THE MICHIGAN DAILY ed Sox Blast New York, 13-3 Gold Cup Boat Race Has Interest, Tradition By The Associated Press STON - The Boston Red rupted for a mammoth nine- ixth inning - four of them :ene Stephens' grand slam r - and went on to blast the ping New York Yankees 13-3 rday. was Boston's fifth straight ion over the Yankees, the time the Red Sox had swept e-game series from the New ers since 1939. The loss >ed Casey Stengel's world pions into fifth place, two is of a percentage point be- Detroit. Stephens, inserted a pinch run- ner for Ted Williams early in the sixth, stroked a 3-1 offering by Jim Bronstad into the right field seats as the 11th Red Sox to go to bat in the inning. That wrapped up a wild, weird exhibition started by Jackie Jen- sen's double off the centerfield wall. Boston's biggest inning of the year also included such oddities as two singles by Frank Malzone, and Sammy White ambling in from third base unmolested when Yan- kee first baseman Elston Howard held the ball and turned to pro- test a ruling by first base umpire Nestor Chylak. Braves 3, Giants 0 MILWAUKEE - The Braves defeated the National League leading San Francisco Giants 3-0 last night on a top-run homer by Eddie Mathews and six-hit pitch- ing by Warren Spahn. The victory pulled Milwaukee to within a half-game of first place. The triumph was the second in a row for Milwaukee over the CHICAGO : Iartzen Advances in Clay Tourney CAGO (A) - D e f e n d ing ion Bernard (Tut) Bart- overseas engagements. They are and young Californian, Chris ford led yesterday's opening advance in the National Clay t Tennis Tournament. rtzen, 31-year-old Dallas an, won by default over Nick rf of San Jose, Calif., on a -surfaced court of the River st Tennis Club. awford, 19, of Piedmont, d up almost as easily with a 6-1 decision over Gunter Polte pringfield, Ohio. o of the tournament's star ctions and its 1 and 2'seeds, Olmedo of Los Angeles and and Barry MacKay of Day- Ohio, did not arrive from expected today. Olmedo has a first round bye; MacKay meets un- seeded David Nelson of Skokie. Women Start Today Women's play is scheduled to begin today, followed on Wednes- day by men's and women's doubles.i Bartzen, seeded third, is trying for his third singles title here to go with ones captured in 1954 and 1958. His game has been sharp as evidenced by his victory Sunday in the championship of the West- ern Open Tournament in Milwau- kee over Warren Woodcock of Australia, the No. 2 foreign seed here. aivis Cup Captain Jonies 't To Name 1959 Squad CHICAGO (P)-The captain of the United States Davis Cup Team disclosed yesterday the 1959 team will be named this weekend and based largely on performances by several contenders in the current National Clay Court Tennis Tour- nament. . Capt. Perry T. Jones said he has gathered most of the outstanding uniors (18 years old and yunger) at the tournament as part of a Mont petit, Maron Set. Two Michigan gymnasts have been named to the Canadian gym- nastic team to the Pan American Games this summer. The two, Richard Montpetit and Nino Marion, will leave with the Canadian delegation Aug. 20 for Chicago and the Games, which start Aug. 27 and last through Sept. 7. The two were chosen as the re- sult of a meet held in Windsor July 10-11. The meet was also the Canadian Gymnastics Champion- ship meet. Montpetit scored first in the meet, gaining his points from his excellent performance on the side horse. The Michigan youth hails from Montreal. Marion, a junior from Windsor, placed third in the event as a re- sult of his performance on the rings. The Canadian delegation to the Games is composed of six men. Two Tied DENVER (A)- Hal McCommas, 24, Dallas, Tex., and Dr. Donald J. Keith, 31, San Diego dentist, shot 4-under-par 67s yesterday to lead the first qualifying round in the U.S. Public Links Golf Tourna- ment. A stroke back were Al Beneflel, Denver railroad worker, and Ray H. Patak, Dallas, a member of the Notre Dame golf team. Defending champion Dan Sikes of Jacksonville, Fla., and Don Essig III, Indianapolis, the 1957 champion, were among five play- ers who shot 69s over the 6,617- yard, par 35-36-71 Wellshire Mu- nicipal Course. Others were Mat Palacio, Jr., San Rafael, Calif., Rich Casabella, Louisville, Ky., and Gene Dixon, of Memphis, Tenn. The rest of the first day par breakers with 70s were Raymond Massey of Miami, Fla., Ralph Johnson, Salt Lake City, Marshall K. Strauss, Highland Park, Ill., and Gene Dahlbender Jr., Atlanta Ga. The sub-par shooting of Mc- Commas and Patak along with a 72 by Gene Towry, runnerup in 1957, gave Dallas the team compe- tition lead with a 207-the aggre- gate for the three men. The team.championship is based on 36 holes of qualifying play. Louisville's team is second with 215 and Denver trails in third with 917 new program to build United States tennis stars. These players, as well as the adults, are trying in suburban River Forest this week for berths on the squad which will defend the Davis Cup. Program New The program is new in its ap- plications to junior players. For the first time, six top youngsters will be named to the squad with equal membership with older play- ers such as Alex Olmedo, star of last yearsvictorious entry in the challenge round against Australia. Among the outstanding juniors competing at the tournament in suburban River Forest are Ramsey Earnhart, Ventura, Calif.; Larry Nagler, North Hollywood, Calif.; Paul Palmer, Phoenix; Marty Ries- sen. Hinsdale, Ill.; Bill Bond, La Jolla, Calif.; Dennis Ralston, Bak- ersfield, Calif. Others being con- sidered for the team are Charles McKinley, St. Ann, Mo., and Thomas Edlefsen, Piedmont, Calif. Jones, 71, termed the new pro- gram "my greatest contribution to tennis." He complained that in the past young players practically have been forgotten after they lost an early match in a tournament. "Now, if they lose here this week, off they go to the next tour- nament at Merion (the Philadel- phia Grass Court Tournament)," Jones said. Assistants Help There they will be met by one of Jones' assistants who will work with them prior to the tournament, giving each individual instruction. Besides working on the young- sters' physical game, Jones and hishelpers are trying to give each top junior confidence that he has an actual chance to make the Davis Cup squad. This 'mental therapy worked with Alex Olmedo last year, Jones boasted. "He was ranked 11th in the nation at this time last year, which was nothing," said Jones. "Then I told him if he settled down he could make the Davis Cup squad. Now he's about the best in the world." Jones listed the tentative Davis Cup team, exclusive of juniors, as Bernard Bartzen, defending clay court singles champion, Earl Euch- holz Jr., Chris Crawford, Donald Dell, Jon Douglas, Myron Franks, Grant Golden, Ron Holmberg, Clifton Mayne, Barry MacKay and Olmedo. M~ajor League Standings Night Games Not Included NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. GB San Francisco 49 36 .576 - Los Angeles 49 38 .563 1 Milwaukee 45 35 .563 3 Pittsburgh 46 40 .535 32 Chicago 41 44 .482 8 St. Louis 40 44 .476 8/ Cincinnati 36 4 .429 12a~ Philadelphia 31 52 .373 17 YESTERDAY'S RESULTS (See night game results below) TODAY'S GAMES San Francisco at Philadelphia (-N) Los Angeles at Pittsburgh (N) Milwaukee at Chicago Cincinnati at St. Louis (N) Woodcock took his opening clay court match on a 6-4, 6-2 show- ing over Charles Karabel, West Lafayette, Ind. Earl Buchholz, Jr., No. 4-seeded 18-year-old from St. Louis, earned his advance on a 6-4, 9-7 struggle with unranked Ray Weedon of South Africa. Foreign Seed Wins Ian Vermaak of South Africa, No. 1 foreign seed, player strongly and easily in whipping Al Driscoll of Hollywood, Calif., 6-0, 61. But Crawford, a 1958 Davis Cupper, ran into unexpected trouble in his second round match against Hal Surface Jr. of Kansas City. Surface took the first set 6-3, before Crawford settled down and won the next two, 6-3, 6-2. All eight domestic and the four foreign seeds advanced with some playing one round, others two. The Australian won his second round match, 6-1, 6-3, over John Erickson, Kalamazoo, Mich. Marty Riessen, Hinsdale, Ill., three-time Illinois prep champion, nearly pulled the day's only major upset in his second round match with Iyo Pinentel of Venezuela. Riessen took the first set 6-3, dropped the second 6-2 and led 5-3 in the final set with a 30-love edge in the ninth game when Pi- mentel turned the tide. Tho No. 4 foreign seed picked off the game and went on to take the set 7-5 and win the match, Abe Segal of South Africa, seed- ed No. 3 among foreign entries, advanced by default. Whitney Reed, NCAA singles champ seeded fifth among domes- tic entries, swept past Manuel Lo- pez of Beaumont, Tex., 6-0, 6-1, in his only match of the day. Diamond Cup Ilae''Saturday COEUR D'ALENE,, Idaho (P)- The second annual Diamond Cup Race gets underway here Saturday with 17 unlimited hydroplane boats tentatively set to show. their stuff. The 3-mile course on Lake Coeur D'Alene is ready for the big hydros with log booms in place and pits already handling several of the early arrivals in- cluding Miss Spokane of Spokane, Wash., and Dollar Bill of Lompoc, Calif. Expected in the pits today is Maverick, the Phoenix boat. Thriftway and Thriftway Too, from the Seattle Stable, may be in the water by Thursday. Othere unlimiteds expected to go after the diamond-shaped tro- phy in the two-day race, with six heats, all 15 miles in length:, Yeller Jacket, Detroit; Miss U.S., Detroit; Hawaii Kai, New York; Bardahl, Seattle; Burien, Burien, Wash.; Gale VI, Detroit; Nitro- gen, Wilmington, Del.; Miss Wa- hoo, Seattle; Kolroy I and Kolroy II, Seattle (former Fascinations I and ID; Coral Reef, Tacoma and Miss Buffalo, Buffalo, N.Y. Giants and gave the Braves a sweep of the brief series. Turning in one of his best per- formances of the season, Spahn claimed the 257th victory of his great career,-his 46th shutout and his third of the season, He fanned four and didn't give up a walk in taking his 11th victory against 9 defeats. He's 3-0 against the Giants this year. The crafty left-hander retired the first nine Giants in order un- til Jim Davenport banged the first of his two singles leading off in the fourth. The next nine Giants also went down in order until Willie Kirkland singled opening the seventh. Mathews, called out on strikes the first time up, picked on the first pitch served him by Jones in the third and blasted a lone-drive homer over the right field fence. Johnny O'Brien, on a walk, scored ahead of Mathews. Reds 13, Dodgers 5 CINCINNATI (P) -- Cincinnati's seventh place Reds unlimbered heavy artillery last night with three home runs - two by Frank Robinson - battering Los An- geles Dodgers, 13-5. It was the second in a row over Los Angeles, and was the second in five games for Cincinnati under new manager Fred Hutchinson. Brooks Lawrence, Redleg pitch- ing retread who hadn't won a game since a victory May 8 over Milwaukee, toiled through 6% in- nings in relief for the triumph. Lawrence had lost eight straight games. - The Reds blew two healthy leads before settling down. After Gus Bell's three-run hom- er i nthe sixth set up a four-run lead, Lawrence smothered the high-riding Dodgers, giving up two hits the rest of the way. AT PHILADELPHIA: Russian Track Team Arrives for Meet PHILADELPHIA (JP) -- Russian men and women track stars ar- rived here yesterday for their weekend meet with U.S. athletes on the University of Philadelphia's Franklin Field. After eating lunch and resting in their rooms at the fashionable Warwick Hotel in mid-town Phila- delphia, Coach George Korobkov hustled his charges to the site of the competition for a workout. A group of 79 members of the Soviet squad arrived in New York at 6:45 a.m. yesterday by plane from Brussels. They were, greeted by Dan Ferris, honorary secretary Swimmer Lumsden Takes Distance Contest ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. W)-Cliff Lumsden of New Toronto, Ont., yesterday won the sixth annual Atlantic City Distance Swim by about 75 yards over defending champion and three-time winner Tom Park of Bellfiower, Calif. Lumsden swam the 25 miles in 10 hours, 54 minutes and 5 seconds to regain the crown he won in 1956 when he beat Park by a' stroke. Lumsden swam up to the finish line at the Atlantic City State Marina to the cheers of hundreds of spectators, sounds of numeroug foghorns and the music of a band that played the Canadian national anthem., SEATTLE OP)-A score or more of high-powered hydroplanes will dash around Lake Washington here at up to 180 miles an hour Aug. 9 in a 90-mile thriller that probably draws the country's largest sports crowd. It's the 52nd running of the Gold Cup, top event in a noisy, dangerous expensive sport. The race climaxes Seattle's July 31- Aug. 9 Seafair celebration. Anything may happen when the unlimited class speedboats whiz around the three-mile course. They kick up spectacular clouds of spray a block long. To keep one running you may need a roll of bills about the same length. But the spectacle is mostly free to the spectators, and that's one reason there is hardly standing room along the shore and hillside leading down to the 25-mile long lake. Large Crowd Even if the sponsors' estimate of a 500,000 crowd is slightly on the. optimistic side - as some WOMEN'S WESTERN GOLF WINNER-Jo Anne Gunderson of Seattle sports a wide grin as she accepts the trophy last Saturday after winning the Women's Western Amateur golf championship at the Exmoor Club in Highland Park, I11. v7 the tables defeating Parks for the title. On climbing up on a dock at the end of the race,'the two opponents clasped hands and posed for pic- tures with their arms around each other. Lumsden won first prize of $5,- 000 and lap money, Park won $1,- 500. Anderson Third Third to finish and the first woman was former Danish swim star Greta Andersen of Long Beach, Calif., who covered the distance in 11 hours, 7 minutes, 25 seconds. The blonde, 30-year- old swimmer, was clad in a one- piece red bathing suit. Miss Phyllis Clarke, 27, of Kings- ton, Ont., was pulled from the water after seven hours and doc- tors said she had become paralyzed from the. waist down. She was taken to Atlantic City Hospital with what doctors said was an ap- parent sprain of the sacro-lumbar or the sacroilliac. Fred Higgins of Preston, Ont., Tonatiun Gutierrez of Mexico City and Steve Wozniak of Buffalo, N.Y., also dropped out. to the Amateur Athletic Union. Then, the Russians boarded a bus for the 90-mile ride to Philadel- phia. Korobkov, who speaks fairly good' English, said he had a much younger team than the one which met the U.S. last year in Russia. He said it was difficult to deter- mine whether the 1959 Russian squad was weaker or better than last year's. "The meet will show hqw strong our team is," he commented. Korobkov remarked that he was sorry America's decathlon star,I Rafer Johnson, would not be able to compete. Johnson, a UCLA stu- dent who last year set a world decathlon record in defeating Rus- sian star Vasily Kuznetsov, an- nounced last week a bad back would keep him idle. He sustained the injury in an automobile acci- dent June 11 and won't be able to resume heavy training until next year. Kuznetsov, captain of the Rus- sian team,'was in the party arriv- Busso Injured, Out of Fight LOS ANGELES (A') - Johnny Busso, who hurt his back when he fell through the ropes in a spar- ring session Sunday, withdrew yesterday from a scheduled bout Thursday with Mexico's Mauro Vasquez. Olympic auditorium match- maker George Parnassus is trying to get California lightweight champion Paul Armstead as a substitute. Busso, fourth ranked light- weight contender, at first was not believed injured \badly enough to miss the scrap. The New Yorker fell out of the ring after duck- ing sideways to avoid a punch thrown by sparring p a r t n e r George Barry. X-rays showed no broken bones. G' ----" ing yesterday as was Taisia Chen- chik, women's captain and high jumper. Also with the team was Dmitry Postnikov, deputy chair- man of sport societies and organi- zations of the Soviet Union. Postnikov said the team had not brought any special foods with them. He said that no special pre- parations had yet been found that could cut fractions off seconds from track records. The Russian athletes, dressed in blue suits with hammer and sickle emblems on their Jackets, were greeted at the hotel by several of the American team members. Yawl Leads Yacht Race HONOLULU UP) - The 66-foot yawl Chubasco held its head yes- terday in the squal-swept Trans- Pacific Yacht Race. The Chubasco, owned by Don- ald Haskell of Newport, Calif.; not only led in its class and the fleet,, but also was out in front in the handicap standings, which deter- mine the actual winner. The Chubasco reported its po- sition 441 miles northeast of Honolulu at 5 a.m. yesterday, Ha- waii Standard Time, after a run Sunday of 174 miles. Behind -her, 449 miles from Honolulu, was the 75-foot schoon- er Constellation, owned by Sally Blair Ames, the only woman skip- per in the 2,225-mile yachting classic. The Constellation was second' in fleet position, but sixth in the handicap positions. The biggest boat in the race, the 161-foot schooner Goodwill, was in third position 467 miles from Honolulu and sailing well south of the main fleet. Owner Ralph Lar- rabee was gambling on catching some winds the others won't get. skeptics suggest - it still is a good cut above the number who turn out for the Kentucky Derby, World Series or top fotball games. The defending champion, this year is the Hawaii Kai, formerly owned by Edgar Kaiser, son of in- dustrialist Henry Kaiser. The Kai's 103.481 mile average in the 1958 race shows how far the sport has come since the Columbia Yacht Club's entry, the Standard, won the first Gold Cup in the east in 1904 at 23.6 miles an hour. To qualify now you must com- plete three laps of the three-mile course at 95 miles an hour or bet- ter. On straightaways the boats bat along at up to 180, so fast that hitting a tiny piece of debris can wreck a boat. All the top entries now are varied versions of the three-point- ers. At racing speeds the boat rides on tips of the sponsors - rounded extensions at the bottom of the hull - and the propeller. That is, the part of the propeller that isn't out of the water. Many Accidents Despite safety precautions, ao- cidents have marred some races. Last summer a jammed rudder sent driver Bill Muncey of Seattle and the speedboat Miss Thrtf- way careening into a U. S. Coast Guard patrol boat at 100 miles an hour. Muncey and the Coast Guardsmen were rescued but the two craft sank. A few months earlier Muncey was injured when his speedboat disintegrated at Madison, Ind., during running of the Governor's Cup. The first time the Gold Cup was run on Lake Washington, in 1951, two men drowned when the Miss Quicksilver of Portland, Ore., hit a submerged object and sank. All the recent winners used Al- lison or Rolls Royce power plants. The crews beef them up with "ex- otic" fuels with almost as much care and secrecy as experts setting off rockets at Cape Canaveral. Boats Costly The boats and their operation cost plenty. One estimate is that the expected 21 entries combined are worth a half million dollars. This doesn't pose any major problem to owners like William Waggoner Jr., the Arizona and Texas oil and cattle man. But little fellows want to get into the act, too. Several com munity groups sponsor boats, s o m e t i m e s scraping up just enough dough to get to the race. There's ,no monetary prize to the winner, unless you count the publicity for sponsors whose en- tries carry product names. The Gold Cup itself is a per- petual trophy donated 55 years ago by New York's Columbia Yacht Club. It's a piece of silver with a thin layer of yellow metal that hardly looks worth, all the fuss. But you couldn't tell that to the participants or spectators. SUPREMACY in Hair Styling stands out predominantly when done Here. 715 North University * r' t. Parks Second Parks followed him to the finish line with a time of 11 hours, and 15 seconds. Th& 28-year-old swimmer looked exhausted after leaving the 70- degree water. Parks told newsmen that he be- came caught in the tide near the end of the arduous swim and "I never could quite get back." Earlier in the race, when Lumsden had momentarily become caught on a jetty, Parks stopped swimming and went over to his opponent to see if he was all right. Parks and Lumsden have mono- polized the distance swim since it was begun six years ago. Parks won in 1954, 1955 and last year, Lumsden finishing second each time. In 1956 Lumsden reversed Y 4' 'i .. n One of 7 Big Bests Chevy gives you over any car in its field rL-!fl I I, -- T You've got more to go on than our saysso: Every motor magazine has given Chevy's standard passenger car and Corvette V8's unstinted praise. SPORTS CARS ILLUS- TRATED says it this way: ".. . surely the most wonderfully responsive engine available today at any price." And if you want the thrift of a six, you still get the best of it in a Chevy. BEST ECONOMY Nodoubt about this; a pair of Chevy sixes with Powerglide came in first and second in their class in this year's Mobilgas Economy Run-get- ting the best mileage of any full-size car, 22.38 miles per gallon. BEST BRAKES Not only bigger, but built with bonded linings for up to 66% longer life. Just to prove what's what, Chevy out-stopped both of the "other two" in a NASCAR*-conducted test of repeated stops from highway speeds. *National Association for Stock Cr Advacew mt iand Resarch BEST RIDE A few minutes behind the wheel will leave no doubt about this. MOTOR TREND magazine sums it up this way: .. the smoothest, most quiet, softest riding car in its price class." BEST TRADE-IN Check the figures in any N.A.D.A.* Guide Book. You'll find that Chevy used car prices last year averaged up to $128 higher than comparable models of the "other two." *Nationa Amtomobila Dealers Aasociation BEST ROOM Official dimensions re- ported to the Automobile Manufacturers Association make it clear. Chevy's front seat hip room, for example, is up to 5.9 inches wider than comparable caims. i 4, r 'A EXCLUSIVE Nunn-Bush and Edgerton SHOE SALE AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Cleveland 47 34 .580 - B ff%ยง-Ap qp mkqpl"n no . Ttf_ 1.1. t. A e. A