nieman slugged his homer in the fourth off loser Whitey Ford and hit a base-clearing double in the sixth following singles by Bil- ly Gardner and Bob Boyd and a walk to George Kell. White Sox 5, Tigers 4 CHICAGO - Nellie Fox kept alive Chicago's diminishing pen- nant hopes yesterday when he twice drove in the game-tying run, then romped home. in 'the 11lth inning on Larry Doby's single for a. 5-4'huphill WhiteSox victory over the Detroit Tigers. Fox' single in the ninth inning scored pinch runner Ted Beard to send the game into extra inn- ings with the score tied, 3-3. The diminutive second baseman also singled home a run in the bottom of the 11th after Detroit :gad tak- en a 4-3 lead, then scored tte winning marker on Doby's shot into center field. Braves 13, Cardinals 2 ST. I OUIS - Milwaukee streaked to the biggest lead in the National League this season- 31/2 games - as Bob Buhl, backed by an 18-hit attack, subdued the second-place St.i Louis Cardinals last night, 13-2. It was Buhl's fifth victory in a row and the Braves' fifth straight success. Loser Lindy McDaniel was hit hard for six runs and seven hits, five of them extra-base blows in two and one-third innings. * * * - Redlegs 9-6, Cubs 7-4 CINCINNATI - A four-run up- rising on five hits in the eighth inning carried Cincinnati's Red- legs to a 6-4 victory over Chica- go's Cubs last night in the night cap, completing a doubleheader sweep. The Reds outslugged #.he Cubs in the opener for a 9-7 triumph. The Cubs got a rally' going in the ninth inning of the finale,. putting across a run before relief- ers Hershell Freeman and finally Brooks Lawrence could snuff it out. Catcher Smoky Burgess won the first-game slugfest for Cincinnati with a three-run homer. * * * Senators 8, Red Sox 0 BOSTON-Washington's Pedro Ramos, long-time Red Sox tor- mentor, hurled a six-hit, 8-0 vic- tory over Boston last night for the Senators' seventh triumph in their last eight games. First baseman Art Schult drove in four runs. Athletics 3, Indians 2 CLEVELAND - Billy Martin's single in the 13th inning scored Bob Cerv from second base 'and led tha Kansas City Athletics to a 3-2 victory over the Cleveland Indians last night. The defeat dropped the Indians into fifth place, a half-game be- hind the Baltimore Orioles. Women amateurs - Clifford Ann Creed of Opelousas, La., in- creased her lead to six strokes with a 78 for 159. The "World" championship winds up 72 holes of pressure shooting tomorrow. stroke lead.t Miss Creed Leada t, I F .. ......,. Star Hurdler Defies AAU, Wed on 'Bride and Groom' FEINER GLASS & PAINT CO. $34.50. Argus C-4 Camera, Case, and Flash, $54.50. THE QUARRY, INC. 320 S. State NO 3-1991 )D10 FOR SALE RACCOON COAT-man's large A-1 con- dition. $200 cash. Write Box B13, Michigan Daily. )B13 SALE SHORT SLEEVE sport shirts 97c. Washable. Assorted colors. SAM'S STORE Phone NO 3-8611 122 East Washington )B2 216 W. William Stre Anan Arbor, Michigan Telephone NO 8-8014 'p NEW YORK (AP) - In defiance of the Amateur Athletic Union, Olympic gold medal winner Lee Calhoun was married yesterday on the "Bride and Groom" tele- vision show to his college sweet- heart, Gwendolyn Bannister. An AAU spokesman said that the moment the 23-yr.-old athlete appeared on the network show he disqualified himself bs an ama- teur. Dan Ferris, executive secretary of the AAU, had warned Calhoun a week ago that the commercial- ized wedding would capitalize on his athletic fame. The couple re- ceived gifts worth an estimated $2,500, as well as an undisclosed amount of traveler's checks and plane tickets for a Paris honey- moon. The AAU has strict rules against appearances on commer- cialized TV and radio programs. There was one surprise when Relax! Lourself before the Movie.. PLAY MINI GQLF The Modern Miniature Golf Game Ypsi-Ann Golf Course Next to Ypsi-Ann Drive-In Theatre the Olympic Games 110-yd. high hurdle champion's father, the Rev. Carey 'Calhoun of the Even.- ing' Star Baptist Church,v Gary, Ind, married the couple. Calhoun, a native of Laurel, Miss,, now re- sides in Gary. The bride, from Pinehurst, N.C., met Calhoun at 'a school dance when both attend- ed North Carolina College. Calhoun said that if he lost his amateur standing "it would. hurt' me very much, but I would con- tinue my work as an athletic in- structor." He plans to join the Cleveland recreation department Sept. 3. TONIGHT LITTLE THEATRE presents the hilarious comedy "THE TENDER TRAP" Daily Cla ssif i II El DIAL NO 8-6416 ENDING TODAY "VERY FUNNY! A FULL BAG OF BRITISH COMIC CHARACTERS!" -Winsten,Post "A HILARIOUS, SATIRICAL COMEDY! A HOWLING DELIGHT!" -Zunser, Cue Magazine We Have All Kinds of Glass-1irrors and Furnture Tops YOU CAN PARK RIGHT IN FRONT OF OUR, STORE WE HAVE BEEN SERVING THE-COMMUNITY FOR 67 YEARS DIAL NO 2-3136 ** L; A R ENDING TONIGHT! Last Complete Show 8:45 P.M. "BEGINNING OF THE END" also "THE UNEARTHLY" TONIGHT at MIDNIGHT! Doors Open 11:30 P.M. -One Showing Only AMERICANl New York Chicago Boston Balt imore s Cleveland Detroit Washington Kansas City LEAGUE' W L Pet. 70 38 .648 65 41 .613 57 50 ..533. 53 54'.495 53 55 .491 51 55 .481 4? 67 .385 38 69 .355 GB. 12112 16% 17 1$ 312 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Baltimore 4,New York 3 Chicago .5, Detroit 4 (11 Innings) Kansas City 3 Cleveland .2 , (13 innings) Washington 8, Boston 0 TODAY'S SCHEDULE Kansas City at Cleveland - Ur- ban (1-2) vs. Garcia (5-7).. Washington at Boston - Pascual (8-11, vs. Porterfield (3=4) or Sisler (7-6). New Yorl at Baltimore (N) - Lar- sen. (6-4) vs. Wight (3-5)' or Brown (4-6)" Detroit at Chicago (N)-Lary (4-15) vs. Derrington (0-0)' SAugust 9 and 1 Q Friday and Saturday LITTLE THEATRE ELVIS IS A DRAMATIC EUPRISE TECHNICOLOR* MODERN MUSICAL TREAT... EXCITING STORY I . dca ICt1ARD AIINtQIOIJSII " DEtNNIS "A delightful spoof . Chuckling tongue - in - cheek humor . . . One hilarious in cident after another!" -Pelswick, Journal-American SUNDAY New Ann Arbor High School Curtain Time 8:30 P.M. Tickets $1.50 For information, call N03-6198 Final Play of the Summer 7 GREAT SONGS! Milwaui St. Louis Brooklyn Cincinna Philadel New Yor Chicago Pittsbur NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pu ee 6 42 .6l Is 62 45 .1 n 61 47 .5 atI 60 49 .51 phia 58 50 .5 rk 49 61 .4 39 68 .3 rgh 37 70 .34 et. 611 578 565 550 537' 445 364 346 GB. 31/2 5 614 8 28,4 A ;;;;,I ENDS iAONDAY' DIAL NO 2-2513 _" er ecti4 LE-9 ALL SEATS 90c (None Reserved) *' * * YESTERDAY'S RESULTS New York 6, Philadelphia 2 Milwaukee 13, St. Louis 2 Brooklyn 4, Pittsburgh 2 Cincinnati 9-6, Chicago 7-4 TODAY'S SCHEDULE Philadelphia at 'New York - Had- dix (9-8) vs. Barclay (5-7). Brooklyn at Pittsburgh Drysdale (9-6) vs. Purkey (10-8). ~ Chicago at Cincinnati - Hillman (4-7) vs. Jeffcoat (8-8). Milwaukee at St. Louis - (N) Spahn (11-8) vs. V. McDaniel (6-2). Ends Tonite-- Late. Show Starts at 11:45 All-Color Cartoon Party ANTHONY QUINN in Man From Del Rio GUY MADISON in Beast From Hollow Mountain in Color- Starts Sunday Gunfight At OK Corral Chasing The Sun Opening SUNDAY! at his sensational best... a teen-age terror who scares .4 I . ~ auu a - ;*'w .~