I WIMM" SATURDAY, OCTOBER'3, 1953 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE '1REE' . ___ __ _ __a.a PAGE TTIREE Do dgers Win in Third Contest ----C.~ Triple Threat Halfback' Leads Opponent's A ttack Campanella Socks Homer As Bums Down Yanks, 3-2 (Continued from Page 1) The Maize and Blue have been installed in some quarters as 14-point. favorites. in .today's contest. Both the high national rattag and the heavy favorite role are the result of last week's drubbing of the Washington tean. Tulane's strong first team should furnish a more severe test than did the Huskies. The Tulane run- ning game especially with McGee and Kent. will be much stronger than was Washington's, which was almost non-existant due to in- juries to the two first string half- backs. THE GREEN WAVE has been primarily a running team in its first two outings, but quarterback Clement has completed more than half of his passes, and the aerial threat cannot be overlooked. The Greenies have plenty of scoring punch, as demonstrated by the 54 points run up against the Citadel. Tulane followers - blame last Saturday's rain for the troubles with the Georgia team. The wet weather hampered the tricky "T," Split "T" and double wing offense of the New Orleans club. The Greenies have not seen a single wing team yet this sea- son, but have been drilled all week to stop Michigan's versa- tile offense. A look at the Tulane roster shows that two-thirds of the squad is from Louisiana. Only one mem- ber of the team, tackle Bill Spol- len of College Pointy New York, is from north of the Mason-Dixon line. Halfback McGee, who had a bad afternoon in the fumble depart- Students who have not pick- ed up their student tickets may do so this morning at the Ath- letic Administration Building. By failing to 'do so, they will forfeit their rights to a student ticket. -Don Weir ment last Saturday at Athens, los- ing the ball three times, is the team leader in scoring, rushing, pass receiving, punt returns and kickoff returns. In addition he, is the squad's top punter with a 44- yard average on six attempts. (Continued from Page 1) Erskine started out as though he had taken aim at Ehmke's rec- ord. He fanned two men in each of the first three innings. * * DESPITE Erskine's spell, the Yanks managed to get out front in the fifth on three infield singles, none of which ever reached the outfield grass. Billy Martin's smash toward short, was stopped by Peewee Reese who couldn't come up with the ball in time to make a play. It was the first hit off Erskine after four no-hit inn- ings. Little Phil Rizzuto slammed a hard grounder over second that Junior Gilliam deflected with af diving stop. * * * WITH MEN on first and second and nobody out, Manager Casey Stengel called on Raschi for a sacrifice bunt that moved up both1 men.1 Gil McDougald, hitless in two previous trips, drove a vicious grounder toward the diving Bil- ly Cox who missed Rizzuto run- ning to third, while MartinE scored with the first run. Raschi was as much to blame for the Dodgers tying run in the fifth as anybody in the park. With one out, Jackie Robinson hit a double off the right-field screen, about six feet short of a home run. WHILE pitching to Billy Cox,! Raschi committed a balk. That advanced Robinson to third. With Robinson on third and one out, Manager Chuck Dres-1 sen crossed up the Yanks by having Cox lay down a perfect squeeze bunt. Robinson, his pride wounded by being dropped to No. 7 spot in the batting order, put the Brooks! out front in the sixth with a sharp! single to left. The hit followed a Passer Star As Standish- Evans Wins Sparked by the superb passing of Gus Nieboer, Standish-Evans' House romped to a 24-0 victory over hapless Fletcher Hall in the Independent Touch Football League. Standish - Evans scored four touchdowns for the win but failed on every attempt at the extra point. * * * IN THE FIRST HALF, Nieboer passed to Jim Holmes for three touchdowns on passes of 20, 30 and 20 yards respectively. The rest of the scoring came on a ten yard pass to Russ Bucci from Bob Stevens and Bucci ran an- other fifteen yards for the tally. Fletcher Hall ran up against a brick wall and was held to only one first down. In addi- tion they had a minus in the yardage gained department. The first touchdown came on! the third play of the game when Standish-Evans marched thirty yards for the score. The second six points came in the next series of downs when Holmes grabbed a More men are needed to offi- ciate I-M football games. All interested candidates please re- port to the Intramural Build- ing office. -Earl Riskey MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAY! 2 .60 1.34 1.96 3 .70 1.78 2.94 4 .90 . 2.24 3.92 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily. FOR SALE SOLID WALNUT GATELEG TABLE, $25. One large double coil springs, $15.00. One upholstered chair, $1.00. One large walnut veneer table and five chairs, $25. One wool rug. $35. Two large wal- nut veneer buffets, $15 each. One small steel folding cot, $10.00, Large child's coaster wagon, $4.00. Phone 2-3020. )13B .._ - .,, Is iftrue what they say about Dixie? CARL ERSKINE . . . sets series record * * * single by Duke Snider and a walk to Hodges. There weire two out at the time. * * * BUT THAT 2-1 lead didn't hold up in this fiercely contested game. Back came the Yanks in the .eighth to tie it up again between strikeouts by Erskine. After Collins swung wildly at a curve ball for his fourth strike- out, Hank Bauer singled to cen- ter. For the second time in the game, Yogi Berra was hit by an Erskine pitch, this time on the back. The stands, with their Brooklyn series record crowd of 35,270, came alive as Mantle came up to the plate. But Mickey, the home run hero of Thursday's second straight Yankee victory, became Erskine's 12th strikeout victim. GENE WOODLING delivered a sharp single to center that scored Bauer with the tying run and it was 2-2 going to the last of the eighth. It was then that Campanella got revenge for the ball that Allie Reynolds threw, injuring ,his hand, in the opener. Gil Hodges had bounced out be- fore the portly Campanella, hit- less in three previous trips and shut out in four attempts Thurs- day, came to bat. r RASCHI'S first pitch found Campanella in full swing and the ball sailing high into the lower left-field seats over the head of Woodling. The ball traveled about } ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords-$6.88. Sox, 39c; shorts, 69c; military supplies. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. 114B YOUNG BUDGIES or Parakeets, also singing canaries, bird supplies and cages. 562 S. 7th, Ph. 3-5330. )15B 1952 CHEVROLET - Black four door, radio and heater. Excellent condi- tion. Very clean. Complete service record available. Call 2-3246, 8 to 5 p.m. Monday thru Friday. )20B EVERGREENS: at wholesale Pfitzer Juniper........$2.50 to $7.50 Pyramidal Arbor Vitae . $2.00 to $5.00 Spreading Yew ..........$2.25 to $4.50 Dwarf Mugho Pine ......$2.50 to $4.00 Also Blue Spruce, hemlock, fir, etc. Call Michael Lee 8-574 or see me 4100 Chem. Bldg. afternoons. )36B 1950 CROSLEY CONVERTIBLE-14,600 miles, excellent condition. $400. Ph. 3-2370 after 6 p.m. )42B PURCHASE at "PURCHASE" - Two- section tripod with pan head. Regular $13.75, special $9.25. Purchase Camera Shop, 1116 S. University. ) 50B KAISER '47-Black 4-door sedan, newly, rebuilt motor, good tires, new trans- mission. $350. Phone 3-0611. )46B FOR SALE .MOTORIZED BICYCLES"-English 3 gear Hercules with Minimotor. 1 man's and 1 woman's. Used 2 months. Phone 3-0260. )51B TIME TIME TIME 6c 6c 6c Student Periodical, phone 6007. )54B WEIMARANER PUPPIES -- Choice champ. Stock Imp. P. O. Box No. 638.' Battle Creek, Mich. )55B CORONNA PORTABLE - Call 2-7326. )56B DIALAMATICBendix Washing Machine. Eight months old, perfect condition. $120. Call 3-2746. )57B FOR RENT BACHELOR GIRL Apt. New kitchens and tile baths. Call at 305 E. Liberty or phone 3-5062. )C3 QUIET ROOM-Very large and pleasant. Double or single, out W. Madison 11. mi. Ph. 2-2004. )11D ROOMS FOR RENT OVERNIGHT GUEST ROOMS Reserve rooms now for Football Week- ends. Rooms by Day or Week. Campus Tourist Homes. Ph. 3-8454. 518 E. Williams St. (near State) )3D ROOM AND BOARD i STILL A FEW room and board openings at 1617 Washtenaw. Room $30 per month. Free linen and porter service. Board $2.10per day for three meals. Phone 3-2360. )6E BOARD for southeast campus area. $2.10 per day. Three meals. Generous refund policy. 1617 Washtenaw. Ph. 3-2360. )7E BOARD-Southeast of campus-3 meals $1.95 a day, any combination of meals, re-bate system. Call 2-8312. )8E PERSONAL PIANO INSTRUCTION - Don-David Lusterman is now accepting students for the new school year. Phone 6719. )3F VOICE LESSONS-Call David Murray. Graduate voice major. Corrected Ph. 2-7306 between 6-7 p.m. )91 4c A WEEK will bring LIFE to room- mates. Why not enjoy life? Phone Student Periodical Agency, 6007 days, 25-7843 eves. )6F TRANSPORTATION WANTED - Rider to Benton Harbor, Mich. Each Sunday morning. Return Sunday evening. Call 3-8475 evenings. )5G HELP WANTED IDEAL JOB for graduate student carry- ing only light schedule or writing thesis. Year around with opportunity to study on job. Require some skill in mechanics, carpentry and painting. Good sales personality essential. Ph. 2-2887. PART TIME . WAITRESS-i1 hour at noon; 2 hours in evening. Clark's Tea Room, 1217 Observatory. )22H STENOGRAPHER with general office experience. Good pay and gud work- ing conditions. Ph. 3-4391. )23H BUSINESS SERVICES TYPEWRITERS! Portable and Standard for rent, sales and service. MORRILLS 314 S. State St., Phone 7177 RADIO SERVICE Auto -Home - Portable Phono and T.V. Fast and Reasonable Service ANN ARBOR RADIO AND T.V. "Student Service" 1215 So. Univ., Ph. 7942 11 blocks east of East Eng. )51 WASHING, Finished Work, and Hand Ironing. Ruff dry and wet washing. Also ironing separately. Free pick- up and delivery. Ph. 2-9020. )21 DR. KENNETH N. WESTERMAN; Voice Development in singing and speak- ing. Member research commitee: Nat'l. Assoc.Teachers of Singing Di- rector, Walden Woods Voice Confer- ence, Author of Emergent Voice. Stu- dio, 715 Granger; phone 6584. )101 EXPERT TYPIST - Rates reasonable. Prompt service. 914 Mary Street. 3-4449. )4I WANTED TO RENT WANTED-Rooms for Medical School Reunion. Single and double rooms are needed for medical alumni return- ing to Ann Arbor wishing to rent rooms for this period are urgently asked to call the Medical School Of- flIce. Ph. 3-1511, ext. 413. )K REAL ESTATE FOR SALE by owner. Burns.Park area, near bus lines and schools. Colonial type home; three bedrooms and bath on second fht~or. Kitchen, dining room, panelled sun room on first floor. Basement room with toilet, shower, lavatory, laundry room. Gas heat, Phone$8282 mornings or evenings. Price _$22,000.)2 Read and Use Daily Classifieds III, =ej I .. --- Memberships Now On Sale for our 1953-54 season at Marshall's Book Store, Wahr's Book Store, the Music Center, and THE ARTS THEATER CLUB 2091/2 E. Washington ... Phone 7301 "A Professional Coipany - A Members' Theater" . NOWT ORPHEUM 60c We're really Lucky We have the funniest picture in Ann Arbor! ALASTAR SIM who panicked you in "Happiest Days Of Your ife".,.now in the most hilarious role o u lifetimel; Paradise":.,r ALASTAI R Si M FAY COMPTON BEATRICE CAMPBElL, "Truly surprising ending , the viewer can be Extra grateful to Alastair Sim!" --Times MR. MAGOO "PETE HOT HEAD" ~ 1 PioneersiTop Favored Flint NorthernHigh By DAVE BAADj Trailing by 13 points going into the final period, Ann Arbor's High School football team came back sensationally last night with three touchdowns in the last eleven min- utes to whip favored Flint North- ern, 20-13. The victory, the third straight for the Pioneers this year, stretch- ed their undefeated string over three seasons to 18 games. * * * LEFT HALFBACK Jack Lousma, Ann Arbor's sparkplug all even- ing, initiated the Pioneers' come- back less than two minutes after the last period opened when he dashed 22 yards off tackle for the Pioneers' first six points. Lousma kicked the extra point to make the score Northern 13, Ann Arbor 7. The second play f*3m scrimmage following the ensuing kickoff presented Hank Fonde's squad the break that set up victory possibilities. Flint's speedy halfback Art Johnson fumbled while circling left end permitting alert Ann Ar- bor left guard Stan Larmee to grab the ball and chug 30 yards for the tying score. * * * LOUSMA'S attempt to put his team ahead with an extra point sailed wide to the left. Northern tried desperately to get back into the lead but final- ly yielded the ball on a punt to the Ann Arbor 25 yard line. Then Lousma and fullback Dick Wil- liams began ripping off yardage through the Viking line, produc- ing a march that went 75 yards for the final touchdown. Williams tallied the winning score with less than a minute re- maining when he dashed 11 yards around the right end of a tired Northern line. ,i t Nieboer pass. Standish - Evans racked up eighteen points at half- time on the basis of the first three series of downs in which they scored every time. * * MICHIGAN Christian Fellow-' ship and Wesleyan Guild played a scoreless game until the last' play when a completed pass by1 M.C.F. gave them the ball game, 6-0. They tried for the extra point r but like Standish-Evans failed in their attempt. In the other touch football' game, Newman Club defeated Lit- erature, Science, and the Arts by a similar score of 6-0. Next Monday the Residence Halls get back into action with the following slate of games: Hayden vs. Wenley Cooley vs. Kelsey Reeves vs. Lloyd Michigan vs. Williams Strauss vs. Huber Van Tyne vs. Anderson , i .... ........ READ AND USE' DAILY CLASS IFI EDS 55c All records smashed as all Ann Arbor wanted to see "From Here To Eternity"- But it ends tonight! NOW! F! ti NOW! -*j FUN FORE ALL! THE TWO ZANIES WIN THE ALL TIME LAUGH CUP! Late Show TONIGHT 11 P.M. j SET THE Soclery Se N ,pt ®N TS EARI e' LOUSMA'S placement iade the winding margin 20-13. Led by backs Jerry Miller, Bob Failing and Johnson, Flint out- classed the Pioneers during the first half and most of the third period. Miller raced 38 yards on Flint's first offensive play of the game to give the Vikings a quick 6-0 lead. This margin was extended to 13-0 midway in the second stanza when Johnson squirmed nine yards to paydirt, climaxing a swift 62 yard march down the field. ' f', i. I wm _12 I I r I Feb.15-ROAD TO HEAVEN, directed by Alf Ie hetorm Within-), 5