1949 THE MICHIGAN DAILY P, Dodgers Up, Cardinals Down in See-Saw NL Race (. > JOINS HAEFNER: Newsom Through With Washington Organization Brooklyn Wins in Tenth; Phillies Blank Cards, 1-0 Indians Drop A's on Lemon's Three-Hitter; Red Sox Defeat Tigers, 5-2, Yankees Win WASHINGTON - (P) - The Washington Senators' perplexing problem child, Louis (Bobo) New- som, is a problem no longer, Pres- ident Clark Griffith said yester- day. "When Newsom walked out on Chattanooga (the Senators' Class AA farm club in the Southern Association), he walked out on any possiblec hance of recall by the Senators," said the 79-year- old prexy. GRIFFITH, who recently fired. Schalon Loses Ace byInches Ed Schalon, captain of the Michigan golf squad and Western Conference co-champion, came within a foot of a hole-in-one yes- terday as he teamed with profes- sional Fred Hunter to put on an exhibition at the Ann Arbor Mu- nicipal course. Schalon put twelve of his first thirteen drives on the green of the 16th hole and wound up with a total of 90% of his drives on tar- get. Hunter's best shot was ten feet from the tee. The exhibition was staged in conjunction with the annual hole- in-one golf tournament to be held at the Ann Arbor course. The tournament is open to the public. DAILY OFFICI (Continued from Page 2)1 hurler Mickey Haefner for an "in- different performance," said the same of Newsom that he did of Haefner: "He'll never wear a Washing- ton uniform again." Haefner is now at home in New Athens, Ill., waiting to see what happens to himself. NEWSOM, who has a 10-7 rec- ord with the Lookouts this season, refused to accompany the team to Little Rock earlier yesterday. Chattanooga president Joe Engle then promptly "suspended Newsom for the season and fined him," Griffith said. In announcing Newsom's sus- pension in Chattanooga yester- day, Engle said. "Before he can go (to some other team), some club has got to want him. I have tried to make a deal for him and I gave him permission to make a deal for himself." Griffith emphasized that as far as the Senators farm system is concerned the righthander is strictly saleable merchandise. "He may get back in the major leagues with another club," said Griff, "because he's definitely for sale." NEWSOM TOLD a Chattanooga reporter Wednesday that he was going to seek major league con- nections and that if he did not make them would "quit Chatta- nooga now because there is no future in minor league baseball for me'' [AL BULLEINJ the Bureau of School Services. 4:00 p.m., Auditdrium, University High School. Lecture: "Brittle Failure of Plates of Ductile Steel: A Problem of Plasticity in Three Dimensions." H. M. Westergaard, Gordon Mac- Kay , Professor of Engineering, Harvard University. 4:00 p.m., Rm. 445 West Engineering Building. Academic Notices Doctoral Preliminary Examina- tions for Students in Education: Preliminary examinations for doc- toral applicants in education will be held August 15, 16, 17. All stu- dents who anticipate taking these examinations must file their names and fields of specialization with the chairman of the Com- mittee on Graduate Studies in Ed- ucation, Rm. 4012, University High School, not later than Aug. 1. Exhibitions Rackham Galleries: Paintings by Willard MacGregor, Visiting Professor of Piano, School of Mu- sic (July 8-August 5), East Gal- lery. Education Conference Textbook Exhibit: Corridors of University High School and University Ele- mentary School buildings. Museum of Art: Drawings by Isamu Noguchi, through July 31; Arabic and Persian Miniatures, through Aug. 3. Alumni Memorial (Continued on Page 4) -Daily-Gene Kiddon QUENT SICKELS ... connects Sickels Slams Homer To Give Frats 8-5 Win Quentin Sickels homer with two mates aboard in the last of the third proved to be the winning punch as the Fraternity All Stars defeated the Independents 8-5 at South Ferry Field last night. Sickels also banged a double in the fifth driving in one more run. * * * BUTLER'S TRIPLE and Harris' single gave the Independents a short-lived one run edge in the top of the first, but the Fraternity All Stars came back to score twice on three errors and one hit. Sickels homer added three more runs to the winner's total in the third, and another brace of hits coupled with two fielder's choices stretched the advantage to 8-1 in the fifth. In the top half of the seventh, Butler homered after McKeachie led off with a single closing the gap to five runs. Successive singles by Pedder and Wulfson garnered another run, and after Schmidt was hit by a pitched ball, Sulli- van returned to the mound to re- lieve Barcman. Bradshaw was hit by a pitched ball, and Carrington singled home Wolfson. Sullivan bore down to fan the next two men and end the game. By The Associated Press BROOKLYN - Mary Rackley singled to open the last half of the 10th inning and scored on a double by Billy Cox to give Brook- lyn a 6-5 victory over the Cin- cinnati Reds last night. The vic- tory coupled with Philadelphia's 1-0 triumph over the St. Louis Cardinals increased the Dodgers' first place lead to a game and a half. Ewell Blackwell blew a two- run lead in the ninth inning as a relief pitcher, then lost in the tenth. Blackwell came in because Howie Fox, who was hit by a pitched ball to startaCincinnati's three-run eighth inning rallyl against Jack Banta, seemed shak- en. Ewell had a 5-3 lead. * * *. , PHILADELPHIA - Del Enmis' home run in the last half of the ninth inning broke up a pitching duel between Kenny Heintzelman and Max Lanier and gave the Philadelphia Phillies a 1-0 vic- tory over the St. Louis Cardinals last night. Ennis' homer, his 13th of the season, came with one out in the ninth and gave Heintzelman his seventh successive pitching vic- tory and his 11th of the season against three setbacks. * * * CLEVELAND--Bob Lemon hurl- ed his 10th victory of the season for the Indians last night, defeat- ing the Philadelphia Athletics and Alex Kellner, 7 to 1. Rookie shortstop Ray Boone hit his third homer for two Tribe runs in the second inn- ing, and Cleveland's centerfielc- er, Larry Doby, swatted his 14th in the fifth. The luckless A's, dropping their sixth straight, could hit safely off Lemon only three times, and two of those hits were in the fifth inn- ing. * * * NEW YORK - Johnny Mize slammed his 14th home run of the season with one on in the first inning last night to lead the New York Giants to a 4-3 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates. John- ny Hopp blasted a three-run hom- er off Larry Jansen in the third to account for all of Pittsburgh's runs. The blow was Hopp's first of the season and the 20th yielded by Jansen. Henry Thompson scored two of the Giant runs, one on his opening round triple and Whi- tey Lockman's single. * * * BOSTON-Dutch Leonard, the Chicago Cubs' hard luck right hander, turned in a four hitter against the Boston Braves to gain his third victory of the season last night by a 3-2 margin. Leonard has been charged with 11 defeats, mostly because of his teammates' feeble hitting. Leonard insured his own tri- umph by singling in Frankie Gustine with the winning run in the eighth. His hit was the 10th and last one made against Vernon Bickford. * * * CHICAGO-The Chicago White Sox scored four runs on one hit in the third inning and went on to trim Washington, 6-2 before 8,004 persons here last night as Billy Pierce scored his second' straight victory and fourth of the season. Sam Mele batted in both Sena- tor runs. Washington outhit Chi- cago 7-6. * * * ST. LOUIS - Allie Reynolds struck out ten batters and yield- ed only three hits in pitching the league-lead&ng New York Yankees to a 5-0 shutout over the St. Louis Browns last night for his tenth victory. *' * * DETROIT - The Boston Red Sox, propelled by Al Zarilla's home run with Bobby Doerr aboard in the eighth, turned back the De- troit Tigers, 5 to 2, last night in the opener of a three-game series. Top-Seeded Court Stars Record Wins CHICAGO - (P) - Defending champion Richard (Pancho) Gon- zales and Frankie Parker, seeded Nos. 1 and 2 respectively, yester- day advanced to the semi-finals of the National Clay Courts Ten- nis Tourney but Pancho got a scare. It took Gonzales five sets and two and a half hours to turn back sixth-seeded Arthur Larsen, a wiry, little southpaw from San Francisco, 3-6, 6-4, 1-6, 6-4, 6-1. * * * PARKER, WHO HAS won this meet five times, had little more CHICAGO --')-Jackie Hayes, star Chicago White Sox infielder until afflicted by blindness in 1942, will have a belated baseball "day" at Comiskey Park Aug. 30 when the Sox meet the Washington Sen- ators in a night game. Hayes. now a collector at Clan- ton, Ala., his wife and his seeing eye dog, Abano, will be brought here as guest of a special commit- tee. He will be presented a purse, now being collected by the com- mittee which has the cooperation of Charles Comiskey, Sox vice- president. HAYES played 14 major league seasons, seven with the Senators and seven with the White Sox. His eye sight began failing in 1940. It first was believed a cin- der impaired his right eye. The ailing eye was removed and, Paton Advances Andy Paton, who captained Michigan's powerful tennis squad last season while play- ing first singles, teamed up with Tony Trabert of Cincinnati to move to the semi-finals in the men's doubles play at Chicago. Paton and Trabert dropped James Brink and Fred Fisher of Seattle in the second round, 6-2, 3-6, 6-4 and then trounced Dick Mouldeous, New Orleans and Dixon Osborn, Tampa, Fla. 6-0, 6-0 in the third round. than a nice workout belting aside Jack Tuero, the National Inter- collegiate Champion from Tulane. 6-1, 6-0, 6-2. Gonzales' semi-final opponent will be Vic Seixas, third seeded star from Philadelphia, who ral- lied today for a 4-6, 6-2, 6-4, 6-1 victory over unseeded Fred Ko- valeski of Hamtramck, Mich. A STAR IS BORN j! ,- r l st gE: ,} { w x 'w E >'a ; REtw }:;;;' ;;:q:::;":Si:+'., ;:;::::::"r. x v . 't'. LET'S GO!.. to the BEER DEPOT BEER -- WINE -- MIXERS DRIVE-THRU COURTEOUS SERVICE NO PARKING Daily 10 A.M. - 10 P.M. - Sunday, Noon - 7 P.M. 114 E. Williams Phone 7191 for a time. Jackie tried to play with one eye. He wore a specially constructed helmet. Finally, his left eye also went blind. DO YOU KNOW... that the Michigan football team has ranked with the top ten teams in the country for the last nine years? Better Late Than Never; Sox Give Hayes a 'Day' ure of Plates of Ductile Steel; a Problem of Plasticity in Three Dimensions," will be held at 4:00 p.m., Friday, July 15; the second entitled "Transient Elastic Waves in Bedrock," will be held at 11:00 a.m., Saturday, July. Both lectures will be held in Room 445, West Engineering Building. All who are interested are invited to attend. Education Conference. General Lecture: "Techniques of Evalua- tion of the Secondary School," Lawrence Vredevoe, Director of Your Hair Is Our Care!! Tonsorial Queries Invited Plenty of Barbers FAN -COOLED The DASCOLA BARBERS Liberty near State TYPEWRITERS Office and P-rtable Models of all makes Sold, Bought, Repaired, Rented STATIONERY & SUPPLIES G. I. Requisitions Accepted 0. D. MORRILL 314 South State St. Major League Standings Parker's semi-final opponent wi be Herh Flam, Beverly Hills, Calif.,a who dorned Hugh Stewart, Pasa- dena, Calif., 6-2, 7-5, 6-2. Parker will meet Flam today. Gonzales and Seixas will not angle until Saturday. * * * WOMEN'S quarterfinal play provided a mild upset as Rosemary Buck of Dallas, Tex., turned back second-seeded Wi'lma Smith of San Francisco, 6-4, 6-3. Defending champion Magda Rurac of Los Angeles toyed with Lucille Davidson of Kansas City, Mo., for a 6-1, 6-3 decision to gain a semi-final tangle with Miss Buck. Mela Ramirez, tiny Mexican na- tional champion from Mexico City, took a little while to get onto her game, but then eliminated Violet Kastl of Berwyn, Ill., 2-6, 8-6, 6-3. Miss Ramirez' semi-final oppon- ent will be Beverly Baker of Santa Monica, Calif. MASONIC TEMPLE * 327 S. Fourth Ave. Now Under NEW MANAGEMENT Serving SUNDAY DINNERS OPEN TO THE PUBLIC! TAL CAEEI SULLIVAN STARTED for the Fraternity All Stars and was NATIONAL LEAGUE credited with the win. He moved W L Pct. GB to the outfield in the fifth to be Brooklyn ........48 31 .608 ... replaced by Bergstrom, but re- St. Louis ........47 33 .588 1%/ turned to put out the fire in the Boston ..........43 37 .538 51/2 top of the seventh. Philadelphia .....42 38 .525 61/2 Bruno, Leve, and McKeachie New York .......39 38 .506 8 were on the mound for the Inde- Pittsburgh .......35 43 .449 121/2 pendents, with Bruno being charg- Cincinnati .......31 46 .403 16 ed with the loss. Chicago .........31 50 .383 18 AMERICAN LEAGUE W. L. Pct. 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