THURSDAY, SETEMBER 26, 1946 THE ICHIAN DATTY PAGE Cardinals Lose, But Retain Full Game Lead over D Odgers Advance Sale Of Grid Tickets Pleases Baker Applications Ireble Last Season's Mark If the smile on Mr. Andrew Baker's face can be used as an indication of the advance football ticket sales, it is easy to see that each contest is well on its way to being a sell-out. Baker, who is in charge of athletic tickets, reported that orders for sea- son pasteboards are three times as great as those of last season. The gridiron enthusiasts have waited a long time to see the pre-war calibre of football again, and this fall they expect to find it, The Maize and Blue aggregation encounters a rugged nine game sched- ule with seven contests slated for the Michigan Stadium. Although the seating capacity is one of the larg- est in the country, 85,783 spectators, the stadium staff shouldn't encounter much difficulty in filling the bowl up to the brim. Traveling restrictions have been lifted, while the colorand hustle ex- hibited at former Wolverine battles will once more return to the Ann Ar- bor scene. At least five contests, In- diana, Iowa, Northwestern, Illinois and Michigan State can look forward to a spirited multitude for over 50,000 applications for these games have been handled already by Baker's as- sistants. There is, however, plenty of space in the end zone for those still desiring tickets. Servo Turns Over Welterweigh t Titl e NEW YORK, Sept. 25-(')--Baby- faced Marty Servo, who couldn't get the New York State Athletic Com- mission to believe his nose was badly injured, was forced today to abdicate his world welterweight championship and retire from the ring because of the injury.. Immediately, the National Boxing Association, which refused to go a- long with the New York Commission in vacating the New York half of the title when Marty pleaded for his aching proboscis a few weeks ago, announced it would sanction a bout between the stringbean swatter, Ray Rlobinson, and former lightweight champion Beau Jack for the crown. All men who have been on pre- vious track squads and all those who are interested in trying out forthe 1946 squad are requested to report at 5 p.m. today at Yost Field House for an important meeting. -Ken Doherty Track Coach Midwest CGrid-bits Indiana .ANN ARBOR, Mich,~ Sept. 25--(A') -Indiana coach Bo McMiliin's grid- ders will begin their trip to Ann Ar- bor today in a caravan of 16 auto- mobiles which will stop at Fort Wayne, Ind., Thursday night and ar- rive at Jackson Mich., for a short workout Friday afternoon. The 36 man squad will arrive here shortly be- fore game time Saturday. Michigan State EAST LANSING, Sept. 25 -(P)- "We're not worrying about Wayne but we're also not passing them off light- ly." That .was head Coach Charles Bachman's answer yesterday when asked if he and his Michigan State College eleven feared Saturday's sea- so nopener here against the Tartars. The Spartan mentor said that al- though State has beaten Wayne in eight previous contests, the Detroit- ers have an outside chance of upset- ting the applecart this year. * , Notre Dame NOTRE DAME, Ind., Sept. 25 --(P)' - Quarterback Johnny Lujack of Connellsville, Pa., and right tackle Ziggy Czarobski of Chicago will be co-captains of the Notre Dame team in its opening game Saturday against Illinoiis at Champaign. Lujack and Czarobski were chosen at a squad election last night, Coach FrankrLeahy announced today. Czarobski, back at Notre Dame after three years in the navy, was the regular right tackle of the 1943 Irish team. This is the second year of Notre Dame competition for Lujack who was discharged from the navy in June as an ensign after three years of serv- ice. In 1943 Lujack succeeded An- gelo Bertelli as quarterback for the Irish just before the Army game. Against Army he completed eight of 15 passes, two for touchdowns, as Notre Dame won, 26 to 0. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE Walters Leads Reds to 6-0 Triumph; Bums Wilt in Ninth, Drop Tilt, 11-9 wLs Boston....... 103 48 Detroit .......90 60 New York .... 85 67 Washington .. 73 77 Chicago .......72 79 Cleveland......66 85 St. Louis ...... 65 85 Philadelphia .. 49 102 Pet. .682 .600 .559 .487 .477 .437 .433 .325 GB 12% 18 291/ 31 37 37 54 IBrooks Use Eight Pitchers in Futile Effort; iRedl egs Give McKechnie Going Away Gift {", __ YESTERDAY'S RESULTS St. Louis 8, Detroit 7 Chicago 4, Cleveland 1 Washington 6, 7, Philadelphia 3, Boston 5, New York 2 NATIONAL LEAGUE 4 St. Louis ..... Brooklyn .... Chicago ...... Boston ....... Philadelphia .. Cincinnati .... Pittsburgh .... New York .... w 95 94 79 79 69 64 62 58 L 56 57 70 70 82 86 87 92 Pct. .629 .623 .530 .530 .457 .427 .416 .387 GB 1 16 16 26 301/ 32 361/ YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Philadelphia 11, Brooklyn 9 Pittsburgh 6, Chicago 5 Boston 6, New York 5 Cincinnati 6, St. Louis 0 Sophomores and juniors are needed as student managers in the Intramural Department. Those accepted are of the same rank and receive the same awards as do managers of major varsity sports. Applicants are to report im- mediately to Bill Jennett, Senior Manager, Main Office, Sports Building. Plans for th- pep rally sched- uled for ;tomorrow night will be the. subjec~t of the M-Club meeting in the Union, at '7:30 this evening.' Elmer Swanson, president, re- quests that all letter-winners be present. DICK WAKEFIELD Wakl efie.ld W i.l Return to Books Dick Wakefield, hard-hitting De- troit Tiger outfielder, is returning to Michigan this semester to finish the studies he dropped so suddenly in 1941 when offered a $50,000 bonus to sign with the Detroit club. Wakefield played for the Wol- verines in the spring of 1941, bat- ting .371 and sparking the Michi- gan nine to the Western Conference championship. During the follow- ing summer, he divided his time between the Tigers and Winston- Salem of the Piedmont League, a Detroit farm club. The ex-Wolverine star graduated to a permanent berth on the Tigers in 1943 after batting .345 with Beau- mont of the Texas league in the pre- ceding season. Wakefield kept his average considerably above .300 in his two years with the major league nine, with .316 and .355 marks in 1943 and 1944, respectively. During his three years of profes- sional ball, from the time he left Michigan until he entered in the Navy in 1944, Wakefield compiled an overall average of .326. Return- ing to the Tigers this year, his av- erage was under .300 for the first time since 1941. Wakefield had completed his soph- omore year at the University when he left four years ago and now has 85 hours credit. He is majoring in eco- nomics. Due to his professional standing, unfortunately, Wakefield will not be eligible to continue where he left off with the Michigan squad in 1941, his standing at the University being purely academic. By The Associated Press ST. LOUIS, Sept. 25-{R)-Bucky Walters, sore-armed Cincinnati vet- eran who hadn't won a game since he beat St. Louis Aug. 17, shut out the League-leading Cardinals to- night, 6-0 on seven hits, leaving the Red Birds one full game ahead of Brooklyn. Presented with a golden oportun- ity to drape the Dodgers over the rcpes after their aftern;oon loss to the Phillies, the Cardinals blew their chance before the mystifying slants of the 36-year-old right hander. Waters Pleases Walters gave Manager Bill Mc- Kechnies"retiring" as Cincy skipper after the game, a neatly-wrapped go- ing away present that was a serious jolt to budding St. Louis World Ser- ies plans. The Reds hopped on starter Mur- ry Dickson for three runs in the fourth inning and picked up three more unneeded scores in the ninth off reliefers Alpha Brazle and Teddy Wilks in their final Sportsman's Park appearance of the season. Al- though they bowed eight times in 22 season meetings, Cincinnati won six of 11 in the St. Louis park. Each Have Three Left With the Dodgers and Cards each having only three games to play, the National League race was assured of going right down to Saturday for de- cision and there was a strong proba- bility that the winner would not be known until Sunday night, the final day of the season. While the Brooks are playing off a postponed game with Philadelphia at Ebbets Field tomorrow~ the Cards will be idle. They open a final three- game series with Chicago here Fri- day night, an open date in the Dodg- er schedule.. Walters Shows Mastery The wily Walters, veteran of two Cincinnati pennant-winning clubs, was in charge of the St. Louis hit- ters all night although he did allow men on base in all but the second, third and fifth innings. What started out like a Card hit- ting party when Red Schoendienst doubled on the first pitch, turned out to be a 10th win in a romp for Bucky, the 190th of his career. *I * * By The Associated Press BROOKLYN, Sept. 25-The Brook- lyn Dodgers were all but eliminated from the torrid National League pen- nant race today when, cracking un- der the terrific strain, they blew up in a night-marish ninth inning against the Philadelphia Phillies who scored five runs to win 11-9 before 22,245 dumbstruck fans. The loss set the Dodgers back a game and a half behind the St. Louis Cardinals. Durocher Tries Eight Pitchers In going down to defeat, the Dodg- ers used eight pitchers, a recor dfor the National League, and tying the American League standard made by Washington in 1913. In as weird a game as played in Ebbets' Field all year, and which con- sumed three hours and 37 minutes, the Dodgers had to come from be- hind with three runs in the fourth and three more inthe fifth to over- come a 5-1 Philly lead. Oscar Judd accounted for the first Philly run with an inside-the-park home run. The Dodgers grabbed another run in the seventh and matched Philadel- phia's run in the eighth to go into the ninth leading 9-6 and apparently as- sured of victory. After walking pinch hittei John- ny O'Neil to start the ninth, Taylor, the Dodgers' fifth hurler, struck out Skeeter Newsome but yielded a single to Charlie Gilbert, ex-Dodger, and gave way to Lombardi. Northey greet- ed the little lefthander with a single to right center scoring both runners, and when Dixie Walker let the ball get away from him Northey went to second. After walking Johnny Wyrostek, Lombardi walked himself to the showers but Herring his successor, was no better. He pitched the game- tying single to Jim Tabor and passed Frank McCormick to fill the bases. Manager Leo Durocher waved Kirbe Higbe his ace In and Dee Moore, an- other former Dodger, flied deep to Pete Reiser, Wyrostek scoring the winning run after the catch. * Select your topcoat for fall while our stock is complete--- Fine Cavalry Twills, Coverts, Gabardines and Fleeces. Priced .. . 521 EAST LIBERTY ST. MICHIGAN THEATRE BLDG. Diamond Notes Tigers Lose, 8-7 DETROIT, Sept. 25-(/P)-Collect- ing 15 hits off rookie Righthander Art Houtteman, the St. Louis Browns snapped a Detroit winning streak at 10 games today by stopping the Ti- gers 8 to 7. Hank Greenberg's 42nd homer, which came with a mate on base in the fifth put the Detroit Tiger slug- ger two runs in front of Ted Wil- liams for the American League runs- batted-in chamgpionship. Wiliams went hitless in four trips against the New York Yankees yes- terday and' failed to send a tally across the plate. Greenberg's two-run circuit clout raised his runs-batted- in total to 123 as compared to Wil- liams' 121. * * * Feller Threatens Record CLEVELAND, Sept. 25-(G)-The Chicago White Sox defeated Bob Fel- ler and the Cleveland Indians 4 to 1 yesterday, but the Tribe fireballer whiffed 10 batters for a season to- tal of 337 and now is only seven strikeouts removed from breaking Rube Waddell's listed record of 343. I ST and FOR ALL DEPARTMENTS at IES .. along flame-bright highways T It's a grand time for travel and sightseeing. Mother Nature's brilliant fall show is on dis- play. Trees are dressed in fiery reds and golds. Hills and valleys are tinted in vibrant rusts and browns. The countryside is a bright crazy quilt of warm, glowing color. The best way to enjoy a "close-up" view of this autumn spectacle is through the large pic- ture frame windows of a Greyhound bus ... windows especially designed for greater look- ing pleasure. And Greyhound's deep cushioned, reclining seats add enjoyment to every mile. Take your autumn trip now! Seats are more plentiful. Departures are frequent. Fares are still at their low pre-war level. - - gill ( I ' ,