THE MICHIGAN DAIL Y' 'WEDNESDAY, JULY S, 1959 THIIHGNDIYWDEDY UY8 9 n'rrT " iationals Win All-Star Classic e.ELRUEEKS' - PITTSBURGH OP) - Willie. Mays' 438-foot triple to the ivy- covered right-center field wall in the eighth inning gave the fa- vored National League a 5-4 vic- tory over the Americai. League yesterday in the 26th All-Star Game. Roy Face, Pittsburgh's unbeat- en relief ace who hasn't lost since May 30, 1958, was knocked out of the box in the top half of the eighth by Gus Triandos' two-outc double that pushed the Americans1 ahead briefly 4-3. But Johnny An- tonelli of San Francisco savedI face and grabbed the victory by' throwing only six pitches. A lead-off, pinch single by Ken Boyer of St. Louis, a sacrifice by Pittsburgh's Dick Groat and a run-scoring single by Milwaukee's Hank Aaron preceded the smash. by Mays of the San Francisco Giants. The two runs came off' veteran Whitey Ford Hof the New. York Yankees who had started the eighth. Quiet Until Sixth A quiet, orderly affair in the first six innings while Vice-Presi- dent Nixon and a capacity crowd basked in the warm sunshine, this game erupted into a frenzied battle of pinch hitters and pinch runners down the stretch. Casey Stengel, the presiding genius of the New York Yankees, shuffled his talent so generously AT SWITZERLAND MEET: German Dash Runner Sets world Records Z U R I C H, Switzerland ( P) -- Martin Lauer of West Germany last night bettered the world rec- ord for the 110-meter hurdles and then was clocked. in the fastest time ever for the 200-meter hurdles around a turn. The German's time was 13.2 seconds for 110 meters and 22.5 for the 200. His clocking for the shorter race clipped two-tenths of a second off the listed world mark of :13.4 held jointly by Jack Da- vis of Glendale; Calif., and Milt Campbell of Plainfield, N. J. The world record for;the 200 on a straightaway is 22.1 seconds set by American Elias Gilbert of Win- Champ Makes Swedish Movie STOCKHOLM (M - Heavy- weight Champion Ingemar Jo- hansson will play a bit part in the film "The Man in the Middle," a spokesman for the Swedish film company Freja said yesterday. The film stars Anthony Steele, and Johansson's scene will be shot Thursday. Ingemar Inakes- an un- expected entry while Steele, as an American newspaper man visiting Stockholm, is conversing with a Swede who has seen" the. cham- pionship fight and is bragging about it. ston-Salem at Raleigh, N. C., May 17, 1958. American Charlie Tidwell's time of :22.7 is listed in the record books as the fastest for the 200 meter hurdles around a turn. Lauer ran the 200 about an hour after his record-breaking run in the 100. It was announced at the international meet that his, 200 also broke a world record but this was disputed later. Some offi- cials said a new ruling by the In- ternational Amateur Athletic Fed- eration required hurdles records to be set on a curved track. In New York, however, Dan Ferris, honorary secretary of the American Amateur Athletic Union (AAU), said world records for the 200 meter hurdles may be made either on a straightaway or on a curved track. In both races Willie May of Blue Island, IV.,, finished second to Lauer. May was timed in :13.6 and :22.9. Lauer grabbed .the lead early in each race and pulled away steadily. Lauer recently established a European record of :13.5 for the 110 meter hurdles. The 110 was run under excel- lent conditions shortly before sun- set on a fast track. There was a light following wind of 1.9 meters per second, a tenth of a second within the permissible limit. In other races Bill Woodhouse of Abilene Christian of Texas cap- tured the 100 meter dash in 10.4 seconds and Ernie Cunliffe of Stanford finished fourth in the 800 meter run. The 800 was won by Germany's Paul Schmidt in 1:47.7. that six different men appeared in the seventh position in the bat- ting order, originally inhabited' by Washington's Harmon Killebrew. One of them,* Pete Runnels of Boston, was taken out for anoth- er pinch hitter, Roy Sievers of Washington, before he ever got to the plate. But in the end it was Mays' long drive off Ford that wrapped up the National victory, closing the American League's series lead to 15-11. Smash to Wall Willie's smash sailed over the head of Detroit's Harvey Kuenn in right center. The ball bounced against the scenic wall near the 438-foot mark while Aaron dashed home with the winning run. The San Francisco center- fielder reached third-and stayed there. A paid attendance of 35,277 - full capacity - was announced although only 34,763 showed up at Forbes Field on this perfect afternoon for baseball. They watched Los Angeles' Don Drys- dale throw three perfect innings at the Americans and saw Lew Burdette of Milwaukee give up only one run - a homer by Al Kaline of Detroit in the fourth- during his three-inning stint. Wynn Steady After Chicago's Early Wynn, the American starter, yielded a first-inning homer to Milwaukee's Ed Mathews, he settled down and allowed no more scoring during his three-inning workout. Ryne Duren, the Yanks' fireballing re- lief man, whirled through three shutout innings, fanning four, leaving with the score tied at 1-1 after six innings.. Drysdale's pitching was a thing of beauty. He wentto three balls on only one batter, and struck him out, the handsome 22-year- old righthander struck out four while retiring his nine men in succession. The homer that Mathews hit sailed over the screen into the lower right field stands. Kaline Homers Kaline, who hadn't played in a week after undergoing corrective+ surgery for a fractured cheek- bone, had expected to play only three innings. But he stayed' around long enough to smash a fourth inning 3-2 pitch through the branches of a tree, just out- side the wall in left field about. 390 feet away. The Nationals broke the tie by ripping into Jim Bunning of De- troit for two runs in the seventh.; After Ernie Banks of Chicago col-3 lected his second double, a blast off the screen around a light1 tower near the scoreboard in left,: Bunning retired the next two batters. RIVAL MANAGERS IN ALL-STAR GAME-Casey Stengel, left, manager of the New York Yankees, and Fred Haney of the Milwaukee Braves were all smiles at a news conference yesterday as they announced their batting orders for the All-Star baseball game. Stengel led the American League team and Haney the National League. Bantamweight Title Contest Pits Becerra Against Halimni FOR RENT, FOR RENT first semester only-Pro- fessor's attractive 2 bedroom home. Professional or grad student couple or women wanted. Everything fur- nished including gas. Near Ann Arbor High School. Price discussed at inter- view. Call NO 3-8473 afternoons. C25 3 ROOM large apartment to share with one person. One block from campus. $40 a month. Call after 5 P.M., NO 3-7393. C24 ROOMS FOR RENT for girls. % block from campus. 1218 Washtenaw. NO 8-7942 for arrangements. C12 CAMPUS clean, 4 room furnished apartment, $70. NO 3-4322. C 3 BEDROOM furnished apt. for 4 girls or 4 boys. Includes silver and dishes. Tastefully decorated by interior dec- orator. Convenient Liberty St. loca- tion. $160 per month, including heat and water. Phone NO 3-5098 evenings. C19 ROOMS FOR MEN: Quiet. Campus area. Linens furnished. Low rent. NO 3-4747. C15 SINGLE ROOM, private bath, linens, near campus and hospital. NO 5-5605. C13 ONE BLOCK from campus, modern apts. 514 So. Forest. NO 2-1443. Cl FURNISHED:yCampus apts., 1 or 2 bdrms. Boys, girls, families. Single beds. Summer rates and fall rates. 344 S. Division. Also caretaker apt. Cii FOR SALE FOR RENT OR SALE: Zimmer house trailer, over two hundred square feet of floor space, Servel refrig., gas stove, gas heater and bathroom fa- ciities. Needs handy-man to put into A-1 condition. Only $450. Will ar- range terms. Call GE 8-8391. B7 CHESS SETS: 2 hand-carved Austrian (figurines). One English ivory. One German plastic (figurines). Call after 7, HUnter 2-4056. B6 LARGE COLLECTION of classical mu- sic: piano, opera scores and organ. Wide selection of Bach and Mozart. Also Conn flute, $50. Call after 7, Hunter 2-4056. B5 FOR SALE: % ton quiet, automatic room air conditioner. Used 3 months. Call NO 3-0047 after 5. B8 MUSICAL MDSE., RADIOS, REPAIRS Complete line of HiFi components including kits; complete service on radio, phonographs and HiFi equip- ments. HI Fl STUDIO 1317 South University 1 block east at Campus Theatre Phone NO 8-7942 X2 LEARN TO PLAY Hammond Spinet or- gan. $15 per month, includes lesson in our studio. Rent a Spinet piano of your own choice-$10 per month. GRI NNELL'S 323 S. Main NO 2-5667 xl 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 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily Phone NO 2-4786 BUSINESS PERSONAL CAMPUS: 23 apartments, 2 houses, modern, profitable. NO 2-1443. FF2 ROOM AND BOARD BOARDERS WANTED: Good food at reasonable prices. Short walk from campus. Call Hse. Mgr. at NO 2-8312. E2 CAR SERVICE, ACCESSORIES Have a Foreign Car? Is it running smoothly? If not .bring it to MichiganEuropean Car Corp. We service Foreign Cars. Michigan European Car Corporation 313 S. Ashley S5 C-TED STANDARD SERVICE Friendly service is our business. Atlas tires, batteries and accessor- ies. Warranted & guaranteed. See us for the best price on new & used tires. Road service-mechanjc on duty. "You expect more from Standard and you get it!" 1220 S. University at Forest NO 8-9168 52 WHITE'S AUTO PAINT SHOP Bumping and Painting 2007 South State NO 2-3350 61 BARGAIN CORNER MEN'S SKIP-dent short-sleeve sport shirts. $1.39, 2 for $2.50. Wash 'n Wear, sanforized, assorted colors. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. W1 USED CARS 1953 STUDEBAKER, 6 cylinder with overdrive. $200. See between 5-6 P.M. at 510 Lawrence, apt. 6. N15 '56 OLDS cony., all power, white walls, leather seats, new top, sharp. $1,395. NO 2-1443. N5 PERSONAL WANT TO rent, swap or exchange 9 room house in Flint, three blocks from U. of M. campus for comparable accommodations in Ann Arbor. Call NO 8-8712. F13 LESSONS in singing and speaking, Carol F. Westerman, NO 8-6584. F9 LOS ANGELES (P) - Fellow countrymen of young Jose Becer- ra of Mexico swarmed into town yesterday to pull for their latest idol to win the World Bantam- weight Championship. Miller Loses In Tourney Values to $29.95 at THE DILLON SHOPS But the titleholder, Alphonse Halimi of France, remained the general choice to retain the crown in the 15-round nationally tele- vised fight tonight. It goes on in Los Angeles' new six million dollar Memorial Sports Arena at 7 p.m., Pacific Daylight Time. TV coverage will be blacked out for a radius of some 300 miles. There will be no radio broadcast. The latest word from the bet- ting fraternity was 8-5 on Halimi, with some money going at 2-1. In any event, this clash of the top two 118-pounders in the world shapes up as a fight well worth seeing. Neither is the waltzing, clinch- ing type and both can belt with either hand. Matchmaker George Parnassus, who made the fight, indicated yes- terday that his previous estimate of a gate close to $150,000 might be bettered if tickets keep moving today as they have the last few days.. This will be Halimi's second de- fense of the title he won April 1, 1957, when he outpointed Mario D'Agata of Italy in 15 rounds in Paris. The 27-year-old native of French Algeria made his first de- fense here at Wrigley Field when he closed strong to win a 15-round decision over another Mexican hero, Raul (Raton) Macias. BUSINESS SERVICES JULY SALE ofa Rain and Shine Coats, and Dusters at $7.00, $10.00, $14.98. , ,J15 TYPING, all kinds done professionally, reasonable rates, will call for and deliver. NO 5-6713. J14 New coffee pot? Can openers? Dishes of all kinds- all this and more too at Ralph's Kitchen Hardware Department. RALPH'S MARKET 709 Packard NO 2-3175 J'8 CAMPUS OPTICIANS Most frames replaced while you wait. Broken lenses duplicated. FAST service on all repairs. 240 NICKELS ARCADE NO 2-9116 NO 8-6019 J6 TYPING : Thesis, Term papers, reason- able rates. Prompt service. 1,8-7,590. J11 TRANSPORTATION WOULD LIKE female rider to' Texas during first week of August. Cal NO 2-7386 after 6 P.M. 06 Rent A Car 514 E. Washington St. NO 3-4156 Fords'and Other Fine Cars Rented by Hour, Day, or Week WEEKEND SPECIAL RATE from Friday 5 P.M. till Monday 9 A.M. I 7 f ,; , v $10.04 plus $.08. per mile Gas, oil and insurance included 1 ta U U U (1 CONTINUING our SALE of MEN'S 'I S p 7c and SHOES S-ONLY 3 BIG GROUPS 6.80 8.80 10.80 Values to 19.95 2 Salesman's Samples are the best buy in the store because they are hand- lasted and handstained to plese the most c ritical merchant. Many styles to chcoose from -Cordovans, grains, polished calf and kid. Sport and dress shoes. I i A I NOTICE IOdds & Ends . 0 0 A