'THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tinum TfIE TCHTAN TATTV AGK HRF1 .. #t./f Yi1 Z 1alYL LI i igers Rally in inh ning To Shade Red Sox, 8-7 Snead Leads in Dapper* Dan Open Golf Tourney Slamming Sammy Shoots Second Straight Sixty-Seven; Leads Metz by Three Strokes .#PITTSBURGH - {A}) - Sammy Snead shrugged off a storm and a bad hole yesterday to shoot his second straight 67 and take the lead in the $16,500 Dapper Dan Open Golf Tournament. Snead's total of 134 for 36 holes put him three strokes ahead of Dick )Metz, of Virginia Beach, Va., who also had a 67 today. THAT 67 is five under par for the 6,850-yard Alcoma Golf Club course, where par is 36-36--"72. Delayed by a driving rain- storm, Snead needed five strokes on the par three, 250-yard sec- ond hole, but from there on he played virtually perfect golf. Playing on a course made to order for his long-hitting game, the White Sulphur Springs, W. Va., clouter bounced back after that one bad hole to reach the -- _____ -__ kParker Makes turn in 34, two under-par. Snead was keeping his drives straight on the hilly course and approach- ing with deadly accuracy. Al- though he missed a five-footer for a birdie on the 17th after being heckled by a noisy spectator, Sammy was putting as if he never had heard that he was supposed to be erratic on the greens. COMING HOME IN 33, Snead birdied the 510-yard tenth and the 370-yard 12th. On the home hole he fired an iron shot within a foot of the cup and dropped the putt for a third birdie. The weather didn't trouble the leaders. Bobby Cruickshank, little Pittsburgh veteran, had a hole in one on the same hole where Snead had his only trouble. Metz covered the short back nine in 31 for his 67 after a first-round 71. Gene Webb, of Clayton, Mo., also had a 67 today to enter a three-way tie for third place at 138. Deadlocked with him were Dapper Lloyd Mangrum of Chi- cago, who finished in the rain for a 71, and Otto Greiner of Balti- more, who came in with 70. Fred Haas, Jr., of New Orleans, who had a 66 yesterday and Henry Ransom of St. Andrews, Ill., who had the same score for today's best round, tied at 139. Clay Courts Tennis Finals Whiting Out In Front in Golf Tourney PORT HURON - (T) - Blond Dick Whiting from Dearborn by way of Notre Dame, got by two major hurdles today in his bid for the State Amateur-Golf Cham- pionship. The 26-year-old Dearborn golf- er, medalist yesterday with a 69, had a comparatively easy time in his first round match as he took John Babis of Detroit, 6 and 5. THEN WHITING outlasted Ted Kuzma of Jackson, 3 and 1, in his IHerbie Flam and Fred Kov- aleski, Hamtramck, Michigan, defeated Tony Trabert, of Cin- cinnati, and Andy Paton,. of Ann. Arbor, Michigan, in the Clay Court men's doubles quar- ter finals 1-6, 6-8, 6-2, 8-6, 6-2. second round match over the Black River Country Club course this afternoon. Whiting was four up at the 14th hole but Kuzma came back to win the 15th and 16th and cut Whiting's margin to two up. The Dearborn golfer got a par on the 17th to wind up the match. Ed Ervasti, 1947 state champ, fell by the wayside in one of the big upsets of the day. Bob Mc- Cormick of Plymouth was the sur- prise winner in the first round match. * * * THE TWO DUELED on fairly even terms until the 15th when McCormick fired an eagle three to go one up. He followed it with a par on the 16th to stay a hole ahead. Ervasti squared the match on the 18th, but on the first over- time hole, McCormick had a par four which gave him his victory. Harold Brink of Grand Rapids took Ben Smith of DetroiV, a former University of Michigan golf champion, 3 and 1, in one of the best matches of the morn- ing round. Brink then got by Jim Briegel of Plymouth one up in this after- noon's second round match. The 37-year-old Grand Rapids golfer who has played every stateI amateur tournament since 1937 ranked tonight as one of the fa- vorites in the tournament. In pre- vious play, he went to the semi- finals two years and to the finals+ match in two other years.+ DETROIT - (P)-Detroit's hit- hungry Tigers burst out in a rash of 17 safe blows yesterday to whip Boston 8 to 7 and snap the Red Sox' eight-game winning streak. The Tigers had to come from far behind to win. They got four runs in the ninth inning to give Paul (Dizzy) Trout his second victory of the year against six losses and hang a fifth straight defeat on Boston's Jack Kramer, who has yet to win a game. *. * * BOTH PITCHERS were the third to be used by their clubs in the free-hitting game. . (. T1T If"1TT Y-t Robinson, Campanella, Brown H omer To Give Dodgers11-5 Win Over Reds ANCHORS AWEIGH: Record Field Competes In Mackinac Race Today IN THE SEVENTH, Detroit be- in Kramer. His hit scored Kell. hI de- gan to click. Three straight singles by Paul Campbell, George Kell, and Pat Mullin accounted for one run in and sent Boston starter Ellis Kinder to the showers. Earl Johnson got the side out with one more score and re- tired Detroit without difficulty in the eighth. But in the ninth, with Detroit trailing by three runs, he wasn't so effective. Campbell led off with a double. Kell singled him to third, and he scored when Mullin grounded out. Vic Wertz banged out a single that finished Johnson and broughtj / CHICAGO -(AP)- The expected Pancho Gonzales-Frankie Parker showdown for the National Clay -Courts tennis title today was half in the making as Parker bounced into the finals with his hardest- earned victory of the tournament. Parker, five times winner of this meet and second seeded, had to get down to real business for a 6-3, 7-5, 6-3 semi-final round tri- umph over Herbert Flam, former National Junior Champion from Beverly Hills, Calif. THE OTHER semi-final match -between top-seeded and defend- ing champion Gonzales and third- seeded Vic Seixas of Philadelphia -will be played tomorrow. The championship tangle will be Sun- day. One feminine finalist also was determined today as top-ranked Beverly Baker of Santa Monica, Calif., rallied for a 6-8, 6-1, 6-2 semi-final decision over Mexi- can Champion Mela Ramirez of Mexico City. Miss Baker meets the winner of tomorrow's semi-final tussle be- tween defending champion Magda Rurac of Los Angeles and Rose- mary Buck of Dallas, Tex. Parker's experience and accur- ate depth shots turned the tide against the hard-battling Flam, who won the National Junior ti- tles in 1945 and 1946. OTHER RESULTS: Men's doubles-quarterfinals: Sam Match, San p~rancisco, and Seixas beat Don Lowenbein, San Francisco, and Clarke Taylor, Chapel Hill, N.C., 6-3, 6-4, 6-3. Johnny Groth greeted Kramer with a resounding double to left. Aaron Robinson was given a free pass and Johnny Lipon's fourth straight single scored the two runs that ended the game. M * * BROOKLYN-(P) - Home runs by Tommy Brown, Roy Cam- panella and Jackie Robinson plus some sloppy fielding enabled the Brooklyn Dodgers to trounce the Cincinnati Reds, 11-5, yesterday. The triumph was the Dodgers' eighth straight over the Reds at Ebbets Field this season. * * * BROWN POLED his first homer of the season with Gil Hodges and Luis Olmo on base in the second inning to begin the rout. The Dod1gers nicked balding Ken Raffensberger for two more runs in the fourth with the aid of an error by Ted Kluszewski. The Dodgers polished off Raf- fensberger in the fifth, scoring five runs although they got only one hit-Campanella's 12th homer. Robinson completed the Dodgers scoring in the sixth when he lined his ninth homer into the left field stands. CHICAGO-(P)-The Washing- ton Senators blended six hits with a walk and Luke Appling's throw- ing error to score six runs in the eighth inning and trim the Chi- cago White Sox, 9-4, before 3,619 persons yesterday. All told, the Senators collected 18 hits-their season high. * * * OUTFIELDER SAM MELE led the potent Senator smacking with four singles in driving in a third of Washington's run total. Bill Wight held a 4-2 lead going into the eighth in search of his tenth victory. Before the Senators were finally stopped both Alex Carrasquel and Max Surkont rushed to Wight's rescue. Probable Pitchers NATIONAL LEAGUE Pittsburgh at New York (2) - Bonham (5-2) and Chambers (4-1) vs. Hartung (7-8) and Jones (6-7) or Behrman (3-2). St. Louis at Philadelphia - Brazle (8-4) vs. Vorowy (7-6). Cincinnati at Brooklyn - Wehmeier (1-5) vs. Roe (8-2). Chicago at Boston - Rush (7-10) vs. Sain (6-9). AMERICAN LEAGUE Washington at Chicago - Scarborough (7-5) vs. Gum- pert (7-7). Philadelphia at Cleveland- Brissie (9-4) vs. Wynn (6-1) or Gromek (4-4). New York at St. Louis--Byrne (6-4) vs. Fannin (2-5). Boston at Detroit -- Parnell (11-5) vs. Kretlow (2-2) or Trucks (10-5). CHICAGO - (P) - A cannon booming off Chicago's skyline will signal the startof the world's longest fresh water yacht race, the 42nd Chicago-to-Mackinac Island sailing competition. Entered in the three-day chase the 331-mile length of Lake Mich- igan are 64 boats sailing in five cla;!ssees. Barring expected scratches, this will top last year's record entry of 61. * * * DEFENDING CHAMPION in the Czech Tennis Players Defy Red Orders GSTAAD, Switzerland - (A') - Jaroslav Drobny and Vladimir Cernik, two of the world's best known tennis players, turned their backs on their native Czechoslo- vakia yesterday and prepared to seek admission to the United States as political refugees. Here for the Swiss National Championships, the two defied an order by the Communist-domin- ated government to return to Prague immediately because of the presence of two Germans and a Spaniard in the tournament. They said they would continue to play here, then enlist the aid of the U.S. Lawn Tennis Associa- tion and friends abroad in gaining a haven as exiles in the United States. (In Washington, D.C., State De- partment officials said any request by Drobny and Cernik to enter the United States would be receiv- ed "sympathetically." They point- ed out that other foreign athletes had been permitted to come here after renouncing their govern- ments. cruising division is Taltonah, a newly-rigged cutter, owned by Ed- gar B. Tolman of Chicago. In the Universal division, Chi- cago's L. L. (Ole) Karas will try to pilot his yawl, Cara Mia, to a third straight victory and his 10th Mackinac win as an owner. The first gun at noon (CST) will sen'd the Class D cruising en- tries sailing north, followed by the four remaining classes every 15 minutes. * * * THE ENTIRE RACE, which av- erages 55 hours, but which may come closer to 65 hours, will be patrolled by a full-strength Coast Guard complement, including the 390-foot ice-breaker, Mackinaw; a Coast Guard helicopter aboard the big boat; the 'eutter, Frederick Lee; and a PBY aircraft. The Atlantic seaboard has one of its rare entries in the race, the Tiny Teal, a 39-footer out of Larchiont, N.Y., yacht club, owned by Palmer H. Lang- don and sailing in the cruising division. Strong contenders in the cruis- ing division also include three big yawls from out-of-town ports; in- cluding the 70-foot "Scratch" boat, Kittyhawk, owned by W. Robert Temken of Cleveland; Royono, the 1947 champion, owned by J. B. Ford, Jr., Detroit; and the 72- foot Escapade, owned by Wendell Anderson of Detroit. * * * THE MASSIVE SLOOP, Sabre, an 87-footer, owned by Roman Brotz of Sheboygan, Wis., is the largest racer in the fleet and was rated scratch in the Universal di- vision. Last year, a 53-mile-an-hour gale hit the fleet 24 hours out of Chicago forcing four craft out of competition. The Mackinaw had to tow one rudderless racer into port in a stormy, midnight rescue. The weatherman promised a more placid race this time. Night Games I CLEVELAND-()-The Phila- delphia Athletics knocked Bob Feller out of the box last night' and defeated the Cleveland In- dians, 8-0, for their first victory in seven starts. Pitcher Dick Fowler again made the World Champs look bad with his so-called nothing ball. He al- lowed seven hits and beat them for the third time this season. .* * * PHILADELPHIA -(P) - ,Howie Pollet pitched and batted the St. Louis Cardinals to a 1-0 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies last night. He held the Phils to six hits and drove in the winning run with a single in the seventh. BOSTON - (P) - Lefty Warren Spahn clinched his 10th victory with a one-on homer in the second inning last night as the Boston Braves defeated the Chicago Cubs, 6-1. Jeff Heath made his first out- fielding start since fracturing his ankle last September. * * * ST. LOUIS-(P)-Yankee catch- er Yogi Berra, who in three years as a major leaguer has never been able to hit a home run in his home town of St. Louis, realized a lifetime ambition by belting two of them in Sportsman's Park last night and led New York to a 6-0 victory over the St. Louis Browns. WHITE SOX announced the Los Angeles of He was hitting star team. (AP SIGN MALONE-The Chicago White Sox have purchase of Catcher Eddie Malone (above) from the Pacific Coast League for an undisclosed sum. .351 and was a unanimous choice on the loop all- Wirephoto). 1 NNW Major League Standings NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. Brooklyn ........49 31 .613 St. Louis ........48 33 .593 Boston ..........44 37 .543 Philadelphia.....42 39 .519 New York ........39 38 .506 Pittsburgh .......35 43 .449 Cincinnati .......31 47 .397 Chicago .........31 51 .378 AMERICAN LEAGUE GB 1/2 52 72 812 13 17 19 W. New York.......52 Cleveland.......45 Philadelphia.....45 Boston..........43 Detroit.........42 Washington......34 Chicago.........34 St. Louis........24 L. 27 33 36 37 40 43 48 55 Pet. .658 .577 .556 .538 .512 .442 .415 .304 G.B. 61,/ 8 9 112 17 19 2 28 at 1:30 - 4:15 - 7:10 & 10:00 tRandolph SCOTT Ella RAINES IC.- __""""""""""" Doors Open 1:15 P.M. TODAY ONLY! at 3:05 - 5:50 & 8:50 P.M. Matinee 25c Nights 35c IFIIS/- Starts SUNDAY! LORETTA YOUNG VAN JOHNSON "MOTHER IS A FRESHMAN" r l l LOST and FOUND Continuous from 1 P.M. COOL - Last Times Today -- WALLACE MARJORIE BEEtRY MAIN -- Starts Sunday - ART CINEMA LEAGUE PRESENTS JANET FREDRIC MA RCH "A STAR IS BORN" with ADOLPHE MENJOU TECHNICOLO produced by DAVID O. SELZNICK LOST-Brown collapsible umbrella. On campus. Call New Dorm (2-6581). room 6569. ) 84 WANTED WORK-Full time, any kind. Contact Cal Leedy at 8257. )92 TRANSPORTATION RIDE WANTED TO CHICAGO-Week- end of 22nd or 29th. Share driving and expense. Box 196, Mich. Daily. )89 FOR SALT CUSHMAN MOTOR SCOOTER - with automatic clutch. Darwin Rhoads, Phone 2-8312. )90 MOTOR SCOOTER-$70-Good running condition. 2-6500, ask for Don. )93 CANARIES, Parrakeets, Lovebirds, talk- ing, whistling Cocketiels. Bird sup- plies and cages. 562 S. Seventh, at W. Madison. Phone25330. t)88 SUMMER SPECIALS. Army type foot- lockers, $10.99 (all taxes included). U.S. Navy T-Shirts, $.49. Suntan pants, $2.99. Sleeping Bags, $2.95 up. Short-sleeve Sport Shirts, $1.69. Open 'til 6:30. Sam's Store, 122 E. Wash- ington, )82 BUSINESS SERVICES 4 WHEN YOU are in need of prompt, expert typing call 2-3537 )91 THE STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY is run by students, deals almost ex- clusively with students, and offers student rates on TIME, LIFE, FOR- TUNE. NEWSWEEK. COLLIER'S and SATURDAY EVENING POST. To or- der subscriptions, simply phone 6007, 9 to 5:30 (9 to 3 Saturday). )85 TYPEWRITING SERVICE Student reports, theses, dissertations. Phone 6197. )28 WE BIND THESES, term papers and dissertations in a variety of styles and colors. OLSEN'S BINDERY 325 E. Hoover Phone 2-7976 )1 LAUNDRY - Washing and/or ironing. Done in my own home. Free pick-up and delivery. Phone 2-9020. ) ROOMS FOR RENT FOREIGN STUDENTS - Rooms with complete cooking facilities. Linens furnished. Block from Union. Phone 2-0482'. )87 HELP WANTED SALES TRAINEES--Engineering trained men, about 25 years old, will be placed on 16-month program to learn pro- ducts. Prefer C. E., Arch. E., M.E., or I.E. Training in Chicago and reloca- tion to district office upon comple- tion. Straight salary. Selling to ar- chitects, contractors, dealers. High selection standards. Give full details. photo. Write, Personnel Deparmtent:; Ceco Steel Products Corporation, 5701 W. 26th Street, Chicago 50, Illinois. )86 - N "A STAR IS BORN" Come to the ICE CREAM-CAKE -LEMONADE -BALLOONS SQUARE DANCING - MICKEY MOUSE MOVIE WHEN: Tonight from 7 to 12 P.M. Drop in anytime - after the movies . . . after "The Glass Menagerie." WHERE: Across from Angell Hall on Betsy Barbour's lawn -South State and Williams Streets. WHY: A benefit carnival to help a Displaced Person from Ending Saturday Comae CANOE ING Tonight on the Huron River _ _ --~A_ p & I':: I I \i ~