THE MICHIGAN DAILY Giants Beat Cubs; Yanks Top Orioles By The Associated Press CHICAGO (A)-- Willie Mays broke out of a lengthy slump yes- terday with three hits, including his first homer in more than a month, to lead the San Francisco Giants to a 6.4 victory over the Chicago Cubs behind the effective relief pitching of Paul Giel. The triumph ended a six-game losing streak for the second-place Giants who only last Tuesday were in first place In the National League but now trail the Milwau- kee Braves by 4% games. Mays' homer, his 17th, gave him his first RBI in 18 games. It was his first homer since July 2 and that also was hit at Wrigley Field off Cub pitcher Dick Drott. Pirates 4, Braves 3 MILWAUKEE (R) - A bases- WILLIE MAYS empty home run by Roberto Cle- ... breaks slump mente in the ninth inning gave Touring U.S. Trac T"eam Meet in Budapest Tonight As an official stepped off the, putt at 60 feet, the slim 27-year- old San Francisco pro said "but I'd like to step off that putt my-1 self - I think it must have been, 70 feet." That lengthy carpet tap was a real pressure putt. Boros, who fin- ished ahead of Venturi, was eighta under par throug 68 holes. Former U.S. Open Champ Boros knew Venturi was seven under going into the 67th green. By sinking the 60-footer, Ven- turi went nine under, knowing Boros had finished seven under.' After that, Burke was Venturi's big problem. Venturi, who shot earlier rounds ',of 65-67-68,1 matched par three on the 200-yard. 71st hole with what Burke de- scribed as "fantastic play." Venturi salvaged his par by chipping in from high grass to within 2 feet. I-M Notice The Intramural Department's weekly Co-Recreational Program will be held Wednesday evening, 7:30 to 10:00 p.m., at the Intra- mural Building on Hoover Street. Facilities will be open to all Uni- versity students and staff mem- bers and their guests free of charge. Children of students and staff members are invited to use the facilities during the first hour. Parents must accompany their. children. Lockers and towels will be fur- nished to men and women. Those. desiring to use the facilities of the gym or ,the paddleball courts are required to use gym shoes. The Intramural pool will' be open from 7:30 to 9:30 with Den- nis Rigan of the Physical Educa- tion Department in charge. Wolf- gang Dozauer of the varsity gym- nastics team will be available o help anyone interested in learning the fundamentals of gymnastic exercises, including trampolining and tumbling.. This will-be the last weekly pro- gram until the fall semester. Per- sons having any suggestions for improving the program are asked to leave their comments at the In- tramural office. BUDAPEST (W) - America's touring track team, g r o w in g "edgy" from travel, a tight sched- ule and tough competition, workedl out briefly and last night relaxed' and waltzed by the grey Danube.' Third Meet The team meets a group of Hungarians and Czechoslovakians today and Wednesday in the 100,- 000-seat Nepstadioh in the third' of four meets on a European tour. MacKay Wins Tennis Match Barry MacKay, former Michi- ;an star, advanced yesterday into the second round of the Eastern Grass Court Tennis Champion- ships at Sputh Orange, N.J. Mac- Kay, seeded No. 2, put out Bob Perry of Los Angeles 6-1, 6-3. Ham Richardson of Arlington, Va., seeded third, stopped Jack Douglas of Santa Monica, Calif., 6-1, 6-1. Cooper Wins Wimbledon Champion Ashley Cooper of Australia, making his first appearance on the 1956 American tournament circuit, de- feated Chris Crawford of Pied- mont, Calif. Cooper, top-seeded foreign en- try, was somewhat pressed to score a 6-4, 6-4 victory. Gibson Sweeps. Match In the women's feature, Wim- bledon Champion Althea Gibson of New York, Eastern winner in 1956, swept past Mrs. Baba Lewis of Newtonville, Mass., 6-4, 6-1. Cooper, just off the hard courts of the European circuit, had some trouble getting his game adjusted to the grass. Once he found the range, however, he overpowered his American opponent. Savitt's Service Strong The American top-seed, Dick Savitt of South Orange crushed William Hoogs Jr., of Berkeley, Calif., 6-1, 6-1. Savitt's big service and powerful overheads proved to be a quick undoing for the Cali- fornian. American headquarters during the four-day stop in Budapest will be on Margaret Island in one of the few hotels of the Communist world which rates as high as class 3. On either side of Margaret Is- land is the Danube River which may be blue at Vienna but at this one-time revolutionary headquar- ters is a sad grey. Busy Night "The team has made fast jumps from Moscow to Warsaw and some of the members are getting edgy," Assistant Coach Payton Jordan said. "We have a busy night coming up today against a new team and the coaches are pleased everyone has been in such good humor. "Tonight, we did away with the schedule - eat when you like, work out informally, go dancing on the terrace under the stars and listen to sweet music. "That'll relax 'em." No Team Score There will be no team score of any kind in Budapest-unlike the tension-filled meet in Moscow eight days ago and the more re- laxed but - ruggedly competitive meet at Warsaw last weekend. the Pittsburgh Pirates a 4-3 vic- tory last night as they broke the league-leading Milwaukee Braves' six-game winning streak. Cardinals 3, Dodgers 2 ST. LOUIS (R) - Larry Jack- son pitched a five-hit game last night and backed by Gene Green's home run led the St. Louis Card- inals to a 3-2 victory over the Los Angeles Dodgers. Jackson struck out 12, including the last five men he fated and retired the last 17 straight. Yanks 9, Orioles 4 BALTIMORE (P) - The Balti- more Orioles were presented with three gift runs in the first inning last night but lost 9-4 to the New York Yankees for their eighth straight defeat. The Yankees came from behind by scoring runs in each of the last five innings after being held hitless in the first four by Arnold Portocarrero. Every New York starter made at least one hit and six different players knocked in runs, including two each by Mickey Mantle, Yogi Berra and Bill Skowron. Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Milwaukee 58 43 .574 - San Francisco 55 48 .534 4 Pittsburgh 52 49 .515 6 Chicago 51 54 .486 9 Cincinnati 49 52 .485 9 Philadelphia 47 51 .480 9y St. Louis 47 54 .465 11 Los Angeles 47 55 .461 11 TODAY'S GAMES r Philadelphia at Cincinnati (N) - Sanford (7-11) vs. Haddix (7-5) or Newcombe (2-10). Pittsburgh at Milwaukee (N) - Kline (11-9) vs. Burdette (10-8). Los Angeles at St. Louis -- Mc- Devill (1-3) vs.aMuffett (3-3). San Francisco at Chicago-Miller (3-6) vs. Hillman (2-3). AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB New York 68 36 .654 - Boston 51 51 .500 16 Chicago 51 52 .495 16%4 Cleveland 51 54 .486 17ij Detroit 50 52 .490 17 Baltimore 47 53 .470 19 KansasCity 47 53 .470 19 Washington 45 59 .433 23 TODAY'S GAMES Cleveland at Detroit (N) -- Mc- Lish (10-6) vs. Susce (3-0). Chicago at Kansas City (N) - Wilson (7-8) vs. Grim (1-2). New York at Baltimore (N)-Tur- ley (16-4) vs. Harshmann (8-9). Washington at Boston (N) - enger (6-8) vs. Monoboquette (0-2), USED CARS 1953 VOLKSWAGEN; new tires, up to 45 MPG. $695. OL 3-3651. _ _)N184 1957 RENAULT DALPHINE. Excellent condition. $1,450. See Donald Hope be- tween 6 and 8 P.M., 119 N. Forest. 1956 VOLKSWAGEN, sun roof, excellent condition. Must sell, owner leaving country. Best offer. NO 2-8210. )N178 GOING TO HOLLAND-must sell '55 Volkswagen. Excellent condition. $1050. NO 3-1654. )N180 1955 FORD Hardtop, 1 owner, 2-tone paint, R&H, white walls. Real nice. $1,195 1 950 Oldsmobile 4-door sedan, V-8, R&H. No rust. California car $395 1956 FORD Hardtop, V-$, automatic, power brake, power steering, R&H, white wall tires. $1,495 1950 DODGE Club coupe, 1 owner. I deal transportation. $245 JIM WHITE, Inc. Cor. W. Huron and First Sts. Inside Display Lot NO 3-3321 )N183 PERSONAL GIRL wanted to share apt. for fall with two grads. Call NO 5-6708. )F509 YOUNG, ATTRACTIVE thrifty maga- zine agency wishes to attract readers: Object: subscriptions. Single and mar- ried may apply by phoning Student Periodical Agency. NO 3-6522. )F510 CAMPUS CLOSE-UPS Do you know? Eldora Brummet .........NO 2-8145 Robert Nixon ............NO 2-4085 GRAD. WOMAN arriving Sept. wants to share apt. with 1 or 2 other women. C. Stein, Dolgelly, Bryn Mawr, Pa. )P505 ISRAELI and International Folk Danc- ing every Tues. evening at 7:30. Hillel Foundation, 1429 Hill St. All Welcome, including beginners. )F498 GRAD will share apt, with student only. High class girl and non-drinker. Apt, fully furnished $55. On Forest, Call EMpire 3-3024, commerce ex- change. Or write 6510 Commerce Rd., OrchardLake 1, Michiga. )F506 LOOK at LIFE this way, Look $5 per year, Life $5 per year. Phone Student Periodical, 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. NO 3-6522. )F507 PETS AND SUPPLIES Tropical fish, pets, and supplies UNIVERSITY AQUARIUMS 328 E. Liberty NO 3-0224 )T30 GLASS DOMED: Tokyo Stadium Planned NEW YORK W) - What city will be the first to build an all- weather baseball stadium? New York? Cleveland, Los Angeles? No. It is Tokyo. That's the word from George S. Mizota, prominent fishery execu- tive and sports enthusiast. "Plans for a new Tokyo stadium. already have been made," Mizota said. "It will be a tremendous thing. It will seat 70,000 and will have a glass dome. You could play a game in a snow storm if you pleased." The Tokyo visitor said the project is being financed by Mat- sutaro Shoriki, president of the Yomiuri newspaper, owner of the Tokyo Giants baseball team and the man generally regarded, as the father of baseball in Japan. "When it came time to plan the dome," said Mizota, who learned his impeccable English at Stanford, "architects sought to find out how high would be the hoghest home run. "So a survey was made of Amer ican home runs, those of Mickey Mantle, Babe Ruth and others. Fi- nally it was decided that the mightiest home run was that one of more than 500 feet which Babe Ruth hit in an exhibition game at Tampa, Fla. "It was decided the dome should rise 70 meters or around 230 feet. No man should be able to hit that high a roof with a home run. But if he should - if some superman should come along and do it - then a local rule would have to apply." I World Record Shattered At British Track Meet 4 LONDON (R)-One world record was surpassed and two were * threatened yesterday as the men's and women's track and field teams representing the British Empire pand commonwealth defeated the mother country, Britain, in a two- kday dual meet. The men, paced by South Afri- ca's Gert Potgieter and Austra- lia's Herb Elliott, won 199-162. The empire women won 891/2-83%/. For the third time in two weeks, Potgieter surpassed the listed world record for the 440-yard hur- dles, but his time of 50.4 seconds was somewhat slower than his record-smashing 49.7 in the Em- pire Games two weeks ago. It was Elliott, a 20-year-old youth who has run the mile under four minutes seven times, who turned in the day's most amazing performance. Before 45,000 spec- tators at White City Stadium, El- liott ran the third-fastest half mile ever recorded-1:47.3-for an easy victory. Two hours later he turned up at a meet in Watford, about 20 miles from London, and won another half mile race in 1:50.7. Elliott's time at White City has been surpassed only by America's Tom Courtney, with a world record of 1:46.8 and another American, Don Bowden, with 1:47.2. The swift Australian yesterday looked as if he could have beaten those times. Another world's third-best per- formance was made in the two- mile run by Peter Clark of Eng- land. He was timed in 8:37.6 as he won by nearly 100 yards from Gordon Pirie. Three years ago Hungary's Sandor Iharos set a world record of 8:33.4 on the same track and Ken Wood of England ran second in 8:34.8. Those are the only times faster than Clark's. L ii UI STATE 52 Best Picture Awards & World-Wide Honors MICHAEL TODD'S ,ic theWO~~ MATINEE DAILY 2:00 P.M. EVENINGS 6:00 P.M. - 9:00 P.M. I I I U ENE TON 0 15 ELI NC, ,, Shows , I11,1 ! N ' ? andd111 Iii' ,, of P.M. I I ei