, TFiU t DAI'', JULY 1, 194 THE M!ICIGAN D IAI LY . PAGE TH E 'N; *RDAJL , 98P* Lemon Hauris No -Hitter Over Tigers! Barclay Whips Verutti, 5-3, Elliott Wins 1 Up in Golf NCAA .4 Chappuis to Get Reported $60,000 from Brooklyn Team By IRWIN ZUCKER (Special to The Daily) BROOKLYN, N.Y., June 30 - There - is plenty of joy in this sports-crazy town over the sign- ing of Bob Chappuis by Brooklyn's football Dodgers. I Nary a Flatbush follower ex- pected the ex-Wolverine back to join the Dodger fold. In fact, three national maga- zines were processing articles about how Chappuis was going to make the Pittsburgh Steelers a pennant threat in the Na- tional Football League. But the shifty All-American crossed 'em 2' up by inking a two-year Dodger contract. Branch Rickey, Brooklyn's grid monarch, who coached Michigan's baseball team three decades ago, had to pay dearly for Chappuis to outbid the Steeler's attractive bonus salary. No terms were an- nounced, but insiders here say that the 24-year-old rookie will collect a total of $60,000 in salary plus bonus for the two campaigns-as well as aid in his planned radio annouxncing career. One New York writer described Coach Carl Voyles as "the happi- est man since someone told Jack Benny he looked 39." Little wonder-for the Dodger mentor feels that The Chap "is the finest passer in the business .i for us." Voyles plans to use Bob, in the same type of single wing plus winged-T offense in which he excelled at Michigan under Fritz Crisler. The Brooks have signed several star college ends-Hank Foldberg, Dan Edwards and Tony Yovicson -with an eye for good targets for Chappuis' passes. Black-haired Bob was first drafter by the champion Cleveland Browns of the AAC. However, Rickey took over the Dodgers last winter and cleared the way for the annexation of Chappuis by surren- dering half-back Dud Jones in part payment for the draft rights of the Michigan ace. Brooklyn received the rights to Chappuis under an agree- ment wheriby the weak clubs of the Conference were to be strengthened. In the bargaining sessions that followed, it appeared as if the Steelers had Bob practically wrapped and sealed for delivery. But Brooklyn is a land ,of prises-and bigger bundles of and promises. sur- cash Bdilly Mey ers, * ' Kirby Hiby F ined lby Fricka1 NEW YORK, June 30-(AP)- President Ford Frick of the Na- tional League today fined Pitts- burgh Manager Bill Meyer $50 and pitcher Kirby Higbe and trainer Charles Jorgensen $25 each as the result of an argument during the Pirates' game at Cin- cinnati last night. Frick said Meyer had been fined "for violent and profane lan- guage." Higbe drew his punish- ment for throwing a bat in the air. The trainer was fined, Frick said, because "he mixed in an ar- gument that was none of his busi- ness." Iosox Wmi Dodgers Gars Lose By The Associated Press Jack Kramer posted his seventh victory of the season today and his fifth in a row, pitching the Boston Red Sox to a 7-3 seven hit triumph over the New York Yan- kees. Kramer got off to a rocky start, yielding two runs in the first in- ning but thereafter he muffled the Yankee bats on three hits until the ninth when they scored their final run on a double and a sin- gle. Kramer walked only three and fanned six including the side in the ninth. Vern Stephens led the Sox ten- hit assault against three Yankee pitchers by driving in five runs on a homer, single and two flyouts. Vic Raschi, boasting a nine game winning streak, started for the Yankees and the Sox promptly slugged him for two runs in the first inning. Ted Williams' single in the third was his only hit of the game in five tries but it enabled him to stretch his consecutive game knitting streak to 16. The Chicago Cubs lashed out from their lowly cellar position with unexpected fury today when they made it two straight over the St. Louis Cardinals with a deci- sive 9-1 victory. Ralph Hamner scattered six hits while his mates pounded Jim Hearn and four successors for 13 solid wallops. One of the blows I-M Softball Fraternity League Gamma Delta 6, Theta Delta Chi 0. Theta Chi 13, Alpha Chi Sigma 12. pelta Tau Delta 7, Psi Upsilon 3. Independent League Fletcher Hall 17, Goosers 12. Chiefs 20Q Hell Cats 5. Hadrocks 21, Robert Owen Coop 3. Chemistry 3, Hot Papa's 2. that knocked Hearn out of the box in the third innings was Gene Muach's first major league home run. It came with one aboard. The frail-looking Hamner fanned eight while registering his third victory in five starts. He was in serious trouble only once and that was due to a lapse of control. He walked the first three Cardi- nals to face him in the sixth, but only one, Stan Musial, tallied on a long fly by Don Lang. The Philadelphia Phillies took advantage of 12 walks today to hand the Brooklyn Dodgers their fourth straight defeat, 13-4. The victory cost the Phils the services of Dutch Leonard, their veteran knuckleball artist, for an indefinite period. Leonard was struck on the head in the third in- ning by one of Harry Taylor's pitches and was carried from the field. He was rushed to Swedish Hospital where it was said he ad suffered no fracture but would be hospitalized four days. Late Scores AMERICAN LEAGUE Cleveland . . 200 000 000-2 5 0 Detroit .. . .000 000 000-0 0 2 Lemon and Hegan; Houtte- man and Swift. Chicago ............... 1 8 1 St. Louis ...............2 8 1 Gettel and Robinson; Sanford and Moss. NATIONAL LEAGUE New York .............1 7 0 Boston ................3 10 0 Jansen, Kennedy, (5), Jones (7) and Cooper; Voiselle and Salkeld. 50,000 Sit Stunned As Tribe Aee Baffles Benaals Converted Outfielder Walks Only Three; Houtte>lan Is Tagged With 10th Loss , DETROIT, June 30-(/P)-Big Bob Lemon, who wasn't good enough to be an outfielder or a third baseman for the Cleveland Indians, pitched the first no-hit, no-run game of the Major League season to- night as he blanked the Detroit Tigers 2 to 0. The 27-year-old righthander, who now sports a record of 11 wins and six losses, almost had a perfect game as only three Tigers ~-w~t----~ ~. . - ________________________ reached base, all on walks. A crowd of 49;628 sat tensely game as Lemon worked methodi- cally towards the goal of every Major League twirler. When the final Tiger out was made on a toss from Lemon to first baseman Johnny Berardino, they gave Lemon a tremendous ovation.. His teammates raced to Lem- on's side, with Manager Lou Boudreau the first to reach him and hug him enthusiastically. Hundreds of fans rushed out onto the field to shake Lemon's hand, but a cordon of police and players rushed the big pitcher to the Cleveland dressing room. Lemon was the calmest person in the room as players, newspaper- men and a few spectators jammed into the small space to discuss his no-hit, no-run game-the first in a Detroit Major League ball park since 1922. Queried as to whether he knew that he was bidding for a no-hit- ter as the game progressed, Lem- on said: "The fellows on the bench wouldn't talk to me from the sixth inning on. I thought at the time it was funny, but didn't quite know what was happening. Boy, oh boy, what a thrill it was when that last out was made...." All the scoring came in the first inning as the Indians pushed over two unearned runs to give Lemon a headstart. It was all the big righthander needed, as he had the Tigers swinging futilely for the rest of the distance. Falkenburg in. Wimbledon Finals LONDON, June 30-(P)-Bob Falkenburg of Hollywood, Calif., and Jack -Bromwich of Australia stumbled into the finals of the men's championships at Wimble- don today. They won two semi- final exhibitions as bad as the old place ever saw. Falkenburg took just one hour and 15 minutes to polish off Gardnar Mulloy of Miami, Fla., 6-4, 6-4, 8-6. The Florida veteran not only was sadly off his game but he had no luck, which made it worse. through the latter innings of the It was a tough loss for Art Houtteman, hard-luck man of the Detroit Tiger mound staff, as he yielded only two runs and five hits. The Tigers kicked in two errors in the initial inning to get Houtte- man into trouble. It was the first time a Detroit team had been held hitless in 26 years. Lemon's hitless performance is the first in the majors since Bill MeCahan of the Philadel- phia Athletics blanked thi Washington Senators without a hit Sept. 3, 1947. It marked the third straight year an Indian hurler had pitched a no-hitter. Feller hurled his sec- ond one of his career against the New York Yankees in 1946 and Black held the Athletics hitless last year. Other Cleveland pitchers in the record books with no hitters are Bob Feller, Wes Ferrell, Ray Cald- well, Addie Joss, Don Black, Bob Rhoades. Feller and Joss achieved the feat twice. Detroit Lures Top Golf Pros DETROIT, June 30-- (/P) - All but a handful of the nation's ranking golf professionals moved into Detroit today for the first an- nual $15,000 Motor City Open, and it went without saying that the man to beat was the mighty mite, Ben Hogan. Hogan, who already this sum- mer has grabbed two big national titles, the Open and PGA, heads a field of 92 pros and 28 amateurs into tomorrow's first of four 18- hole rounds in the 72-hole stroke play test. Single rounds are on the daily program, Thursday through Sunday. Definite threats back of Hogan for the top prize of $2,600 in the scramble over the hilly 6,616-yard Meadowbrook Country Club lay- out are such luminaries as Jimmy Demaret, the crooning Texan from Ojai, Calif. ON SALE TODAY! R Featuring Names, Phone Numbers, Home Addresses at the Lowest Price in Years.. B UY IT ON THE CAMPUS TODAY My Request TlpsEscaru NEW YORK, June 30-(P)--{ Without Citation or Coaltown to worry about, Ben Whitaker's My Request romped to a length and a half victory over Escadru today in the $20,000 added Shevlin Stakes for three year olds at Aqueduct. Jet Black was third in the 11 horse field. PALO ALTO, Calif., June 30- (/P)-Defending champion Dave Barclay of the University of Mich- igan defeated Howard Verutti of San Jose State 5 and 3 today in the first round of the 1948 Na- tional Collegiate Golf Tourna- ment. Barclay, who qualified for the match play automatically al- though competing in the medal rounds to help his school in the team scoring, gained a 1-hole lead on Verutti on the first nine. Picks Up 4 He went to the front with a par 4 on the sixth, where his rival went one over. The Michigan entry had a 38 against Verutti's 39 on - the outgoing Stanford course nine. Wins Match on Birdie His birdie 3 on the 15th made it 5 up and the match. Verutti failed to win a single hole, the others being halved. Michigan football player Pete Elliott continued to show his com- petitive ability in a widely diver- gent sport by, defeating Ross Col- lins, North Texas State, 1 up in a tight match that went the full round. Elliott carded 39-37-76 against Collins' 39-39-78. I i i1 ,:, '. Y^ 30 Balls 50e, 65 Balls $1 (Includes Use of Clubs) No Waiting - 30 Tees Lighted for Night Play IHlOP'S HAVEN GOLF DiRIVING RANGE 3200 Washtenaw Last of Warner Dairy Styled in genuine leather $10 and $15 .5 ___________ti ____ _________ IL 1i, tihctlt Ilan / oveh i' Ma jor. League Standings Yesterday's Games Boston 7, New York 3 Washington at Philadelphia (Night) Cleveland at Detroit (Night) Chicago at St. Louis (Night) i AMERICAN LEAGUE Yesterday's Games Chicago 9, St. Louis 1 Philadelphia 13, Brooklyn 4 New York at Boston (Night) Only Games Scheduled NATIONAL LEAGUE *Cleveland . . *Philadelphia. New York ... Boston..... . *Washington *Detroit ..... *St. Louis ... Chicago . , . . f ei i t e r c W L 38 23 40 27 38 26 32 29 30 34 29 33 23 38 19 39 Pet. .623 .597 .594 .525 .469 .468 .377 .328 G.3. .1. 1, 1% 6 91 / 9 ! 15 17 bi *Boston ..... Sit. Louis .... Pittsburgh.... *New York .. Philadrlphia.. Brooklyn .... Cincinnati .. Chicago .... . W 36 35 33 32 33 27 29 27 L 27 28 29 29 33 33 36 37 Pet. .571 .556 .532 .525 .500 .450 .446 .422 G.B. 1 2% 3 4% 7/ 8 912 f Fs V. 1 .{v. $.: ti {>' . . J +-0Wa: " z >i ii " ;' :}; . . " ¢: t ^c , :' : .., , x .;:: 1 ' s: ( I . r: . Q . ' r:: r >,: R} .: s : '> * z a z;'3. l '> . '' :. ' 4 r ? DO N fB Q R Nt19 " ANIMA' ,4 i ... 'l.. y°. '"""' Better Way to Cool Off! 5 (*-playing night games) Today's Games Boston at New York-Dobson (9-4) vs. Hiller (1-0). Washington at Philadelphia- (Night) -Scarborough (5-4) vs. Brissie (6-6). Cleveland at Detroit--Muncrief (5-1) vs. Trout (7-8). Chicago at St. Louis -- (night) --Pieretti (1-3) or Papish (0-1) vs. Stephens (2-4). Today's Games New York at Boston-Hartung (4-4) or Kennedy (0-2) vs. Sain (9-5). Philadelphia at Brooklyn - Rowe (3-3) vs. Behrman (0-0). Pittsburgh at Cincinnati -- Os- termueller (3-2) vs. Wehmeier (5-3). St. Louis at Chicago-Dickson (6-5) vs. Chipman (1-0). I ' 4 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING FOR SALE FORDOR Model A. Good condition. $150. Phone 2-0765 after 7 p.m. )48 RUSSIAN Linguaphone Course For Sale. Almost unused. $35.00 Call 2-0647. )43 '35 CHEVROLET, four-door, good motor, $150. Phone 2-8434. 535 Church St. )44 TYPEWRITER - Remington portable, year and a half old. $20 under list price. 2-7293. )66 WHIZZER BIKE; Schwinn-built; Ac- cessories; Nearly New. Sacrifice. Call 2-9750. )55 PUCCINI'S 'Boheme' and Tosca com- plete recordings with Gigli & Co. Total price: $30.00. George Murdoch, 315 N. State, 6284, evenings. )65 FOR SALE W. CARL RUFUS COTTAGE, furnished. at Crooked Lake with 80-foot water frontage, 5 miles west of Chelsea. Restricted wooded lots. Private road. Call Detroit, VInewood 1-5890 or write Herman D. Rufus, 191 Richter Street, River Rouge 18, Mich. )56 GAS STOVE, 4-burner, A&B, $40. Wash- ing machine, Universal with many new parts, $65. Small child's tri- cycle, $3.50. Combination bottle-gas and coal and wood table-top model stove, practically new, $125. Every- thing in good condition. Call 2- 9020. )38 LOST AND FOUND SLIDE RULE. Tan leather case. Near Wikel Drug, June 22. Reward. Call ROOMS FOR RENT NEAR University for worker or student. Double suite furnished for one or two men available for rent now. Shower. Plenty of Hot Water, Rent Reasonable. Call at 509 S. Division St., near Jefferson St.}3 HELP WANTED SHOE SALESMAN. experienced, to work part-time. Jacobson's. )63 TRANSPORTATION RIDE wanted from Plymouth to Univ. and return. Write Box 122 Daily. RIDER to San Francisco wanted to share expenses and driving. Leaving July 3. Dr. John Merritt, 2-0750. )61 r 1.:: zt. , . : ' s <: :-: -: ,'> 3 t < " x,.... ' >" : : Hot "Summer Daze" won't slow up men who keep cool, crisp, well- dressed in whisper weight Haspel suits. Easily cleaned for constantly fresh, smartly groomed use. Seersucker and Cords ...$20.50 Sir Preme .............$25.50 (Celanese and Cotton) All Celanese .... .......$28.50 CLOSED SATURDAYS at 1 :00 P.M. 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