SUNDAY, JULY 3, 1949 THE MICHIGAN DAILY - - -------- :Kolloway s Single in 11th Gives igers IJiMa ,. Diffaggio Named to All Star Squad by Boudreau SOME SWEETIE! Cantrell Wmins Gold Cup Piloting 'My Sweetie' Yankees, Dodgers Increase Leads K,' _________ __________________________ CHICAGO--(P)-Joltin' Joe Di- maggio, now in a roaring come- back after being a fixture among the New York Yankee halt and lame, will be back doing business as usual at the All-Star stand in, Brooklyn July 12. The re-winged Yankee clipper yesterday was named to the-Amer- ican League squad for baseball's Major League classic in a special appointment by All-Star manager Williams Meets Ward Today For Link Title AMES, Ia.-(P)-Slender Mor- ris Williams, Jr., a 19-year-old University of Texas student, and Harvie Ward of North Carolina, a tourney veteran at 23, will clash today for the National Collegiate Golf Championship. They came through today with semifinal round triumphs on the treacherous 6,055 yard Iowa State College course. * * * WARD, WHOSE HOME is in Tarboro, N.C., and who was the 1948 North-South amateur cham- pion, did not have serious trouble in eliminating Tommy Veech, the big boy from Notre Dame, 4 and They halved the first five holes before Ward won two in a row and never lost his lead after that. Veech had defeated Arnold Palmer, Wake Forest's tourna- ment medalist in the quarter finals. Williams earned his champion- shi? match position with a sizzling comeback to' oust Eli Bariteau, 20- year-old California amateur cham- pion representing San Jose State, 1 up on the 18th green. * * * BARITEAU fired a sub par blast at Williams that was good for a three hole lead at the end of 11 holes. Eli was three under par at that point and Williams was even with perfect figures. Lou Boudreau of the Cleveland In- dians. * * * , DI MAGGIO, named to 10 prev- ious All-Star contests, didn't get a tumble in the recent poll of 4,637,000 fans for the simple rea-' son that the "grandstand coaches" figured the only way he could get to the game was in a wheel-chair. So Boudreau used his preroga- tive of selecting whomever he chose beyond the, eight non- pitching starters picked by the fans. Boudreau, in a statement re- leased through the American League office, emphasized that picking outfielder DiMaggio was just a matter of honoring a great Elliott To Coach CORVALLIS, Ore.-()-The Oregon State College footall caching staff was completed to- day with the appointment of Pete Elliott, Michigan Star, as end coach. Though he played right half and quarterback at Michigan, Elliott will be end coach here. He may also be one of the chief scouts. player. He invited DiMag to join the squad more than two weeks ago, well before Joe bounced out off the crippled list with his big war-club booming this week. * * * "DI MAGGIO SAID he would like to be on the All-Star squad," explained Boudreau. "I felt he be- longed on it, even though he had not played because of injury (for the Yankees first 65 games), and I wanted him on the teamI'm to manage. Under the mandate of the fans, Boudreau must play the outfield of Boston's Ted Williams and Dom DiMaggio in left and center, and New York's Tom Henrich in right for the first three innings. THUS, THE PROSPECT is that big Joe will come into the game as a replacement for "little brother" Dom, who did a whale of a job maintaining the DiMaggio prestige during Joe's injured-heel conva- lescing respite. DETROIT - (M) - Wild Bill Cantrell, who is equally at home in a racing car or a speedboat, drove his My Sweetie to victory in the 42nd annual Gold Cup speed- boat race yesterday. Cantrell won the second and third heats of the 90 mile race after finishing third in the opening 30-mile sprint. Cantrell piled up 1425 points in the speedboat classic to edge out R. Stanley Dollar, Jr.'s Skip-A- Long which finished second in each of the three heats. SUCH CRUST I of Detroit, driv- en by Danny Arena, won the opening heat, but wound up in the show position in the final two runs. Dollar had 1,300 points and Arena 850. Cantrell got a bad break in the opening heat when his foot throttle broke, but he completed emergency repairs as most of the field lapped him, and came back strongly for the No. 3 spot. In the last two heats, Cantrell got off to a big lead by beautiful All Stars Two Michigan stars, guard and captain Dom Tomasi and tackle Joe Soboleski, and Ohio State's. captain,. guard. Dave Templeton, have been named to the all-star football squad. handling of his craft at the take- off. In each case, he moved into a fairly sizeable lead in the first of the 12 laps and won easily. CANTRELL, WHO drove in the Indianapolis Speedway 500 Mile Race the last two years, gave the rest of the small field a driving lesson as he handled his boat flawlessly. At the end of the first two heats, it was a three-way choice between My Sweetie, Skip-A- Long and Such Crust I to see which would grab the coveted Gold Cup title. Cantrell settled that question in a hurry as he gunned his boat across the starting line of third 30-mile leg and zoomed ar'ound the 21,2 mile course at an 85.731 mile per hour clip for the fastest lap of the race. From then on it was all Can- trell, as the Louisville Marine sales company executive turned back all challenges with ease. Cantrell explained after the race that his trouble in the open- ing heat came when his throttle jammed. He tried to release it, but when this failed he kicked it loose and fed the gas in with a hand lever while steering with one hand the rest of the way. B roughTakes Womens Title At Wimbledon LONDON-0P)-Louise Brough, the Beverly Hills, Calif., Blonde outlasted Margaret Osborne du Pont of Wilmington, Del., 10-8, 1-6, 10-8, in a gruelling duel to win the women's singles title in the Wimbledon tennis champion- ship yesterday. It was the second straight Wim- bledon triumph for the sturdy Miss Brough. She thus joined Ted Schroeder of La Cresenta, Calif., ,who cap- tured the men's singles yesterday, in giving Americans a virtual mo- nopoly on the ancient British court championships. Frank Parker and Pancho Gon- zales of Los Angeles whipped Schroeder and Gardnar Mulloy of Miami, Fla., in the men's doubles, 6-4, 6-4, 6-2, while Miss Brough and Mrs. du Pont took the wo- men's doubles with an 8-6, 7-5 victory over Gussie Moran of San- ta Monica, Calif., and Mrs. Pat Todd of La Jolla, Calif. By The Associated Press The Detroit Tigers took over third place, from the Cleveland Indians, edging the Chicago White Sox, 7-6, in 11 innings as the In- dians bowed, 4-2, to the St. Louis Browns. Don Kolloway, formerly of the White Sox, broke up the game when he singled home George Kell in the third extrasframehatgDe- troit. Pat Mullin sent the game first when Ted Williams tripled and scored on Vern StephensF single. The A's took the lead in the third, scoring twice on singles by Mike Guerra, Don White, Ferris Fain and Sam Chapman. THE LOSS SPOILED bonus lefty Charles Stobbs' celebration of his 20th birthday. The Sox are ten full games behind the Yanks. Karl Drews, with aid in the ninth from Ned Garver, stopped the Indians on three hits. Drews hit a batter and walked another and had two balls on Larry Doby when Garver came on. Garver completed the walk to Doby, got Joe Gordon to fly out, yielded a single to Lou Boudreau and then induced Bob Kennedy to force Doby at third for the final out. Bob Lemon started for Cleve- land and was trailing, 1-0, going into .the top of the ninth when he was tagged for a three run homer by Roy Sievers. * * * WASHINGTON PITCHERS held Joe DiMaggio homerless for the second straight game yesterday but the Yankee Clipper drove home four runs on a pair of singles to spark the New York Yankees to a 10-2 triumph over the Sen- ators. DiMaggio, who was named to the American League's All-Star team before the game, singled home two runs in the first in- ning and delivered two more in the eighth with his second hit. Between the two safeties Di- Maggio flied out twice and grounded out once. Since he began playing last Tuesday, DiMaggio has driven home 13 runs in five games and has extended a hitting streak that began last season to 18 consecutive games. THE NATIONAL League's front- running Brooklyn Dodgers came from behind and beat the New York Giants, 13-8, in a home run battle at the Polo Grounds. Each team belted four homers. After the Giants had built up an 8-4 lead on round-trippers by Bobby Thomson, Sid Gordon, Ray Mueller and Willard Mar- shall in the first five innings, the Dodgers went to, town. Gene Hermansky tied the count at 8-8 with a grand slam homer in the sixth. Pee Wee Reese broke the tie with his tenth round- tripper in the eighth and Carl Furillo and Reese insured the ver- HAIR-CUTS TO FIT YOUR PERSONALITY and individual whims!! Plenty Barbers-No Waiting!! The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State Theater DON KOLLOWAY . ..singled in the eleventh into overtime with a homer in the bottom of the ninth. * * * LEFTY TOMMY BYRNE went the distance for the Yanks to gain his sixth triumph. Byrne yielded seven hits and walked seven batters. The Senators scored both of their runs in the third when Sam Mele clubbed a two-out triple with two on. The victory was the Yankees' fifth straight and it enabled them to maintain their five- and one-half game lead over the runnerup Philadelphia Athletics. The A's downed the Boston Red Sox, 3-1, behind the four-hit pitching of Joe Coleman. Coleman gave up a run in the OPENING WEDNESDAY Hilarious Comedy ie sth 9aM e,' BY LINDSAY AND CROUSE Wednesday thru Saturday Admission $1.20 - 90c - 60c (tax incl.) Box office open 10-5 (except Sunday and July 4) Lydia Mendelssohn Theater DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) positions by Mozart, DeCrucz, and Beethoven. Student Recital: Albert Buswell, graduate student of tuba with Harold Ferguson, will present a program at 8:00 p.m., Wednesday, July 6, in the Rackham Assembly Hall, in partial fulfillment of the requirements for, the Master of Music degree. His program will include composition's by Galliard, Busser, Barat, Morel, Tournemire, Clerisse, and Ibert. Exhibitions Museum of Art, Alumni Memor- ial Hall. Drawings by Isamu No- guchi (July 7-31). Islamic pot- tery from the collection of the College of Architecture and De- sign. Rackham Galleries. Paintings by Willard MacGregor, Visiting Professor of Piano, School of Mu- sic (July 8-August 5), East Gal- lery. Architecture Building. Exhibit of student work in design and in city planning. (June 9-August 13). University Museums Building, rotunda. Arctic birds, by George Miksch Sutton. (Continued on Page 4) Hall, p.m. Wednesday, July 6, at 8:00 The program includes com- TYPEWRITERS Office and Portable Models of all makes paired, pieRented STATIONERY & SUPPLIES G. I. Requisitions Accepted O. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. + Classified Advertising +i FOR SALE k Wi ,---° .{ COOL! STARTS TODAY! BIOLOGY TEACHERS! The micro- scope you need. B&L 3-obj., medical, mech. stage. New. 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