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September 30, 1951 - Image 6

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Text
Publication:
Michigan Daily, 1951-09-30

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PACxE SIB

THE MICHIGAN DAILY

P AY, SEPTEMBER 30, I9g .,

PAGE SIX SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1951 ~.

Giants,

Brooklyn

Both

Triumbh;

Remain

Tied

J

New York Ace Maglie
Breezes Through Braves
Three Game Playoff To Begin on Monday
At Ebbets Field if Two Teams Finish Tied

BOSTON - (?) - New York's
amazing Giants and the Brooklyn
Dodgers headed into the final
games of the sizzling National
League Pennant race today all-
square after scoring shutout vic-
tories.
The Giants whipped the Boston
Braves 3-0 behind the superb
pitching of Sal Maglie yesterday
afternoon to take undisputed com-
mand for the first time this season.
* * *
MUT THEY held possesion by
themselves for only a few hours as
MSC Grabs
For Goal Post
As Team Wins
(Continued from Page 1)
the Michigan players bench, but he
was asleep.
THERE WAS little spirited evi-
dence of the traditional rivalry
between the two student bodies un-
til the game's end at 4:15 p.m.,
when scattered fist-fights broke
out near the north goal post.
A Michigan wrestler, Harold
Holt, '53, received a blood-
smeared face and a broken nose
when he tried to stop an MSC
gymnast from tearing down the
favored steel trophy.
The two were surrounded by a
crowd of several hundred from
both schools who stayed around for
45 minutes taunting one another
and calling names.
By 6 p.m., though, most tran-
sients had cleared out of town.
All that remained was the ling-
ering memory of a group of MSC
students who faded into the north'
singing a song which had been1
hurriedly written for their pep
rally the night before.
Set to the tune of "Home on the
Range," it went something like
this.
Oh keep your old school
Where tlhe intellects rule
Where the brains all frolic and
play.
Girls' shapes and good looks
Are lost in textbooks
And the guys are not handsome
and gay.
Foam, foam on my beer
And a beautiful girl in my arms,
You can take your old school,
You can slide your slide rule
I'll take MSC and her charms.

the Dodgers, reeling under the im-
pact of the Giants' great surge,
turned on the Philadelphia Phillies
and won 5-0 behind big Don New-
combe.
They meet the same opponents
in the final games of the regular
season today. If they both
win or lose a best of three playoff
series will start in Ebbets Field
Monday. The second and third, if
necessary, will be played at the
Giants' Polo Grounds.
The Giants solved southpaw
Warren Spahn for only five hits in
eight innings, but broke through
for single tallies in the second and
fifth innings to whip the crafty
lefthander for the sixth time this
year. They added an insurance run
against reliefer Vern Bicford in
the ninth. It was Spahn's 14th de-
feat against 22 wins.
4, * * ,
MAGLIE a sinister looking, side-
burned side-armer from Niagara
Falls, N.Y., was superb as he set
the Braves down in five of the
nine innings and only in the
seventh did he allow more than
one hit in a frame. That was when
he dished up successive two out
singles to Walker Cooper and Wil-
lard Marshall, a couple of former
Giants. The gritty right hander,
however, bore down and forced
Sibby Sisti to tap back to the box
to end the threat.
The Braves staged only one
other real scoring threat. That
came in the ninth when 34-year-
old Maglie issued his only pass.
Earl Torgeson received the free
ticket after Sal had retired lead
off batter Sam Jethroe.
Sid Gordon, one of the four ex-
Giants in the Boston lineup,
singled to right sending the Braves'
first baseman to second: Maglie
then got Cooper and Marshall to
tap weakly to first baseman Whitey
Locman. Cooper bounced into a
force play and Marshall raised a
soft pop to end the game.
s * *
BMAGLE'S RECORD is now 23-
6, the best mark racked up by a
Giant pitcher since Carl Hubbell.
.registered a 26-6 figure in 1936..
.He is the first 23-game winner in.
.the majors.
Ace right hander Larry Jansen
will carry the Giant standard into
today's climactic showdown with
the Braves. He will be seeking his
22nd victory against 11 setbacks.
His opponet will be Jimmy Wil-
son who has won seven and lost
six in the current campaign.

Yankees Win
As Cleveland
Beats Tigers
NEW YORK-(2P)-The Cham-
pion New York Yankees swept
their second straight double head-
er from the Boston Red Sox yes-
terday, 4-0 and 3-1. The lineups
of both teams were sprinkled with
rookies.
Veteran lefthanders Ed Lopat
and Bob Kuzava tuned up for the
World Series by blanking the Sox
on four hits in the opener. Lopat
went the first six innings and
gained his 21st victory. The
Yanks clubbed three Red Sox
pitchers for 11 hits with Jackie
Jensen and Joe Collins leading
the way with three singles apiece.
* * *
CLEVELAND 7, DETROIT 5
CLEVELAND - (AP) - Big Luke
Easter's 26th and 27th home runs
o fthe season drove in five runs
yesterday, but it still took the
Cleveland Indians 13 inningsto
defeat Detroit, 7-6.
The winning run was scored by
Harry Simpson, who singled, stole
second, reached third on an er-
ror, and made it to the plate on
Paul Lehner's pinch single.
* *. *
CHICAGO 8, ST. LOUIS 3
ST. LOUIS-(A)-The Chicago
White Sox, held to one hit for five
innings, broke loose for three runs
on five singles and a walk in the
sixth, and handed the St. Louis
Browns an 8 to 3 defeat yesterday.
Rookie Bob Turley was the vic-
tim of the Sox' attack.
* * *
PHILADELPHIA 5, WASHING-
TON 1
WASHINGTON - (IP) - Phila-
delphia defeated Washington here
last night, 5-1, behind the five hit
pitching of Alex Kellner.
* * *
ST. LOUIS 4, CHICAGO 3
CHICAGO-(A') - Rookie Lefty
Jackie Collum, with late inning
assistance from Dick Bokelmann,
gained his second major league
pitching victory yesterday as the
St. Louis Cardinals defeated the
Chicago Cubs, 4-3, before 4,272
fans. St. Louis scored three times
in the first inning by knocking out
starter Bob Rush with five
straight singles.
* *, *
CINCINNATI 4, PITTSBURGH 2
PITTSBURGH--(P)-The Cin-
cinati Reds hammered Murry
Dickson rfor 11 hits as they de-
feated the Pittsburgh Pirates, 4-2,
last night in Forbes Field. Hank
Edwards hit his third homer of
the season in the fourth inning to
help Ewell Blackwell to his 16th
win against 15 defeats.

-Daily-Malcolm Shatz
MSC BACK, JIM ELLIS, SHOWN ABOUT TO BE TACKLED BY PETERSON AND OSTERMAN
AP GRID RO UND UP:
USC, Princeton, Maryland Victorious

LOS ANGELES-Southern Cali-
fornia's varsity football team over-'
ran the San Diego Naval Training
Center yesterday 41-7 after the
Trojan junior varsity had been
beaten, 27-17, in a double header
played before 26-574 fans in Me-j
morial Coliseum.
Halfback Frank Gifford, a fast,
195 pounder from Bakersfield, was'
th star of the Trojan running
attack, twice scoring after shoul-
dering most of the offensive bur-
den of the afternoon.
Coach Jess Hill kept the Troys
close to the ground for three
fourths of the game, but the
team loosened up for a bit of
aerial fireworks in the last per-
iod. Substitute quarterback Rudy
Bukich connected with two
scoring strikes, one for 65 yards
to halfback Jim Sears, the other
for 14 to an end, Ron Miller.
The Bluejackets rallied in the
last quarter with their best com-
bination quarterback Don Logue
from Arkansas and Bucky Curtis
from Vanderbilt finally got togeth-
er on a screen pass for 39-yards
and the score. The Sailors, who
upset Loyola a week ago, glittered
on occasion but could not match
the consistency of the collegiates.
PRINCETON 54, NYU 20
PRINCETON, N.J.-All-America
halfback Dick Kazmaier, the only
offensive team member remaining
from Princeton's 1950 Ivy League
Champions, was just about all the
Tigers needed yesterday to wallop
New York University, 54-20, in
the first game between the two
schools since 1912.
Princeton scored the first two
times Old Nassau got the ball,
and the estimated crowd of 12,-
000, rattling around huge Palmer
Stadium soon realized the score
would be just about what coach
Charlie Caldwell's Tigers wanted
to make it.
NYU got a gift touchdown in the
third period, and a strong-armed
quarterback named Frank Sau-

chelli pitched two aerial beauties
in the final quarter against Prince-
ton reserves to make things a bit
more interesting.
But, the ig interest this cool
autumn day was what Princeton
could uncover to replace theloss
of 25 lettermen from the team
which rolled up 10 straight vic-
tories last year.
LOUISVILLE 28, WAYNE 12
DETROIT - Scoring in every
period, the University of Louisville
rolled over Wayne University, 28.
SPOR TS
JOHN JENKS: Night Editor
to 12 Last night andspoiled the
Tartars' home football debut be-
fore 7,500 fans.
Halfback John Brewer and
fullback Jim Williams were the
big guns in the visitors' attack.
Together, they accounted for
142 of the 235 yards Louisville
amassed by rushing. Brewer
scored twice while Williams
helped set up three touchdowns.
Wayne showed a stronger de-
fense than expected, twice holding
the Cardinals for downs within
the 10. But two Wayne pass in-
terceptions and a fumble, each
deep in its own territory, helped
Louisville to three touchdowns.
STANFORD 26, SAN JOSE 13
PALO ALTO, Calif.-Stanford's
Indians, showing flashes of prom-
ise and an alert defense, opened
their home season yesterday with
a 26 to 13 victory over San Jose
State College.
A small crowd of 19,000 saw
men coach Chuck Taylor's red
jerseyed players rack up their

Newcombe Stops Phils
In Crucial NL Struggle

{

second win of the year. They
beat Oregon a week ago 27-20.
Stanford quarterback Gary Ker-
korian contributed the most thrill-
ing play of the contest when he
rambled 68 yards after being trap-
ped on an attempted pass in the
second period. He broke out and
behind good blocking went over
for the score.
* ,
MARYLAND 54, W & L 14 ,
LEXINGTON, Va. - Maryland
put on an impressive display of
power and capitalized often on the
breaks to crush Washington and
Lee's Generals, 54-14, in a South-
ern Conference football game
played before 8,000 fans yesterday.
* * *
NAVY '7, YALE 7
NEW HAVEN, Conn.-Favored
Navy rallied in the final quarter to
tie Yale 7-7 in a hard fought foot-
ball game yesterday before 55,000.
Yale registered in the opening
quarter on a 17-yard pass, Jim
Ryan to Ed Woodsum. Captain
Frank Hauff tallied for Navy on a
nine yard smash through the mid-
dle.
* * *
MISSISSIPPI 21, KENTUCKY 17
OXFORD, Miss. - Mississippi
scored on Kentucky twice in the
fourth quarter yesterday to whip
the defending Southeastern Con-
ference Champions, 21-17. Two
fumbles gave the Rebels their
scoring chances. A crowd of ap-
proximately 20,000 roared as Ken-
tucky staged a last minute scoring
attempt.
Typewriters
Adding Machines
Duplicators
Wire Recorders
All makes new and used.

PHILADELPHIA - (A2) -- The
thoroughly-aroused Broolyn Dodg-
ers crushed the Phillies, 5-0, last
night behind big Don Newcombe's
fiery fast ball pitching and climbed
back into a tie with the New York
Giants for the National League
lead.
Thus Brooklyn and New York
go into the final day of the season
each with 95 victories and 58 de-
feats.
* * *
NEWCOMBE, achieving his 20th
pitching victory of the season, set
the Phils down with seven hits. He
received sensational fielding sup-
port from Jackie Robinson and
Flag Race at a Glance
New York Giants 95 58 .621
Brooklyn Dodgers 95 58 .621
GAMES TODAY
New York at Boston
Brooklyn at Philadelphia
Billy Cox as well as the solid
backing of ten hits by his team-
mates including a two-run homer
by Andy Pafko.
The Dodgers got off to an ear-
ly lead and this time they held
it, hammering Robin Roberts
hard ,and taking advantage of
every Philly miscue. There were
plenty of these as the Phils made
four errors and gave up three
unearned runs.
Big Newk, blazing his fast one
past the Philly batters, was in
danger of being scored on only
twice and each time Robinson
started a double play to get him
out of it.
* 2 *
NEWCOMBE struck out three
Phils in the second inning and
didn't yield a hit until the third,
after he had a four run lead. Then
with runners on first and second,
he bore down and retired three of
the hardest-hitting Phils to save
his shutout.
After spending a few uncom-
fortable hours in second place
following the Giants 3-0 triumph
over Boston this afternoon, the

no-longer jittery Dodgers came
backmagnificently.
There was no sign of yielding to
big-game pressure even though
they had lost four of their last
five games and had seen their lead
dwindle from 13% games early in
August to the point where they
had to win last night's contest to
hold a half-interest in first place.
IN TODAY'S windup game,
Broolyn manager Chuck Dressen
plans to come in with his "big"
pitcher, Preacher Roe, in an all-out
effort to take the pennant without
a playoff.
The Dodgers can win only if
the Giants lose their final game
in Boston, but they must take
this last contest to avoid the
painful possibility of being beat-
en out on the last day. For the
Phils, Emory (Bubba) Church is
slated for mound duty.
It was only a year ago that the
Dodgers faced these same Phils
with the pennant in the balance.
The Phillies' Dick Sisler powdered
one over the fence to break up a
tie game and give Philadelphia the
flag.
b rushy Visits
Owner Veeck
CHICAGO-(A)--Rogers Horns-
by, who will confer today with
owner Bill Veeck of the St. Louis
Browns-presumably about man-
aging the American League tail-
enders-said today he also has
appointments with "two other ma-
jor league club owners."
Hedeclined to name them, and
told newsmen, "there is nothing
'definite to report at this time.
In St. Louis, Veeck announced
"There was a possibility" that he
and Hornsby will discuss the
managership of the Browns, now
held by Zack Taylor. Hornsby,
once one of the greatest right
hand hitters of the game, man-
aged the Browns from 1933 to
1937.

4

V;

I-

1'

.i

N

I U

Portable Typewriters

60 secondhand machines that
sold new for as high as $92.50.
This group is comprised of
Underwoods - Remingtons -
Royals and Smith - Coronas.

$25

MORRI LL'S
314 South Stae

1U,

I TH MEDIAL BOKCNTERC
.r.{. j r.;{ . '';;fi S rM."."WE;;;" "::"%:"frrEr ".r+.{:; :tM.;" .,"re:,r+.ir .C":iME MiSEM^ vsesSr-::i W :" ri '"m

Student Supplies
Fountain Pens
Stationery
Loose Leaf Note Books
Greeting Cards
Typewriter Supplies
Gifts and Novelties
Typewriter Desks

Bought, sold, rented,
pair work a specialty.
Filing Cabinets

re-

Office Equipment
and Supplies.
Office Furniture

MbPed H ICa, Dental, Pub icHeaIth
and Nursing BOOKS and SUPPLI ES
Required TEXTS and
REFERENCE BOOKS for every need.

ajor League Standings

AMERICAN

New York........
Cleveland.......
Boston-...........
Chicago...........
Detroit..........
Philadelphia .....
Washington .....
St. Louis.........

LEAGUE "
W L Pct.
97 56 .634
93 60 .608
87 " i .569
81 72 .529
72 81 .471
69 83 .454
61 91 .401
51 102 .333

NATIONAL

GB
..
4
10
16
27
35
4&

New York........
Brooklyn,.......
St. Louis........
Boston............
Philadelphia..
Cincinati.........
Pittsburgh........
Chicago...........
* '

LEAGUE
IV L Pct.
95 58 .621
95 58 .621
80 72 .526
76 77 .497
73 80 .477
68 85 .444
63 90 .412
61 91 .401

GB
1411
19
22
27
32
33j

Siuce
1908

Fountain Pens repaired by a factory-trained man.
Typewriter repair work a specialty.
Wire .Recorders repaired by factory-trained man.
GI requisitions accepted for supplies only
Open Saturdays Until 5 Except Home Games
MO RIULL'S
314 South State St.
Student and Office Supplies

Phone
7177

OVERBECK BOOKSTORE

r

1216-South University

Phone 4436

t

I

YESTERDAY'S RESUiLTS
New York 3-3, BostonE0-1.
Chicago 8, St. Louis 3..
Cleveland 7, Detroit 6.
Philadelphia 5, Washington 1.
TODAY'S GAMES
Boston at New York-Hisner (0-0) vs.
Shea (4-5).
Philadelphia at Washington (2) -
Shantz (18-9) and Hooper (11-10)
vs. Porterfield (8-8) and Hudson
(5-12).
Detroit at Cleveland-Trucks (12-8)
vs. Jones (0-0).
Chicago at St. Louis-Dobson (7-6)
vs. Garver (19-12).

U

YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
New York 3, Boston 0.E
Brooklyn 5, Philadelphia 0.
Cincinnati 4, Pittsburgh 2.
St. Louis 4, Chicago 3.
TODAY'S GAMES
New York at Boston--Jansen (21-11)
vs. Wilson (7-6).
Brooklyn at Philadelphia-Roe (22-3)
vs. Church (15-11).
Cincinnati at Pittsburgh-Ramsdell
(9-17) vs. Pollet (6-13).
St. Louis at Chicago (2)-Staley (18-
13) and Chambers (14-12) vs. Kelly
(7-4) and Minner (6-16).
.1

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arriving daily!
For that hard-to-find textbook
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TEXTBOOKS

CORRECTION

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. Ulrich's carry a very huge stock of
used and new books for every course on
the Michigan campus.

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