SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1955
THE MICHIGAN DAILY
P A t:F. i"'1i.Vl
SATURDAY, APRIL 18, 1955 THE MICHIGAI~ DAILY D A ISV 'W'TWDU'U'
aA % LA11 L rl I&
i
Wolverines Smother Toledo;
/ "'
Play
r
Toads Win
One-Hitter
In Softball
By BILL GRANSE
Don Rieman proved to be the
pitching ace in a group of games
which featured slugging battles as
the Toads defeated Gamma Delta,
6-1, in an Independent softball
game at South Ferry Field yester-
day..
Rieman only allowed the Gam-
ma Delts one hit as the Toads
pushed across five of their six
runs in the fifth inning.
With the help of a wild third
inning, the Willow Run Recrea-
tion Center"B" team set back Po-
litical Science, 13-8.
The IRS Club won over Air
Force ROTC, 9-4, Owen Co-op de-
feated the Mugwumps, 5-2, Fire-
house Five Plus Four defeated the
Foresters, 14-13, and the Willow
Run Recreation Center "A" team
triumphed over English, 10-4.
Bob Willoughby had a field day
at the plate as he led Michigan
Christian Fellowship to an 18-3
rout over Bad Debts Adjustments,
Dave Stewart was the winning
pitcher.
In other games, Zoology Mu-
seum bested Physics, 9-2, behind
the fast-ball pitching of Jack
Sherwood; and Evans Scholars
walloped Nakamura, 19-4. Farouks
Five whitewashed the Hawaiians,
13-0.
In Social Fraternity ping pong,
Tau Delta- Phi whipped Sigma Chi,
5-0. The Tau Delts will defend
their table tennis championship
next week against Sigma Alpha
Mu, who yesterday whipped Alpha
Epsilon Pi, 4-1.
Iitans in Detroit Today
M' Httrlers
CntudLook Sharp
In Victory
k u (Continued from Page 1)
-Daily-John Hirtzel
MICHIdAN'S SOPHOMORE TENNIS SENSATION,
BARRY MacKAY, DISPLAYS SERVE
Tennis Sensation MaeKay
Continues Improved P lay
WUERTH
STARTING FRIDAY
*e
BUBBLING WITH EXCITING :
: ENTERTAINMENT!:
w "
HUMPHREY -
13OGART
AUDREY
HEPBURN -
WILLIAM
HOLDEN
e .
ALSO
PURSUED THRU SCREECHING
JUNGLE HAUNTS
JJA1 E DAN
CMN ANDREWS
DMD FARRAR
By DIANE LaBAKAS
A match with the University of
Indiana, May 20, should prove of
interest to Wolverine tennis soph-
omore sensation Barry MacKay in
more ways than one.
MacKay, who expects to be
playing first singles, will probably
be competing against an old ri-
val, Gerald Parchute, in a match
which could decide which team
finishes on top in the Big Ten
race.
MacKay started his tennis ca-
reer at the age of nine with his
older sister, Bonny, who won the
National Junior Girls Indoor and
Outdoor doubles titles in 1951.
ORPHEUM
ONE FULL WEEK
STARTING MONDAY
OMtEY CROWTHER - N. Y. Times soys
"IT'S A MAJOR ACHIEVEMEN"
"A JOY
TO THE
EYE
EAR!" s
:L & Sun
In COLOR --
By the time he completed his
junior tenure, Barry's powerful
service, aided by his 6'5" height,
and his excellent volleying gave
him a ranking of three in doubles
and 16 in singles.
Barry attributes much of his
success to the experience he ac-
quired last summer while travel-
ing with the Junior Davis Cup
team, coached by professional
Jack Kramer.
The team, which is comprised of
the nation's top ranked Junior
players, hit all the major tourna-
ments where Barry competed
against such stars as Ken Rose-
wall, Lew Hoad, Art Larsen, and
Bob Perry.
"I played my greatest doubles
match," said Barry, "when I
teamed with Maxwell Brown, Lou-
isville, Ky., to lose to Hoad and
Rosewall in the national doubles
championships, 6-2, 6-2, 7-5, and
never lost my serve throughout the
match."
Barry attributes most of his de-
feats to a weak backhand which
he is working on daily to improve.
Coach Bill Murphy is expecting
to play MacKay with sophomore
Dick Potter, whose strong serve
and good volleying could make
them a potent first doubles combi-
nation.
Several Wolverines found them-
selves safe at first with infield hits
abecause of this.
Only One Hit
Toledo's single hit and only run
came in the seventh inning off
hurler Jim Clark as sophomore
third baseman Ed Gliatti blasted
a home run far over the left field
fence. The rest of the Toledo bat-
ters appeared baffled and only
managed to lift the ball over the
infield four times.
The major factor in Michigan's
overwhelming victory lay in To-
ledo's lack of heads-up ballplay-
Rockets Racked
TOLEDO
AB R H E
Collins, 2b...............4 0 0 0
Takacs, -if............... 3 0 0 0
Hunt, ss ................ 3 0 0 2
Gliatti, 3b...............3 1 1 1
Basich, cf............... 3 0 0 0
Kristoff, rf .............. 1 0 0 0
Miller, rf.................2 0 0 0
Smith, lb............... 3 0 0 0
Bloomer,c:..............1 0 1
Reeves, c.................2 0 0 0
Baldwin, p...............1 0 0 0
Guttman, p.............1 0 0 0
Zerby, p.................0 0 0 0
TOTALS............27 1 1 4
MICHIGAN
AB R H E
Benedict, ss ........... 2 1 1 0
Meyers, ss............3 1 2 0
Fox, cf....... 3 2 0 0
Westwood, cf........... 2 0 1 6
Cline, rf ............... 2 3 1 0
Perry, rf...............2 0 0 0
Eaddy, 3b..............3 1 1 0
Tippery, 2b............3 2 1 0
Ronan, 2b............. 1 0 1 0
Tommelein, If......... 5 1 2 0
Vukovich, lb.......... 4 2 1 01
Snyder,c.............. 3 1 1 0
Szalwinski c.... :. 0 0 0
Black, c.,..............0 0 0 0
Levy, p...............1 1 0 0
Clark, p............... 1 1 1 0
Fagge,p..............1 0 0 0
Peterjohn, p........... 0 0 0 0
TOTALS..........38 16 13 0
ing, and in the fact that Michi-
gan took every advantage that it
had in exploiting its weaker op-
ponent.
Toledo comimitted four errors,
three of them in the third inning,
and along with this several hard
chances were dropped, a majority
of which landed in the players
glove and then dropped out. Also,
Michigan stole six bases because
of an inexperienced opposing
catcher, and scored two runs on a
combination of wild pitches, pass-
ed balls, and balks.
MICHIGAN DAILY
Phone NO 2-3241
CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING
RATES
LINES 1 DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS
2 .66 1.47 2.15
3 .77 1.95 3.23
4 .99 2.46 4.31
Figure 5 average words to a line.
Classified deadline, 3 P.M. daily.
11:00 A.M. Saturday
LOST AND FOUND
LOST-White gold bracelet watch, Ben-
rus, in vicinity of Diag and Engine
Arch. Reward, NO 8-8607. )93A
LOST-"Lippmann" baseball glove at
I.M. field Wed. Reward. NO 3-5806.
)96A
LOST-Oval sorority pin, pearl set,
C.C. on back at or between W.A.B. or
Angell Hall. NO 2-2890. )95A
LOST PARAKEET-Grey Black, Blue
Breast, answers name "Denny"; neigh-
borhood 619 E. University. Call NO
3-5583, Dawson; $10 reward if located.
)97A
FOR SALE
ARMY-NAVY type Oxfords- 6.88. Sox.
39c, shorts. 69c; military supplies.
Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )26B
SWEATERS to formals, size 9 to 11.
Call NO 3-8153. )301B
IT'S NOT TOO EARLY to lay away a
Mother's Day gift. Small deposits will
hold purchase.
VAN DYKE'S GIFTS
215 E. Liberty NO 3-1319
)326B3
FOR SALE
The New Look in TV
GE Ultra-Vision Lo-Boy, at the new, low
price of only $129.95. New, natural
viewing angle! See it today at
Ideal Radio Service
"Authorized GE Sales and Service"
1521 Miller Rd. Phone NO 2-3660
)332B
JENSON BASS Reflex speaker cabinet,
12". Converter, 6v DC to 110v AC (will
operate tape recorder in car). Record-
ing Tape. Call NO 2-4925. )335B
FOR RENT
WANTED-Male to share campus apt.
with 3 college men. Call NO 3-2038.
)29C
ROOMS FOR RENT
ONE DOUBLE ROOM, large closet kit-
chen privileges optional. No drinkers
or smokers. For quiet gentlemen.
Near State and Packard-Phone NO
8-8345. )50D
BY DAY-WEEK-MONTH. Campus Tour-
ist Homes, 518 E. William. Student
rooms also available. NO 3-8454. )66D
DELUXE two room apartment, com-
pletely furnished, new and clean,
electric store, semi-private bath,
building in the rear, private entrance,
$67.50 per month. Phone NO 2-9020.
)71D
PERSONAL
SMALL CHILD for day care in licensed
home. NO 3-5830. )78F
IFC BALL tickets available through fra-
ternity presidents. )82F.
You Can Check Your Own
Radio & TV Tubes
FREE!
Drive to our Gulf Service Station
(Fourth Ave. at Huron) anytime
from 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. (seven days
a week) and check your own tubes
in our new, simple-to-operate ma- 7
chine.
CASEY'S -,Ph. NO 2-4489
)7J
TYPING-Thesis, Term Papers, etc.
Reasonable Rates, Prompt Service,'
830 South Main, NO 8-7590. ) lJ
WANTED TO RENT
CAR SPACE in vicinity of Tappan. Call
Jean Kurtz, NO 2-4514. )10K
GRAD COUPLE desire one-bedroom,
furnished apartment near campus.
Available after May 1. Call Charles
Smith, NO 2-3657 after 6 P.M. )9K
USED CARS
1949 CHRYSLER, New Yorker. Black,
four-door, very good condition. The
big lot across from downtown car-
port. Huron Motor Sales, 222 W. Wash-
ington, NO 2-4588. )24N
FOR SALE-British MG Model T-6,
Radio and heater. All accessories and
immaculate. Can be seen at 604 S.
State. )22N
Transportation Specials
from $50 up
1941 Dodge, 2 dr.
1947 Plymouth, 4 dr.
1949 Mercury, 2 dr.
1947 Pontiac, 2 dr.
BENZ
Motors, Inc.
Benz Insurance Bldg., 331 S. 4th Ave.
Open 8 to 8. Phone NO 3-2005
)26N
Exe
wee
BUSINESS SERVICES
BABY SITTING
ellent references. Evenings and
kends. Call after 5:30 P.M. NO
3-4389._
Purchase from Purchase
New 16 mm. Magazine load Keystone
Movie Camera Turret Model with
F 1.9 Bausch and Lomb lens. Regular
$175. Now $139.88. Terms available.
PURCHASE CAMERA SHOP
1116 S. University NO 3-6972
)330B
HEATH KIT, Hi-Fidelity audio ampli-
fier. Call John Hodgma at NO 2-3256.
)329B
TWO MATCHED English type Bicycles,
man and woman's. Will sell separ-
ately. NO 2-0450. )331B
Brides and
Grooms
See our selection of gifts for the
bridal party. All can be engraved.
From ........................$1.79
Engraving Free!
SPECIAL PURCHASE-A paper of
%-carat diamonds (5 stones) aver
age weight 40 points; your choice,
while they last ..........$175.00.
They are all top color and fine
gem grade.
BAYS JEWELERS
Nickels Arcade
)333B
AIR FORCE OFFICERS summer and
winter uniforms; gabardine; like new.
Size 42. Phone NO 5-5182. )334B
HELP WANTED
WE WISH a mechanical engineer, pri-
marily a math major, male or female.
Versed in stress analysis, mechanics,
stress and strain, fatigue, failure
points, modulous elasticity and mo-
ment of inertia. All pertaining to var-
ious materials. Extremely attractive
salary. For interview call Mr. Nichols,
United Metal Craft, Gar Wood In-
dustries, Ypsl 3550. )54H!I
STUDENT SALESMAN for afternoons.
Experience preferred. Wild's Clothing
Store, 311 State St. )55H
MAN for summer camp counsellor to as-
sume responsibility for rifle range
and riflery program at a Michigan
summer camp for boys from June 17
to Aug. 27. Call evenings, NO 2-9454.
) 56H
BUSINESS SERVICES
TYPING, Editing Manuscripts, Paperq
Theses. 831 Tappan Court, NO 3-0708
)301
R. A. MADDY-VIOLIN MAKER. Fine
instruments. Accessories, Repairs. 310
S. State, upstairs. Phone NO 2-5962.
)10I
RADIO - PHONO - TV
Service and Sales
Free Pick-Up and Delivery
Fast Service - Reasonable Rates
"Student Service
ANN ARBORRADIO AND TV
1217 S. University Phone NO 8-7942
11Z blocks east of East Eng. )281
)6J
DAILY
CLASSIFIEDS
BRING
QUICK
RESULTS
Ione
Cinema SL uid
Saturday at 7 and 9
Sunday at 8 only
USED CARS
1951 CHEVROLET, two-door, light green,
one owner, sharp. The big lot across
from downtown carport. Huron Motor
Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO 2-4588.
)25N
1951 STUDEBAKER, four-door Cham-
pion, radio and heater. Hydramatic.
Perfect transportation. The big lot
across from downtown carport. Huron
Motor Sales, 222 W. Washington, NO
2-4588. )23N
BARGAINS
1952 Ford Custom 8, Four-door, sharp,
priced to sell.
1951 Mercury, four-door, sharp.
1948 Ford V-8, two-door, real bargain.
PALMER MOTOR SALES
Your Ford Dealer in Chelsea
Greenwood 5-4911
)20N
1952 CHEVROLET, Sedan Delivery. Ra-
dio and heater.
1950 CHEVROLET, Styleline Deluxe,
Two-door, $375.
AL GROSS
Ford Sales, Inc., Dexter, Mich.
Call Dexter HA 6-4411 or HA 6-5441
for evening appointments.
)27N
1938 CHEVROLET Sedan. Excellent
transportation, $75. 1948 Fraser Sedan,
$75. Fitzgerald-Jordan, Inc., 607 De-
troit Street, NO 8-8141. )28N
ALTERATIONS
ALTERATIONS -- Ladies' Garments-
Prompt Service. Call NO 2-2678, Alpa
Graves. )3P
------------------
b
Major League Standings
ENJOY
Carry-Out Beer & Wine
Service Served
at the
Del Rio Restaurant
122 West Washington
Hours 4-12 - Closed Tuesday Tel. NO 2-9575
~"Good, ctec
There is a woor,
around the perf
Otis Guernsey o,
quote Bosley C
'The scene in
from a sly-eyed
pious but vastly
F1
an dishonest fdun!1
ld ly halo of hearty laughter
formance of Fernandel," says
i/ the Herald Tribune. And to
rowther of the N. Y. Times,
which he hears a confessiorn
t Francoise Rosay is an im.
funny thing. And all the way
through he broadly straddles
Irrev rence-and.burlesque.'
.............,.._..._-- , .. _ _" - 7
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L
Cleveland...........3 0
Boston ..... . ..21
New York...........2 1
Chicago ............1 1
Washington ..........1 1
Kansas City ..........1 2
Detroit .............1 3
Baltimore ............0 2
Pct.
1.000
.667
.667
.500
.500
.333
.250
.000
GB
1
1
114,
2
21
2 :
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pct.
Chicago .........3 0 1.000
Brooklyn ............30 1.000
Philadelphia ........ .2 0 1.000
Milwaukee ............1 1 .500
St. Louis .............1 1 .500
Pittsburgh ............0 2 .000
New York ............0 3 .000
Cincinnati ...........0 3 .000
GB
%
1%
1% f
2%
3
3
rx - muant,
'ERNANDELIReAWnOISI XrOA
I
I
I IJ R " ,
Today and ORPHEUM 1:30 P.M.
Sunday 65c
"A DROLL SMILING MOVIE ... COMIC AND HUMAN"-Sat. Review
Ii& f t "The first chance
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
Cleveland 7, Detroit 3
New York 6, Boston 4
TODAY'S GAMES
Cleveland at Chicago-Feller vs.
Pierce.
Kansas City at Detroit-Portocar-
rero vs. Garver.
New York at Washington (night)
-Lopat vs. Porterfield.
Baltimore at Boston-Palica vs. De-
lock.
TODAY'S GAMES
Philadelphia at New York-J. Mey-
er vs. Hearn.
Brooklyn at Pittsburgh - . Meyer
vs. Purkey.
Milwaukee at Cincinnati - Bur-
dette vs. Pearce.
Chicago at St. Louis - Jones vs.
Poholsky.
SQUARE '
Top Off Your Evenings
at the
YESTERADY'S RESULTS
Brooklyn 6, New York 3
ARCHITECTURE AUDITORIUM
50c
11
Dial NO 2-3136
For Program
Information
mm
LATE SHOW
TONIGHT 11 P.M.
to watch Europe's
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bomb in an all
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--Time Magaz
DREAMS" . .
VITTORIO DE SICA
Produced by Marcello Girosi
Directed by Luigi Comencini
A Titanus Film 1::/l
This is the
Open 11 A.M. - 12:30 P.M.
3730 Washtenaw Near Pittsfield Village
ORDERS TO GO -NO 8-7146
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for
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1
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Lydia Mendelssohn
8:00 P.M.
.
90c -$1.25
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W! -
1 STARTING MONDAY "AI DA" IN COLOR I
DRAMATIC ARTS CENTER presents
1
Ending" Dial
Today ' 2-2513
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
tPicture of the Y
AD f iAhhRF 8
featuring THE GOLDEN DEER
with the ANNARBOR CIVIC SYMPHONY
FRIDAY, April 15, 8 P.M. - SATURDAY, April 16, 7:30 P.M.
SUNDAY, April 17 - 2 P.M. - 4 P.M.
MASONIC TEMPLE . . . 327 South Fourth
Call NO 2-5915 for reservations
Guest Admission: Children 50c - Adults $1.00
11
1I 111 11U BU
11 0 1 1 t v ,I