ic IL - 0 as Ell, IT* a s. la um 4.aa.a Aw EPM - A JUL JLJ Ivit A T-A- 1'.11..x. Xj A; ..: ... ... . - ............. .- - - -- - . -. . - - --" ..- - - ...~ -.. . P hils Stretch Lead; Tigers 3Up After Nippii ig Chisox ;"-- * * * * * * Dodgers Lose in Eighth; Braves Stop Giants, 3-2 BROOKLYN - (P) - J i m flied to Gene Hermanski, driving KonstantS made his 50th relief home Jones. appearance of the year today as * the onrushing Phillies swept the BRAVES 3, GIANTS 2 two-game series from Brooklyn, BOSTON-(P)--T w o booming -g doubles by Bob Elliott brought an end to the New York Giants' The victory, their 14th in the stririg of eight straight victories, last 18, preserved the Phils five- giving victory to the Boston Braves game lead. 3 to 2. Konstanty-. took over in the Elliott's two bagger in the eighth after Mike Goliat's fly ball fourth, with two out, was follow- with the bases loaded scored Wil- ed by Sid Gordon's double to score lie Jones from third with the the first Braves run. In the sixth Phils tie-breaking run. with the Giants leading, 2-1, El- A walk to Jones, Granny Ham- liott's second double scored Earl ner's double and an intentional Torgeson who had walked. Elliott pass to Andy Seminick ' by Erv advanced to third on a fly and Palica loaded them up with one scored the winning run on Tommy out in the. eighth. Then Goliat Holmes' high pop to Bobby Thom- 1 pson. THANKS FOR YOUR Bob Chipman went all the way for the Braves to make his sea- PATRONAGE son's record six victories and six We feel pleased to have losses. Chipman didn't allow a served you again. New York hit until the sixth. The DASCOLA BARBERS Two National League games were - iberty near State postponed. lc =oco;;(c ;;;;>04 o0-c:: o<;;;;oc:::oc >so > oco; r At WESLEYAN GUILD 8 PM. FRIDAY NIGHT 8 P.M... (Parking lot of First Methodist Church) WAYNE KUHNS, Caller Swing your Ice Cream Lots of Fun oPartner * and *for j Two by Two Cold Drinks Old & Young ADMISSION 30c D.P. FUND BENEFIT ^ HENRY H. STEVENS, Inc. LONG D STANCE MOVING Fit, Michigan Phone Flint Collect 4-1686 For Lower Interstate Rates. We own, operate and schedule our own fleet of vans for direct service without transfer. Oosterbaan Calls for Gridders League Standngs PcInvites 73 to Leage Sandigs Fall Practice Yanks Still Hot on Trail Of Bengals ith 2-1 in Locke Beats Man grum for Tam Jackpot CHICAGO-(P)-Bobby Locke defeated Lloyd Mangrum by four strokes, 69-73, in a playoff yes- terday to win $2,500 and the Tam O'Shanter All-American golf ti- tle. The triumph marked his first return to U. S. fairways in more than a year. "I just can't say how nice it is to be back in the United States again," said the Johannesburg, South Africa, putting wizard as he tucked promoter George S. May's check in his pocket. Mangrum, who won $20,000 and everything but the door knobs at Tam in 1948 when Locke was run- ner-up, accepted second money of $1,750. "It is certainly a pleasure to be doing business with an old es- tablished firm," cracked Mangrum. "That's a good hunk of cash for the kind of golf I played today." After the first four holes, Locke had scooted ahead by two strokes. Mangrum never came close to clos- ing the gap as they toiled over the par 36-36 - 72, layout under a broiling sun. And in the unwieldy throng - which made the affair look like Custer's last stand - were several new fathers hauling their off- springs around in baby carriages. It was a poor man's show, and quite a picnic. Major AMERICA N W Detroit 65 New York 63 Cleveland 63 Boston 60 Washington 45 Cheago 42 St. Louis 36 Phtladjelphia 38 ** TODAY'S LEAGUE L Pct. 36 .644 40 .612 41 .606 45 .571 55 .450 65 .393 65 .356 66 .364 GAMES k GB 3 31f 7 19 'A 26 29 28 /- W Philadelphia 65 Boston 58 St. Louis 57 Brooklyn 54 New York 53 Chicago 43 Cincinnati 43 Pittsburgh 34 L 42 45 46 44 48 57 58 67 NATIONAL LEAGUE Pet. .607 .563 .553 .551 .525 .430 .426 .357 GB 5 6 61/ 9 18 /A 19 28 'Septemberd By MARV EPSTEIN (Daily Sports Editor) Philadelphia at New York - Hooper (10-7) or Kellner (6-13) vs. Lopat (13-6). Detroit at Chicago (2)-New- houser (10-6) and Houtteman (13-9) or Stuart (1-0) vs. Hol- combe (2-7) and Gumpert (5-5). Cleveland at Washington (2) (twi-night) --Nixon (3-1) and Masterson (4-4) vs. Kuzava (6- 7) and Consuegra (4-3). TODAY'S GAMES Brooklyn at Boston (night) - Roe (14-7) vs. Sain (16-7). New York at Philadelphia (night) - Jansen (13-7) vs. Church (5-2). Chicago at'Pittsburgh (night) -Rush (9-14) or Schmitz (9-10) vs. Werle (6-9). (Only games scheduled.) Sugar Ray Hangs On To Title In Clean Decision over Fusari JERSEY CITY, N. J.--(1P)-Su- gar Ray Robinson retained his world welterweight championship last night with a clean-cut 15- round decision over Charley Fu- sari before a capacity crowd of more than 30,000 in Roosevelt Stadium. Robinson weighed 147 pounds, the exact limit for his class,uand Fusari came in at 145%/. The champion gave all of his purse except for one dollar to the Da- mon Runyon Fund. Robinson drew blood freely from Fusari's head in the opening rounds but the challenger came back strongly. Referee Paul Cavalier carded 14 rounds for Robinson and one for Fusari, the fourth. Summer locker refund must be picked up by 5:30 p.m. to- morrow in the Sports Building. ''Every game is our toughest game and our policy will be the same as always. We concentrate on one at a time." In these days of more ominous greetings, Coach Bennie Ooster- bann's salutation to 73 football candidates came as a welcome reminder yesterday that, the world situation notwithstanding, Michi- gan will embark on another great football season with the opening of fall practice on September 6. * *I * MOST OF the 1950 hopefuls got their invites yesterday; the rest will receive the notices to report back today. On the mailing list were 22 veteran lettermen. A new Western Conference ruling will bring the mob to Ann Arbor a day before practice is officially scheduled to begin. September 5 will be devoted to placating the press and the pho- tographic corps. Uniforms will be issued that afternoon, so that workouts can begin in earnest on the following day. Looking over the invitation list, Oosterbaan observed, "We no long- er have the backlog of experienc- ed players built up during the post-war y e a r s.uConsequently we've spent more time surveying the entire group. That meant more scrimmage in spring prac- tice with a higher number of mi- nor injuries. "THAT ALSO MEANT less time for individual instruction and po- lishing. We do have a number of boys with good potentialities, but most of them need a full year of seasoning." The post-war backlog that the Michigan mentor was referring to included Dick Kempthorn, one of the greatest linebackers in Wolverine history; all-around back and punter Wally Teninga; the quarterback duo of John Ghindia and Bill Bartlett; full- back Tom Peterson; right half Bob Van Sunmern, and left half Chuck Lentz, whose seven. interceptions last year set a Conference record. Gone from the backlog of great material Oosterbaan is used tc having at his disposal are All- American Al Wistert, and linemar Jim Atchison, Lloyd Heneveld, Don McClelland, Bob Erban, Irv Wisniewski and Bob Holloway. Oosterbaan and company will have three major problems to solve; the quarterback slot, the entire forward wall, and lack of experienced reserve strength. Meanwhile Oosterbaan w i 1' spend between now and the fifti of September finding new spots or his head for additional grey hairs CHICAGO - (P) - The Detroit Tigers retained their three-game edge on the American League field by. defeating the Chicago White Sox 5-3 yesterday. Vic Wertz, the second batter ever to drive a baseball into the center field bullpen in Comiskey Park, helped the first-placers to victory on his homer, his 24th It follow- ed an eighth-inning double by George Kell to supply Detroit's winning margin. Freddie Hutchinson scattered nine Chicago hits to gain his 13th victory. Ray Scarborough was the victim, suffering his fourteenth loss. De- troit tagged the veteran right hander and Billy Pierce, who pitched the ninth, for 10 hits-five for extra bases. YANKEES 2, RED SOX 1 NEW YORK-(P)-Vic Raschi pitched the New York Yankees to a 2 to 1 victory over the Boston Red Sox yesterday, and for six and two-thirds breathless innings it looked as if he might achieve the first perfect game in the ma- jor leagues since 1922. Billy Goodman's infield single finally broke the magic of the big Yankee's strong right arm. Then in the eighth Al Zarilla hit a homer to end any argument over the close decision on Good- man at first base. As it was, Raschi retired 32 cpn- secutive batters in his last two pitching performances, both su- perb ones. He set down the last 12 Cleveland Indians to face him Aug. 4 when he won 1-0, and the first 20 Red Sox today. In both these games he allowed only three hits. INDIANS 4-8, BROWNS 3-10 St. Louis-(IP)-Ken Wood slam- med a two-run homer in the eighth to break an 8-8 tie and give the St. Louis Browns a 10 to 8 deci- sion over the Cleveland Indians in the finale of a twi-night twin- bill last night after Larry Doby led the Indians to a 4-3 triumph in the opener with a pair of two- run circuit blows. ATHLETICS 7, SENATORS 6 PHILADELPHIA -(AP)- Catcher Joe Tipton's only hit of the game, a single with two out, scored Sam Chapman with the winning run last night as the Philadelphia Ath- letics defeated Washington 7-6 in eleven innings before a sparse turnout of 1,055. Chapman had tripled with one out. Mickey Harris, fourth Wash- ington pitcher to see action, then walked Ferris Fain and handed an intentional pass to Billy Hitch- cock to fill the bases. 37.50 SUMMER SUITS Now 27.75 ELRUhFIEfl COOL! Continuous from 1 P.M. Weekdays 44c to 5 P.M. -.-&.. Li.. A .A A - aa-A A--LA%& MICHIGAN DAILY Phone 23-24-1 HOURS: 1 to 5 P.M. CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING RATES LINES 1DAY 3 DAYS 6 DAYS 2 .54 1.21 1.76 3 .63 1.60 2.65 4 .81 2.02 3.53 Figure 5 average words to a line. Classified deadline daily except Saturday is 3 P.M. Saturdays, 11:30 A.M. for Sunday Issue. N BUSINESS SERVICES THE STUDENT PERIODICAL AGENCY is authorized to offer special rates to students and educators. Ph. 2-8242. BABY PARAKEETS and Canaries. New and used bird cages. Reasonable prices. 562 S. Seventh, Ph. 5330. )2B WASHING-Finish work and ironing also. Rough dry and wet washing. Free pick up and delivery. Ph. 2-9020. lIB VIOLA STEIN-Experienced typist, at 308 S. State. Legal, Masters, Doctors dissertations, etc. Call 2-2615 or 2-9848. )13 HAVE YOUR typewriter repaired by the Office Equipment Service Company, 215 E. Liberty..'...)., TYPEWRITERS AND FOUNTAIN PENS' Sales & Service MORRILLS-314 S. State St. )4B q00>0 =>G 0 o0 =>4=>04 FRATERNITY -o JEWELRYO SOUVENIRS - GIFTS TRADITIONAL MUGS DIAMONDS - WATCHES CUPS - TROPHIES o L. G. BALFOUR CO. 1319 S. Universityv .. "Home of theU Official Michigan Ring" C Summer Hours, ten till five; o closed Saturdays. 90<"""">0<""'">0<"""0<""""0<""""0< , FOR RENT SUBLET for Fall term only-4 room furnished apatrment, $80 ma. Con- venient location. Call evenings 3-4402. ) 8R e PERSONAL THIS IS TO ANNOUNCE to all my friends that I'm leaving here in Aug- ust, dragging my degree, and my sub- scriptions to Time and Life with me. Why don't you gruys break down and subscribe at the special school year rate of $3? Orders take 6-8 weeks to start, so ph. 2-8242 now to get your copies in September. Act now; be billed later. Pablo. )2 HEY FOLKS-What am I g ing to do now? Btter sendme some money so that I can pay for my subscription to the Daily. If you don't I'll be a Freshman again. Pete. KIDDIE KARE-Reliable baby sitters. Ph. 3-1121. )10B LEARN TO DANCE Jimmie Hunt Dance Studio 209 S. State Phone 8161 )1P TRANSPORTATION WANTED-Ride to Boston around Aug. 19. Ph. after six, 2-9776. )10T DOCTOR DRIVING TO CALIF-Leave Aug. 18 or 19. Want riders. Share costs ,andl drlving. Ph 3=-$214 aften 6 O n. --.LLOST & FOUND LOST-- weeks of good, hard, study. WHY? cause I forgot to pay for my subscription to the Daily, LOST-Black zipper notebook, name F. Faulkner on cover. Phone University extension 2588. Reward. )21L LOST-Mon. 7 Aug. K&E slide rule, be- tween Arb entrance on Geddes & E. Eng. Finder please call W. Conrad, 2-6674. )22L WANTED TO RENT GRADS WANT TRIPLE SUITE with pri- vate bath for fall. Near campus. Call 2-1465 after 7. )3N STUDENT-Experienced house painter. Wants room and work near campus. Bob Shore, 2-0113. )4N MOTORCYCLE-'38 Indian Chief, A-1 shape. Bargain. 2-7601 or 1617 Wash- tenaw. You should see this. )44 MOTORCYCLE-Indian Chief, 1946, 74. Excellent condition. Seen any time at 1617 Washtenaw. )43 GOLF CLUBS-Matched set, 4 irons, 2 woods. Never used. $26.45. Also wom- an's set. Same size, same price. Ph. _2-8692. ___________)23 BEAT THE RISING COSTS! Navy "T" shirts--45c; white Navy Broadcloth Shirts-49c; Briefs-39c; Undershirts -39c: All Wool Athletic Hose-49c. Open 'til 6 P.M. Sam's Store, 122 E. Washington St. )5_ ______ ROYAL PORTABLE-Recently overhaul- ed,.excellent condition. $40. Call 7009. ) 41 1949 CUSHMAN Motor Scooter. Call 3-4986. leave name, ph. number. )42 2-WHEEL TRAILERS-Will BUY or sell. Antique chest. Twin-beds and chests. 716 S. Forest. Ph. 2-2800. )40 1930 CHEVROLET COUPE-Goodcondi- tion, radio and heater. Call Don Edge 9400 after 5. )39 HELP WANTED MAN WANTED-Full or part time. Car necessary. No canvassing. Arrange own hours for good, assurred income. Call 3-1168,_evenings. )6H YOUNG MEN-20-30 yrs., wishing to improve their spare time at good pay, learning heatingrbusiness. Excellent preparation for meeting people and gaining experience. Here is an oppor- tunity to make money while waiting for fall term to begin or a permanent connection If -yvbu so desire. Apply in person_ Holland Furace.Co,, )1 S. Ashley. . .-' .)5H TO H FOR SALE Lusty Song Wins In Hambletonian GOSHEN, N. Y.-(AP)-L u s t y Song, the two-year-old trotting champion a year ago, won the sil- v e r anniversary Iambletonian stakes in straight heats yester- day. The strapping brown, . son of Volomite-Scotch Song, took on a dozen of the nation's best three- year-old trotters in this richest of all Hambletonians and blazed home to grab the winner's share of $40,537. The time far both heats was 2:02 flat. "The Great Adventure" A Y .ia,.. I. a comedy by ARNOLD BENNETT Tickets: $1.20-- 90c - 60c (tax incl.); 8 P.M. LYDIA MENDELSSOHN THEATRE .i. " STRAW HATS 1/3 Off TOPCOATS 20% tOff Year Round Suits 37504975 Values to 65.00 KuOHN'S 217 East Liberty F. I 4' fa JACKIE ROBINSON' "The Pride of Brooklyn" as HIMSELF in "THE M E ROINSI.I.I.... MIOR STRY" with MINOR WATSON- RUBY DEE as "Branch Rickey" of "Anna Lucasta" Fame RICHARD LANE as"Clay Hopper" of the yMontreal Royals" >, and Billy Wayne as "Clyde Sukeforth" The American Society of Public Administration I I I I U WI AWJ'IN5 'IAYJ I Ii 118,