THE MICHIGAN DAILY F DAT, 'JUNE 26, 19" i ii iJ TH i Vi M~fltitN BtATTYFRDA, TJE 6,i Title Bout Championship Bout So For Tomorrow EventI NEW YORK (MP-The weather- nan knocked out both heavy- Rosensohn said he had n veight champion Floyd Patterson report than Tuesday's ann nd challenger Ingemar Johans- ment of a $450,000 advanc on today with a damp, foggy The promoter was ordered1 lay. As a result, their world title New York State Athletic, oxing match at Yankee Stadium mission to make refunds t vas postponed until tonight. body wanting their money.J Kayoed by Weather o later ounce- e sale. by the Com- o any- People The forecast for tomorrow is not promising. Another warm, humid day is predicted with a possibility of late afternoon and evening thundershowers. Promoter Bill Rosensonh, whose production has been plagued by aw suits, feuds with the cham- pion's manager and uninspired workouts by the Swedish challen- ger, tried his best to take the postponement in stride. Rain Might Help "Who" knows?" he said. "It miight even help. I certainly would :ave sold very few seats today in the rain. If tomorrow comes up nice we might do a tremendous business. If I had to go today I would have been lucky to do $500,000." still were buying tickets at the downtown office in mid-afternoon. No refund requests had been re- ported at that time. In case of bad weather again tomorrow, it is not definite whe- ther the fight would be set back again to Saturday or to Monday. "Both dates are clear at Yankee stadium," said Rosensohn. "Let's not talk about more trouble until we come to it." Television Problem A Saturday bout would mean serious trouble for the closed cir- cuit television people for Saturday is a big night for regular movies in the theatres they expect to use. Irving Kahn, president of Tele- PrompTer, said he would lose only one theater (California) on Fri- day night. That would mean the fight would be shown in 169 loca- tions in 135 cities. There will be no free home television, of course, but there will be a radio broad- cast of the 15-round match, scheduled for 9:30 pm. The fight will be in conflict with the usual Friday TV fight, origi- nating in Madison Square Gar- den. Tiger Jones and Victor Zala- zar, an Argentine import, will be appearing for free on the nation's TV screens. Called Press Conference Rosensohn announced at the morning weigh-in that the fight definitely was on but scheduled a 1 p.m. press conference to discuss later developments. After several phone calls, the promoter moved up his decision and announced the postponement just as a heavy shower broke over the downtown area. The rain and the soggy con- dition of the infield at Yankee Stadium were given as the reasons for the earlier announcement. The last heavyweight title post- ponement was Sept. 20, 1955, when Rocky Marciano defended against Archie Moore at Yankee Stadium; Jim Thomson, Yankee Stadium superintendent, said the field was "quite muddy." Under the con- tract, Rosnsohn is obligated to return the ball park to the Yan- Bridegroom Golfer Ahead In Chicago Open Tourney kees as he found it. If the infield should be churned up so badly that new turf would be needed, it could be a $20,000 job. Weigh-In Yesterday The weigh-in almost got lost in the shuffle with the weather. Johansson, smiling confidently, scaled 196 pounds and Patterson, who appeared to be a little bored by the whole thing, weighed 182. It was Patterson's lightest weight as champion, a quarter of a pound less than the night he flattened Archie Moore to win the crown in 1956. He also weighed 182% when he stopped Brian London, May 1 at Indian- apolis, his most recent fight. Johansson had not been as light as 196 since he won the European title in 1956. When he knocked out Eddit Machen in one round last Sept. 14, he weighed 198. If the bout is held tomorrow night, 4 there will be no second weigh-in. I VIAJOR LEAGUE ACTION: Tigers Break Streak, Trounce Boston CHICAGO (P) - John Pott, a bridegroom of 20 days, celebrated his best golf round yesterday - a 7-under-par 63 that shattered the course record and gave him the first round lead in the $57,000 Chicago Open. The husky former Louisiana State links star, who has failed to win a tourney since turning pro in 1957, rocketed 300-yard plus drives over the sun scorched 6,350-yard Gleneagles course in fashioning a 34-29. It broke the competitive course record of 64 set last year by Bill Casper and matched earlier yesterday by de- fending champion Ken Venturi. The closing 29, lowest back nine ever shot at Gleneagles, which carries a 35-35-70 par, included 7 birdies, 1 bogey and 1 par. In all, the 23-year old Pott, who registers from Shreveport, La., had 9 one-putt greens and total of 27 putts. Twice he came out of traps on the last nine to within three feet of the pin to get birdies. "I'm still on my honeymoon and now this round puts me high- 'We Wuz Robbed' BORDERTOWN, N. J. (AP) - Baseball players operating under the National Baseball Congress By The Associated Press 71' DETROIT-Little Rocky Bridges hit the first grand slam home run of his major league career yester- day and paced the Detroit Tigers to a 10-5 victory over the Boston Red Sox. A Ladies' Day turnout of nearly 13,000 swelled the attendance to nearly 23,000' as the Tigers snap- ped a four-game losing streak with their best hitting in almost a week. A Al Kaline slugged his 13th home run as relief pitcher Tom Morgan, who saved Jim Bunning's fourth straight triumph over Boston, hit one in the eighth. It was Mor- gan's second. Dick Gernert and Marty Ke- ough hammered roundtrippers in the eighth and routed Bunning, who tired in the heat. Bunning hit a batter, walked another and yielded two hits in the first inning as the Red Sox grabbed a 2-0 advantage. Kaline's leadoff homer got one back in the second and the Tigers broke the game open in the third.' Bridges capped a five-run flurry with his grand slam blast. Boston starter Tom Brewer, working with two batters retired, gave the slumping Gail Harris an. intentional pass in order to pitch to Bridges. The Tiger shortstop promptly lashed Brewer's first pitch into the Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Milwaukee 40 29 .580 - San Francisco 39 32 .549 2 ,-Los Angeles 39 33 .542 2 Pittsburgh 38 34 .528 3/ x-Chicago 34 34 .500 5/2 x-Cincinnati 31 37 .456 8/ St. Louis 31 37 .456 8 j x-Philadelphia 25 41 .379 13% x-Played night game. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS (See night game results below) Pittsburgh 3, San Francisco 1 St. Louis 3, Milwaukee 2 TODAY'S GAMES Philadelphia at San Francisco (N) St. Louis at Cincinnati (N) Chicago gat Milwaukee (N) Pittsburgh at Los Angeles (N) AMERICAN LEAGUE WV L Pct. GB Cleveland 36 29 .554 - Chicago 36 31 .537 1 Baltimore 36 32 .529 11/2 Detroit 35 33 .515 22 x-New. York 34 32 .515 22 Boston 30 36 .455 6'/A x-Kansas City 29 35 .453 6% Washington 30 38 .441 7 a-Played night game. YESTERDAY'S GAMES (See night game results below) Detroit 10, Boston 5 Chicago 4, Washington 1 Cleveland 3, Baltimore 2 TODAY'S GAMES Washington at Kansas City (N) Baltimore at Detroit (2) Boston at Cleveland (N) New York at Chicago (N) Night Game Results Los Angeles 5, Philadelphia 2 New York 5, Kansas City 4 Chicago 6, Cincinnati 2 left field seats. The Tigers added one more in the sixth and three in the eighth, offsetting Boston's late efforts. er in the clouds than ever," said Pott, who married hisucollege sweetheart. "It takes luck to shoot a 29 and I had my share on the 380-yard 17th. My drive head- ed out of bounds but struck a tree and bounced back in. I was on in 2 and dropped a 20-foot birdie putt." Pott's best finish as a pro was 7th in the Houston Open last win- ter. He was 19th in the recent National Open. Venturi, who rounded out his 33-31-64 card by birdying the last three holes, held the lead for most of the day as a field of 151 players opened the 72-hole tour- ney in quest of the $9,000 top prize. About one-fifth of the field bet- tered par. Veteran Ted Kroll, a persistent money-gainer but with- out a victory since winning the 1956 "world" crown at Tam O'- Shanter, posted 32-33-65. The 66 s h o o t e r s i n c l u d e d George Bernardin, former Univer- sity of Miami player who has won only $800 in 12 PGA events this year, and Bo Wininger. At 67 were Walker Cupper Jack Nicklaus, the 19-year-old former Ohio State star; Marty Furgol, Joe Conrad, Tom Nieporte, Art Wall and Arnold Palmer. Packed in a large group of 68 shooters were such contenders as GeorgeBayer, who used only five clubs on his round, Doug Sanders and Bob Goalby. Such seasoned pros as Chick Harbert, Dutch Harrison, Dow Finsterwald and Mike Souchak were bunched at 69. Indians 3, Orioles 2 CLEVELAND - Tito Francona kept Cleveland in first place yes- terday by slamming a pair of home runs, including an eighth inning blast that broke a 2-2 tie; and gave the Indians a 3-2 victory over the Baltimore Orioles. The Orioles, who could have taken over first place with a triumph, dropped into third place, a half-game behind the Chicago White Sox, who defeated Wash- ington 4-1. Cleveland leads the White Sox by one game. Francona, whoh also had two singles, hit his initial homer into the right field seats and his game-winner into the left field stands. It was his third round- tripper in the last two games and only his sixth of the season. Francona's second homer came off Jack Fisher who relieved start- er Hoyt Wilhelm. The knuckle- ball ace had hurled the first six innings in a duel with Cleveland rookie Bobby Locke. White Sox 4, Senators 1 CHICAGO-The Chicago White Sox yesterday regained secnd place in the tight American League race, defeating the Wash- ington Senators 4-1 on the five- hit pitching of young Barry Lat- man. It was the 23-year-old Latman 's first victory of the season. The victory, coupled with Baltimore's loss to Cleveland, put the White Sox a half-game ahead of the Orioles an, left them one game behind the first-place Indians. Latman, who earned his first start since May 9 by pitching 18 consecutive scoreless innings in relief, held the Senators to five hits. The only run off him came in the fourth when Bob Allison tripled and Roy Sievers singled. Pirates 3, Giants 1 SAN FRANCISCO - Outfielder Roman Mejias smashed a two- run homer in the 12th inning yesterday, giving the Pittsburgh Pirates a 3-1 victory over San Francisco as Elroy Face notched his 12th pitching triumph. The hit by Majias, who had three previous homers this season and was batting a puny .227. came with Dick' Shoffield on first. Victim of the 390-foot blast over the left field fence was young righthander Eddie Fisher. He beat the Pirates in the opener of the four-game series but found rough going in relief today. Cardinals 3, Braves 2 MILWAUKEE. (WP)-The St. Louis Cardinals pushed across three un- earned runs to edge Milwaukee 3-2 yesterday as the Braves' de- fense collapsed to ruin Lew Bur- dette's bid for his 12th victory. The Cardinals scored two un- earned runs in the sixth inning after some sloppy fielding by second baseman Felix Mantilla, then tallied the winning marker following an error by rightfielder Hank Aaron. By PETER ANDERSON Summer Sports Editor The Michigan Women's Pool will be in almost constant use this summer accommodating both phy- sical education classes and free- swimming sessions, according to Miss Fritzie Gareis, pool director. The pool will be open several times a week for the use of women students, faculty members Chevrefils Joins Detroit DETROIT (P)-Real Chevrefils, whose failure to keep training regulations forced him out of the National Hockey League, is get- ting another chance with the Detroit Red Wings. . The 27-year-old left wing came up through the Boston Bruins' system and later was traded to Detroit for goalie Terry Saw- chuck. He went back to the Bruins and was waived out of the NHL last January. and employees of the University. Women students may make use of the pool from 5 to 6 p.m. Monday through Thursday, 4 to 5:30 p.m. Friday and 2:30 to 4 p.m. Satur- day. In addition women students may use the pool Monday and Wednesday from 8 to 9 p.m. and Tuesday and Thursday from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Faculty members are invited to use the pool on Friday nights. Faculty families with children under eight years of age may use the pool between 6:30 and 8 p.m. Pool officials require that parents swim with their children. Those faculty familiesnwhich do not have children under eight may use the pool from 8 to 9:30 p.m. In addition, a co-recreational program is put into practice on week-ends. Both men and women. may swim in the pool from 7:15 to 9:15 p.m. Saturdays and from 3 to 5 p.m. Sundays. Many of the physical education classes at the pool are still open and women students are encour- aged to sign up. The classes cost --Daily-Robert Dennis A GOOD PLACE TO COOL OFF-The young lady jumping into the Women's Pool has but one idea in mind, to cool off. The pool, located at Geddes and Forrest will be open at various times during the week for the conveniene of University students. In addition, free classes are held in both swim- ming and diving for students. Students may sign up at the pool or Barbour Gymnasium. BEAT THE HEAT: Women's Pool Offers Swimming By PEER ANERSO nothing and attendance is not compulsory. Open elementary swimming classes are held Mon- day and Wednesday at 4:30 p.m. and also Tuesday and Thursday at 4:30 p.m. Intermediate swim- ming classes are held both Mon- day and Wednesday at 7:15 p.m. and Tuesday and Thursday at 3:30 p.m. A diving class is also open, meeting Monday and Wednesday at 3:30 p.m. Women may sign up either at Barbour Gymnasium or at the Women's Pool, located at the corner of Gedds and Forest. Miss Garies emphasizes that students "should enroll for their own benefit and recreation." 4 I fv Aaron, who accounted for both had better watch out which um- Milwaukee runs with his 21st pires they tell, "we wuz robbed." home run of the season in the The Congress announced today third inning, turned from hero to it' is training Bordertown Reform- goat when he kicked around a atory inmates to be umpiresr - single to right by Joe Cunning- after they get their walk to free- ham in the seventh. dom. SUPREMACY in Hair Styling stands out predominantly when done Here. 715 North University -, FOR YOU R WEEKEND 41 w ir DINING I-J CHUCK WAGON LUNCH and DINNERS Fine Salads & Sandwiches FAMOUS FOR ROAST BEEF Serving your favorite BEER, WINES and CHAMPAGNE-- Air-Conditioned -r-- Open from 11 A.M. to 11 P.M. CLOSED TUESDAYS Recommended by DUNCAN HINES and GOURMET BANQUET FACILITIES AVAILABLE 2045 PACKARD NO 2-1661 Catering at Your Home or Hall - Picnics Henry Turner, Prop. , ) i . ~ 1 P 1 4 1 1 Leo Ping Say: Take that break between your studies a and come down to Leo's. We have the finest in food o to offer you.a -j0 0 C 100 Enjoy the finest in Cantonese and American Food0 When Important People come to town highlight their visit with luncheon or dinner at the Corner House...where food, service and surroundings meet your every wish. Tuesday through Saturday, 11:30 to 2:00 and 5:00 to 7:00. Sunday: Dinner, 12:00 to 3:00. May we suggest that you telephone for reservations? a V te Corner JNowe S. Thayer at Washington in Ann Arbor A block west of Rackham idg.-NO 8-6056 The GOLDEN APPLES Restaurant... SELECTIONS FROM OUR DINNER MENU. BROILED WHOLE LIVE LOBSTER from our Ocean Neptune Tank. BROILED U.S. N.Y. SIRLOIN STEAK, Onion Rings. VEAL CUTLET, rolled in Country Fresh Eggs and Bread Crumbs and served with Tomato Creole Sauce. HALF FRIED CHICKEN; Pan fried to a Golden Brown. BROILED CENTER CUT PORK CHOPS; Young Tender Chops and served with Cranberry Apple Sauce. BROILED FRESH LAKE SUPERIOR TROUT, Served with Lemon Wedge and Creamy Cole Slaw. BROILED TENDERLOIN STEAK, skillfully Broiled to Perfection and served with French Fried Onion Rings. BROILED SPRING LAMB CHOPS and served with Mint Jelly. SUMMER SALADS'... GARDEN FRESH TOMATO stuffed with Jumbo Shrimp Salad surrounded with Fresh Garden Cuts. FRESH AFRICAN LOBSTER BOWL - mixed with Tossed Garden Greens and topped with Slices of An- chovies. WEBER'S SUMMER FRUIT PLATE-Florida Wedges of Oranges and Grapefruit, Ripened Cantaloupe, 4 I Y. t