THE 'MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE TIMIUE Here We Go Again: DiMa g Homers as Yankees Win FINISH FOR 'M': Olson, LeClair Beaten In NCAA Links Play Joe Hammers Fourth in T hree Days; Tigers Blast Indians;Dodgers Lose (Special to The Daily) AMES, Ia.-A pair of Michigan golfers, Bob Olson and Keith Le- Clair were eliminated yesterday in the hot battle for the National Collegiate championship here. They were the lone members of the Wolverine team, Big Nine champions and fourth place fin- ishers in the National Team cham- pionships here, to survive the first round of thermatch play tourney. OLSON LOST to Harvie Ward of North Carolina who has now advanced to the quarter-finals play while LeClair was dropped by Bill Johnston of Utah who went to defeat in subsequent play. In other matches, Arnold Pal- mer, the tournament medalist from Wake Forest swept through two rounds to enter the quarter finals. The 19 year old Latrobe, Pa., lad strayed above par for the first time in a 2-up second round victory over Harold Spears of Georgia. But he re- turned to form in the afternoon for a 5 and 4 triumph over Tom Sullivan of Miami (Fla.) Uni- versity. Sullivan, like his opponent the son of a professional, couldn't chip shot that cinched him a birdie 3 on the 18th green. Veech advanced into the third round by stopping Al Littleton, Wichita University, 2 up. GARDNER DICKINSON, Louis- iana State's co-medalist of 1948, toppled Dave Dennis of Kansas, 7 and 5, to get a quarterfinal pair- ing with Ward. Dickinson was a 2 and 1 winner over Dick Turner, Oklahoma A. & M., in the morn- ing. Hottest golf of the day was fired by Norris Williams, Jr., the slender University of Texas boy. Williams dipped to three under par to oust Fred Wampler, Pur- due's Big Ten co-ehampion, 5 and 3, in the second round, and cooled off only a little in the afternoon when he shot even par for a 5 and 4 decision over Bob McCall of Colgate. BUSTER REED of North Texas State defeated his teammate, Palmer Lawrence, 2 and 1, and will play Williams this morning in the first lower bracket quarter- through Bill Smith, University of Texas, 7 and 5, in the second round. Dave Laflin, another Purdue sophomore, smashed the hopes of Johnston, the Skyline Con- ference champion from the Uni- versity of Utah. Laflin won 5 and 4 after leading 3 up at the turn. Laflin's second round vic- (Chicago) 1 up in 19 holes. E Laflin will get together with Eli Bariteau, San Jose State senior, in the fourth match in the morning. Bariteau, who will be 21 today eliminated Bob Travenick of Southern California, 5 and,. 4, in the third round after beating Al Besselink, Miami (Fla.), 1 up. Two 18-hole rounds will be played again today with the two finalists determined in afternoon semifinals. I-M NEWS Two forfeit games were included among yesterday's intramural fra- ternity league contests. Zeta Beta Tau and Lambda Chi Alpha were given 7-0 forfeit vic- tories when their respective op- ponents, Sigma Chi and Phi Gamma Delta, failed to show up. One run was the margin of tri- umph for both the Phi Kappa Psis and Strauss Hall. The Phi Kappa Psis defeated Theta Xi, 6 to 5, while Strauss shaded Gamma, 5 to 4. In the other three games, seven or more runs separated the two opponents. Alpha Chi Sigma blast- ed Theta Delta Chi, 11 to 4; Phi Kappa Tau drubbed Theta Chi, 15-2; and Prescott House set the night's pace in run-production, mesmerizing Hayden House, 17- 4. KOKOS KAUGHT-St. Louis Browns outfielder Dick Kokos (center) is ltagged out by second base- man Cass Michaels of the Chicago White Sox on an attempted steal of second in the eighth inning of Friday night's contest at Comiskey Park. That wasn't enough to stop the Brownies, however, as they went on to win a 1-0 decision. The umpire is veteran Bill McGowan. DOUBLE TROUBLE: Schroeder-Mullov in Wimbledon Finals LONDON-(P)-The top-seededl American team of Ted Schroeder and Gardnar Mulloy overcame controversial line decisions and two tough Australians yesterday to reach the finals of the Wimble- don men's doubles tennis cham-! pionship. The Yanks beat peppery Geoff Brown and Billy Sidwell 6-4, 3-6. 6-8, 6-3, 9-7, after escaping from close enough scrapes to last a life- time. * * * CAPPING a glorious comeback, the Americans saved two match points when trailing 6-5 in the BOB OLSON . .eliminated * * 4 match Palmer's one-under par performance in the 14 holes in the Wake Forest boy needed to win. WARD OF NORTH Carolina University, a red-hot rival of Pal- mer's down in the Tarheel State, moved ahead with a 2 up victory over Bo Wininger of Oklahoma A. & M., three-time champion of the Missouri Valley Conference. Tommy Veech, the 250-pound Notre Dame boy, earned a quar- ter final engagement with Pal- mer, by eliminating John Hare, Purdue sophomore, 1 up. Veech licked Hare with a beautiful HAIR-CUTS TO FIT YOUR PERSONALITY and individual whims!! Plenty Barbers-No Waiting!! The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State Theater Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE AMERICAN LEAGUE G W. L. Pet. G.B. WV L Pet. GB Brooklyn ......41 26 .612 ... New York .....44 24 .647 ... St. Louis ......40 27 .597 1 Philadelphia .. .39 30 .565 512 Philadelphia ... 38 32 .543 42 Detroit ........38 31 .551 61z Boston ........ 38 32 .543 42 Cleveland .....35 30 .538 72 New York... 33 34 .493 8 Boston.........35 31 .530 8 Cincinnati .....27 38 .415 13 Washington .. .31 35 .470 12 Pittsburgh . . . .27 39 .409 1312 Chicago........27 42 .391 171/ Chicago .......26 42 .382.15'1 St. Louis ......20 46 .303 23 TODAY'S RESULTS TODAY'S RESULTS Boston 3-6, New York 0-2. Detroit 12, Cleveland 6. Philadelphia 4, Brooklyn 2. New York 6, Boston 3. Chicago 12, St. Louis 5. St. Louis at Chicago not sched- Pittsburgh 2, Cincinnati 0. uled. PROBABLE PITCHERS PROBABLE PITCHERS Brooklyn at New York-New- New York at Washington combe (5-1) vs. Koslo (3-2). (night)-Lopat (6-4) vs. Hud- co m b (5 1 vs. C os (3- 2). s son (5-6). Pittsburgh at Chicago-Ches-10)oston at Philadelphia a-1 (night)-Stobbs (2-1) vs. Brissie Philadelphia at Boston (night) (8-3). -Borowy (7-4) vs. Bickford (9- St. Louis at Cleveland (night) 4). -Fannin (2-3) or Ostrowski (2- Cincinnati at St. Louis (night) 3). vs. Benton (2-2). -Raffensberger (7-6) vs. Bre- Chicago at Detroit (night)- cheen (5-5). --Wight (7-5) vs. Hutchinson + Classified Advertising + ROOM AND BOARD 1 . HELP WANTED TASTY HOME-COOKED MEALS-Sani- tary approved AA Health Dept. Mrs. Peachers, 1009 E. Catherine St. Call 2-3782. 2 meals daily 12:15,p.m., 6:15 p.m. Sunday 1:00 p.m. )37 SALES CLERK, male, part - time in Men's Wear store. Experienced. Give qualifications and hours available. FOR RENT Write Box 195, Michigan Daily. )35FO BUSINESS SINGLE ROOM for man, linens and SERVICEStowels furnished, close to campus. SEVCS ~Phone 2-8787. )441 WILL MOW your lawn. Call Yang, SINGLE AND DOUBLE ROOM with 2-3219 betweeny1-ur a. n cooking privileges. Maple furniture. 2-3219 between 11-22 a.m. )42 507 East Liberty. Ph. 5224. )43 TYPEWRITING SERVICE-Student re- ports, theses, dissertations. Phone FOR 6197. ) 28 LAUNDRY - Washing and/or ironing.SALE Done in my own home. Free pick-up__________________ and delivery. Phone 2-9020. )2 BINOCULAR MICROSCOPE - German, TAKEADVNTAE nw oftheSpeial new, modern design. Full optical TAKEAIDVANTAGno of the Special euipmet Call 2251, Ext. 45'i Student Rates on TIME ($5.00 yr. in- 5qupmn.fter l 2-552,t415.'til stead of $6.50), LIFE ($4.75 yr. instead 5_pm._After_6_2-8551._)38 of $6.00) and FORTUNE ($7.50 yr. in- SUMMER SPECIALS at Sam's. Men's stead of $12.50). 50% savings under loafers $3.88; men's moccasins $2.48; newsstand costs. Phone 6007 to order. navy T-shirts 49c; wash slacks $2.99. Student Periodical Agency. )39 Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington. )36 HOT WEATHER SPECIAL - With an TOWN AND COUNTRY JEEP easy to manage new permanent wave, Unique custom-built convertible, 4- cut and styled especially for you, you wheel drive. Highest bid takes it. Call can beat the summer heat. Our regu- 25-9383 after 6. )22 lar $15 permanent waves now $10.- $12.50 now $8.50. Rainey's Beauty NEED CASH-Must sell tennis racquet, Salon, 1031 E. Ann. Air-conditioned. radio that wakes you to music, pho- Ph. 2-3725. Open evenings by ap- tographic equipment. Call Bob 2- pointment. )32P 8429. ) 45 deciding set. They were stoutly encouraged by many of the 17,000 usually sedate English fans who demonstrated against what they considered raw decisions by lines- men and umpire. The other men's semi-final was put over to today, inasmuch as none of the participants is concerned with the singles final between Schroeder and Jaroslav Drobny of Czechoslovakia. Pancho Gonzales and Frankie Parker of Los Angeles are favored to oust Budge Patty, still another Los Angeles product, and Eric Sturgess of South Africa, and thus make tomorrow's final an all- American affair. BEFORE AND AFTER yester- day's two and a half hour men's duel, Mrs. Margaret Osborne Du- Pont of Bellevue, Del., and Louise Brough of Beverly Hills smashed into the women's singles final with one-sided victories over a pair of less talented Americans. Mrs. DuPont routed Mrs. Hel- en Pedersen Rihbany of Bos- ton, 6-2, 6-2, scoring with every- thing except aces. They were unnecessary. Louise, defending champion, qualified for her third Wimbledon singles final in four years by knocking Mrs. Pat Todd of La Jolla, Calif, off the court in 28 minutes, 6-3, 6-0. The women's doubles was boiled down on the sun browned courts to the semi-finals. Three teams are American and one British. * * * MRS. RIHBANY and Shirley Fry of Akron, Ohio, beat Mrs. Molly Blair and Jean Quertier of Britain, 6-3, 5-7, 11-9. Joy Gan- non and Mrs. Betty Hilton beat Mrs. P. F. Glover and Mrs. Mar- got Gordon, 6-2, 6-2, in an all- British quarterfinal. By The Associated Press BOSTON-The devastating bat of Joltin' Joe DiMaggio did it again yesterday. The great Yankee Clipper, for the third straight day, crashed a home run in Fenway Park, to lead the league-leading New York Yan- I kees to a 6-3 victory over the Bos- ton Red Sox. The circuit clout, his fourth since entering the lineup for the first time this season last Tues- day, came with two on in the seventh inning, and provided the winning margin. The victory enabled the Yankees to sweep the three-game series from the Sox, and put them eight games in front of the club Yankee manager Casey Stengel regards as the one to beat for the flag. DiMaggio's sensational slug- ging climaxed a three-day hit- ting spree that gave the star centerfielder a total of five hits in 11 official times at bat, and nine runs batted in. His last four hits all have been for the distance. Joe's four - baggers were responsible for the Yan- kees winning the first two games. DiMaggio's four homers also gave him a major league total of 307 to tie him with Johnny Mize of the New York Giants for the most round trippers by an active player. a CLEVELAND - The Detroit Ti- gers moved back into third place in the American League yesterday on a splurge of 17 hits which snowed the Cleveland Indians un- der, 12-6. The Tigers punished four Cleve- land pitchers, but starter Early Wynn, big righthander, was charg- ed with the loss. He was chased from the mound in the second inning. Rightfielder Vic Wertz poled out his ninth home run, two doubles and a single in five times up to drive in five Detroit runs. Winning pitcher Art Hout- teman got three singles in five trips and drove in two tallies. Four unearned runs after third baseman Lou Boudreau's fumble at the start of the fourth inning gave the Tigers an 8-2 lead, and they coasted on to triumph from there. * * * PHILADELPHIA - Ken Heintz- elman ended a four-game Phila- delphia losing streak as well as a four-game Brooklyn winning skein today, pitching the Phils to a 4-2 victory over the Dodgers. The veteran southpaw scattered five hits for his ninth triumph. The Phillies broke a 2-2 tie in the eighth inning when starter Joe Hatten was knocked out. R.ichie Ashburn beat out a bunt for his third hit, and when Billy Cox threw wild into right field, Ashburn took an extra base. Gran Hamner sacrificed and Dick Sisler's second double scored Ashburn. With Jack Banta on the mound, Del Ennis got his third hit to bring in Sisler. ST. LOUIS-Right Fielder Hank Edwards caught fire here yester- day and led the Chicago Cubs to a 12-5 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals. Edwards slammed two home runs, scored five times out of five trips to the plate and drove in four tallies. The round trippers, one in the fourth and the other in the sev- enth inning, brought Edward's to- tal f or this year to seven. His first yesterday was poled on a three and nothing pitch with no one on. The second scored Hank Sauer, who had singled to center. PITTSBURGH-The Pirates got only four hits off Howie Fox yes- terday, but they bunched three of them in the sixth inning to beat Cincinnati 2-1. Aside from that fateful sixth, Fox showed the fans a master- piece of pitching. He cut down the first 13 Pirates to face him, before Westlake tripled in the fifth. He got the next four, too, and had two out in the sixth when Pete Castiglione and ohnny Hopp singled. Rookie Dino Restelli then dou- bled to left center with the decid- ing blow. NEW YORK - Boston's Braves swept a double-header from the New York Giants yesterday, 3-0 and 6-2, to move into a third place tie with the Philadelphia Phillies. Bill Voiselle and Elbie Fletcher, two men the Giants practically gave away, collaborated to win the first game. Voiselle, traded away by the Giants two years ago for a useless Mort Cooper, blanked his old mates with four hits. Fletcher, sold by the Giants to the Braves a month ago, accoun- ted for all Boston's runs. He slam- med a three-run homer off Hank Behrman in the fifth. , * * * - WASHINGTON - Washington exploded for four runs with two out in the eighth inning to de- feat Philadelphia, 8-6, last night. The loss dropped the second place Athletics 512 games back of the New York Yankees. Dick Fowler, bidding for a sev- enth successive win, was the victim of the Senators' uprising. With two out in the eighth and the score locked at 4-4, Sam Dente beat out a bunt and Al Evans walked. Dick Weik, rookie pitcher who won his first game of the year, singled to left, scoring Dente. Gil Coan fol- lowed with a looping triple to center, scoring Evans and Weik, then stole home. Philadelphia . surged back with two runs in the ninth when Nel- son Fox and Wally Moses walked, Eddie Joost doubled and Taft Wright grounded out, but Weik checked the rally. Girl Who Shot Phils' Waitkus CHICAGO-AP)-Eddie Waitkus' most fanatical admirer was sent away for mental treatment yester- day almost as quickly as she shot the first baseman in a hotel room 16 days ago. Between 10 a.m. and 2 p.m. these things happened to Miss Ruth Ann Steinhagen, 19-year-old former typist who bore a secret crush on thePhiladelphia Phillies' first baseman for two years: 1. She and Waitkus, who was in a wheelchair recuperating from a .22 caliber rifle bullet wound, met socially for the second time in the felony courtroom of Judge Matthew D. Hartigan. 2.hAf ter a brief hearing at which Waitkus told of the strange assault, Judge Hartigan fixed the girl's bond at $50,000 and held her for action by the grand jury on a charge of as- sault with intent to murder. 3. The Cook County (Chicago) Grand Jury voted a true bill which was returned before Chief Justice James J. McDermott of the crim- inal court as an indictment for assault with intent to murder. 4. A criminal court jury of six men and six women adjudged the girl insane. Judge McDer- mott ordered her committed to the Kankakee State Hospital for treatment. 5. At 2 p.m. she arrived at Kan- kakee Hospital. U C Batting Leaders Player Team AB H Robinson, Dodgers . .271 99 Kell, Tigers.......235 83 Kiner, Pirates.....236 82 Schoendienst, Cards. 269 92 DiMaggio, Red Sox .256 85 Wertz, Tigers ......275 90 Pct. .365 .353 .347 .342 .332 .327 " Official Michigan Rings Michigan mugs and souvenirs v Medals, Cups and Trophies O O Fraternity Jewelry Hours 12:30 to 5:30, Mon.-Fri. o L. 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